Down on the dumps
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Alicia Robinson
The City Council will vote tonight on whether to ask the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers to deposit sand dredged from the Santa Ana River
offshore rather than on the beach in West Newport.
City officials vowed to do so last week after residents raised a
stink about a corps project to put river sand between 32nd and 56th
streets on the beach, widening it considerably in places.
The $4.5-million project will remove 400,000 cubic yards of
sediment from the river to reduce the risk of flooding. In their
long-term battle against erosion, city officials agreed to take the
river sand because it was free, and paying for beach replenishment
could cost millions, Assistant City Manager Dave Kiff said.
But residents complained that using sand from the Santa Ana River
-- often a source of bacteria that contaminates beach waters -- would
pose health risks and cause dangerous shore breaks by extending the
beach farther into the water.
While officials said they’d work together to address residents’
concerns, there was a snag: The corps is bound by a contract with
CJW, the contractor already hired and doing work upstream.
“We’re still working with the city and the county to see if there
are other means of [sand] disposal,” said Ken Morris, project manager
for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. “The project as it’s been
awarded is continuing as far as taking the vegetation out of the
channel.”
Work on the beach wouldn’t begin until after Labor Day, he said.
The city will use its muscle to get the sand put offshore, so some
of it still would be washed back onto the beach, but problems with
dust and beach access would be minimized. Newport Beach officials
don’t have much leverage, because the corps is funding and
controlling the project, Kiff said.
One big question is whether money can be found to pay for offshore
disposal, which could cost as much as $2 million more, Morris said.
“[Funding is] the largest barrier to near-shore disposal,” Kiff
said. “We really are toeing a fine line between asking them to do
what the contract requires and pushing them away.”
The council tonight will consider approving a letter to the corps
offering the city’s help in finding ways to limit the amount of sand
trucked onto the beach. Councilman Steve Rosansky said he’d like to
see the city take an even stronger stance.
“The contractor needs to obtain an encroachment permit from the
city to operate on the beach, so certainly the city could deny them
from doing what they want to do,” he said. “Certainly, that is one
tool the city has to control what happens, but I’m confident that the
corps is looking at alternatives.”
Residents are likely to crowd council chambers tonight to voice
their opinions, said resident Jim Brooks, who recently sent letters
encouraging neighbors to get involved.
They’d like to see the council approve the recommendations, which
include hiring an environmental expert to watch the corps’ work and
sending a letter urging the offshore-disposal option, Brooks said.
Residents also want the corps to agree not to dump the sand on the
city’s beach, he said.
“We support the dredging of the river,” Brooks said. “We support
dumping it offshore. We will not support putting it on the beach.
Until we get a signed letter by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, we
will not be satisfied.”
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers business, politics and the environment.
She may be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail at
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