HomeMy WebLinkAboutWRS Engineering LLC Letter for Zorzie Saltmarsh NOIWRS Engineering LLC
467 Ocean St Hyannis, MA 02601
508-776-0956 royokurowski@gmail.com
October 5, 2025
TO EDWIN HOOPES
CONSERVATION COMMISSION CHAIR
TOWN OF YARMOUTH CONSERVATION COMMISSION
508 – 398 - 2231
Re: Notice of Intent for salt marsh creation as mitigation for patio: 39 Prince Rd, Yarmouth, MA 02673
On behalf of our client, PETER ZORZI, ZORZI FAMILY LLC we are submitting another NOI which is being held
At your office pending clarification questions. The project involves removing a large section of an unauthorized
Section of brick patio in the 50’ buffer zone to the coastal bank. We are basically attempting to put back a
healthy salt marsh where there was one before that has been lost to erosion from higher water levels and boat
traffic. The question was asked by Brittany DiRienzo weather I was qualified to design a salt marsh which I take
offense to as a Licensed Civil Environmental Engineer with a concentration in Coastal Engineering. I have
designed and seen numerous salt marsh projects from start to finish including required inspections required by
the Army Corps of Engineers on numerous projects in the state. I also am on the project management teams for
construction of Salt marshes in FL, Alabama, Louisiana, and Texas. I have also been in the past the towns
reprehensive Engineer on numerous public projects including repairing greys beach boardwalk, several public
beach dune enhancement projects, and dredge consulting. I have included a few examples of projects going on
now or recently completed including the largest salt marsh creation project in the history of North America.
Please review my letter and accept the pending NOI.
Sincerely,
WRS Engineering LLC
Roy E. Okurowski P.E.
Lake Borgne Marsh Creation: A Once-in-a-Generation Effort
This month marks a milestone for Mike Hooks, LLC:
dredging operations are now complete on the Lake
Borgne Marsh Creation Project in St. Bernard Parish,
Louisiana — the largest marsh creation project by
acreage in the state’s history.
It wasn’t just another project. It was a test of
endurance, teamwork, and commitment, and every
single person at Mike Hooks played a part in making it
happen.
From Surveys to Success (Early days)
The journey began in November 2021, when survey crews first set foot on the site. From
that point, years of planning and preparation unfolded before the first pipe was laid or
dredge was mobilized.
By early 2022, our fleet was hard at work, pumping
sediment into engineered cells to rebuild Louisiana’s
fragile coastline. After nearly four years, dredging is
now complete, with full demobilization set for
December 2025.
Every Dredge. Every Hand.
This job took everything we had — and then some.
• Dredge Mike Hooks (Completion)
• Dredge E. Stroud
• Dredge Missouri H
• Dredge Lorraine
Each dredge in our fleet was deployed, supported by a company-wide push that involved
nearly every employee. From crews offshore to the staff in the office, it was truly an all-
hands effort.
In total, 15,161,709 cubic yards of material were placed, thanks to the addition of the
MCA-8 expansion. That’s enough sediment to fill the Superdome more than three times
over.
The Human Side of the Job
Behind every cubic yard of sediment were the hours,
sweat, and skill of our people.
• In 2024 alone, Mike Hooks crews averaged
2,024 man-hours per week, while our
subcontractor Dean Equipment added another
700 hours per week.
• Over the life of the dredging phase, that effort
totaled nearly 500,000 man-hours — the
equivalent of more than 240 full-time workers laboring for a year straight.
It wasn’t easy. Crews battled Hurricane Francine (2024), heavy rain, and flooding, each
storm bringing delays and extra work. At the same time, global challenges — from COVID-
19 supply chain shortages to rising fuel and steel prices — tested our ability to adapt.
Yet through it all, we kept going. We never gave up, and we never quit.
By the Numbers
• Surveys Began: November 2021
• Fleet Involved: 4 dredges (Mike Hooks, E. Stroud, Missouri H, Lorraine)
• Sediment Placed: 15,161,709 cubic yards
• Acreage Restored: ~2,770 acres
• Man-Hours Logged: ~495,000 (prime + sub)
• Completion: Dredging in September 2025; Demobilization by December 2025
• Investment: $100+ million through Deepwater Horizon NRDA
A Lasting Legacy
Funded by the Deepwater Horizon Natural Resource Damage Assessment, the Lake
Borgne Marsh Creation Project is more than a number on a report. It’s habitat for fish and
wildlife. It’s protection for communities. It’s resilience for Louisiana’s coast.
For Mike Hooks, it’s also proof of what we can do when every part of this company comes
together. From surveys in 2021 to dredging completion in 2025, this project reflects our
culture of teamwork, our expertise, and our commitment to building a stronger future for
the Gulf Coast.
The Lake Borgne Marsh Creation Project will stand as one of the largest and most important
efforts in Louisiana’s fight against coastal erosion — and as one of the proudest
achievements in Mike Hooks’ long history.