Contract signed for dredging project
A contract to dredge the Upper Newport Bay has been signed, and the
project is moving forward, an official with the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers said Thursday.
Rio Vista-based DD-M Crane & Rigging was awarded a $16.5-million
contract on Sept. 26, said Art Shak, chief of coastal engineering for
the Corps of Engineers’ Los Angeles District.
“It’s really good news. We had a bid that was in line with what we
thought it should have cost,” Shak said.
The contract should cover work for most, but not all, of the
project, Shak said.
Shak said a start date for the project has not been set. He and
Denise Maurer, owner of DD-M Crane & Rigging, said a pre-construction
meeting is scheduled for Oct. 21.
A previously announced ceremony to commemorate the dredging
project is still scheduled for Tuesday, Shak said.
Orange County supervisors approved a funding plan for the project
in August. According to that plan, dredging will cost more than $39
million and more than two-thirds of that would be come from federal
sources.
A $12-million grant for the project from the California Coastal
Conservancy was announced in December 2003. Washington has already
allocated $1 million for the project, and more money has been
outlined in spending bills.
Former Rep. Chris Cox managed to have $2 million for dredging
written into a House appropriations bill, and Sen. Dianne Feinstein
got $7 million written into the Senate version of the bill.
Officials are still waiting for a conference committee to work out
the differences in the bills.
A Feinstein spokesman said Thursday that he does not know when
that meeting will be held.
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