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Army Corps And Dredging Industry Sign MOU To Improve

Maritime Activity Reports, Inc. June 4, 2021 From left: Tiffany Burroughs, Chief of Navigation, USACE; Richard Balzano, Executive Director, Dredging Contractors of America; Al Wong, Deputy Chief of Safety, USACE; Michael Gerhardt, Executive Director, CDMCS; MG William H. Graham, Deputy Commanding General for Civil and Emergency Operations, USACE; Keith Jones, Floating Plant Manager, USACE; Devon Carlock, President, CDMCS; Tom Smith, Chief of Operations and Regulatory, USACE; and Mark Atkins, Chief of Safety, USACE. (Photo: CDMS) The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) is working with industry partners to create and sustain an injury-free workplace and safety-first culture for the men and women who work in dredging and marine construction.

Steel cutting ceremony for Mike Hooks new dredger

Steel cutting ceremony for Mike Hooks’ new dredger May 14, 2021, by Eldin Ganic Kim McMahon, co-owner and daughter of founder, Mr. Mike Hooks, traveled to Southwest Shipyard in Galveston, Texas, recently to attend the Steel Cutting Ceremony for Hooks’ new dredger. McMahon, accompanied by various Hooks executives and managers, was invited to the ceremony by contractor SPI/Mobile Pulley Works to celebrate the start of construction of the 27-inch custom cutter suction dredger (CSD). As she addressed an audience of guests from Mobile Pulley, Southwest Shipyard, and Hooks’ management, McMahon formally announced that the new dredger will be named Dredge Lorraine Hooks in honor of her mother – the late matriarch of the Hooks organization.

Dredge Tender Sinks Near Matagorda Ship Channel - The Waterways Journal

Dredge Tender Sinks Near Matagorda Ship Channel - The Waterways Journal
waterwaysjournal.net - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from waterwaysjournal.net Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Bigger, Stronger: The U S Dredging Fleet Is Growing

Maritime Activity Reports, Inc. January 18, 2021 Callan Marine’s new CSD General Bradley is being built by Hagler Systems at the Halimar Shipyard in Morgan City, La. (Photo: Callan Marine) The U.S. dredging fleet is growing. Presently on order and under construction is a raft of in-demand equipment that will help to keep America’s ports and waterways open, safeguard coastal communities and maintain the vital flow of maritime commerce to, from and through the U.S. In August, Eastern Shipbuilding Group cut first steel for a new trailing suction hopper dredge (TSHD) it is building for Weeks Marine, and the keel was laid the following month at the builder’s Allanton Shipyard in Panama City, Fla. The new 6,540 cubic meter capacity dredge R.B. Weeks, ordered by the Cranford, N.J.-based marine construction and dredging contractor in April, is scheduled for delivery in early 2023. It is the second TSHD Eastern is building for Weeks Marine, following the Magdale

Channel Deepening, New Dredge Projects Made Headlines In 2020

December 31, 2020 By Frank McCormack While COVID-19 proved the dominant newsmaker for much of 2020, a steady stream of dredging and waterway announcements during the year will, hopefully, have a much more enduring and endearing impact on the maritime industry. The waterway deepening news started early in the year, with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ 2020 work plan, released February 10. The work plan, remarkably, included both funding for the first phase of deepening the Mississippi River from Baton Rouge, La., to the Gulf of Mexico to 50 feet and more than $274 million to fully fund the construction of the Mobile Harbor channel deepening project in Alabama, which will also bring that channel to 50 feet.

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