hose
of you who dock your boats at the city owned N.P.
Dodge Park Marina
will probably never
forget just how frustrated you felt last August when low water
levels on the Missouri River forced the city into installing a
temporary earthen dam to protect the floating docks from being
destroyed.
Hundreds of boaters were basically in a lock-down
facility for 3 weeks while they watched other
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An earthen dam was used to coffer water in Omaha's N.P.
Dodge Park marina during mid-summer low Missouri river water
levels in 2003. |
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boats travel
leisurely up and down the river. The annual River Thunder Poker
Run, which is based out of Dodge Park, had to be canceled although
the party still continued
at the pavilion.The good news is - this may never have to
happen again, thanks to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service who
recently approved a $930,692 grant to help fund projects at the
marina. The money will be used to help the marina provide
docking facilities for up to 40 transient boats and construct a
system of locks that will allow access to and from the marina
during low water conditions. Boats will go into a holding area in
which the water level can be raised for those entering the marina
or lowered for those going out into the river. Apparently, the
grant money came as quite a surprise to the Omaha Parks and
Recreation Department. A grant proposal was written last year by
Gene Zuerlein from the Nebraska Game
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The annual River Thunder Poker Run, which is based out of Dodge Park, had to be canceled although the party still continued at the pavilion. |
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and Parks Commission and W.
Don Nelson, a staff member of U.S. Senator Ben Nelson. The Fish
and Wildlife Service ended its Boating Infrastructure Grants
program after it could only fund one project last year, then
suddenly congress authorized additional funds.With so many
projects left uncompleted, the Fish and Wildlife Service decided
to re-evaluate and prioritize each of them, choosing to fund only
four around the entire country. Dodge Park Marina was one of them. The
grant money will be given to the Nebraska Game and Parks
Commission who will then turn the money over to the city of Omaha
to be used for improvements at the marina. More funds will be
needed to complete the project, although it is not known exactly
how much yet. A lot of engineering will need to done before the
lock system can be put into place but this will be something so
unique that people will travel from all over just to see it work.
Hopefully boaters will never find themselves dry-docked again
during what is already a very short boating season here in the
Midwest.
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