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THE FIRESTORM AFTER THE STORM: Desperate Destin homeowners challenge dredging permit (with PHOTOS and VIDEO)

If a challenge to Destin harbor dredging cost Holiday Isle a shot at beach restoration, will a second challenge turn things around?

In the wake of Tropical Storm Ida, the Holiday Isle Improvement Association, Destin Pointe, Jetty East, Inlet Reef, Holiday Surf and Racquet and The Islander Owners Association filed a petition with the Florida Department of Environmental Protection, challenging a permit’s dredging plan for East Pass. The petition requests that the permit be modified to comply with statute 161, which states “All construction and maintenance dredgings of beach quality sand are placed on the adjacent eroding beaches.”

“It is clear that the east side of the East Pass is eroded as compared to the west, and technical studies have been conducted to document this erosion,” said President of the Holiday Isle Improvement Association John Medina in a statement. “Tropical Storm Ida, a small storm, did hundreds of thousands of dollars in damage to homes and condominiums on Holiday Isle because we have either no beach or very little beach to protect our properties.”

Okaloosa County was close to receiving a permit for beach restoration for Destin and Okaloosa Island when multiple lawsuits were filed by homeowners who don’t want to participate. A group of Holiday Isle homeowners suggested that, while the county attempts to settle those lawsuits, the sand the Corp dredges could be used to rebuild the worst-eroded beaches.

Four Okaloosa Island homeowners objected that the state’s 10-year-old Inlet Management Plan requires the sand to be placed on Okaloosa Island. Homeowner David Sherry told The Log that while his property doesn’t need sand now, eventual erosion is inevitable without the dredged sand. Sherry said the harbor jetties interfere with the natural westward drift of sand, so what the island receives is what it’s entitled to by nature.

_________

A COLLECTION OF COVERAGE
For photos of the cleanup at Destin Pointe, click here.

To see photos from Jetty East and Destin Pointe immediately after the storm, click here.

Find out how much rain Destin saw from Ida, click here.

Read The Log’s take on the situation, click here.

Read the entire statement challenging the dredging permit online at the bottom of this article

_________

The four owners filed a challenge to the Corps’ state dredging permit, on the grounds that the permit didn’t guarantee Okaloosa Island will get the sand. They dropped the challenge after a DEP decision that none of the sand would go east of the harbor.

“To make matters worse, this permit is for ten years,” Medina said. “Therefore it would prohibit any sand dredged from the East Pass from being placed on our beaches for ten years.”

Erosion has been a problem on parts of Holiday Isle for several years, to the point that even storms that bypass Destin can eat away at the beach. Last year’s hurricane season cost Jetty East an estimated $300,000 in damages; Destin Pointe saw the storm surge from Hurricane Gustav undermine the community pool.

“We’ve got to do something,” Holiday Isle resident Guy Tadlock said Thursday. “We’re absolutely vulnerable to any of the little winter storms, and we’re going into hurricane season next year without any protection.”

Sherry told The Log this week that Ida “was pretty much a non-event for Okaloosa Island. Water barely made the base of the dunes and came nowhere near the building.” However, he said, the damage to Destin doesn’t change his position.

“They need to stop trying to solve their problems at the expense of others, especially us,” Sherry said. “I think this is the wrong approach for them and everyone. One more temporary Band-Aid is not the answer; it only forestalls a real solution.”

One of the Holiday Isle owners suing to block the beach restoration project is Roland Guidry of Oceania Condominiums. He said Oceania’s stretch of property added beach during Ida’s storm surge, “25 feet — that’s probably temporary, but we added beach.”

Guidry said the best solution for the eroded Holiday Isle properties was for them to support cutting Okaloosa Island, Oceania and other owners who didn’t want to participate out of the beach restoration project.
“If (the county) would restrict beach restoration to those that would really need it, it would probably happen faster,” Guidry said.

Medina maintained that Holiday Isle had no other option but to file the challenge.

“Restoring our beaches is critical to our economy,” Medina said. “Without some type of immediate renourishment, the next tropical storm or hurricane will cause millions of dollars of property damage and wipe out the tourist trade and real estate market in Destin for years.”

 

THE CHALLENGE

The full text of the complaint is as follows.


To: Commissioners, Councilors and Distinguished Officials                   date: Nov. 12, 2009
 
As you are aware the beaches in west Destin are in an emergency situation.  Tropical Storm Ida, a small storm, did hundreds of thousands of dollars in damage to homes and condominiums on Holiday Isle because we have either no beach or very little beach to protect our properties.  The attached photographs show the damage at Jetty East and houses on Destin Pointe.  This minor storm has left the west beaches of Destin absolutely defenseless as we enter a new year and another season.
 
