Three case studies are described, providing the project locations and background, to gain a better understanding of the circumstances surrounding the need to develop the dredged material beneficial use alternatives.
3.1. Case Study 1: Dog Beach, Greenwood, and Lee Street Beaches (Evanston, IL, USA)
Waukegan Harbor is a Federal navigation harbor located in Waukegan, Illinois, USA, where dredging occurs on the western shore of Lake Michigan. It is in the Advance Maintenance Area, an adjacent federal harbor, that dredging occurs to form a basin where littoral sand is deposited before it settles in the federal channel. The primary purpose of dredging is to support the economic viability of the Waukegan Harbor. An additional need is to protect and restore Illinois’ public Lake Michigan shoreline. The actions are driven by several municipalities, including the City of Evanston. The role of the USACE and municipal authorities is to leverage local resources to address Lake Michigan shoreline issues to be sustainable and cost-effective. One effort is to build a regional sand management network to manage and protect Illinois’ public shoreline.
Dredged material will be placed at Lee Street Beach, Greenwood Street Beach, and Dog Beach in Evanston, IL (
Figure 2). The alternatives to use the dredged material are shown in
Table 1. One option is to place sand at the littoral zone to prevent shoreline erosion and another is for it to be placed on-beach with hydraulic dredging. The former will enhance nearly 54,560 square yards of the beaches, parks, and open space communities [
4]. These actions can support the local economy, outdoor recreation, and key infrastructure. These beaches are typically used recreationally for swimming and sunbathing, and are available to residents and non-residents of Evanston.
There are additional opportunities for restoring and protecting critical habitat for a variety of critical species including the federally-listed Piping plover and Pitcher’s thistle. An Environmental Assessment was conducted under the Chicago District’s authority to operate and maintain the Waukegan Harbor federal navigation. The environmental assessment found that no significant adverse impacts were anticipated as a result of placing dredged sand from Waukegan Harbor upland. USACE [
5] also held that there are no significant potential effects to air quality, navigation, noise levels, and water quality and all other interests such as aquatic resources, fish and wildlife, floodplains, hydrology, environmental justice, soils, and climate change would remain unaffected by the action. There were several historic fish collections made within the vicinity of these beaches and approximately 24 species of birds observed at Greenwood Street Beach. As of the 2020 census, Evanston had a racially and ethnically diverse population of 73,473 people. The median age of residents was 34.3 years, the median household income was
$78,904, and the median home price in Evanston was
$391,400 [
6].
In terms of toxicity, the dredged material in Waukegan Harbor indicates no detectable levels of PCBs. This is because a large source of the dredged material is sand transported along the Lake Michigan shoreline rather than coming from the inner harbor. There are concerns by the surrounding population over the possibility of contamination in the dredged material from the outer harbor, approach channel, and advanced maintenance area. It is a common misconception that hydraulically dredged material is contaminated.
3.2. Case Study 2: New York/New Jersey Harbor (New York, NY, USA)
The project is located on a harbor on the east coast of the United States [
7,
8,
9]. The project area lies in between New York and New Jersey. The Port of New York/New Jersey (
Figure 3) is extremely important to the economy, providing 229,000 jobs through industrial and commercial shipping. Annually, the port sees more than 1.7 million loaded containers a year, with that number constantly increasing every year. With all the ship activity in the harbor, it is necessary to keep the harbor from creating too much sediment buildup in the harbor floor. Therefore, dredging is a necessity to keep the cargo moving in and out of the port [
7].
The Harbor Deepening Project had the depth of the harbor floor increasing from about 19 feet below the low tide water elevation to 50 feet throughout the channels connecting to the harbor and the harbor itself. This was accomplished in order to provide adequate clearance for big vessels. The total estimated volume of dredged material from the project was 42.5 million cubic yards. The plan to manage the dredged material was called the dredged material management plan (DMMP) that was developed by USACE. The plan called for testing the dredged material to determine the best place for disposal.
