
Five Rivers will raise the bridge, replace a beam underneath the deck, and realign the approaches. Officials hope the higher bridge will not sustain the damage during freshets that the bridge currently experiences.
Commissioners Dan Cothren, Blair Brady and Lisa Marsyla said they all had taken phone calls from people hoping for a public crossing route.
Cothren added that the river channel is too wide for the county's temporary bridge, and it would take a year to get through the permit process to use it.
"We'll have to hold on and put up with this for a few months," Cothren said. "It would add $100,000 to the project cost."
Public Works Director Pete Ringen said no one suggested using a temporary bridge, so it wasn't included in planning and design.
"This is a major pain; we acknowledge that," Brady said. He suggested Ringen try to negotiate some sort of waiver for area residents, and that the road be closed only when work has started.
Ringen said he would talk to the contractor about those issues.
Ringen said he scheduled the work as soon as possible to avoid winter weather when snow and ice would make the high, east end of Beaver Creek Road treacherous.
The board and concerned citizens discussed some possible alternatives: Cothren said EMS personnel tested logging roads and found them to be slower than driving around to Mill Creek, and they're not passable for passenger cars; a boat to ferry people was suggested, but Cothren said the low water made that a difficult rocky route.
Cothren did say that people might be able to hike along an old logging railroad from the hatchery to Kent's Bridge and access the Elochoman Valley Road.
Marsyla said she would meet with interested citizens to explore that possible path.
Ringen did have good news for the commissioners: The state County Road Administration Board agreed to cover the county's portion of the construction cost through emergency funding, so state and federal sources will completely finance the project.