Portsmouth Herald

Kittery storm damage costs in the hundreds of thousands

- Ian Lenahan

KITTERY, Maine — Damage to Fort Foster and Pepperrell Cove caused by the back-to-back storms and flooding events in January could cost hundreds of thousands of dollars to repair, according to the town's initial cost estimates.

The Jan. 10 and Jan. 13 storms that brought flooding to the Seacoast and southern Maine region pummeled the Fort Foster pathways and pier, as well as the riprap beneath the Pepperrell Cove parking lot and its commercial fishing pier.

At Fort Foster, early cost estimates for the damage to the pier, which was shifted off its structural holdings, range between $400,000 and $500,000, while the Pepperrell Cove damage may cost between $100,000 and $250,000, according to Town Manager Kendra Amaral.

Those figures could change as the town continues to evaluate the destructio­n.

“We need engineered assessment­s to get more concrete cost estimates tied to very specific scopes of repair work,” Amaral said.

The town does not yet have cost projection­s for resetting the paths at Fort Foster, she added.

The town manager said residents and business owners, along with town staff, will continue to learn from the recent storms and look into “fortifying those barriers to storm surge.”

“The other thing I think that came out of this is that these ‘storms of the century' are happening much more rapidly, much more frequently,” Amaral said. “What we have planned for in terms of 100-year emergencie­s, we need to start thinking about the fact that they happen more than every 100 years. The resiliency has to really be resilient and be able to withstand those storms multiple times.”

The York County Emergency Management Agency and the Federal Emergency Management Agency have begun touring private property damage in Kittery.

The costs of damage to private property and businesses in town have not been finalized.

“We have a lot of residents and businesses who experience­d flooding, seawall erosion, loss of piers and docks, loss of equipment,” Amaral said.

The Town Council adopted 29 town climate action plan strategies in December that were formed by the Kittery Climate Action Task Force. Some of the strategies included preserving and revitalizi­ng working waterfront­s, advising residents of health effects from climate and extreme weather events, updating evacuation routes for current and future flood risk areas and protecting waterrelat­ed infrastruc­ture.

Representa­tives from FEMA met in New Hampshire in nearby Hampton and Rye with local officials on Tuesday to tour storm damage sites as the state works to identify the total cost.

 ?? DEB CRAM/SEACOASTON­LINE ?? Kittery, Maine, town docks at Pepperrell Cove at Kittery Point, seen Jan. 25, were damaged by the recent back to back storms earlier in the month.
DEB CRAM/SEACOASTON­LINE Kittery, Maine, town docks at Pepperrell Cove at Kittery Point, seen Jan. 25, were damaged by the recent back to back storms earlier in the month.

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