Here's the update he provided on the current situation:
"Crews are working right now to isolate the source of the failure. They are capping lines and then testing them. We are working to re-open on Saturday, if all goes well. That's the temp fix. The long-term fix will be months away if we receive emergency funding. We have submitted a funding request up to HQ USACE. There is a queue of tows, about 10, awaiting passage, many hauling coal. "
Then I asked about the permanent outage in the auxiliary lock. People have spent all year talking about the possibility of a major failure at Emsworth and Montgomery, which are a couple of decades older than New Cumberland. New Cumberland, along with Greenup, was one of the first all-new locks and dams to be built in the 1950s. His reply:
"The auxiliary chamber is closed due to the condition of lock miter gates. The gates have severe structural cracks that prevent the gates from being operated in a safe manner. The cracks are so extensive and severe that the gates cannot be economically repaired and must be replaced. Funds are not currently available to fabricate new gates and replace the deteriorated gates. The service design life for a navigation project is 50 years. These gates were likely placed in the late 1950s. The request for emergency funds will not include funds for the auxiliary chamber."
Hawk said photos of the situation at New Cumberland will be posted on the Pittsburgh District's Flickr page.
Hawk said photos of the situation at New Cumberland will be posted on the Pittsburgh District's Flickr page.
3 comments:
I had not heard about this! It's funny how something so important to commerce and industry goes unmentioned in the media.
It's been a big deal in the media from Pittsburgh to Wheeling, but scarcely mentioned elsewhere. I guess editors don't see it as a local story. It should be one here in Huntington, as two Marathon boats have or had been stuck above the locks waiting to return to Catlettsburg. But apparently it wasn't.
Amen!! to Granny Sue
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