The dredged material was expected to be largely unacceptable for open ocean disposal due to the fact that the harbor has been utilized since before strict environmental regulations were enacted. A large portion of the dredged material from the harbor deepening project cannot be disposed of in the ocean because of the contaminants in it. These contaminants include: polychlorinated biphenyls (PCB’s), polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), polychlorinated dibenzofurans (PCDFs, or furans), polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins (PCDDs, or dioxins), and heavy metals. Since ocean disposal was not an option, other dredged material disposal methods were required to be considered.
Prior to the Harbor Deepening Project, the constant dredging of the harbor due to maintenance had the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey (PANY/NJ) and USACE searching for several ways to dispose of the dredged material. The estimated yearly maintenance volume was around 4–6 million cubic yards of dredged material. The material that met the requirements at the time for open ocean disposal was dumped into a 2.2 square mile area in the ocean, 7 nautical miles off the coast of Sandy Hook, New Jersey. This dumping area was named the Mud Dump. It is estimated that over 63 years (from 1914 to 1977) 200 million cubic yards were discarded in the Mud Dump.
Over the years, the effects of dioxin bioaccumulation were evident specifically in worm tissue, since most of the dredged material from the harbor was contaminated. The Mud Dump was de-authorized and covered up with dredged material that met the regulations to not surpass Category 1. Category 1 consists of allowable toxicity and bioaccumulation amounts determined by USACE and USEPA. Nineteen square miles of surrounding area was designated a historical remediation site (HARS). This is where 40 million cubic yards of suitable dredged material was used to remediate the originally dumped contaminated dredged material.
With a massive amount of dredged material contaminated and not suitable for open ocean disposal, another solution was drawn up by the Port Authority of NY/NJ. This solution consisted of moving the contaminated material across the country to Utah and dumping it on land. This solution became very short term because of the cost to transport it, costing $118 per yard of dredged material.
An alternative solution was to build a confined disposal facility to hold the contaminated dredged material in Newark Bay within the New Jersey border. The disposal facility consisted of a 17-acre area of the bay, 70 feet deep. This created a massive amount of contaminated dredged material (1.4 million cubic yards) which was disposed of in the Mud Dump before it was de-authorized. The rest of the material taken out during the construction of the Newark Bay Confined Disposal Facility (NBCDF) was used to cover the mud dump to keep the contaminated material isolated. The clay was within the Category 1 guidelines.
After the Newark Bay Confined Disposal Facility was finished, it was calculated that the disposal of dredged material was more cost efficient than sending the material to Utah. The cost of disposal came down to $29 per cubic yard. This cost was calculated solely to recover from the costs of construction.
Another solution to dredged material was the use of it with Portland cement [
8]. OENJ Corporation came up with the idea to implement the dredged material with cement, this combination proved to be structurally sound. This solution to disposal of dredged material was used to create a parking lot for the Jersey Gardens Mall in Elizabeth, New Jersey (1997). This project used over 800,000 cubic yards of dredged material. This method of disposal costs about
$30–
$40 per cubic yard.
Dredging is a necessity for the New Jersey/New York Harbor, however the effects of dredging and its disposal are not always accepted by all. Simply disposing of the contaminated dredged material in the ocean or constructing a disposal facility may not be enough. Residents of these areas have the ‘not in my backyard’ approach to these solutions for fear of possible contamination, an unsightly view, or the effect on property values. The mud dump, before it was remediated, was affecting wildlife in the surrounding area. The NBCDF reached capacity and is still being monitored. Other uses for dredged material such as utilizing it in the mall parking lot in New Jersey created jobs, and tax revenue that ultimately benefited the community [
9,
10,
11].
Different methods were utilized for the disposal of dredged material throughout the lifetime of the port. However, for the purpose of this study, the focus was on the following alternatives: no action, bathymetric recontouring, and landfill and brownfield remediation. The different costs for disposal utilizing these alternative methods are shown in
Table 2.
