Friday, June 15, 2012

West coast state parks facing huge expense removing Japanese debris

By Chuck Woodbury
RVtravel.com

With state park budgets squeezed everywhere, the last thing the state parks of the U.S. northwest coast need is to spend their already tight dollars picking up and hauling away Japanese tsunami debris from their beaches.

The first of it has begun to show up. In Oregon, the huge Japanese dock that washed ashore at Agate Beach State Recreation Area near Newport needs to go. Already, Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife staff, paid contractors and volunteers have removed about a ton and a half of plant and animal material.

Now comes the 66-foot long, 132-ton dock itself. Six companies have bid to remove it, either in pieces and hauling it off, or towing it away. The cost: Low bid $79,922, high bid $240,000. The winning bid is expected to be announced next week.

"The cost is solely on us," said Chris Havel, spokesman for the Oregon Parks and Recreation Department. "No one else has stepped up to help out. About $20,000 was already spent on other issues before this first wave of tsunami debris began to arrive. This will decimate our budget."

The park system's biennial debris budget for debris removal is $135,000. That covers the removal of dead animals, derelict vessels, plastic and aluminum cans, buoys and other material that washes up. "We don't know if anything big like this will show up again but what we do know is that removing even the small debris will quickly overwhelm our trash systems," said Havel.

The department and other partners are working on a coast-wide plan for disposal of tsunami debris, and exploring longer term funding for the effort, but details are still in the works.

Meanwhile, other Pacific states anxiously await the arrival of the debris on their own shores. By some estimates, the area of the debris field is twice the size of Texas, some of which may be radioactive from exposure to the damaged Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear facility.

SOURCE: RVtravel.com. Permission to reprint granted as long as source is credited.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Since it belongs to or is property of Japan, shouldn't they pay or at least contribute to the cost of removal? Unless the want it back of course. :-)

--
An Oregonian

Anonymous said...

What is the downside to just leaving it there?

Anonymous said...

Was the earthquake and tsunami their fault? Haven't they suffered enough?

If we can't start thinking of all people as part of our global community, then perhaps we can look on bearing some of the cost in the spirit of American generosity.

Anonymous said...

American generosity has put us in the financial crisis we are.. If you feel the need for this spirit then donate the cost of the removal of all of this debris yourself. Why should residents of these communities suffer the burden for this removal? It is Japan's responsibility to clean up their junk. If they had built things to withstand such natural disasters then there would not be a need to clean it up!!

RV_Home said...

The US Navy should use the large debris as targets for gunnery practice before they reach shore. Then they will be much more manageable for volunteer organizations to clean up.
Why aren't the environmental groups helping with the cost?