Workers dredging harbor mouth
- Share via
June Casagrande
Federal dredging now taking place near the mouth of the harbor will
clear a path for boaters, including in areas that haven’t been
dredged for 70 or 80 years.
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ project will cost more than $1
million, funded entirely by the federal government. It will move more
than 44,000 cubic yards of sediment out of the area designated as
federal navigational waterways, removing shoals of sediment buildup
that have become an increasing problem for boaters.
“It was getting to the point that you had to maneuver in the
federal navigational channel over shoals so that you wouldn’t hit
them,” Assistant City Manager Dave Kiff said of the area near the
harbor mouth. “If the tide was low and you weren’t paying attention,
you could start to run aground.”
On Thursday, workers began removing about 13,000 cubic yards of
sandy material creating a shoal at the harbor mouth. Another 13,000
cubic yards will be removed in the channel between Balboa Peninsula
and Balboa Island. Another 6,500 cubic yards of sediment will be
removed from the East Balboa Island Channel near the Bahia Corinthian
Yacht Club. And a 10,000-cubic-yard shoal near Collins Island will
also be moved.
When work is complete, these areas will be between 12 and 20 feet
deep. Work is expected to continue through the second week in
October.
Environmental tests on the sediment have shown that most of it is
clean enough to be used as sand for beach replenishment, city Harbor
Resources Director Tom Rossmiller said. That sediment will be put
into the water offshore near 52nd Street in West Newport, where waves
will push it ashore. The sediment near Collins Island is not suitable
for beach sand, so it will be dragged into an underground hole nearby
that was created by a 1998 dredging project.
Since workers began on Thursday near the harbor entrance, the
dredging equipment has been turning heads. Workers are using a crane
on a barge that uses a large dredging bucket to place the sand on a
second barge for transit to the beach.
“Everybody’s in awe of this great machinery,” Peninsula resident
Ralph Bernard said. “It has gigantic jaws that go down and bring up
the soil. It’s very impressive to look at.”
Officials say that much more dredging is needed throughout the
harbor, especially in the Back Bay. That work is estimated to cost
$33 million. About $20 million could come from the federal government
over three years. The remaining $13 million will be paid by the state
of California. That work could begin next year.
* JUNE CASAGRANDE covers Newport Beach and John Wayne Airport. She
may be reached at (949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.