Abandoned barge threatens Perdido Bay property
LILLIAN, Ala. (WKRG) — In the north part of Perdido Bay sitting about 20 yards off Mike Cadden’s pier, a barge that for the last year and a half has been his closest neighbor.
“When it pivots around this way, it’s probably 20 feet,” Cadden said.
Friends, former students remember Spanish Fort woman killed by ex-husband in murder-suicide
One he wants gone before it gets any closer.
“From this winter, it was another 40 feet out, and it has gradually moved,” Cadden continued.
It’s nothing new in Baldwin County waterways. WKRG News 5 has reported on boats abandoned in Bon Secour River, near Pelican Point, just north of the Lillian boat launch and most recently just off Perdido Beach.
Fourth of July events on the Gulf Coast
The fear of these abandoned vessels is always the same.
“It’s going to gradually keep moving towards us and going to take out my pier or my neighbor’s pier or both of them,” Cadden said. “Certainly if we have a storm anybody along the way here including us would be taken out.”
Like most abandoned vessels, where they come from and who they belong to is largely unknown. That prompted the establishment of a county commission account with state funding from the Alabama Department of Conservation to eliminate the hazards.
450,000 gallons of treated wastewater spills in Fairhope after manhole overflow
Cadden has reached out but so far he hasn’t gotten a response.
“If we don’t do something soon it’s going to be a lot worse for us and our neighbors,” he said.
The county said the barge is on the list, but they also said it would be out of here by June 1. The Caddens just hope it is out of here before the next big storm heads this way.
Copyright 2024 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to WKRG News 5.