Photo by Agnali. CC0/Pixabay License. |
Sediment, matter that settles to the bottom of a body of
water, nourishes wetlands. Sediment, literally as charismatic as mud, is not
given the same attention as a natural resource as fresh water or plant life. It
is not photogenic. It is out of sight and out of mind. It is a waste product,
an impediment to shipping traffic. But in areas where wetlands have been
identified as strategically valuable in the defense against rising sea levels,
sediment’s star is rising.
One of these areas is the San Francisco Bay, where sea level
has been measured as rising steadily since its first tide gauge was
installed in 1854. Numerous wetlands
restoration projects are underway to help protect the bay shoreline,
and sediment is in demand to nourish them. Right now, there is a shrinking
supply of sediment in the SF Bay. According to Bodega Marine Laboratory
oceanographer Doug George, the primary culprit is dams trapping sediment, but
also the petering out of the large pulse of sediment that came with placer gold
mining during the Gold Rush, and current sand mining practices. Meanwhile, the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (ACE), responsible for
dredging to maintain channel depths for ship navigation at U.S.
harbors, is dumping dredged materials from the bottom of the bay—useful but
uncharismatic mud—outside the Golden Gate Bridge. ACE is bound by federal
statute to do the least-cost disposal method, and it costs more to reuse
sediment for wetlands.
A Lawsuit over Mud
Some of the dredged material is being redistributed to nourish bayside wetlands, but not enough.
A 1998
environmental impact statement (see the Long Term Management Strategy [LTMS] for the Placement of Dredged
Material in the San Francisco Bay Region) indicates that 40% of that
dredged material should be put to “beneficial reuse,” including wetlands
nourishment. However, in 2016 ACE allocated less than 40% of its dredged
materials to reuse. According to the Bay Conservation and Development
Commission (BCDC) Executive Director,
Larry Goldzband, and Sediment Program Manager, Brenda Goeden, other dredgers in
the bay are keeping up with the 40% reuse policy, but ACE, the largest dredger,
has been falling short.
BCDC, formed in 1965 in response to heavy shoreline
development on the SF Bay, is the agency tasked with keeping the bay from
shrinking in size. So, in theory, it would be all in on dredging. However, BCDC
is concerned about the bay’s landward-shifting shoreline. It was one
of the first government agencies in the U.S. to issue guidelines responding to
sea level rise. Its staff report, Living with a Rising
Bay (2011), informed SF Bay Plan
revisions, including the assertion that “[a]n adequate supply of sediment is
necessary to ensure resilience of the Bay ecosystem as sea level rise
accelerates.”
ACE has worked closely with BCDC for years on the question
of sediment management in the SF Bay. ACE carries out its responsibility regarding
navigation channels in compliance with the Coastal Zone Management Act
which gives BCDC its accreditation. BCDC reviews ACE practices and determines
whether they are consistent with that federal act. Now, BCDC, chafing under the
shortfall in beneficially reused sediment, on
Sept. 22, 2016, filed a lawsuit against ACE to force it to stop
dumping good mud. While ACE falls back on the federal requirement of using a
least cost disposal method as a rationale for its shortfall, the lawsuit
focuses on the full language of the regulation, which dictates that the
disposal method be “environmentally acceptable” (per L. Goldzband). The lawsuit
was filed after months of discussions and attempts at mediation. In late March
2017 representatives of ACE and BCDC will attend an “Alternative Dispute
Resolution,” a last-ditch attempt to avoid the courts.
A SF Bay Wetlands
Restoration Project Roll Call
There are many pilot projects involving sediment in various
stages of development in the SF Bay.
Bel Marin Keys/
Hamilton Airfield
This ACE/ California Coastal
Conservancy project is celebrated as a successful transformation of
a military site into a wetland. Click here
to see a 1:38 video with images of the breaching of the levee,
opening the land to the SF Bay waters in 2014. This
project benefited from beneficially reused sediment.
Oro Loma Horizontal
Levee Project
This, the first horizontal
levee in the SF Bay, using vegetation on a slope to slow waves
rather than a vertical wall, was set to be fully operational in 2016. It might
be the first levee of its kind in the world. After more than four years in the
permitting process it took six months to build (per Nate Kauffman in Save the
Bay, 2016).
