Dredging setbacks are likely
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Andrew Edwards
Stormy weather and a boat running aground are expected to delay
completion of the Santa Ana River dredging project by about one
month, Newport Beach officials said Monday.
“With all the storm action it’s certainly not on schedule,”
Newport Beach Councilman Steve Rosansky said. “It’s been one thing
after another.”
Work on the $5-million dredging project, which is being overseen
by the Army Corps of Engineers, started in November, and crews were
initially assigned to work nonstop. The corps contracted Santa
Ana-based CJW Construction to dig out the river, and the work was
expected to be completed by mid-March, though Rosansky said the
contractors expect the work will take longer.
“They’re already asking to work into April,” Rosansky said.
Representatives from the corps and CJW could not be reached for
comment Monday, Presidents Day.
A report from the Newport Beach Harbor Resources Division lists a
series of problems related to the river dredging, most notably the
events of Feb. 6 when the dredging boat Eland ran aground on the
beach at West Newport, during an attempt to move the pipeline that
carries dredged materials. The boat was stuck for two days.
Other difficulties listed in the city report include heavy
storm-related flows from the Santa Ana River, damage to the discharge
pipe and rough surf.
“Obviously, when the main dredging boat goes aground and the
pipes take a long time laying, it’s inevitable that the project
overall would be delayed,” Newport Beach Asst. City Manager Dave Kiff
said. “So this isn’t unexpected ... nor is it necessarily a problem
because it’s just kind of the way those projects go.”
Kiff said he did not have specific information on the delay, but
was not surprised to hear one was anticipated.
“It’s only a problem if the corps can’t continue to manage it and
can’t continue to fund it, because we’re just observers on this
project anyway,” Kiff continued.
The Harbor Resources Division’s report also mentioned that
lifeguards have had to pay extra attention to the discharge pipe
during breaks from the storms, as beachgoers have tried to walk on
the pipe.
Lifeguard Lt. Boyd Mickley said the storms have been a much
greater problem than anything posed by surfers or swimmers trying to
play around the pipe.
“The weather’s what’s been the problem with the pipe,” Mickley
said. “They’re either having problems with the tide, or the surf or
the pipeline.”
* ANDREW EDWARDS covers business and the environment. He can be
reached at (714) 966-4624 or by e-mail at andrew.edwards
@latimes.com.
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