Chattanooga Times Free Press

Beach projects bug residents and visitors

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BRICK, N.J. — Ah, the sounds of summer: waves crashing on the shore, the calls of seagulls, the beepbeep-beep of bulldozers in reverse …

New Jersey residents love their beaches, one of the state’s economic engines and a tourist magnet. What they don’t love so much is the process of keeping those beaches nice and wide, particular­ly when it happens during the summer.

The federal and state government­s have long carried out beach replenishm­ent projects here and in other states. After Superstorm Sandy devastated parts of the East Coast in 2012, those efforts accelerate­d, and New Jersey is in the midst of building or repairing protective sand dunes along most of its 127-mile shoreline.

Not all of that work can be done in the fall or winter. That inevitably creates temporary disruption for beach residents and visitors, even though most acknowledg­e the need for the work.

Jerry Ranges owns a house on the beach in Brick Township, where a beach replenishm­ent project was recently carried out directly in front of it. He realizes he will benefit from the added protection of the wider beach, even if it means some noise and vibration.

“It’s got to be done,” said Ranges, who lives in Honolulu but stays at the Jersey shore in the summer. “You just have to live with it.”

Ranges loves the cooling sea breezes that come with living on the beach. “I hate air conditioni­ng,” he said. “I love to leave the windows open. But with this going on, you can’t. I had to buy an air conditione­r.”

He and his wife, Lis Ranges, had to use a beach about a mile away while the work was in front of their home. The round-the-clock work involves a huge offshore ship pumping torrents of sand and water onto the beaches and bulldozers moving it and smoothing it on the shoreline.

“The house vibrates all night long,” she said. “The bed shakes.”.

The beach work often is a surprise to visitors who have no idea the work is going on when they book rentals, often months in advance. Annalise Roberts, of Mahwah, was among a group who recently arrived at the Brick beach, only to encounter signs saying it was closed and directing them to one a few blocks away.

She had previously experience­d beach replenishm­ent work up close during a stay on Florida’s Long Boat Key near Sarasota. “There were a lot of pipes, and you hear a lot of beeping from the bulldozers,” she said. “But then one morning you walk outside and the beach is twice the size it was a few days earlier, and you say, ‘This is the greatest thing ever!’”

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