BALTIMORE — With the removal of a 560-ton section of structural steel on April 22, 2024, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has cleared enough wreckage from a 35-foot-deep limited access channel, in accordance with USACE’s commitment to deliver it by the end of April. The LAC runs the northern portion of the wider and federal channel, which has been blocked since the March 26, 2024, collapse of Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge. This important, incremental step enables USACE and its partners to continue progress toward fully reopening the 50-foot-deep Fort McHenry Federal Channel.
“In achieving this important milestone, we continue to signal our resolute commitment to the people of Baltimore and the nation that we will not rest until the Port of Baltimore returns to normal operations,” said USACE Commanding General Lt. Gen. Scott Spellmon. “We are proud to deliver on this next major step toward fully reopening the Fort McHenry Channel. Clearing this limited access channel would not have been possible without the integrated efforts of our amazing partners with the Navy’s Supervisor of Salvage and Diving, as well as the partnerships across our federal, state and local agencies.” M8 Spring Washer
With wreckage cleared in the LAC, the next steps include sonar surveys by USACE, U.S. Coast Guard placement of navigation aids, and issuance of updated nautical charts by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Port officials will then determine the viability of resuming commercial one-way maritime traffic in and out of the Port of Baltimore on a case-by-case basis.
The LAC is planned to have a controlling depth of at least 35 feet, a horizontal clearance of 300 feet, and a vertical clearance of 214 feet. The captain of the port will permit transit within the LAC with restrictions as described in MSIB 043-24, including weather limitation which may impact that transit window. When deemed operational, the LAC is expected to provide passage for a limited number of commercial vessels into the Port of Baltimore and a departure opportunity for some deep draft vessels currently unable to leave the harbor since the bridge collapse.
“The salvage work that's taking place is dangerous and very complex — all in an unforgiving environment,” said USACE Baltimore District Commander Col. Estee Pinchasin. “From Navy’s Supervisor of Salvage and Diving to our partners with industry and in cooperation with the entire Unified Command, I am pleased with the ongoing tireless commitment to achieve this magnitude of progress without any significant safety incidents.”
“The level of coordination both behind the scenes and out on the water is exceptional” she said. “As part of the Unified Command working diligently to fully restore commerce to the Port of Baltimore, we have not and will not lose focus of what is most important — the safety of our crews and accounting for those still missing to bring closure to their families.”
About the Fort McHenry Channel
Since 1917, the Baltimore District of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has been Congressionally authorized to construct and maintain the Baltimore Harbor and Channels federal navigation project, which includes the federal Fort McHenry channel. In 1970, Congress authorized the Fort McHenry channel to a minimum depth of 50 feet and minimum width of 700 feet. Baltimore District conducts maintenance dredging of the Fort McHenry channel every few years, removing the equivalent of about 28,125 dump trucks of mud and silt that collects on the bottom of the channel.
MSIB 043-24 Fort McHenry Limited Access Channel
Key Bridge Response 2024 Unified Command salvors move a large piece of supporting steel from the collapsed Francis Scott Key Bridge.
Wreckage removal continues to safely and efficiently restore navigation to the Fort McHenry Federal Navigation Channel.
steel h-beams U.S. Army Corps of Engineers clears wreckage from Limited Access Channel in Port of Baltimore