Crews continue to remove sandbags in Kent along the Green River

Crews have removed 13,390 of the nearly 20,000 giant sandbags in Kent along the Green River.

Crews continue to remove the giant sandbags in Kent along the Green River and reopen sections of the Green River Trail.

Crews continue to remove the giant sandbags in Kent along the Green River and reopen sections of the Green River Trail.

Crews have removed 13,390 of the nearly 20,000 giant sandbags in Kent along the Green River.

AGR Contracting, Inc., of Monroe, received the contract of $894,628 in July to remove the sandbags and repair any damage to the Green River Trail, a popular walking and bicycling destination.

City officials expect to have all of the sandbags gone by the end of September. Crews started to remove the sandbags on July 10.

As of Aug. 17, crews had removed approximately 558 sandbags per day.

Crews placed 3-foot high sandbags along the trail three years ago for extra flood protection along the levees after the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers discovered a January 2009 storm had damaged an abutment next to the Howard Hanson Dam on the upper Green River. The Corps completed repairs to the dam last fall. No heavy rainstorms ever tested the sandbags.

The King County Flood Control District will cover most of the cost of the sandbag removal by delaying certain levee projects along the river. The district is funded through a county-wide property levy of 10 cents per $1,000 assessed value.

 


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