Welcome to our new website!
Please note that for a brief period we will be offering complimentary access to the full site. No login is currently required.
If you're not yet a subscriber, click here to subscribe today, and receive a 10% discount.

Big Decisions Ahead On Haulout Planning

Posted

By SHANNON HAUGLAND

Sentinel Staff Writer

Perhaps the trickiest part of designing a new boat haulout is not just planning for today’s needs, but for the boats of the future, says Garry White, director of Sitka’s Gary Paxton Industrial Park.

“It’s having that crystal ball,” White said. “We want to make sure we’re building infrastructure that not only services our fleet, but what the future looks like. That’s going to take some analysis and investigation.”

The park board’s regular meeting last Thursday was attended by a number of commercial boat operators for the discussion of the agenda item on the haulout. In the last city election Sitka voters dedicated $8.18 million from the Sitka permanent fund for the haulout project, and advertising is underway for a project manager.

White said Thursday’s meeting was the first of many at which the haulout will be a topic at the GPIP board’s monthly meeting. 

“We had a robust discussion for about two hours,” White said. “I think the bottom line is that there’s a lot  more information that we need to obtain to make a really good decision to spend these taxpayer dollars and to make sure that we’re really building something that’s going to be successful in the future. And not ending up in any big cost adjustments that we didn’t foresee.”

The GPIP meetings are held at Harrigan Centennial Hall and are open to the public. White added that a town hall meeting will be scheduled once a project manager is hired, and more details are available. Board President Scott Wagner said he is expecting a joint work sessions will be scheduled as well with the Port and Harbors Commission.

The Thursday discussion points included consideration of the desired width and capacity of the marine haulout, upland improvements, pros and cons of possible locations, environmental concerns, existing infrastructure, and the number and location of the washdown pads needed.

“We’re going to have to help define what’s needed for infrastructure,” White said. “For instance, I think everyone’s settled that we’re going to build a 150-ton lift because it services the greatest part of the community, and that’s the goal.”

He said he’s received a number of opinions on specifications, but that in general many items, such as haulout width, will need to be investigated further.

“We don’t want to build something that the new boats coming on-line in the next 10-15 years are going to be too wide to be able to fit in the slip,” he said.

White said he has already heard about pitfalls at other operations, such as bottlenecks caused by a lack of washdown pads.

The $8.18 million in city funds for the project represent the proceeds from the city’s sale of the Sitka Community Hospital land and buildings to SEARHC.

In November the park board approved a “charter” for the project, outlining its goals and construction timeline. The city is advertising for a project manager with management, planning, design and environmental qualifications. Plans are to have a manager hired soon after the Jan. 19 deadline for applications.

“A portion of the conceptual plan will be based on the community’s wishes and needs on the capacity of the haulout infrastructure,” White said in a memo for Thursday’s GPIP board the meeting. “Information from the users of the facility will help form the basis of design for the project.”

White said the choice of the haulout location from among the available sites at the industrial park will be determined by analysis of water column depth, geotechnical investigation, ocean condition and proximity to the shipyard.

“There are a lot of environmental factors,” White said. “There’s going to be a cost associated with the different locations and costs associated with moving those boats from whatever the waterfront location is to the yard where the work will be done. What’s the distance, what are the upland improvements that are needed? Is that area going to accommodate multiple washdown pads?”

The timeline for the project calls for construction to begin in July 2024 and the haulout to be operational by February 2025.

The last marine haulout available to the public closed last year when the owner of the facility closed it to pursue tourism projects.