<p>A long-awaited project to dredge a channel that feeds Sengekontacket Pond is set to go this spring, now that Oak Bluffs has awarded a bid for project. Sediment has been piling up at the channel since Hurricane Sandy.</p>
A long-awaited project to dredge a channel that feeds Sengekontacket Pond is set to go this spring, now that Oak Bluffs has awarded a bid for project.
This week the town agreed to pay the International Golf Company a base fee of $300,000 to remove an estimated 6,300 cubic yards of sediment from under the Little Bridge on Beach Road. The town will pay most of that bill with disaster aid awarded by the Federal Emergency Management Agency as part of its Hurricane Sandy response.
Sediment has been piling up at the Little Bridge channel ever since the storm hit two and a half years ago. Over time, a sandy beach formed there, blocking the exchange of water between the salt pond and the ocean.
With a contractor now in place, dredging can begin at the site on June 1 to restore that flow and improve water quality in the pond.
Engineering consultant CLE Engineering reviewed bids on behalf of the town this week, and recommended that the town go with International Golf. The other bid was submitted by Coastal Marine Construction of Canton, and came in much higher, at $433,524.
Town administrator Robert L. Whritenour said the winning bidder will collaborate with Dale McClure of Watercourse Construction and the R.M. Packer Company, both of Vineyard Haven.
“We are very, very happy . . . that this company is comprised of a partnership of local contractors,” Mr. Whritenour said at a selectmen’s meeting this week.
Last December, FEMA awarded the town $289,000 for the project. The town will contribute an additional $89,000.
Those funds will allow contractors to remove sand down to five feet below mean low water, not quite to the depth of the rock casing that lines the channel at eight feet below mean low water. That means the town will have to dredge periodically in the future to maintain the inlet as sand continues to pile up under the bridge.
“With the monies we have from FEMA, we are doing as much as we possibly can,” said selectman Gregory A. Coogan.
Once the sediment is removed from the channel, the town will store the material at the dredging site or at the town highway garage, Mr. Whritenour said. Next spring, the town plans to use the sand to replenish the sediment at Inkwell Beach, a town beach near the Steamship Authority terminal which has eroded in recent years.
In an earlier round of bids, which came back a year ago, contractors said they could do the same dredging job for $325,000 to $390,000. The town waited to do the work until the federal funding came through, and pursued local bidders.
“It was good that we waited and went back out locally,” said Mr. Coogan.

Comments
Good news but please don't
Bob MVGood news but please don't store the material on-site.
I certainly hope they are not
Summer Resident New YorkI certainly hope they are not going to try and artificially refurbish the beaches with the dredge remnants. We pay our hard earned dollars to summer on Martha's Vineyard and to have the dredge remnants used as beach fill is absurd. All it does is bring things like sharp metal shards and broken glass to the once beautiful beaches. I applaud the small bridge dredge project's intent but my concern is where is the dredged soil going to end up. I hope not on the beaches. Does anyone know where it will be disposed of?
So, no beach for you, then.
SteveSo, no beach for you, then. We would rebuild your beach if we weren't so busy showering in your hard-earned dollars.
Ok, and where exactly did you
David oak bluffsOk, and where exactly did you think the sand came from? It comes from the beaches up current from little bridge channel. And since the current changes direction twice a day, that means it comes from both Silva beach and Harthaven beaches - maybe even as far as Inkwell Or Fuller street beaches, both of which have seen a lot of erosion in the past few years! Wow, whoda thunk?! So let's put it back where it came from, and you can come back next Earth Day to help the islanders clean it up! If the next winter's storms haven't already cleaned it or moved it! Oh, and by the way, sand is expensive, so it would cost a lot more of your (and our) hard earned dollars to NOT recycle this sand!
Where do you think the sand
Shane EdgartownWhere do you think the sand comes from, the dump? Once beautiful beaches? It is sand that has shifted from other parts of the beach and Sengekontacket. The beaches are still beautiful. Be reasonable New York.
It's that sand or no sand, I
Actual ResidentIt's that sand or no sand, I'm afraid. The beaches are eroding, and people spending hard earned dollars want beaches. Think of it this way. That sand Mother Nature washed into the pond opening is probably from Inkwell just up the road. It is being returned.
We did try a sand raising drive but it ended badly. Seasonal visitors were asked to pick up sterile sandbox sand from Home Depot and bring it over on the ferry. Response was phenomenal. So much so that the ferry nearly sank from the weight of all those SUVs piled full of bags of sand! So that option is out,wet
Others have suggested replacing the sand with rocks. They do a brisk beach tourist business in the south of France with gravel beaches. But some were concerned topless sunbathing might follow, while others were concerned that fresh healthful food might invade OB. That idea was shelved.
So, unless a better plan is hatched, it needs to be dredged sand or no sand.
Dredged sand doesn't make it
skip OBDredged sand doesn't make it bad sand, it's a verb/past tense for digging it up--and it probably came from the Inkwell anyway, let's bring it back, Jack!
Ever sit on State or
John WTEver sit on State or Eastville Beach that is that awful dredged sand that all of enjoy. All you are doing is moving sand from one place to another so lets get real about this!
I first saw the "Inkwell" in
RICH W. INKWELLI first saw the "Inkwell" in 1942. I crawled on it. As I grew up I enjoyed the pier that had levels on both sides for swimmers to get out of the water onto. There was a float about 30 feet offshore that you could swim to and rest and play on. It was every kid's challenge to finally be able to swim out to where the "big kids" were. The float was anchored in about 6-7 feet of water and there was plenty beach to play on. Now the pier and float are gone as is the beach. The water that the float was anchored in is now about 3 feet deep. No challenge for the kids.The same depth is found on the "Pay Beach" side. The change in depths happened after the "Pay Beach" jetty was extended. Why not dredge both sides of the long jetty and put the sand back on the beach where it came from? The extended jetty could be shortened to the original length. The sand doesn't get much cleaner and it's FREE! A nice touch after restoring the depth and beach would be to replace the pier. Sorry, I started to dream how nice it could be.
Take your hard earned dollars
Albie Mohayhee MiddlegroundTake your hard earned dollars to Nantucket and see what that buys you. What goes around, comes around. Now fill in the Ink well.
I thought New Yorkers were
GH Guy Gay HeadI thought New Yorkers were used to things like glass and metal on their beaches? Beach replenishment with dredged sand has been going on for decades all along the coast. The only alternative is to use sand from inland sand mines and the quality is never the same.
Add new comment