3.3. Case Study 3: Poplar Island (Chesapeake Bay)
The Chesapeake Bay faces serious problems due to human activities such as polluted stormwater runoff, pollution from animal wastes, deforestation, wetland destruction from agricultural, urban, and suburban development, and sea level rise being caused by global climate change. Poplar Island is located in the Chesapeake Bay and is being affected by these issues. Back in 1847, the island occupied more than one thousand acres of land and by 1996, Poplar Island was reduced to less than four acres. With the island eroding fast, collaborative efforts by federal, state, and private organizations were initiated to restore it. This collaborative team consisted of the Maryland Port Administration (MPA), the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE), and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS). Though the collaboration from various organizations initiated, it was the MPA’s Dredged Material Management Program that undertook the restoration of Poplar Island (MPA 2015).
In March 1998, Poplar Island began restoration activities with the construction of containment dikes in two phases. The first phase used 640 acres at a cost of
$59 million for the first 2 years. The second phase, during the following three to five years, with 500 acres at a cost of
$45 million. Since the initiation of the project, Poplar Island has been Maryland’s primary site to reuse sediment dredged from the channels leading to the Port of Baltimore. To maintain current widths and depths, MPA says nearly five million cubic yards of sediment are dredged from these channels every year. All that sediment has allowed the port administration and the US Army Corps of Engineers to restore the island back to its original size. The dredged material from the rivers that flow into the Chesapeake Bay is a source of a constant supply of sediment including fine silts, which settles into the shipping channels. Routine maintenance dredging occurs to keep the shipping channels safe for ship passage and the Port of Baltimore economically viable [
12,
13,
14,
15].
Poplar Island is now home to hundreds of species of wildlife and waterfowl. According to the USEPA, this project used 40 million cubic yards of dredged materials, which would create 1140 acres of remote wildlife habitat; half of which was wetlands, while the other half was uplands. Wildlife highlights include a total of 224 species of birds that have been identified at the project site, including 34 nesting species (Walburn 2021, USACE et al., 2021). The pre-construction and September 2011 aerial images can be seen in
Figure 4.
The MPA’s Dredged Material Management Program is a 20 year long planned cycle. This planning encompasses collaboration on specific projects through three committees: execution, management, and citizens. Participants on each committee include federal and state natural resource management agencies, local governments, transportation agencies, conservation organizations, and citizens. These participants are then invited to publicly participate about specific proposals. Those proposals are then assigned to work groups encompassed by professionals from those participating agencies. The purpose of the intensive involvement by stakeholders is to identify concerns related to the project design. As planning progresses, participants discuss and negotiate project objectives. For example, with the Poplar Island project there were negotiations about the percentage of the island that should serve as wetlands.
To rank projects in order of priority, MPA and other stakeholders use structured decision making involving criteria definition, economic and environmental decision matrices, and fatal flaw analysis. Members from the three committees participate in the development and implementation of decision making tools and procedures. This process yields a short list of options. After evaluating potential projects, committees select and carry out projects that mutually fulfill beneficial goals for the involved parties as in the case of the restoration of Poplar Island.
Although the Popular Island project is completed, engineers are still planning on the next island restoration project using dredged sediment. MPA and USACE are in the process of a pre-construction phase for a new “Mid-Chesapeake Bay Island Ecosystem Restoration”. This project will restore James and Barren islands and eventually replace Poplar Island as the source for dredged sediment from Maryland’s shipping channels. The organization and decision making tools used for the Poplar will be adopted and used in similar projects in the future. MPA Secretary, Greg Slater says, “Our experience working with the Army Corps of Engineers at Poplar Island gives us great optimism for what we can accomplish together at Mid-Chesapeake Bay” (Viviano 2021). The process of having a collaborative effort developing decision making tools and procedures is beneficial to the project itself, but also the relationship between stakeholders.