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.
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,
LLC)