City will help to stabilize canyon
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Hoping to prevent a landslide that could destroy homes along Morning
Canyon in Newport Beach, city officials plan to shore up the
hillsides and build rock structures to reduce erosion.
The stabilization project, which will cost about $796,000, comes
as a relief to homeowners, who have complained that runoff from the
Pelican Hill golf course and other development in Newport Coast has
scoured away soil from their backyards and left them unstable.
The city began studying the problem in 2004, after owners of about
20 homes on the canyon’s edge asked the city to help pay for a fix
because some of the water was coming from an old city storm drain.
The project will include seven rock structures called gabions that
will slow water coming down the canyon, structures to buttress the
slope, and landscaping with native plants. Two homeowners will pay
for about $300,000 of the work, and some are giving the city
permanent easements on which to build and maintain the gabions.
Initially the city and the residents didn’t agree on who should
pay to fix the problem, but they reached a compromise that will
benefit the homeowners while helping to restore the canyon, said
Steve Badum, Newport Beach’s public works director.
“If there’s damage and homes sliding down the hill, it’s going to
cost a whole lot more and there’ll be plenty of lawsuits for
everyone,” he said. “The council saw that it was the right thing to
do. We’ll spend a few bucks up front and prevent a disaster down the
road.”
The work is scheduled to start in early October so it can be
completed before winter rains start. It will be a race against the
weather, but homeowner Chris Wynkoop will be happy just to see it
started.
“I think they [the City Council] finally addressed a long-overdue
problem, and I’m happy they’re stepping up to the plate,” he said.
“It’s going to allow me to sleep better at night.”
Badum said the erosion problem didn’t come about because someone
did something wrong when they developed their property. Rather, the
science of drainage has simply improved since the area was developed.
Even after the canyon is shored up, the city will continue working to
prevent runoff that ends up in the ocean, he said.
“This is a long-term solution for erosion,” Badum said. “We’re
still going to be working with the upstream residents and property
owners to reduce dry-weather flow.”
The Morning Canyon restoration could also be a model for how to
handle similar problems in Buck Gully, he said.
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