A deep-water dumping spot
This is absolutely critical that it does get approved because one of
the biggest problems the harbor has is our filtration due to the
runoff from the county and inland. We must dredge it, and to make it
feasible, we need to have a dump site that is relatively near. The
materials being dumped are already in the water, so there is nothing
special about them. They will be put back into the water once again,
four miles offshore in a deep canyon. Now with saying all that, there
do need to be limitations,as other communities will be using the
site.
RALPH RODHEIM
Newport Beach
It is said in the environmental movement that every victory is
temporary and every loss permanent. Newport Beach Assistant City
Manager Dave Kiff said the cost to haul the dredging waste up to Los
Angeles County would double. Then I’m afraid we’ll just have to
double it, because our most precious asset is our ocean water, and it
demands the maximum investment that we can possibly bare.
We also have a local congressman, Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, who
reports to be a surfer although he has a weak environmental voting
record in the past. We need to know where he and other local
officials stand on this issue.
FRANK CAMPBELL
Costa Mesa
Re: “Dump site in waters sought,” Tuesday. I strongly support the
effort to make the LA-3 disposal site off Newport Beach permanent.
Without a nearby disposal site for the sediment that accumulates in
the Upper Newport Bay Ecological Reserve during storm events, the
entire estuary could be in jeopardy of becoming a meadow. Other
disposal methods would be too costly or impractical.
A review of the environmental document for the project confirms
that the LA-3 disposal site will accept only clean sediment that
meets strict Environmental Protection Agency standards. No toxic
sediment from the Los Angeles or Long Beach ports would be allowed.
The proposed LA-3 disposal site is located 1.3 miles southeast of the
underwater Newport Canyon in an area with minimal ocean currents.
For three decades, the EPA has monitored the interim LA-3 disposal
site and has found little evidence of biodegradation or accumulation
of toxic sediment. It’s time to make the LA-3 site permanent. New
technology and new EPA regulations should guarantee a much more
accurate release of sediment at the designated disposal location.
Stringent monitoring and management requirements are spelled out.
The possible loss of the Upper Newport Bay Ecological Reserve as
an estuary far outweighs any environmental risks that the disposal of
clean sediment at LA-3 might cause.
JACK SKINNER
Newport Beach
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