Bringing out the dredge
Local officials are planning an October ceremony to commemorate the
start of Back Bay dredging, though there’s no concrete evidence that
work will begin then.
The event is tentatively scheduled for Oct. 11, and Newport Beach
officials plan to join Orange County and California Coastal
Conservancy officials for the occasion, Assistant City Manager Dave
Kiff said.
The date was chosen because Sen. Dianne Feinstein was expected to
be available, not because dredging was expected to begin that day,
Kiff said. Feinstein got $7 million for the project written into a
Senate appropriations bill.
Former Rep. Chris Cox got a $2-million dredging provision written
into the House version of the bill, and federal and local officials
are still waiting for Congress to iron out how much money will be
allocated to dredge the Back Bay.
Kiff expressed optimism Wednesday that dredging could begin this
fall, but he acknowledged the possibility that the planned ceremony
would not coincide with the start of actual work.
“We may have a ceremony even if there’s no contract,” Kiff said.
In August, Orange County supervisors approved a funding plan that
called for the federal government to pay for more than two-thirds of
the dredging project. Under the plan, more than $39 million would be
spent during three years of dredging. The Army Corps of Engineers
would be the lead federal agency and hire a contractor to do the
actual dredging work.
Even if federal money is not forthcoming, enough funds are on hand
to begin the project this year, said Larry McKenney, manager of the
Orange County Watershed and Coastal Resources Division. McKenney said
the project could begin with money from the California Coastal
Conservancy and $1 million in federal dollars that have already been
allocated for the bay.
“If the corps will execute a contract, we’re not beholden on them
[the federal money] to start work,” McKenney said.
When supervisors passed the funding plan for the dredging project
in August, McKenney said he hoped the corps could have a contract
ready by the end of this month.
Army Corps of Engineers project manager Ken Morris said the corps
has not yet inked a deal for the project, noting the corps’ resources
have been stretched thin by the ongoing war and hurricanes Katrina
and Rita.
The corps has not yet considered whether the project could start
with just Coastal Conservancy money, Morris said.
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