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$378 million price tag to prevent flooding leaves Delray Beach reeling

by Contributors
February 16, 2019
in News
2

Delray Beach will have to pay more than $378 million to save its neighborhoods from knee-deep floods, the City Commission learned on Tuesday.

Commissioners were stunned by this price tag, determined by an engineering team that said roads and seawalls will have to be raised and pipes improved to protect streets fromrising waters associated with climate change.

“How are we going to manage a $300 million endeavor in little tiny Delray Beach?” Mayor Shelly Petrolia asked.

Delray Beach is one of many coastal cities in South Florida that are working to deal with the effects of rising oceans, waterways and groundwater. In Miami Beach, construction has already begun on elevated roads and pumps that help to dry streets after floods.

In Broward, beach dunes have been built and seawalls raised. Municipalities have invested in sensors, gates and pumps to push water out of neighborhoods.

South Florida counties have been meeting since 2009 to coordinate efforts through the Southeast Florida Regional Climate Change Compact. Still, record flooding continues to inundate neighborhoods and coastal roads every year.

King tides, an October flood exacerbated by the full moon, are an annual problem in Delray Beach. Tides cascade over seawalls intended to keep water from the Intracoastal Waterway out of neighborhoods. Some of these seawalls are more than 70 years old, although they were built to last only 30 years, said Jeff Needle, the city’s stormwater project manager.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency requires municipalities to update their plans every five years. Delray Beach’s last update was in 2000, Needle said.

The city identified 14 neighborhoods that need extensive repairs to stave off flooding. The most expensive, Tropic Isles, will cost more than $157 million to protect; Atlantic Avenue, the trendy restaurant and shopping district that reaches the ocean, would cost $28 million to fortify.

With one mile of public seawall and 20 miles of private walls, the city will have to coordinate efforts with property owners, Needle said.

“Our seawalls are not high enough to keep us dry,” Needle said.

Petrolia said she wants to send the report to U.S. Rep. Lois Frankel, who represents the city in Congress, so she can help find sources of money to protect the city.

“The Invading Sea” is a collaboration of four South Florida media organizations — the South Florida Sun Sentinel, Miami Herald, Palm Beach Post and WLRN Public Media.

Tags: South Florida Sun Sentinel
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The Invading Sea is a nonpartisan source for news, commentary and educational content about climate change and other environmental issues affecting Florida. The site is managed by Florida Atlantic University’s Center for Environmental Studies in the Charles E. Schmidt College of Science.

 

 

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