Beach study to chart sand movement
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Just like the rest of California, bits of Newport Beach could be
falling into the ocean. Or maybe, as some people believe, the city’s
beaches are getting wider.
To find out which is the case, the city has commissioned a new
study, which will chart the movement of sand along the Newport
coastline.
The City Council on Tuesday agreed to hire Long Beach firm Moffatt
& Nichol to conduct the study of West Newport, the Balboa Peninsula
and Big Corona for $48,614.
There’s a wealth of data floating around on beach widths and
erosion, but this will be the first comprehensive study of sand
movement in Newport Beach, city public works director Steve Badum
said.
“I don’t think the average person really understands that that
sand is moving all the time, and without the additional sources of
sand coming into our system, our beaches would deplete,” he said.
“The sand that you see out there today isn’t the sand that’s out
there tomorrow.”
Big storms can scour sand off the beaches, and they sometimes
flood the parking lot by the Newport Pier -- in fact, that happened
in mid-September. To prevent beaches from shrinking over time, the
city has since the 1960s been part of a federal replenishment project
that dumps sand in the waters off of Seal Beach and Sunset Beach,
assistant city manager Dave Kiff said.
Some of the sand gets carried by winter storms down to Newport,
where it washes up onshore. That project is undertaken every five to
seven years. The city also sporadically does its own smaller
replenishments, trucking sand from other projects onto beaches and
smoothing it, Kiff said.
But not everyone wants more sand. In August 2004, the Army Corps
of Engineers planned to dredge sand from the Santa Ana River and
spread it onto the beach in West Newport, but residents objected so
strongly that the corps agreed to use a pipe to pump it offshore
instead.
One of those residents was Jim Brooks, who lives on Seashore
Drive. Citing a 2003 study by the corps, Brooks said beaches in West
Newport have gotten about four feet wider every year over the last
several decades.
“There may be an occasional retreat in an area, but as a rule, the
whole beach has grown over time,” Brooks said.
The new study will give the city a clearer idea of what has
happened to the beaches over the years and what’s likely to happen in
the future.
It’s also expected to help the public understand when and why
beach replenishment may be necessary, Kiff said.
“We assume these projects are working, and they’re good, and some
of the residents have said they’re not good, and they’re not needed,”
he said.
Results of the study could be ready by April 2006.
QUESTION
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* ALICIA ROBINSON covers government and politics. She may be
reached at (714) 966-4626 or by e-mail at
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