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Ecology and salmon related articles

Coast Guard Cleaning Up 'River Queen,'
Other Derelict Boats on Columbia

by Keely Chalmers
KGW, June 6, 2017

Coast Guard responders from Sector Columbia River Incident Management Division begin a proactive cleanup effort of the barge Multnomah, which is moored at a site along the Columbia River, Goble, Ore., Feb. 2, 2016. The Coast Guard opened the Oil Spill Liability Fund to remove hazardous materials, from the Multnomah a 265-foot barge, in order to mitigate a substantial threat to the environment. GOBLE, Ore. -- State and federal agencies have started cleaning up a site along the Columbia River that's been mooring derelict boats for years.

One of those boats is the old "River Queen," which used to be a popular Portland restaurant.

Clay Jonak leased the site near Goble in 2012 to restore the ferry.

Officials said he brought in another two dozen vessels over the years. Three of them ended up sinking.

According to the U.S. Coast Guard, two of the boats required emergency cleanups.

Following a two-year effort to address pollution concerns, the state of Oregon took control of the site last week, and with the help of the Coast Guard, is now cleaning it up, removing hazardous materials like asbestos, lead paint and fuel.

It was a move Georgia Ray has been waiting years for.

"I've watched that thing rot in the river for a long time now and God only knows what's under it or what's come down river from it too," she said.

Ray lives just downriver from the site.

She said she's worried not only about her community, but also about the fish and other creatures that live in the river there.

But others disagree.

Roy Wall has worked at the Goble Landing for three years.

He says any problems the site caused in the past have been cleaned up.

"I have never seen anything come down here, other than normal debris that's on the river. No oil, no gas, no asbestos pieces, no junk floating down the river. Just normal river debris," he said.

Jonak said he had tried to move the derelict vessels over the years, but because of current state regulations, he was unable to do it.

According the Coast Guard, crews have cleaned up 1,200 pounds of hazardous materials in just last five days

They have also pumped off ten thousand gallons of oily water mixture and burned off 14 containers of propane.

They say it will take about two weeks to remove the hazardous materials. After that, the Oregon Department of Lands will take over the site, removing any remaining vessels and restoring the area.

Related Pages:
Pollution Threat: Site Lease Terminated Near Goble by Cody Mann, The Chronicle, 5/15/17
Owner of Boat that Sank in Columbia River Convicted of Abandoning Vessel, Pollution by Associated Press, Daily Journal, 8/8/14
AG Ferguson Secures Derelict Vessel Conviction in Benton Co. by Dan Thesman, KVEW, 8/7/14
Bret Simpson, Scrap Dealer Who Botched Salvage of Barge Davy Crockett, Fined $405,000 by Scott Learn, The Oregonian, 1/28/13
Derelict Vessel Owner Ordered to Pay More Than $1 Million for Columbia River Oil Spill by Bonnie Stewart, Oregon Public Broadcasting, 1/28/13
Barge Owner Guilty of Polluting Columbia River by Associated Press, KGW, 7/12/12
WA Scrap Dealer Pleads Guilty in Botched Salvage of Barge Davy Crockett by Scott Learn, The Oregonian, 7/12/12
Governors Unite to Remove Derelict Vessels from Columbia by Rachel La Corte, Bend Bulletin, 7/1/12
Cleanup of Derelict Barge Davy Crockett on Columbia River Nearly Complete by Scott Learn, The Oregonian, 8/23/11
Davy Crockett One of Many Dilapidated Vessels on the Columbia by Kristian Foden-Vencil, Oregon Public Broadcasting, 2/3/11


Keely Chalmers
Coast Guard Cleaning Up 'River Queen,' Other Derelict Boats on Columbia <-- Watch at Orginal Site.
KGW, June 6, 2017

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