Rain, birds blamed for delay
Andrew Edwards
Heavy storms and small nesting birds, rather than a dredging boat
running aground again in West Newport, will delay completion of the
Santa Ana River dredging project until autumn, officials said
Tuesday.
Despite the delay, the price tag will not exceed the $5 million
outlined in the original contract.
“That’s all we have for it,” U.S. Army Corps of Engineers project
manager Ken Morris said.
The Corps of Engineers contracted Santa Ana-based CJW Construction
Inc. to dig sediments out of the river, and dredging began in
November. The project has been set back by numerous delays associated
with winter storms and the two occasions, the more recent being
Friday, when the dredging boat Eland ran aground.
The Corps of Engineers signed a performance-based contract with
CJW that will pay the company based on the amount of sediment that is
removed from the river, regardless of how long the project takes,
Morris said. The contract calls for 450,000 cubic yards of muck to be
scraped from the river.
Representatives from CJW could not be reached for comment Tuesday.
The 167-foot Eland ran aground for the second time near West
Newport at about 9 p.m. Friday. The craft was removed about 24 hours
later, lifeguard Lt. Brent Jacobsen said. Jacobsen said the boat was
not leaking fuel.
The Eland has been used to guide a pipeline used to discharge
dredged sand into the ocean, Corps of Engineers spokesman Greg
Fuderer said. Dredging activities could resume as early as Saturday
when tug boats would be used to pull the pipeline.
When the project started, officials expected dredging would be
completed around the middle of this month, and crews were asked to
work nonstop to reach that goal.
However, no dredging has occurred this month, Fuderer said. The
project was put on hold when heavy storm flows made work too
dangerous, and when the Eland ran aground Friday, the boat was being
used in preparations to resume digging.
What happened Friday had a minimal effect on the project’s
timeline, Fuderer said. Previous delays ensured that dredging would
not have finished by the beginning of the least tern nesting season.
The endangered birds lay their eggs in sandy areas and typically
begin nesting around mid-March.
Some of the dredged sand was deposited on an island near the
river’s mouth to be used by the terns. The project’s permit prohibits
dredging activities that would disturb the birds during their nesting
season, meaning an effort expected to take four months could be
stretched as long as a year.
“It looks like it’s going to be November,” Fuderer said.
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