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On Tue, 07 Aug 2018 06:11:02 -0400, John H.
wrote: On Mon, 6 Aug 2018 19:25:21 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 8/6/2018 7:16 PM, John H. wrote: On Mon, 6 Aug 2018 18:44:52 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 8/6/2018 5:01 PM, John H. wrote: On Mon, 06 Aug 2018 15:54:08 -0400, Wayne.B wrote: On Mon, 06 Aug 2018 15:40:44 -0400, John H. wrote: A good video of the problems faced by Scituate, MA, from the nor'easters this past spring. https://features.weather.com/exodus/...me-every-year/ Much of the problem is blamed on climate change, but the sea level has risen by only 8 inches on average since 1900. A good article on the problem: https://insideclimatenews.org/news/1...shment-project "This year, the town of Scituate, which includes Humarock, proposed building a $9.6 million artificial dune and raised road to protect the homes. Yet some residents are prepared to block the project. The town is asking them to sign easements that would cede property rights along the privately owned beach and allow public access. Whatever concerns they have about protecting their homes are being overridden by fear of permanently relinquishing control of their property. Seems like some folks bring on the problems themselves, but like to blame climate change. === Scituate has been hammered more times than my great grand uncle's blacksmithing anvil. I'm fine with people living on that beach if that's what they want, but I'm not fine with repeated tax payer bail outs. Can't disagree with that! When seen in an overhead view, it appears they're just trying hard to tempt mother nature. Don't go pick'in on one of my favorite towns up here (Scituate) :-) Go back to your insideclimatenews.org link and scroll down a bit until you come upon an interactive map. Check that out. You'll find that Massachusetts has invested a mere pittance to coastal erosion compared to all the other states on the east coast, especially Florida. Since 1990 Florida has had major projects on both coasts, from Jacksonville to Miami and from Cape Coral to Tampa. Most of the money spent has been from New Jersey and southward and includes every state from there to Florida. That's what I mean. They blame 'climate change' but don't want to do the things necessary to protect themselves. You mean depend on federal bail out funds? I was thinking more of these folks who don't want to sign away some property rights so the town can try to fix the problem. "This year, the town of Scituate, which includes Humarock, proposed building a $9.6 million artificial dune and raised road to protect the homes. Yet some residents are prepared to block the project. The town is asking them to sign easements that would cede property rights along the privately owned beach and allow public access. Whatever concerns they have about protecting their homes are being overridden by fear of permanently relinquishing control of their property." We have the same fight going on here. The Florida constitution already says the state owns all of the wet sand, usually defined as anything seaward of the grass line that forms at high tide. (with very few exceptions). People have taken that to also include the sand up to the vegetation line on beach front properties and most of the beaches on the west coast have public access points. It is really only over on the east coast where people want walls and fences to keep the public out. There are a couple of neighborhoods in Naples that are that way too but they are geographically isolated. Those areas also tends to be the same Massholes we are talking about here. (along with other I-95 people) My take on the whole thing is, I am OK if you want to own the beach in front of your house but when it washes away, you pay to fix it ... and you fight for the permits yourself. Explain to your neighbors why the government is not going to help them either. When the city of Ft Myers Beach re nourished their beach, there were a few hold outs who refused to sign the public access deal. The city just skipped their property and they had lagoons coming right up to their yards. That just made the erosion worse for them and it also brought beach walkers onto their grass. They caved. I am not really a fan of any beach re nourishment because it is always going to be a temporary fix at a huge public expense but the only way I will hold my nose and accept it is if this is a public beach. Otherwise I don't care if your house floats away and I don't want FEMA to fix it. I didn't see any government people here at my house cleaning up after any of the hurricanes and they are not doing **** to repair the HOA property erosion, nor mine. In fact the government just makes it harder for us to do anything about it. |
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FS: 2004, 37 foot Egg Harbor SportsYacht in Scituate, MA | Marketplace |