Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

McKinley Beach is undergoing a makeover

Here’s what you need to know about its reopening

- Vanessa Swales Contact Vanessa Swales at 414-3085881 or vswales@gannett.com. Follow her on Twitter @Vanessa_Swales.

After almost three summers closed and barricaded, McKinley Beach is getting a much-needed makeover to improve the beach’s overall safety, sustainabi­lity and water quality.

The plan is to restore the beach to its original 1989 design after an ongoing effort to reduce significant erosion and tackle rip current concerns. A year ago, Milwaukee County approved more than $700,000 for a restoratio­n aimed at preventing drownings.

When could the beach reopen?

Constructi­on is set to start in June and will last four to eight weeks, depending on weather and lake conditions, with a target reopening set for this summer, the Milwaukee County Parks Department announced.

“The planned solution restores McKinley Beach to its original intended design by re-nourishing the beach with sand, grading, and grooming,” the department wrote in a statement.

“The planned solution will also effectively lower the water depth between the breakwater­s to help reduce currents and create a shallower beach environmen­t.”

The project faced a setback in the spring when the cost estimates for constructi­on came back higher than initially projected, with bids reaching $350,000 over budget. The Parks Department will be shifting funds from other parks projects to help pay for the McKinley constructi­on, Deputy Director James Tarantino told the Journal Sentinel.

“We need to have this beach open this summer,” said Supervisor Sheldon A. Wasserman, whose east side district includes McKinley Beach. “It’s unacceptab­le that McKinley Beach is fenced in, closed in the middle of a hot summer in Wisconsin... that beach is essential.”

Wasserman said he worked with the Parks Department and Milwaukee County Executive David Crowley to secure the extra funding.

Why did the beach close in 2020?

The beach was closed in August 2020, following growing concerns about riptides, a record number of drownings and several near-drowning incidents.

A report on McKinley carried out between fall 2021 and spring 2022 showed that both the beach’s geometry and high water were the cause of beach erosion and rip currents. It also found that three drownings at the beach were connected to the rip currents.

In 2020 alone, there were at least four drownings at McKinley, including the deaths of a 14-year-old boy and a 50year-old man.

Struggles with lifeguard staffing

The Parks Department has consistent­ly faced short staffing when it comes to beach safety, particular­ly with hiring lifeguards despite increasing wages and implementi­ng bonus compensati­on. Milwaukee’s beaches have relied heavily on a partnershi­p with the Beach Ambassador­s program, which deploys intern ambassador­s to patrol the shoreline and give beach-goers informatio­n about beach safety.

Milwaukee County Parks Executive Director Guy Smith previously said the department would ideally hire 125 lifeguards this season. Only 80 were hired, however, in the previous two years.

As of May 30, the department has commitment­s from 90 lifeguards for this season, up from 63 in mid-March, Tarantino told the Journal Sentinel.

“We’re super optimistic,” he said.

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