Alicia RobinsonA cable tangled in a propeller...
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Alicia Robinson
A cable tangled in a propeller led to the second incident in five
weeks of a 167-foot dredging ship running aground in West Newport.
The Eland ran aground around 9 p.m. Friday night, but the exact
cause is uncertain, said Newport Beach Lifeguard Lt. John Mitchell.
Lifeguards were on scene to keep beach visitors at a safe distance
from the ship.
The boat has been floating just offshore for about the last two
months, helping manage a 1,200-foot pipe carrying sediment dredged
from the Santa Ana River to an offshore disposal site between Fern
and 60th streets.
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is heading the $5 million project
to dredge 400,000 cubic yards of sediment from the river to help
prevent flooding.
“What we do know is the fact that [Friday] afternoon in an attempt
to pull the dredge pipe back offshore in a position to start
production again, one of the cables wrapped around one of the
[propellers],” Mitchell said.
A diver freed the cable, but the Eland may have lost
maneuverability long enough to drift inland, or its anchor may have
slipped.
Two tugboats tried to pull the ship back to sea during high tide
Saturday morning -- the same procedure worked when the Eland ran
aground Feb. 5 -- but one of the cables pulling the boat broke and
the effort failed, Mitchell said. Workers were expected to try again
at high tide Saturday evening.
The boat’s plight didn’t interrupt any beachgoers’ activities. In
fact, some Saturday afternoon surfers were riding waves right next to
the hulking, immobile ship just south of the Santa Ana River mouth.
But it has caused another delay in the dredging project, which has
been plagued with them.
The project was supposed to be wrapping up about now. Heavy storms
and damaged pipes have caused minor delays, and the fast-approaching
nesting season of the endangered least terns, which live on an
offshore island near the dredging project, could mean the dredging
will drag on until this fall.
Whether workers will be able to prevent the boat from running
aground again is unknown, but on a project like this one, a few
technical problems aren’t surprising, said Karl Von Voight, a
sergeant with the Orange County Sheriff’s Harbor Patrol.
“It’s a hazardous operation when you’re working that close to the
shore,” he said.
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers government and politics. She may be
reached at (714) 966-4626 or by e-mail at alicia.robinson
@latimes.com.
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