If you frequent Jeffrey Reservoir south of Brady, you are aware of the dredging work that was done there last summer.
Looks like more is on the drawing board for this year. . . .
(HOLDREGE, Neb.) – The Central Nebraska Public Power and Irrigation District is making preparations for a second round of dredging at Jeffrey Lake which will begin in early May.
Last summer Central removed a large amount of sediment from the lake. Central has leased a larger dredge and will renew its efforts to improve conditions for recreation, aquatic habitat and hydropower operations. The dredged material will be moved via floating pipeline over the top of the dam at the north end of the lake and deposited inside of a containment structure partially on property owned by Central and partially on land owned by Mr. Ward David of Lubbock, Tex., who agreed to temporarily lease the property to Central for the project. Due to the presence of the dredge and the floating pipeline in the project area, the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission’s public boat ramp located in the Jeffrey Lake Wildlife Management Area on the northeast side of the lake will be out of service for about three months, beginning with project initiation on or about May 1. However, to facilitate recreational use of the lake on the Memorial Day and Fourth of July holidays, Central intends to pause the dredging project and open the boat ramp for public use on those two holidays. Jeffrey Lake, a regulating reservoir for the Jeffrey Hydroplant immediately below the lake, is located on Central’s Supply Canal about ten miles south of Brady. Since the hydro-irrigation project began operating in 1941, sediment has accumulated in the northern part of the lake, primarily between the lake’s inlet and outlet. As a result, the water is less than three feet deep over a large area, which restricts travel by boat from one end of the lake to the other, except through a narrow channel that Central has tried to maintain over the years. Gothenburg Division Manager Devin Brundage, who is overseeing the project, said, “Last year’s dredging project made significant inroads into removing the accumulated sediment. The new, larger dredge should allow us to remove even more material and further improve recreational opportunities at Jeffrey Lake.” Central hopes to have the public boat ramp back in service by the end of July. (###) |
That news release comes direct from Central Nebraska Public Power and Irrigation District.
I know that this work will be an inconvenience to anglers and boaters at Jeffrey again most of this summer. I also know from having spent some time on that reservoir that the dredging is very much needed from time to time, and it will make things better for boating, fishing, AND THE FISH. Be patient, it will be better.
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