Chattanooga Times Free Press

With seas rising, ‘dry’ resort is getting wetter than it likes

- BY WAYNE PARRY

OCEAN CITY, N.J. — Ocean City, New Jersey is officially a “dry” town.

In 1879, four Methodist ministers establishe­d a Christian seaside resort here with a permanent ban on the manufactur­e and sale of alcohol — a prohibitio­n that remains to this day.

But numerous times a year, Ocean City is among the wettest dry towns you’ll ever see.

The city of more than 11,000 year-round residents that calls itself “America’s Greatest Family Resort” and draws throngs of vacationer­s from Philadelph­ia and its suburbs is dealing with the costs of sea level rise, both monetarily and in disruption­s to daily life.

From 2014 through 2025, the city will have spent more than $87 million on flood control and drainage projects — costs that require borrowing money to be paid off over many years.

But that’s only part of the price of living amid rising sea levels. Since 1995, Suzanne Hornick’s family has lost three cars to floods that inundate the streets — and many vehicles parked on them.

“Every year it gets worse, more frequent and deeper flooding,” she said. “There are times we can’t get in or out of our houses. We have to arrange doctor appointmen­ts and grocery shopping around tides. It’s part of living here.”

None of that is unique to Ocean City. It’s a common refrain among coastal residents around the country who find themselves living nearer to the water than they once did. And it’s expensive.

In December, Florida’s Monroe County, with its low-lying keys, estimated it would take $1.8 billion to raise just half the roads that need it. They are considerin­g a special property tax assessment of up to $5,000 a year for 30 years to help pay for it. So-called “sunny-day flooding” caused by rising tides is common in and around Miami.

Boston thinks it will need $2.4 billion over the next few decades to stay dry. Charleston, South Carolina, calculated it needs at least $2 billion in drainage projects. And federal engineers have recommende­d a $1.4 billion sea wall to protect just part of Norfolk, Virginia’s coast.

Nationwide, the Center for Climate Integrity and Resilient Analytics predicts it will cost $400 billion over the next 20 years to protect vulnerable coastal communitie­s in 22 states.

A barrier island with the ocean on one side and the Great Egg Harbor Bay on the other, Ocean City has been dealing with flooding for years.

But it recently intensifie­d an island-wide effort to improve drainage. That includes laying more drain pipes, building additional pumping stations, elevating roadways and sidewalks, and repairing bulkheads.

The latest five-year plan will cost $25 million for six projects, making flooding an annual expense that has to be budgeted, like road salt or police overtime.

“It has to be done,” said Mayor Jay Gillian. “You can’t wait on this. If you do, it winds up costing the taxpayers double and triple.”

And some remedies are spurring additional costs. Frequent replenishm­ent by the federal government of the ocean beaches, so vital to attracting millions of visitors annually, has created an unexpected expense for a local fishing club whose pier once jutted over the water.

Now, with wider beaches, the pier is often high and dry. Club members recently agreed to spend $500,000 to extend it over the water again.

 ?? AP PHOTO/WAYNE PARRY ?? Flood waters cover the street, sidewalks and lawns of a neighborho­od in Ocean City, N.J. in October.
AP PHOTO/WAYNE PARRY Flood waters cover the street, sidewalks and lawns of a neighborho­od in Ocean City, N.J. in October.

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