I tried to share this article with you because if you live anywhere in the world and come to California and expect to drive from Monterey to Morro Bay, or anywhere in between this affects your journey on Highway 1 in California through Big Sur. However, the software is very unusual so I displayed it the best I could here:
begin quote from:
1 day ago ... ... slide from Highway 1 in Big Sur, one of the biggest problems is: Where will the
coastal commission let them put all that dirt? ... more preview.
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TRUSTED BY LOCALS AND LOVED BY VISITORS SINCE
1915
Volume 103 No. 22 On the Internet:
www.carmelpinecone.com
June 2 - 8, 2017
What will coastal commission say about the dirt?
n
By land or by sea, a mountain’s worth
of slide debris needs new home
By CHRIS COUNTS
W
ILL BULLDOZER operators be able to use
their heavy equipment to push the countless tons of
rocks and dirt that block Highway 1 at Mud Creek into
the sea? Or will they need to fill up a parade of dump
trucks and transport the material elsewhere — just as
they were required to do nearby in 2011?
The answer to this question could have a big impact
on when the scenic route will be open again from
Cambria to Carmel.
“We had a meeting with local stakeholders, and
they asked a similar question,” Susana Cruz of
Caltrans reported this week. “We’re still investigating,
and we’ve started talking to the California Coastal
Commission about it.
The coastal commission, the state’s powerful land
use watchdog agency, has previously required that the
debris from slides be trucked away to locations where
it will supposedly have less impact on the environ-
ment. The mountains along the coast are relentlessly
eroding into the sea, but environmentalists often argue
that humans shouldn’t accelerate the process by mov-
ing the debris left by landslides downhill more quickly
than Mother Nature would. But trucking material long dis-
tances has its own environmental costs, if only because the
trucks will use a massive amount of gasoline.
Coastal commission planner Mike Watson told The Pine
Cone it is too early to say if the rocks and dirt will need to go
By MARY SCHLEY
PHOTO/MICHAEL TROUTMAN, DMT IMAGING
The Mud Creek slide has added 13 acres to the California coastline and
perplexed officials who wonder how they will dispose of so much debris
β
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elsewhere, but he conceded doing so might not be viable
because there aren’t enough sites nearby to dump all the
material. “It’s probably impracticable to cart it all off,”
Watson said.
In 2011, road crews working on the much smaller Alder
Creek slide were required to truck the material they cleared
from the roadway to dump sites about four miles to the north,
and about one mile to the south. Some Big Sur residents,
though, pointed out the irony of using so much heavy equip-
ment and gasoline to avoid harming the environment.
Before a decision is made about how to dispose of the
debris from the Mud Creek slide, Watson said more studies
need to be completed — including some using a drone, and
others done underwater by divers.
“We’re still trying to figure out how big the slide is,”
Watson added. “We don’t know what our options are yet.
Once we have all the information, I imagine we’ll have a dis-
cussion. We’ll get together with all the agencies and the
county, and we’ll make a decision together.”
The scenic route at Mud Creek has been closed since
heavy rains triggered the slide in February. Last month, offi-
cials conceded the situation had become much worse as the
slide continued to move. On May 20, it suffered an immense
collapse that buried a quarter-mile of roadway and added 13
acres to the California shoreline, according to USCS. At the
moment, there’s no timetable for reopening the highway —
and the timetable gets longer and longer as officials ponder what to do. |
To the best of my ability I write about my experience of the Universe Past, Present and Future
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