Big Canyon lands a big grant
Alicia Robinson
A $500,000 grant from the state Coastal Conservancy will allow the
city to begin the planning and design of a project to restore the Big
Canyon Creek area.
The Coastal Conservancy unanimously voted Wednesday to give the
city the money to flesh out plans for the project, which will take
place on about 55 acres between the Upper Newport Bay and Jamboree
Road known as Big Canyon Nature Park. The restoration will involve
some dredging, removal of nonnative plants, repair of flood damage
from El Nino storms, construction of wetlands that help clean urban
runoff and improvement of walking trails for better public access.
“The funding is very important because it will get us to
construction drawings,” Newport Beach Assistant City Manager Dave
Kiff said.
The work will move Back Bay Drive about 300 feet farther from the
bay and it will increase the amount of mud flats in the canyon by
more than an acre, Kiff said. Mud flats are the best places for
endangered birds such as the light-footed clapper rail and the
California least tern that live in the Back Bay to find food.
Designing the restoration project should take about a year. After
that, the city will seek funding from the Wildlife Conservation Board
to build it, Kiff said. Construction is expected to cost between $3
million and $5 million.
The Big Canyon Creek project has been many years in the making,
and it’s important to the overall health of the Upper Newport Bay,
Coastal Conservancy spokesman Dick Wayman said.
“One of the biggest problems with Upper Newport Bay has been
accumulation of sediments that have eroded from the watersheds that
feed the bay, and it’s been a serious enough problem that if not
corrected the bay could probably fill up over time,” he said.
The Coastal Conservancy has been working with state and local
authorities for years to improve the health of the bay, Wayman said.
The 1,000-acre Newport Bay is Southern California’s largest tidal
wetland.
“The importance of Upper Newport Bay can’t really be
overemphasized,” Wayman said. “It’s a huge wetland in an urbanized
area. It doesn’t just have local importance; it has national
importance.”
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