Senate boosts dredging funds
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Alicia Robinson
A major dredging project in the Back Bay likely will begin in
September, possibly with a $7-million boost in federal funds.
The dredging will combat the constant deposit of sediment into the
1,000-acre Back Bay. Since 1998 city, state and federal officials
have planned a $38-million project to remove 2.1 million cubic yards
of sediment from the bay and restore the area as a wildlife habitat.
Sen. Dianne Feinstein got the possible $7 million written into a
Senate energy and water appropriations bill earlier this month,
filling local officials with subdued glee.
They’re gleeful because it’s much more than the $2 million Newport
Beach Rep. Chris Cox netted for the project in the House version of
the bill. But federal legislators still must reconcile the two
versions of the bill, so the full $7 million isn’t a sure thing.
It is, however, a final bit of assurance for local officials that
they can get the project underway this fall.
Bids for the construction work could go out by mid-July with a
possible contract award in September, said Susan Brodeur, a coastal
engineer in Orange County’s Watershed and Coastal Resources Division.
Officials already were counting on $12.5 million promised by the
California Coastal Conservancy. The $2 million in the house bill was
the minimum needed to begin the work, so the possibility of more is a
bonus.
“It’s great news,” Brodeur said. “We started from zero in the
president’s budget, and it was great to get $2 million in the House
bill, but it was really good news to know that they might bump it up
even further in the Senate bill.”
Cox said Feinstein was able to pump up the Back Bay funding in the
Senate bill because the bill itself includes $1.5 billion more than
the House version and significantly more for the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers, which will lead the project.
In the House, Cox asked for $13 million but only got the $2
million.
“Their budget is not as austere as the House budget,” he said. “In
my view, $7 million is a compromise, and one that we would not have
been able to achieve without Sen. Feinstein’s leadership.”
Newport Beach Assistant City Manager Dave Kiff said Feinstein has
always been supportive of the city’s appropriation requests, but the
Back Bay has never fared so well.
“We’ve never had this much put into either side before, so we’re
cautiously optimistic,” he said.
The project could take two to three years to complete, with
dredging work taking place around the clock and habitat restoration
on a more typical daytime schedule. The sediment will go to a dump
site 4.5 nautical miles offshore from Newport Beach.
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