![Braving a steady drizzle to celebrate the start of construction on the Bull Creek Ecosystem Restoration Project, partners join Los Angeles District Commander Col. Thomas Magness to turn the first shovels of dirt. (Click image to start video) Braving a steady drizzle to celebrate the start of construction on the Bull Creek Ecosystem Restoration Project, partners join Los Angeles District Commander Col. Thomas Magness to turn the first shovels of dirt. (Click image to start video)](https://webarchive.library.unt.edu/eot2008/20090109044124im_/http://www.spl.usace.army.mil/cms/images/stories/newscastle/mar2008/img_0033_sm.jpg) Braving a steady drizzle to celebrate the start of construction on the Bull Creek Ecosystem Restoration Project, partners join Los Angeles District Commander Col. Thomas Magness to turn the first shovels of dirt. (Click image to start video) On a day more appropriate for ducks than the birds the project was designed to benefit, planners and engineers turned the first symbolic shovels of dirt at the Bull Creek Ecosystem Restoration Project. When finished, the project will provide nearly 28 acres of aquatic, riparian and native upland habitat along Bull Creek for wildlife indigenous to the region. The project “offers a splendid example of the efforts the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the nation are taking to protect our valuable environmental resources,” said Col. Thomas Magness, commander of the Corps’ Los Angeles District. “This project moves toward the vision that we all share for diverse habitat, right here in an urban environment.”
The $6.6 million project will excavate an oxbow or “C”-shaped side channel to create an island around which Bull Creek will flow. It will construct bridges to provide pedestrian and maintenance access and connect to pedestrian trails on both sides of the creek. The bridges, along with other interpretive nodes, will serve as overlooks into habitat areas and offer educational opportunities. Speaking to the people whose efforts led to the project, city councilman Tony Cardenas said, “Here’s a place where I can bring my children and show them another wonderful project that you all brought together.” While a steady drizzle fell throughout the ground breaking ceremony, speakers told of the upcoming transformation to a viable, productive habitat.
Michael Tou, spokesman for U.S. Rep. Brad Sherman, who has been an ardent supporter of this and other Corps projects, said, “What you’ll see is a complete restoration of the Bull Creek area, an amazing destination for thousands of families and their children to learn, to play and to enjoy the great outdoors.” Magness took the opportunity to highlight National Engineers Week during his comments, specifically to encourage young people to pursue it as a career. “Nowadays, young people are opting out of being engineers at a young age,” he said. He said many children stop taking math at an early age, and without it, they will never be qualified to be an engineer. “Encourage them to stay in the mathematics programs, the science programs,” he said, “and show them what engineers can do to be a part of the solution to make our communities better.” The efforts of those who planned, designed and will construct the environmental improvements at Bull Creek will result in better communities for both humans and wildlife who will visit it in the future. |