Cullinan Ranch
This
project in the North Bay, now near completion in the Napa River
Delta, came out of a movement to block fill and residential development on the
former wetlands. Read about its return to recreational use in “Into
the Breach: Paddlers and Ducks Return to Cullinan Ranch” (2016).
South Bay Salt Ponds
This is “the
largest tidal wetland restoration project on the West Coast.” It is
fully underway, and will convert 15,100 acres of commercial salt ponds at the
south end of SF Bay into mud flats and tidal marsh. It will rely mostly on natural
sedimentation processes rather than reused dredged material.
Montezuma Wetlands
Restoration Project (Suisun Marsh)
Now completed, this is an interesting project because it used
“slightly more chemically challenged” dredged material than what is usually
used in restoration projects: it is designed to safely make beneficial reuse of
material that otherwise would be dumped in the open ocean. Scroll to the bottom
of this
page for a brief description of this project by the SF Bay Regional
Water Quality Control Board. A
3-page description of the project written during its initial stages.
Living Shorelines
This
subtidal restoration demonstration project in San Rafael and Hayward
was begun in 2012, is ongoing and now expanding to a new location in Richmond,
California. It focuses on eelgrass and oyster habitat restoration.
Bothin Marsh
This project is intended to enhance Bothin Marsh for habitat
and sea level rise protection through beneficial reuse of dredge sediment from
Coyote Creek. Although Marin County has received a grant
to develop a feasibility assessment, it remains in
the conceptual design stage.
Sediment
self-distribution in the South Bay?
A 2014 study (Bever
et al.) showed through modeling that dredged material dumped south of the
southern-most bridge across the SF Bay (Dumbarton) could result in the
nourishment of “mudflats, marshes and breached salt ponds through natural
sediment redistribution.” Any actual experiments with this kind of dumping
would have to wait for BCDC to change its bay fill policy.
What’s Next for the
SF Bay?
There’s no time to
lose
While BCDC and ACE are locked in a legal battle, the Pacific
climate cycle called the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) has shifted as of
the beginning of 2014 according to NOAA
Fisheries: the switch brings a wind pattern that warms surface
waters, causing seas near the West Coast to expand and rise according to NASA
(2015). It may bring a rapid increase in sea level rise, and one
NASA climate scientist, Josh Willis, says “we
could be in for wild ride over the next 20 years or so.”
Funding is on the
horizon
In 2016 the SF Bay Area passed Measure
AA, providing the first funding for the San Francisco Bay
Restoration Authority. While a good first step to sustained sea level rise
preparation, the funding falls far short of the need. There is some hope
(according to L. Goldzband of BCDC) that Measure AA funds could be augmented by
the 2016 Water Infrastructure
Improvements for the Nation Act (WIIN Act), which includes the Water
Resources Development Act (WRDA), providing funding for 10 pilot projects to
maximize beneficial reuse of sediment. These projects would not be subject to
the “least cost” regulation that currently poses a barrier to beneficial reuse.
ACE should announce the locations of these projects by mid-March 2017.
Sedi-Match!
In 2013 BCDC facilitated “speed dating” sessions between
dredgers and restoration project managers to see where dredged material could
be beneficially reused. This turned into the development of a simple online
tool called Sedi-Match.
It was scheduled for release in January 2017. Read more about its
development.
Rethinking fill policy
BCDC is about to launch a series of public meetings to
discuss whether the agency should change its bay fill policy to prepare for sea
level rise. If you are local to the SF Bay, you can attend these meetings
beginning on April 20, 2017, from 1-4 PM at 375 Beale St., San Francisco.
Resilient by Design
This competition—aimed at “design[ing]
solutions that protect the bayshore and mak[ing] us more resilient”—received a $4.6
million grant from the Rockefeller Foundation on January 31, 2017, and should
be ready to roll in April 2017. It is modeled after the “Rebuild by Design”
Hurricane Sandy Design Competition.
More reading
Rising
Reality, Part 4: The Shorelines (“Battle on Many Fronts”) – a
November 2016 article by the SF Chronicle’s John King from a series on the SF
Bay’s sea level rise problem.
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