Legal challenges loom as plans to dredge Newport Harbor, bury contaminated sediment inch forward

By Brooke Staggs The Orange County Register – March 16, 2023

Source: Stars And Stripes Legal challenges loom as plans to dredge Newport Harbor, bury contaminated sediment inch forward

(Tribune News Service) — All permits are in place for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to dredge channels in Lower Newport Bay and bury any contaminated sediment in a massive underwater pit at the heart of Newport Harbor.

But the project is now facing multiple legal challenges that could slow it down or thwart it entirely, as resident and environmental groups that tried to block those permits cite ongoing concerns over risks to marine life and bay contamination.

Already, work on the project is progressing slower than expected. And while efforts to clear sediment brought into channels by tides, boats and storms were expected to start last fall, the Army Corps hasn’t yet put the project out to bid.

“We had anticipated being further along at this point,” said Chris Miller, a manager with Newport Beach’s Public Works department who’s been overseeing the project. He cited standard processes on the Corps’ side to wrap up construction documents as reason for the delay.

Opponents aim to argue in court that those plans still don’t include sufficient analysis and safeguards to protect Newport Harbor.

Friends of Newport Harbor, a coalition of seaside residents that includes tech billionaire Palmer Luckey, sued the California Coastal Commission and the city of Newport Beach in late November over the project. Their lawsuit, filed in Orange County Superior Court, alleges the commission and city violated the Coastal Act and California Environmental Quality Act by approving the plan. A hearing on the case is set for July 11.

“This isn’t a problem solved. This is just sweeping the problem under the rug,” said Shana Conzelman, a Lido Island resident and volunteer director with Friends of Newport Harbor, of plans to bury contaminated sediment in the harbor.

The resident group also sued the Army Corps in federal court in late February for failing to respond to requests for public information. They said in a statement that they “refuse to allow the Corps’ stonewalling to rob us and other concerned residents of Orange County of our right to oppose this environmentally disastrous project, both in court and through grass-roots political efforts.”

Shortly after that suit was filed, Conzelman said they received some information from the Army Corps and Newport Beach, but not all of the documents they’d requested. She said her group is working with three different law firms and considering additional legal action.

A third suit will likely come from the environmental group Orange County Coastkeeper. On Jan. 5, the organization sent written notice to the Army Corps and heads of other federal agencies about plans to sue in 60 days if additional studies weren’t completed to see how the project could affect endangered and threatened species in the area, including green sea turtles.

That 60-day window expires this weekend. As of Wednesday, Matt Sylvester with Orange County Coastkeeper said they hadn’t heard back from the federal agencies.

This project has been in the works for more than four years.

The Army Corps received permits in early 2022 to clear 879,900 cubic yards of material from navigational channels in Lower Newport Harbor that could pose problems for some 10,000 vessels based there. But before dredging could start, Newport Beach needed a permitted plan in place to deal with any contaminated material crews dig up.

Testing indicated most material in the dredging area was clean enough for ocean disposal, at a site six miles offshore. However, some 112,500 cubic yards of sediment showed elevated levels of mercury and industrial chemicals such as DDT.

The city’s solution calls for digging a hole 590 feet wide, 590 feet long and 46 feet deep in the center of the lower harbor, directly between Bay Island, Lido Isle and Harbor Island, to create what is termed a confined aquatic disposal pit, or CAD. Crews then would take contaminated sediment from the channels, drop it in the 8-acre pit and cover it with a layer of clean sand.

Eventually, the city plans to have three feet of clean sand as a barrier. But first, city leaders saw an opportunity to give harbor residents and businesses — who often ask to dredge around their own properties to add docks or other facilities — an option to add their own sediment to the CAD. So for at least two years, until material from those other projects gets added to the pit, the CAD will be capped with just one foot of clean sand.

Having such a thin layer of sand between boat anchors and contaminated sediment in water 20 feet deep worries residents and environmental groups. They’ve also flagged how plumes of sediment might contaminate surrounding waters as the material is dumped into the CAD. So they asked regulators to consider alternatives, such as moving the material to land where it can be isolated or cleaned up.

Test results, checking for sediment contamination, were originally valid through the end of 2022. But Miller said regulators approved an extension so they could keep the project moving forward.

“There have not been any significant events since we tested, so there isn’t any real reason to suspect that it has changed,” Jim Fields, project manager with the Army Corps’ Los Angeles District, said Wednesday.

Field said the agency now plans to put the contract out to bid on March 23 and hopes to finish work in fall 2024.


©2023 MediaNews Group, Inc.

Source: Stars And Stripes Legal challenges loom as plans to dredge Newport Harbor, bury contaminated sediment inch forward

Visit ocregister.com.

Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

0 replies

Leave a Reply

Want to join the discussion?
Feel free to contribute!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Some 175 community leaders, harbor residents and elected officials gathered at the Balboa Bay Resort yesterday for a kickoff luncheon acknowledging the fundraising success of the Newport Harbor Foundation (NHF). The NHF announced that they’ve raised more than $275,000 to support an effort to have the Newport Beach Police, Fire and Harbormaster assume sole jurisdiction over controlling our harbor.

What made the $275,000 announcement even more exciting was the fact that an anonymous donor gave a matching gift, immediately making it $550,000.

Former Newport Beach Mayor and current City Councilmember Marshall “Duffy” Duffield was also recognized at the luncheon for his longtime service to the community and in particular to the harbor. The timing, coincidentally, celebrated the 50th Anniversary of the Duffy Electric Boat.

“Today, I was touched by the community’s outpouring of financial support for my family business and Newport Harbor – the heart of our city. Now the hard work of ‘Taking Back Our Harbor’ begins,” said Councilmember Duffield.

Duffy built his first electric boat as a 16 year old growing up on Newport Harbor. Then, over the next half-century, Duffy followed up building and delivering 30,000 Duffy Boats throughout the world.

So, what’s ahead for the NHF? In 2019, a group of concerned Newport Harbor residents organized, recognizing “decades of benign-neglect of the harbor and the need to begin creating our own Harbor Public Safety Department. The Foundation plans to purchase a fire boat and four patrol boats to jump start the effort. This is the first step to “Taking Back Our Harbor.”

Why do it?

Duffy said, “We want to make our harbor healthier, cleaner and to get the public educated on what makes this harbor so special.”

Continue reading at https://www.stunewsnewport.com/

Duffy House

By Sandra Barrera, Orange County Register

Remember the waterfront mansion on Newport Beach’s Balboa Peninsula that generated international buzz with a YouTube video that spoofed Cali Swag District’s viral dance hit “Teach Me How to Dougie?”

The video for “Teach Me How to Duffy” helped sell the house for $35.008 million – about 22.2% less than the $44.995 million asking price when it hit the market in Oct. 2018.

Even so, the house, which sold on Aug. 28, set a record.

The sale is highest-priced home to ever sell in Newport Harbor, said Tim Smith of Coldwell Banker, the listing agent. The record previously was held by the home of actor Nicolas Cage, which sold in 2008 for $35 million.

But Smith expected as much.

The house was designed by Robert Sinclair, built by Patterson Custom Homes and finished by Blackband Design.

“The type of buyers that buy these (homes), and the buyer that bought this isn’t going to go through the five-year entitlement process and build a house,” he said. “They’d rather have something turn-key and they’re OK paying for it. That’s why we had more than one offer.”

The towering 14,000-square-foot, five-bedroom house presented as party central in the “Duffy” video stretches across three lots, with 90 feet of bay frontage. It boasts a theater, sauna, solar system with three Tesla batteries, 57-foot-long pool with underwater speakers and a private beach with a dock.

“You can park eight Duffies on the dock just for starters,” goes the song in a viral video that starred Smoove da General and Mr. Swag of Cali Swag District and a variety of young Instagram influencers, models and dancers.

Other highlights include a floating underlit staircase illuminated from above by a large skylight, 16-foot stone fireplace and 1,100-gallon aquarium.

There’s also a five-car garage with EV plug-ins.

“The job of the ‘Duffy’ film was to let everybody in real estate, especially, know about this house,” Smith said. “It did its job and because of that it gave us exposure that we never would have got.”

More than half of the showings, he added, were people from outside of the area and saw the film first.

Tara Foster Shapiro of Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty represented the buyer, whom she wouldn’t identify.

But she said, “Their interest in the house stemmed from their admiration in architect Rob Sinclair’s work. That is why we toured the property.”

Photo Credit: Tim Smith, Coldwell Banker

Newport Harbor Channel

Visitors to Newport Beach today might know the coastal Southern California city from “The Real Housewives,” “The O.C.” and “Arrested Development,” all of which were set amid its rolling green hills and picture-perfect beaches. But I had come to Newport Beach to commune with the stars of Old Hollywood, who began staking their claim to this idyllic spot just one hour south of Los Angeles during the silent film era.

In the Golden Age of Hollywood, Newport Beach’s lure was not so much its land, dotted as it was with big-band ballrooms and smoke-filled cocktail bars. It was its water, and specifically the sprawling recreational harbor where the stars docked their yachts and sailboats.

Continue reading at The New York Times…

Photo Credit: Beth Coller/The New York Times