Sunday, May 6, 2001
By JAN BARRY
Staff Writer - THE RECORD
Hidden amid a floating mat
of branches and soda bottles on the Passaic River near the New Jersey
Performing Arts Center in Newark was a boater's nightmare: a thick
beam bristling with rusted spikes.
But before it could gut a
rowing scull or tear propellers off a fishing boat, the 25-foot-long
hazard was swept up by an ungainly looking skimmer boat.

TrashCat™ clearing debris on the Passaic
River
One of North Jersey's
latest weapons in the war on pollution, the S.V. Newark Bay is a
50-foot pontoon boat that gulps all sorts of flotsam, from plastic
bags to pieces of piers, on stainless-steel conveyor belts and into an
open hold that can stomach six tons of trash.
The skimmer boat, operated
by the regional Passaic Valley Sewerage Commissioners, is a welcome
sight to Tom Curry, who rows a racing scull out of the Nereid Boat
Club in Rutherford.
Curry will never forget
the day last November when his oar hit a floating log off Lyndhurst,
flipping him into the icy river and slimy bottom mud.
"It's not a pleasant
experience," Curry said last week after a vigorous, early-morning
row. The tumble into the water was bad enough, but he also noted,
"If it [a log] hits your hull, it would do some damage."
"It's like night and
day, when they've been out there," he said of the skimmer boat.
"These guys are doing a phenomenal job."
Dave Smith, who operates a
marina for small boats in Newark, agrees. "I think these guys are
doing a hell of a job," he said. "It's better than it
was."
Eyeing a tree branch
floating past on the outgoing tide, Smith said he'd like to see a
bigger boat that could take out more debris. After rainstorms, he
said, trees and logs are swept downstream, sometimes jamming into his
dock.

SV Newark Bay's Three-Man Crew
Skimming the Waters
On the skimmer boat, the
crew talked about impending delivery of a second boat that will enable
it to collect more trash. Designed to go under lower bridges than the
13-foot-high Newark Bay can, the second boat will allow sweeping
operations as far up river as the Dundee Dam in Clifton and Garfield,
said Bob DeVita, supervisor of the river restoration program.
Shakeout cruises last year
collected 70 tons of trash. DeVita aims to double that amount this
year. In addition, he organizes riverbank cleanups by volunteer groups
that picked up more than 200 tons of shopping carts, tires, and other
trash last year.
Yet, every storm and tide
bring more throw-away debris.
"Lot of stuff
today," said Don Sullivan, the boat's mechanic and a Kearny
resident who grew up near the river, watching the hull fill up like a
miniature landfill. "This is a time you could use five
boats."
As the beam scooped up
near NJPAC tipped into the hold, crew members recalled previous
memorable catches.
The day before this
outing, "we snagged a 60-foot tree," said Frank Dunschat of
Kearny, who was operating the boat from the captain's chair, using
levers that enabled him to swivel the vessel like a bulldozer.
Too big to pull aboard,
the tree was towed back to the boat's dock at the sewage treatment
plant at the confluence of the Passaic and Hackensack rivers.
Originally designed to
help New York City clean up trash that fell off Staten Island-bound
garbage barges, skimmer vessels like the S.V. Newark Bay -- bought
with a $500,000 grant from the New Jersey Maritime Resources agency --
are now operating in harbors and rivers around the world.
"We have over 60
worldwide," said Lou Shenman, who heads a sales office in
Westwood for the unusual boats. Called TrashCats, they are built by
United Marine International, based in Wisconsin.

Skimmer offloading at PVSC dock
The crew skimming the
river off Newark laughed about the time they scooped up a pair of
mating snapping turtles and gingerly put them back into the water.
"A whole picnic table
one time," said Dunschat, as he maneuvered the boat to sweep in
bottles, soggy clothing, a soccer ball, and other jetsam. In an
opportunistic bit of recycling, the boat swung toward the Harrison
shore and a crew member tossed the soccer ball onto a riverside soccer
field.
"We pulled a
telephone pole up once. It had signs on it and everything,"
DeVita said as he kept an eye on the last of the beam being cut up by
a chain saw wielded by Gary Manla of Totowa, wearing orange chaps and
life jacket.
"I love being
outside," said Manla, an equipment operator whose job that day
was to cut large logs and planks to fit into the hull space. "I
was in construction for a lot of years."
Without warning, a jagged
tree limb being pulled aboard on the conveyor belt rolled toward his
head. "Watch yourself, Gary!" Sullivan called out. A split
second from a nasty blow, Manla turned out of the way.
"It's very easy to
get hurt here," said Sullivan. Even so, he added, "It's not
only a job. It's something you enjoy doing."
Frank D'Antonio, a Passaic
resident who operates a small boat used to aid the sweeper operations,
put it more poetically.
"It feels good to
clean up the waterways," said D'Antonio, an avid fisherman who
trolls the river on his time off, angling for bass. "I go home
feeling good at night."

SV Newark Bay shown docked at PVSC's plant
Source: THE RECORD
(United
Marine International is a subsidiary of Liquid Waste Technology,
Inc.)