Sand-plan opponents again jam chambers
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Deirdre Newman and Alicia Robinson
For the second time in less than a week, residents packed the City
Council chambers to protest a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers project
that would transplant sand from the Santa Ana River to West Newport,
widening the beach by more than 200 feet in places.
As of press time, council members hadn’t voted whether to hire a
coastal engineering expert to monitor any work done on the city’s
beaches or whether to send a letter to the corps urging offshore
disposal of sediment from the river instead of spreading it on the
beach.
A contractor hired by the Corps of Engineers already has begun
removing vegetation from the river near Adams Avenue as part of the
flood-prevention project, which will later entail dredging 400,000
cubic yards of sediment from the river channel.
The city agreed to take sand from the dredging project to
replenish the beach between 32nd and 56th streets in West Newport.
But residents have complained that the river sand could contain trash
and pollutants and that widening the beach will ruin wave patterns
and create dangerous new ones.
“It will create a shore break like the waves in Balboa,” avid
surfer Greg Ozimec said Tuesday. “It will be unsurfable. The beach
will be too steep.”
Another point of contention has been an environmental study the
corps performed for the project several years ago. That study assumed
a maximum beach width of 350 feet, and the project specifications now
show much wider stretches.
A requirement the council considered Tuesday was that the
contractor’s permit to work on the beach, issued by the city, must
adhere to a maximum beach width of 350 feet. Work is scheduled to
begin on the beach after Labor Day.
Meanwhile, city officials have been meeting with the Corps of
Engineers and officials from Orange County, which is paying for a
small percentage of the $4.5-million project to figure out how to get
the sand deposited offshore. Some of it would still be washed back in
to replenish the beach, which residents prefer.
The corps is bound by a contract with CJW, a contractor already
hired and working on the project upstream. Corps project manager Ken
Morris estimated last week that offshore disposal could cost at least
$1.5 million more than the beach-disposal method.
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers government. She may be reached at (949)
574-4221.
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