Restoring our beaches is critical to our economy.  Over 100,000 tourists stayed at the six beachside condominiums on Holiday Isle in 2008.  These tourist spent over $25,000,000 which is approximately 15% of the tourist spending in the City of Destin.  Without healthy beaches the tourist will not come, jobs will be lost and business will close.  Property values will decrease putting additional pressure on the City to decrease services or raise taxes to balance the budget.  Without some type of immediate renourishment, the next tropical storm or hurricane will cause millions of dollars of property damage and wipe out the tourist trade and real estate market in Destin for years.
 
On October 28, 2009 the Florida Department of Environmental Protection (FDEP) issued a permit to dredge the East Pass.  We had hoped this permit would permit the dredged sand to be placed on our beaches.  Unfortunately the issued permit specifically prohibits any sand dredged from being placed on the Destin beaches.  To make matters worse this permit is for ten years, therefore it would prohibit any sand dredged from the East Pass from being placed on our beaches for TEN YEARS.
 
On November 12, 2009 the Holiday Isle Improvement Association, Destin Pointe, Jetty East, Inlet Reef, Holiday Surf and Racquet and, The Islander Owner Associations filed a petition against FDEP to have this permit modified to comply with statute 161 which states "All construction and maintenance dredgings of beach quality sand are placed on the adjacent eroding beaches..."  It is clear the east side of East Pass is eroded as compared to the west and technical studies have been conducted to document this erosion.
 
This is an action we tried to avoid and regret having to take.  We do not want to delay the dredging of East Pass or in any way negatively affect our fishing fleet.  However, I think you will agree this is an emergency situation and we are justified in taking this action.
 
If the permit is modified it could result in the placement of 300,000 cubic yards of sand being placed on our beaches.  This is 36% of the total volume of sand planned for the major beach restoration project that is now being held up in court.  This sand could be placed on our beaches within two months.  In other words it is extremely important and crucial to the survival of our community and economy.  We request your support.
 
If you have any questions contact the Holiday Isle Improvement Association office at 837-4753.
 
John Medina
President, Board of Directors
Holiday Isle Improvement Association


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Reader's comments




It is not about us not wanting to participate. We are already paying funds towards this. We do not want our property STOLEN. It is like paying money to be robbed! And raped! We do not care if they give you sand, the critically eroded areas should get sand. But why do you think the non critically eroded property needs sand and we do not agree with stealing. See 14th amendment

Private Property Owner - Nov 22, 2009 05:33:06 PM Remove Comment

 
Mother Nature Please! If a sink hole, a tornado, hurricane. wipes me out, I better have insurance or the mess stays in my yard. the gov will not pay for it or fix it. It's up to me to fill in the sink hole. I've been in a tornado and hurricanes and all the gov gave me was a bag of ice, and a few MRI's. Why would you say that. And I hope you continue to refuse help now. In ten years Holiday Isle will roll over on inself. If you're not sure what that means look up barrier islands and how they roll over and move closer to shore. This is a interesting fact. Please never give in. stay the course. suey suey, suey. oh by the way take a deep breath, do you smell squid. because you're wrong, again.

bb - Nov 21, 2009 07:44:43 AM Remove Comment

 
Capt Ron you are correct in that with floods gov agencies help, with tornados gov agencies help, with sink holes gov agencies help. One BIG difference with Florida gov they intend to make the helped private property PUBLIC. The only difference is the beauty and desirability of the beach. Flooded property that received gov help did not become public property, tornado repairs helped by gov agencies did not become public homes. It is Florida and Destin that are trying to use restoration as a land grab pure and simple. They propose to restore beaches that are not declaired critically eroded. Guess what, not gonna happen. Law suit, law suit, law suit. Holiday Isle desperately needs sand but the city will only help IF they can take all of Destins shoreline as public. Doesnt look like that is going to happen any time soon.

Mother Nature - Nov 20, 2009 10:37:10 PM Remove Comment

 
fish lady, surely you know Destin Pointe was built on Gulf of Mexico trucked in by Bob Sykes. Then variances were granted to built blocks seaward of the coastal construction control line. Owners may have bought in good faith, but politicians all along the way contributed to sandcastles.

