Posted on August 13, 2020
Monday’s Port of Morgan City board meeting was conducted by Zoom and in the Emergency Operations Center training room to accommodate social distancing. Shown from left are port grants manager Michael Knobloch, Executive Director Raymond “Mac” Wade and board member Lee Dragna.
One business is benefiting Tuesday from a Port of Morgan City project, and more will receive help from dredging  in late August.
 At Monday’s meeting, the port board voted to declare a $700,000  improvement project on port property leased by InterMoor to be  substantially complete. Last-minute detail work remains to be done.
 InterMoor offers methods for mooring offshore installations for oil companies and other maritime enterprises.
 The improvement of the yard at the InterMoor site was financed with a  grant from the Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development.  The grant paid for 90% of the work, and the port put up the remaining  10%.
 The work came in $5,000 under budget and was finished earlier than expected, said Bryan Breaud of Providence Engineering.
 InterMoor employs more than 100 people, port Executive Director Raymond “Mac” Wade said.
 The other project with a direct impact on local businesses is dredging  in Berwick Bay, especially on the Morgan City side where the build-up of  sediment is a particular problem.
 The dredge vessel Ingenuity, owned by Inland Dredging Co. LLC of  Dyersburg, Tennessee, will go to work in Berwick Bay late this month,  said Tim Connell of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
 The dredge will be available for 50-60 days, Connell said.
 The dredging should help businesses along the waterfront that rely on access to the water.
 Also Monday:
 —The port board heard from Connell that bids will go out in the fall for  dredging in the area near Crewboat Cut and mile 142, a key part of the  bar channel that the port hopes ships will use on the way to and from  the port.
 The ideal would be to dredge the curve near Crewboat Cut to a depth of  22 feet and 400 feet wide. But the source of funding has yet to be  identified.
 —The port board agreed to spend about $2,200 on an appraisal of property adjoining the port with an eye on a possible purchase.
 The land, which has served as the site of Eco Serv, would give the port additional waterfront of more than 900 feet.
 —The new commander of the Coast Guard’s Marine Safety Unit Morgan City,  Cmdr. Ben Russell, will take a look at how the Bayou Chene Flood Control  Project might affect this region’s piece of a major salvage project.
 Sections of the merchant vessel Golden Ray are expected to make their  way through area St. Mary waterways, including Bayou Chene, on the way  to Modern American Recycling Services Inc. on Bayou Black. MARS bills  itself as “the largest barge dismantler and offshore decommissioning  provider in the United States.”
 The Golden Ray, a 656-foot cargo ship, was carrying more than 4,000  Hyundai and Kia cars in September when it turned over on its starboard  side in St. Simons Sound, Georgia, according to media accounts.
 Four of the vessel’s crew of 23 were trapped in the wreckage for more than 30 hours before being rescued unharmed.
 The salvage work has been slowed by multiple fires, the environmental  impact of leaking oil and now by a reluctance to move the large pieces  on barges during the peak of hurricane season.
 The work has also been hampered by a COVID-19 outbreak among salvage  workers. Russell cited COVID as the reason the sections of the Golden  Ray won’t be moving through the area in October as planned.
 The $80 million Bayou Chene project, now under construction, will create  a permanent flood gate that can be closed to prevent back-water  flooding in the bayou when the Atchafalaya River runs high.
Source: stmarynow