Back Bay dredge money looks promising
Paul Clinton
NEWPORT BEACH -- Money for two dredging projects in the city survived
a congressional subcommittee’s “mark up” on Thursday, nearly ensuring it
will be included in the appropriations bill heading to the House floor
next week.
Rep. Chris Cox, who represents Newport Beach, had requested about $6.3
million in federal money to help pay for projects to dredge Newport’s
Back Bay and Newport Harbor. Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, who represents Costa
Mesa, had also lobbied for the funding.
Almost two-thirds of that amount stayed in the House appropriations
bill for energy and water. Of the $1.8 million Cox requested for the Back
Bay, the subcommittee left $972,000. Also, $3 million was included for
dredging in Newport Harbor.
On Friday, Cox said the funding was a major step toward seeing these
projects come to fruition.
“This is a big victory, and I am very pleased,” Cox said. “These are
very important projects for the ecology of our area.”
The Army Corps of Engineers is handling the two projects, which have
been budgeted at $34 million for the Back Bay and $4.5 million for the
harbor.
After passing the subcommittee on energy and water development, the
bill is expected to go before the full House next week.
Over the years, sediment flowing down San Diego Creek and other
channels pours into Back Bay and the harbor. In the Back Bay, the thick
clay resting on the marsh bottom can act as a receptacle for nutrients,
pesticides, heavy metals and other harmful substances.
Dredging is also designed to restore habitat -- lost eel grass and
water that protects birds and submerged mud-dwelling creatures.
City leaders said they were elated by the funds, which is the first
federal money to be put toward the dredging itself. Other state money has
paid for the environmental review and design.
The Orange County Board of Supervisors approved the environmental
analysis on June 26, 2001.
If the federal money stays in the budget that passes Congress for the
2003 fiscal year, which will begin in October, it would make the Back Bay
project eligible for additional funding in future budget years, Assistant
City Manager Dave Kiff said.
“To get both of them in is really tremendous,” Kiff said. “The door is
open.”
State and local money is expected to make up $13 million, with the
rest coming from Washington, D.C.
By passing this subcommittee, the funding also broke through a
reluctance among East Coast legislators to fund projects in California,
Rohrabacher’s press deputy said.
In April 2001, Rohrabacher hosted a tour of the Back Bay for Rep.
Peter Visclosky (D-Indiana), an influential member of the energy and
water subcommittee.
“A lot of the East Coast members think we have no real needs,” said
Aaron Lewis, Rohrabacher’s press deputy. “They think our problems are
just trouble in paradise.”
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