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Collapse Issue 454 - 24 Sep 2018Issue 454 - 24 Sep 2018
Collapse  NEWS NEWS
Council does not have $1.2M to start dredging program
Service NSW hub 'still not open'
Express services to be doubled during peak periods
Mayor joins campaign to replace level crossing
Group starts campaign against over-development
Proposal to build six units
Three townhouses proposed to replace single dwelling
Plans may have to change
Association objects to Killcare Heights fencing
Dredging program to cost $2.45 million
Residents disappointed by lack of information
Emergency dredging 'a failure to date' - Mehrtens
Work with nature and science to keep costs down - CEN
Accident blamed on 'unsuitable wharf'
Tesch petition for Woy Woy wharf upgrade
Software company wins interest-free loan
Funding for outdoor water park
Change of code may stop public addressing council
Is Peninsula is the worst heat sink on the Coast?
School holiday activities to be held on Peninsula
Woytopia to be held on October 14
Peninsula's water and sewerage prices may drop
Local conservationist seeks election to national body
Marine Watch holds final meeting
Proposal to review Council facilities management
Meander at Warrah Trig
Free movie at Umina cafe
Former exchange student to speak at youth night
Red Carpet Day declared a success
'Pop-up' garden space with free activities
Council to consider local procurement policy
Poetry competition opens
Brigades promote awareness ahead of fire season
Evening honours fire fighters
Celebrating 60 years in business in Woy Woy
Collapse  FORUM FORUM
Remembrance Day service will be held as usual
DCP that does not control is no improvement
Chambers Place flats are poorly sited
Why is MP being denied Crown Lands list?
A mobile phone is now a must
Council has not done enough
Change the date
Collapse  HEALTH HEALTH
Bone density scans
Hospital licensed to provide Parkinson's program
Hospital announces three new doctors
Second donation buys second tilt recliner chair
Collapse  ARTS ARTS
Theatre production to support autism school
Inside the Square art show
Annual craft exhibition is being planned
Art fair to be held at Patonga
Horsfield Bay artists exhibits in Patonga
Battlefield Ban return to Troubadour
Jazz in the Arboretum coincides with art exhibition
Craft centre condition impresses council, says president
Collapse  EDUCATION EDUCATION
College student sets State athletics records
Breakfast club at Woy Woy
Before and after-school care at Umina
Umina wins debating in local division
Kindergarten students visit college farm
Fun run to raise money for school
Sensory garden at Pretty Beach
Kindergarten orientation starts
Life savers talk about beach safety
Schools celebrate administrative and support staff
Students meet newest Prime Minister
Woy Woy team wins science competition
Collapse  SPORT SPORT
Medals in board riding
Bridge club raises $2000 for women's refuge
Wicks tells parliament of Bunnies under-10s
Roosters claim premiership
Under-19s miss out on rugby union premiership
Come and try water polo

Work with nature and science to keep costs down - CEN

Keeping the Ettalong channel navigable and controlling erosion from Ettalong to Ocean Beach would be a $100,000-a-year job if those in charge simply worked with nature.

That is the opinion of Community Environment Network chair Mr John Asquith.

"There are many opinions being expressed about the channel and most of them are by people who do not understand the science of coastal geomorphology, coastal engineering and how the system works," Mr Asquith said.

"The sand that is in the channel, whether it is at Wagstaffe, or the current deposit off Little Box Head is continually moving," he said.

"It moves roughly in a figure eight, which is how scientists have explained it to me, and where it comes from is Ettalong Beach.

"It comes off the western shore, gets cut out by the outgoing tide, and gets into that system of moving around," Mr Asquith said.

As a result the navigation channel develops two major pinch points over time, one adjacent to Wagstaffe and the off Little Box Head.

"If you don't put that sand back on Ettalong Beach when you dig the channel out, nature will still take sand off Ettalong Beach."

In other words, according to John Asquith, sand will end up back in the channel, no matter how much money is spent on dredging.

"We live in a continually changing and dynamic environment.

"Nothing is static around us.

"The solution is not to make it worse because the estuary management plan for Brisbane Water recognised this pattern exists.

"What we've got to do is keep the channel navigable at the pinch points.

"We dig that out, but what we have got to do is put it back on Ettalong Beach.

"If we work with nature, we won't have erosion at Ettalong Beach because we will put the sand back where it came from.

"The second thing that is going on, and Ocean Beach is one that I have looked at closely, is erosion.

"Ocean Beach gets cut away in storms, as all beaches along the NSW Coast do, and the thing that saves them is the dune vegetation behind them, because that slows the cut out during a big storm.

"That sand gets taken offshore and that is the bar you see sitting off the beach.

"That is the sand that has been taken off the dunes and put out there.

"Again it is part of a circular system and we have got to put it back.

"There are ways of doing that, they involve using machinery if you want to accelerate it.

"That sand during normal oceans will get slowly brought back into the inter-tidal zone.

"So what you do is beach scraping, where that sand, because it has been delivered by the water, is pushed up the beach to the dune.

"Water is powerful. Wind is nowhere near is strong.

"So you scrape that sand, push it up there and nature will use water to take a bit more of that offshore sand and dump it and about six months later you will need to come back to scrape it again.

"If we worked with nature, annual dredging would be a $100,000-a-year job, everyone would have navigation and nature would continue to play its games with the sand."

Mr Asquith said he had been having conversations with local parliamentarians and Central Coast Council about his understanding of Broken Bay system.

"Council has good scientists working for them but they get overpowered by people with dogmatic views who have no expertise in the area what so ever," he said.





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