South Carolina
Related: About this forumWealthy coastal residents remove illegal seawalls. But dispute rages as seas rise
Virtually every property owner who built seawalls in an exclusive oceanfront community south of Myrtle Beach has torn down the walls they hoped would protect the neighborhoods high-end homes from rising tides and storms.
But the decision to remove the structures, a victory for beach protection advocates who say seawalls worsen erosion, doesnt end the dispute at Litchfield Beach over how and whether to protect one of the narrowest, most storm-threatened stretches of South Carolinas coast.
Property owners who live in The Peninsula at Inlet Point South want the federal government to approve a controversial beach renourishment project that would widen a half-mile-long stretch of the sand spit by about 50 yards.
The extra sand would help protect more than $60 million worth of houses with grand views of the Atlantic Ocean and the salty, wildlife-rich tidelands at Litchfields southern-most tip.
Read more: https://www.thestate.com/article247226404.html
PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,730 posts)Pretending they are not does not change the reality.
Honestly, if you live less than 20 or 30 feet above sea level, sell now, move now. Property values are only going to decline.
Captain Zero
(7,508 posts)Maybe they already have.
PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,730 posts)selling insurance connected to sea level rise. I recently read The Water Will Come: Rising Seas, Sinking Cities, and the Remaking of the Civilized World by Jeff Goodell and it strongly influenced me.
The world IS warming. Sea levels ARE rising. No matter how much anyone tries to deny that, they are wrong.
I think the most interesting part of the book is where it points out that savvy real estate people have already understood sea level rise and are quietly pulling investments out of coastal areas.
Me, I live very far inland, in New Mexico.
marble falls
(62,240 posts)... the shore needs to accept the possibilities without my tax dollars to subsidize their inevitable losses.