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FRONT PAGE
County
announces plans for Maple Beach
By Meg
Olson
County engineers say they are finally ready to implement some
of the recommendations of a 2005 report that Maple Beach residents
say could have saved their properties from damage during last
winter’s storms.
“That report was done before that bad storm last year
and there was a process to deal with the emergency, but nothing
was done,” said Bob Cannon, who owns a cottage on Bayview
Drive and Fir Street.
The August 2005 report by Coastal Geologic Services of Bellingham
follows a detailed analysis of the evolution of the shoreline
from Lily Point north to Canada with four recommendations: an
emergency/contingency plan to handle sudden storm damage and
erosion; extending the footing of the seawall downwards; broad-scale
beach nourishment; and the abandonment of some sections of wall
and roadway. Abandoning portions of the roadway would be an
extreme measure, recommended only if beach nourishment and wall
repairs could not maintain the shoreline.
“The seawall was never designed properly,” Cannon
said, and needed to be replaced with a more efficient design,
including deeper footings. Changing erosion patterns have meant
the beach at Maple Beach has been shrinking, while it is growing
north of the border. “The beach has eroded completely,” Cannon
said. “Now at high tide there’s three feet of water
right at the seawall and it’s like a surfing wave coming
over.”
Chris Brueske, one of the county’s engineering project
managers, said they were planning to implement the beach feeding
portion of the report recommendations as soon as the federal
permits they have applied for are issued. “I don’t
think we’ll get permission before winter,” he said.
Once permits are issued they will begin spilling 3/4 to 1-inch
cobbles over the existing seawall and “let the wave action
move it around and spread it in. By making the slope of the
beach steeper, Brueske said, “It would dissipate some
of that energy as it heads up the beach and before it hits the
wall.” This November, pending permits from the county,
Brueske said they would be anchoring the northern panels of
the wall to prevent further rotation. They would not, as the
report recommends, be replacing the wall and deepening the footings.
“Deepening the footings is quite an undertaking,” he
said,” and I’m not sure it’s necessary. That
wall has stood there for over 20 years and it’s only moved
3/4 of an inch. I think it’s holding up well and in the
short term if the beach nourishment goes well I don’t
know it will be necessary to replace the wall.”
Cannon said he was frustrated by the delay in getting critical
repairs done and said if it meant only dumping boulders along
the wall to break the wave action, the community is demanding
action before the storm season hits. “If the county has
held off again and it’s another bad year for storms you’ve
got a fresh class-action lawsuit.”
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