Group: Surf City alerted to ordnance
Surfriders say they warned of danger in beach project
By DONNA WEAVER Staff Writer, (609) 978-2015
Published: Tuesday, March 27, 2007
SURF CITY — A spokesman for
the Surfrider Foundation said he warned officials of ordnance being pumped
onto the beach at the conception of the island beach-replenishment project.
“We've experienced dozens of these
projects,” said John Weber. “This kind of thing has happened elsewhere.
I'm surprised that more precautions were not taken.”
Five fuses for explosive projectiles,
each more than 50 years old, were found earlier this month in newly placed
beach sand between 17th and 24th streets. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers,
which is handling the beach-replenishment project, closed down that portion
of the beach while it surveys the area looking for more explosives. The
corps said last week that work may keep the beach closed past Memorial
Day.
Weber said the Surfrider Foundation
has seen the effects of dredging and beach-replenishment projects in Monmouth
County.
Weber lives in Monmouth County but
learned to surf on Long Beach Island, he said. Weber's family has owned
its oceanfront home on the island for 34 years. He said he is glad that
no one was hurt by the recently found ordnance.
“If I were a local or anybody who
uses the beaches I'd be really mad and insulted this big beach was built
and I couldn't use it. I think this was avoidable,” Weber said. “They say
they used this magnetometer thing and it didn't show anything like this
was going to happen.”
Weber said that leads him to two
possible conclusions — that the Army Corps of Engineers used the magnetometer,
an instrument used to detect the presence of magnetic material, and saw
there were big chunks of metal in the sand and dredged it up anyway, or
the device isn't accurate enough to give the necessary information.
“Why aren't these questions being
asked of the Army Corps? They know this has happened before,” Weber said.
Khaalid Walls, a spokesman for the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, said a magnetometer was used at the start
of the beach replenishment project.
“It's a highly technical metal detector
used to scan the area before the dredging began and nothing was found,”
Walls said.
Walls said the corps is still conducting
an investigation into whether the ordnance could have been missed. He said
it could potentially be that the ordnance was buried too deep.
This is the first time the Philadelphia
District Corps has discovered ordnance, according to Walls. But this is
not the first time a discovery like the one in Surf City has been made
on the East Coast, he said.
“In the late '90s there were ordnance
found on Bethany Beach in Delaware. We wrapped that scan up of the area
pretty quickly,” Walls said.
Bethany Beach's offshore waters had
been used for target practice by the U.S. Navy in World War II. A beach
replenishment project, like the one in Surf City, dredged offshore sand
and accidentally brought small ordnance items onto the beach, according
to Geo-Centers, which is now part of Science Applications International
Corporation, or SAIC, in San Diego, Calif.
Robert Siegel worked for Geo-Centers
in the late 1990s when the ordnance was discovered on Bethany Beach. Siegel
processed and analyzed the data collected in the survey of Bethany Beach.
“We see this a lot, ordnance washing
up. It's fairly common, especially now with the development in shore communities
and sand replenishment projects,” Siegel said in a phone interview Monday.
Siegel is currently doing survey
work with the corps in Huntsville, Ala.
Bethany Beach was slated to open
for the season two weeks from the date ordnance was discovered. Siegel
said a rapid survey of the beach was conducted. Siegel said his memory
was hazy because the survey was conducted almost 10 years ago, but he guessed
the survey took a week to three weeks.
“But the time needed to collect the
data is only part of the project,” Siegel said. “Data needs to be acquired,
analyzed and once the data is analyzed, we come up with locations to dig.
Digging can be time consuming, as well, depending on the number of digs.”
Siegel said that using a vehicle
to survey the area contributed to it being completed quickly.
“Geo-Centers had a system that was
called Stohls, (essentially) a dunebuggy ... with a bunch of metal detectors
attached to it,” Siegel said. “Surveying with a vehicle, we surveyed closer
to 10 to 20 acres a day. It certainly increases efficiency of the project.”
Walls said the corps is using a similar
procedure in Surf City. The vehicle will be hooked up to a towed array
of magnetometers, about three or four devices. Walls said the devices will
be able to cover 15 to 20 feet of land.
“Our goal is to get the beaches up
and running before Memorial Day. Safety is our priority. With the businesses
and locals on our side, we'll get this done quickly,” Walls said.
To e-mail Donna Weaver at The
Press:
DWeaver@pressofac.com
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