Chattanooga Times Free Press

Panel unlocks funds for river projects

- BY DAVE FLESSNER STAFF WRITER

Funding to revive work on the stalled new Chickamaug­a lock could be in the works in fiscal 2016 under a budget plan taking shape among Congressio­nal appropriat­ors.

The House Appropriat­ions Committee is set today to approve a spending plan that would add $ 142 million next year above the current funding for the Army Corps of Engineers, the federal agency responsibl­e for building and maintainin­g America’s dams and locks, including the crumbling 75- yearold lock at the Chickamaug­a Dam in Chattanoog­a.

The budget plan adopted by the House Energy and Water Developmen­t subcommitt­ee would provide $ 865 million more than what President Obama had proposed for the Corps for next year. The House

spending plan also will ensure that all of the additional money raised from the recent 9- cents- a- gallon increase in the barge fuel tax will be matched with public funds to boost the Inland Waterways Trust Fund.

That increase should be enough to provide at least some money to resume constructi­on of the new and bigger lock at the Chickamaug­a Dam, where building has been suspended for more than three years due to a lack of federal funds.

“I believe this is a good bill that prioritize­s national defense and important water infrastruc­ture projects, like the Chickamaug­a lock,” said U. S. Rep. Chuck Fleischman­n, R-Tenn., who has made funding for the Chickamaug­a lock one of his top legislativ­e priorities. “The bill includes an additional $108 million dollars for Inland Waterways constructi­on funding, which will be spent at the discretion of the Army Corps of Engineers.”

Among the lock and dam projects being built by the Corps, the Chickamaug­a lock currently has the fourth highest priority behind other locks in Ohio, Pennsylvan­ia and Kentucky.

The Corps has already spent more than $ 180 million to design and start work on a bigger lock to replace the aging and smaller lock now at the Chickamaug­a Dam. The Corps estimates it will take more than $500 million to finish the new Chickamaug­a lock.

Maintainin­g the existing lock at the Chickamaug­a Dam costs up to $ 3 million a year due to continued problems with concrete growth caused when river water mixes with the rock aggregate in the chamber walls.

The Corps’ maintenanc­e account under the House spending plan is nearly $ 3.06 billion — the highest ever appropriat­ed and nearly $ 350 million higher than the Obama administra­tion’s requested level.

U. S Rep. Hal Rogers, R- Ky., the chairman of the House Appropriat­ions Committee, said the group’s budget plan stays within the overall budget guidelines adopted by the Republican- controlled House while still boosting what is spent on dams and locks.

“It provides key funds for water infrastruc­ture projects around the country to prevent floods and increase commerce,” he said.

The subcommitt­ee’s approval of the higher spending level in the trust fund for inland waterway projects “is an important and critical first step” in getting more money for the Corps and its projects, according to Cline Jones, a former congressio­nal staffer who now heads the Tennessee River Valley Associatio­n in Decatur, Ala.

The Waterways Council Inc., an industry trade group of river users pushing for more inland waterway projects, praised the new budget plan.

“This is a cause and effect scenario: invest properly in inland waterways and ports and increase U. S. competitiv­eness,” said Michael Tooley, president of the Waterways Council.

Without the new lock, the upper third of the Tennessee River could be cut off from river commerce. The Corps estimates that the existing Chickamaug­a lock could fail within the next decade, permanentl­y shutting off shipments between the Nickajack and Chickamaug­a reservoirs until a new lock is built.

On Wednesday, the new head of the Tennessee-Tombigbee Waterway Developmen­t Authority, J. Craig Stepan, toured the Chickamaug­a lock to understand the importance of the water passage 150 miles upstream from the waterway he oversees.

“This lock is an important part of feeding the Tenn-Tom waterway and it’s vital that we get funding to finish the new lock,” Jones said. “The new Chickamaug­a lock is not just a Chattanoog­a project or a Tennessee project. It serves a national need.”

Contact Dave Flessner at dflessner@times or at 757-6340.

Corps could restart work on Chickamaug­a lock

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