‘Mild’ Tropical Storm Ida Caused Millions in Alabama Beach Damage
Tropical Storm Ida was a mild storm along coastal Alabama, but it still caused millions in damage to the beaches.
Gulf Shores and Orange Beach officials told the Press-Register that Ida stripped several hundred thousand cubic yards of sand from their manmade shoreline. That could cost about $5 million to repair.
The two beach communities, along with Gulf State Park, spent about $24.2 million in 2005 to strengthen 16 miles of shoreline by dredging about 6 million cubic yards of sand from the sea floor and dumping it on shore.
Subsequent tropical storms and near misses have caused damage. The cost of repair has more than doubled over the last four years, the newspaper reported, and city officials expect a total repair cost of nearly $15 million.
- Abbott Presses Congress for Legal Shield Over Preemie Baby Formula Lawsuits
- After Years of Pushing Rate Hikes, Florida’s Citizens Now Wants HO Rate Decrease
- Hartford: 10-Year Analysis Shows Shifts in Common, Expensive Small-Business Claims
- Truckers Who Fail English Tests Are Pulled Off Roads in Crackdown