New Jersey

NJ Wants to Double Beach Restoration Budget to $50M Yearly

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With a string of February storms having taken big chunks out of many Jersey Shore beaches, New Jersey is considering doubling the amount of money it allocates to shore protection projects each year to $50 million. A bill increasing the state’s Shore Protection Fund was advanced Thursday by a Senate committee.

What to Know

  • With a string of February storms having taken big chunks out of many Jersey Shore beaches, lawmakers are considering doubling the amount of money the Garden State allocates to shore protection projects each year to $50 million.
  • A bill increasing the state's Shore Protection Fund was advanced Thursday by a Senate committee.
  • The money comes from collection of real estate transfer fees.

With a string of February storms having taken big chunks out of many Jersey Shore beaches — and the federal government refusing to authorize emergency repairs — New Jersey is considering doubling the amount of money it allocates to shore protection projects each year to $50 million.

The bill actually was introduced over a year ago, long before the storm damage and a decision last month by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers that the damage was not sufficient to qualify for emergency repairs. It had been languishing in the state Legislature before being advanced Thursday by a state Senate committee.

But three storms last month that caused serious to severe erosion in numerous parts of the Jersey Shore has given the measure new relevance.

Federal and state officials asked the Army Corps to reconsider emergency funding, but a spokesman for the agency reiterated its decision Thursday.

“The storm didn’t meet the criteria to qualify as an ‘extraordinary storm’, which is necessary for the emergency repair eligibility,” said spokesperson Stephen Rochette.

Bill Curtis, mayor of Bay Head, whose beaches sustained major damage last month, called the decision “ludicrous.”

“Bay Head beaches were destroyed as a result of Winter Storm Orlena,” he said. "As a small town, we can’t afford to correct the Army Corps' dune. We can’t make our beaches safe right now with 18-feet cliff-like drops throughout. If someone were to fall now, they could be seriously hurt or killed. Plus, the dunes could collapse, some are so precarious. Then who is responsible? We need help before it is too late.”

The cost of beach work is shared by the federal, state and local governments.

Money from New Jersey's Shore Protection Fund comes from the collection of real estate transfer fees. The realty transfer fee is imposed on the recording of deeds transferring real property, and is calculated on the basis of the amount paid in the deed.

For over a decade, $25 million from those fees was dedicated to the shore fund, which is used for projects like the state's share of beach replenishment or dune construction.

The Jersey Shore Partnership, which advocates for beach replenishment programs as crucial to protecting the state's tourism industry, as well as lives and property, praised the proposed increase.

“Out state's coastline is the first line of defense from devastating storms,” said Margot Walsh, the group's executive director. “We can anticipate higher temperatures, rising seas, bigger storms.”

Pro-business groups including the New Jersey Business and Industry Association and the state Chamber of Commerce also endorsed the bill.

Some environmental groups, however, opposed the measure, criticizing beach replenishment as artificial and ineffective over the long-term.

“The process is unsustainable,” said John Weber, president of the Bradley Beach borough council and regional manager of the Surfrider Foundation. “Not only is there a limited amount of good, clean, usable sand, but there is a limited amount of federal dollars.”

Jeff Tittel, director of the New Jersey Sierra Club, also noted that some shore towns continue to discourage public access to their beaches, even after receiving repair funds that came from every taxpayer.

New Jersey set out to build or repair dunes along most of its 127-mile (204-kilometer) shoreline after Superstorm Sandy devastated the Shore in 2012.

Beach towns that had replenished beaches and robust dune systems tended to fare better during Sandy than those that did not, although major flooding also occurred from back bays as well, where few shore protection projects have been done. The Army Corps is expected to release recommendations this summer for back bay flooding reduction measures, including elevating houses, building man-made and nature barriers, and other measures.

The bill now goes to the full state Senate for consideration.

Copyright The Associated Press
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