Record setting dredging season comes to an end

St. Louis District
Published Feb. 13, 2023
Updated: Feb. 10, 2023
The dustpan head when submerged uses waterjets to agitate the bottom of the river, loosening the dredge material and pulling it into the pipeline. With the dustpan head raised towards the surface, the waterjets are sprayed to clear out any debris. USACE photo by Janet Meredith, Public Affairs Specialist

The dustpan head when submerged uses waterjets to agitate the bottom of the river, loosening the dredge material and pulling it into the pipeline. With the dustpan head raised towards the surface, the waterjets are sprayed to clear out any debris. USACE photo by Janet Meredith, Public Affairs Specialist

The St. Louis District’s Dredge Potter assisted by the Kimmswick worked 24/7 through the 2022-23 dredging season on the Mississippi River. The Dredge Potter, built in 1932, is a dustpan dredge. The Kimmswick, commissioned in 2006, assists the dredge with pipeline movements. USACE photo by Janet Meredith, Public Affairs Specialist

The St. Louis District’s Dredge Potter assisted by the Kimmswick worked 24/7 through the 2022-23 dredging season on the Mississippi River. The Dredge Potter, built in 1932, is a dustpan dredge. The Kimmswick, commissioned in 2006, assists the dredge with pipeline movements. USACE photo by Janet Meredith, Public Affairs Specialist

Keeping a close watch at all times, Dredge operators maintain the waterways by removing sand, gravel, and rock. The St. Louis District’s Dredge Potter can move 50,000 cubic yards per day of alluvial materials from the bottom of the river. USACE photo by Janet Meredith, Public Affairs Specialist

Keeping a close watch at all times, Dredge operators maintain the waterways by removing sand, gravel, and rock. The St. Louis District’s Dredge Potter can move 50,000 cubic yards per day of alluvial materials from the bottom of the river. USACE photo by Janet Meredith, Public Affairs Specialist

Life on the river onboard the Dredge Potter requires a skillful and highly trained crew of 53 employees. During the 2022-2023 season, crews worked around the clock to maintain the 9-foot shipping channel. USACE photo by Janet Meredith, Public Affairs Specialist

Life on the river onboard the Dredge Potter requires a skillful and highly trained crew of 53 employees. During the 2022-2023 season, crews worked around the clock to maintain the 9-foot shipping channel. USACE photo by Janet Meredith, Public Affairs Specialist

An additional benefit of moving material through a pontoon pipeline or self-floating pipeline, repositions dredge material outside the navigation channel and sometimes creates sandbars needed for nesting waterfowl.  USACE photo by Janet Meredith, Public Affairs Specialist

An additional benefit of moving material through a pontoon pipeline or self-floating pipeline, repositions dredge material outside the navigation channel and sometimes creates sandbars needed for nesting waterfowl. USACE photo by Janet Meredith, Public Affairs Specialist

The Dredge Potter crew finished up an unprecedented 2022-23 season on February 1, 2023, that required tremendous teamwork to maintain the congressionally mandated nine-foot-deep, 300-foot-wide navigation channel and overcome the challenges from the widespread drought, and prolonged extreme low water that affected the Mississippi River basin.

Dredging operations moved nine million cubic yards of material, at 70 different locations along 300 miles of the St. Louis District. In total, seven dredging units -- dustpan, cutterhead and mechanical -- were working throughout the St. Louis District area of responsibility. Two other units, for a total of nine, supported Mississippi Valley Division efforts on the Mississippi River.

Normally, an average year results in three to four million cubic yards of material being moved in the St. Louis District by two dredges. In anticipation of the drought, the St. Louis District Dredging Program Manager, Lance Engle, implemented advanced measures – bringing in additional assets ahead of the forecasted lows – to maintain the congressionally authorized channel. As the extreme low water persisted month after month, closely monitored surveys were consistently reviewed in conjunction with the forecast and input from industry to determine the order and coordination of work and additional assets needed. The ability of the team to present a common operating picture through meetings, phone calls and the Navigation Conditions Status Report enabled the safe planning and shipment of waterborne commerce in support of the nation’s economy.

For reference, it would take more than 2,700 Olympic-size swimming pools to contain the nine million cubic yards of dredge material removed from the riverbed this year, compared with just 1,000 Olympic-size swimming pools in a normal season.

The St. Louis gage steadily declined from a level of +29.77 feet on May 7, 2022, to -3.87 feet on December 25, 2022. Meanwhile, the St. Louis District’s water control office worked behind the scenes to continuously monitor river levels and make gate adjustments on the district’s reservoirs and dams. Water managers constantly collected water data while monitoring numerous hydrological and meteorological factors to forecast river conditions. Strategic measures were taken when the river dropped to its lowest level releasing water from the Melvin Price to allow for additional water to avoid dropping to -6.8 feet.

 “As we continue to get more rain and snowmelt season begins, the USACE Water Control division will continue to monitor river stages to provide a safe and reliable navigation channel,” said Joan Stemler, chief, Water Control Operations. When we experience historic lows or seasonal highs, it’s always a challenge to keep commerce moving, but by constant communication, collaboration, and commitment we can increase preparedness and anticipate what conditions might arise in the future.

Day in and day out, the dredge crews kept their focus on the important mission at hand as they constantly synchronized assets and coordinated efforts to prioritize and address dredging locations before they became an issue. This proactive approach improved their operational proficiency in a highly complex ever-changing environment.

“Without navigation on the Mississippi River, there would be significant impacts to our supply chain, economy, and national security," noted Lou Dell’Orco, chief of operations and readiness.

Throughout this roller-coaster navigation season, the St. Louis District remained proud of the resiliency of the 53-member crew of the Dredge Potter, their unity of teamwork and the partnerships with other agencies and industry. 

According to Dell’Orco, “Advanced measures taken by the Dredging Product Deliver Team, dredges provided by sister districts, strategic management of low water conditions and the common operating picture that was maintained by the Corps, U.S. Coast Guard Sector Upper Mississippi River, the River Industry Action Committee and local partners resulted in maintaining the nine-foot shipping channel during extreme low water.”

“Above all, the master and crew of the Dredge Potter excelled in the delivery of the dredging mission. Their passion and pride in operating and maintaining the 90-year-old vessel was critical to the success of the mission. The next steps in the process are to conduct off season maintenance on the Dredge Potter and document lessons learned and best practices from this event to refine and improve future actions related to low water”, Dell’Orco stated.

St. Louis is the third largest inland port by tonnage, and commercial navigation thrives on the St. Louis District’s stretch of the river thanks in large part to teamwork demonstrated by the many partners, stakeholders, industry, state, and federal agencies working together.

Thank you, Dredge Potter crew, service base staff, and water control team members - your service and dedication to our nation is invaluable!