The United States Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) Vicksburg District will temporarily close Lindy C. Boggs, Lock and Dam (L&D) to navigation on the Red River during two separate periods from August 15 to September 15 in order to dewater the upper gate and again from October 1 to 30 to dewater the lower gate.
The lock will temporarily reopen approximately September 16 and remain open for 15 days to allow traffic to pass.
During the dewatering of the upper and lower gate bays, the district will make repairs, inspect the structure, and plan for future maintenance.
The Vicksburg District remains vigilant in communicating the status of the scheduled closure with the Red River Valley Association, the Coast Guard, and other partners and stakeholders.
The upcoming closure has been coordinated with the USACE New Orleans District’s dewatering of the Old River Lock, located upriver of Red River Landing near Angola, Louisiana.
Boggs L&D is the first lock and dam on the Red River and part of the J. Bennett Johnston (JBJ) Waterway system. Located on the Red River at mile 43.8 about 11 miles north of Marksville, Louisiana, the lock and dam system is part of the Monroe Navigation Project Office and operated by a contracted company.
The J. Bennett Johnston Waterway traverses over 225 miles from its confluence with the Atchafalaya River to Shreveport-Bossier, Louisiana. The waterway includes five locks and dams and five ports, which handle approximately 9 million tons of commodities per year and support over 1,300 jobs. The waterway offers convenient, cost-effective access to regional, national, and international markets. Commodities that have been the staple for the ports include refined oil products, fertilizer, construction-grade sand and gravel, and steel products.
The USACE Vicksburg District is engineering solutions to the nation’s toughest challenges. The Vicksburg District encompasses a 68,000-square-mile area across portions of Mississippi, Arkansas, and Louisiana, that holds nine major river basins and incorporates approximately 460 miles of mainline Mississippi River levees. The Vicksburg District is engaged in hundreds of projects and employs approximately 1,100 personnel.