Army Corps praised for efforts

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U.S. Sen Dick Durbin, D-Ill., is helped onto a boat to watch the removal of rock pinnacles on the Mississippi River Monday in Thebes. Durbin was getting a firsthand look at the urgent efforts to clear the Mississippi River bedrock that’s crimping shipping. The rock-clearing effort is considered vital in ensuring that stretch of river remains open to barge traffic. (AP)
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ST. LOUIS (AP) – Shippers who have idled towboats and lightened barge loads as the Mississippi River shrinks from drought credit the waterway’s stewards for so far averting their worst fear: a potentially crippling shutdown of the artery used to move everything from corn and grain to construction materials and petroleum.

Barge operators still are being squeezed financially because of restrictions on the waterway. But “the Army Corps of Engineers has done a great job of pulling rabbits out of their hat” by scrambling to rid one crucial river stretch of treacherous bedrock while strategically releasing water from lakes into the Mississippi to raise the river, said Rick Calhoun, president of Cargo Carriers, Cargill Inc.’s shipping arm with 1,300 barges.

“We believed it was an oncoming crisis, and by hook and by crook it hasn’t gotten as bad as we thought,” he added. “That’s great news.”

Barge industry trade groups had been critical of the corps, warning that the river soon could close after the agency cut the flow of the Missouri River into the Mississippi amid the worst U.S. drought in decades. The corps rebuffed the industry’s pleas that the flow from a South Dakota dam be restored, saying the pullback was needed to protect interests on the upper Missouri.

To compensate, the corps rushed in contractors in December – two months ahead of schedule – to clear limestone from the Mississippi’s bottom near Thebes, Ill., where increasing shallowness made the jagged bedrock more precarious for vessels.

The corps and barge operators agree that the rock removal is working, though not without some inconvenience for shippers. Barge traffic at that stretch is now limited to an eight-hour window each day, causing bottlenecks and slowing transit times of cargo.

Shipping groups have warned that if the waterway there were to drop to a point in which barge weight restrictions were further tightened, shipping would effectively stop.

Drafts, or the portion of each barge that is submerged, already are limited to 9 feet in the middle Mississippi, down from 12 feet. Trade group officials say that if drafts are restricted to 8 feet or lower, many operators will stop shipping.

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