Monday, November 16, 2009

Hawaii's Beach Problems Go National

The AP ran this story today, which focuses largely on Kailua Beach and quotes the UH Sea Grant guys as saying many of our beaches are already considered to be lost causes. Why? Rising sea levels, erosion, sea walls and inadequate shoreline setbacks. The article notes that there is a Kailua Beach master plan in the works... but knowing how slow our City and State government are to act, whatever gets recommended will probably be ignored and Kailua will go the way of Lanikai and Kahala Beach. It will be too little, too late. Again.

Here's some excerpts and the link to the story...

Hawaii's famed white sandy beaches are shrinking


By AUDREY McAVOY, Associated Press Writer – Sun Nov 15

KAILUA, Hawaii – Jenn Boneza remembers when the white sandy beach near the boat ramp in her hometown was wide enough for people to build sand castles.

"It really used to be a beautiful beach," said the 35-year-old mother of two. "And now when you look at it, it's gone."

What's happening to portions of the beach in Kailua — a sunny coastal suburb of Honolulu where President Barack Obama spent his last two family vacations in the islands — is being repeated around the Hawaiian Islands.

Geologists say more than 70 percent of Kauai's beaches are eroding while Oahu has lost a quarter of its sandy shoreline. They warn the problem is only likely to get significantly worse in coming decades as global warming causes sea levels to rise more rapidly...

... (Chip) Fletcher proposes identifying areas where a land conservation fund would buy five or six adjoining properties. The state would tear down buildings on these plots and allow the beach to shift inland.

He said when erosion hits more sections of Kailua beach, there's going to be a clamor to put up seawalls.

"That will be a very important moment," Fletcher said. "If we allow the first home to put up a seawall, then we're probably dooming the entire beach over the course of a couple of decades . . .


Read the entire article by clicking here.

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