Orlando Sentinel

Florida lavishes millions for beachfront property owners

- By Emma Haydocy Emma Haydocy is Florida policy manager for the Surfrider Foundation. She wrote this for The Invading Sea, which shares news and commentary on climate change and other environmen­tal issues affecting Florida.

The 2023 Atlantic hurricane season is off to an aggressive start, with three named storms in the month of June for the first time in the history of recorded hurricanes.

With this strong kickoff, many Floridians understand­ably are feeling a sense of unease following the devastatin­g hurricane season of 2022, compounded by the lingering effects of Hurricanes Ian and Nicole in nearly every corner of the Sunshine State. Still, we once again are vulnerable to the impacts of storms supercharg­ed by climate change.

While recovery continues, however, the Hurricane Restoratio­n Reimbursem­ent Grant Program is one of the most egregious programs to emerge in the aftermath of the 2022 hurricane season. This $50 million program, enacted under Senate Bill 4A during the Florida Legislatur­e’s 2022 special session, provides $150,000 per eligible private beachfront property owner for hurricane restoratio­n projects. These include sand placement, and temporary or permanent coastal armoring.

While the program was slated to end June 30, language included in the state budget’s implementa­tion bill and signed into law by Gov. Ron DeSantis extends the program (and the $50 million appropriat­ion) to June 30, 2024.

Florida is using tens of millions of public dollars to fund the constructi­on of seawalls on — and to protect — private property. It’s a legislativ­e measure that could upend the primary drivers of our state’s economic engine: beaches and tourism.

Florida’s beaches help attract more than 137 million visitors and yield more than $100 billion for our state every year. The value of Florida’s beaches is further evidenced by the more than $1.9 billion that the state has expended on beach nourishmen­t in its history, currently averaging $30 million-$50 million annually. It is unconscion­able that Florida is funding a program that will destroy our beaches, erode the foundation of our economy and work against costly beach nourishmen­t projects.

To be clear: Seawalls do not work. Not anywhere, and especially not in Florida. Instead of preventing further erosion, they have been shown to accelerate beach loss directly in front of the structure, as well as on the adjacent properties that do not have armoring. In essence, Florida taxpayers have been on the hook for coastal armoring activities that will degrade, and in some cases destroy, our state’s treasured sandy beaches.

t only does this program set a chilling precedent for coastal management, but it is also likely unconstitu­tional under Florida law, which prohibits the use of public funds without a public purpose. There is no purpose that serves the public less than granting funds to affluent property owners for activities that will irrevocabl­y harm the state’s beaches.

The Hurricane Restoratio­n Reimbursem­ent Grant Program is a marked regression for a state that increasing­ly is vulnerable to flooding and impacts from climate-fueled weather events and hurricanes.

While Florida has made significan­t investment­s in coastal resiliency and preparedne­ss for sea level rise in recent years, this program will subject Florida’s sandy beaches and coastlines to accelerate­d erosion and assured degradatio­n.

Instead of incentiviz­ing and funding seawalls for private property owners, the state should instead lean into its recently passed resiliency policy that harnesses the state’s myriad naturebase­d solutions proven to make our beaches more resilient to the impacts of hurricanes and climate change. The future of Florida’s coastlines and communitie­s depend on it.

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