I was there - Nov 20, 2009 12:46:27 PM Remove Comment

 
As I said last night and my post was removed, it is what it is. The developers developed. The corps and DEP permitted, the land was bought and the houses were built to code. The owners bought in good faith. Bad things happen to good people and, Yeahright and others, you could be next. I hope to be the first to help you out and I hope you can find it in your heart to help us now. Thank you in advance.

Fish Lady - Nov 20, 2009 09:08:05 AM Remove Comment

 
I say bb for mayor. His comedy routines would fit right in with the Council meetings -- boring, repetitive, and unintelligible.

Oops - Nov 19, 2009 08:03:55 PM Remove Comment

 
Fish lady, here is another position borrowing largely from Mrs Sherry’s presentation at the last public hearing. JE and DP can repair their beaches and it can be done within 6 months. Mrs Sherry explained three options at that public hearing. The commissioners, except Jannazo, and every west HI speaker chose to ignore options that will bring sand, and to instead chose the option that will keep sand away from west HI the longest. These were the options she said will bring sand. She suggested upland sand like Navarre Beach is doing. DEP has said they will permit this option fast track. This started in September, and construction is on schedule to be completed in March. Two, start the process for a pre-filled breakwater. These are permitted in Florida, and several were approved for the Atlantic coast this year. Coastal Tech recommended in 2005 for JE and DP, but was ignored. Sand likely in 2011, and will last for a long time. Three, full scale beach restoration. This won’t happen until 2013, and probably later, if Destin and Okaloosa Island opposition areas are not dropped. She remarked, if someone goes to the Destin city council and the county BCC and requests all Destin, except for the west Holiday Isle condos and DP be removed, and all OK Island be removed, then full scale restoration of west HI is only a year or two away. I believe west HI owners need to decide if they want to harm their Destin and OK Island neighbors, or if they want sand fast.

insider - Nov 19, 2009 07:53:51 PM Remove Comment

 
A writer who called himself rights said it best and I quote. We all need to get facts straight. JE and DP couldn't do what the engineers suggested because the were told by DEP that DEP would not permit such action. The sand they have received had to be placed on dry sand and not in the water. When you only have two feet of dry sand at the corner of your building this doesn't help much. Beach Renourishment for Destin will be funded through the Bed Tax from the TDC and is tax on the visitors staying here. It will also be funded by the MSBU which is a tax on only homeowners living on the beach. The Destin Beach Renourishment does not have state funding for the project! The sand for the beach renourishment will not come from an upland source but be dredged just off the Eglin property which is the sand that used to make our beaches. It seems we should do the east pass dredging, give the sand to those who need it now and repay the Okaloosa Island with sand from the beach renourishment of Destin as a thank you for helping Holiday Isle and the Boat Captains out now. If 300,000 comes out of the pass and is put on HI then take 300,000 from the Destin Beach Renourishment and give it Okaloosa Island.

Fish Lady - Nov 19, 2009 03:32:26 PM Remove Comment

 
My place on Holiday Isle, like most there, it is not worth 2 million, or even close. Before the beach was gone, I contributed about $30,000 a year to the local economy in taxes and rental revenue. Not anymore. Everyone in Oklasoosa County benefitted from this in some way. Why do some people in the county want to fry the goose that lays the golden egg? Cancel the emeral coast ads. Owners on Holiday Isle would like to make our own repairs, but the beach is owned by the state and we are not permitted. Government and government agencies control the beaches. We do not. By the way, I pay $4200 property tax on a $197,000 property. How about you? If you have a flood, taxpayers will help. If you have a sink hole, taxpayers will help. If you have a tornado, taxpayers will help. If you live on Holiday Isle, you're on your own.

Captain Ron - Nov 19, 2009 01:50:59 PM Remove Comment

 
Speaking of taxes. If you check the Okaloosa tax records you would find that this 2 million dollar homeowner used as an example would contribute about twenty six THOUSAND into government coffers each year. Most of the homes in DP are not 2MM by the way. I think most folks don't realize the tax revenue generated from DP and other properties on Holiday Isle. Just another consideration when we talk taxes.

my2cents - Nov 19, 2009 10:34:15 AM Remove Comment

 
I agree with Thomas Paine. Dave Sherry said the Inlet Management Plan supports his position, and that without the jetties trapping sand, it would naturally flow westward anyway. BB says with the condo's blocking the wind and sand dunes bull dozed this is blocking the nutual flow. Dave wins the squid up his nose award. For only mentioning the one obstruction. But isn't that the way Dave works, using factual information.

bb - Nov 19, 2009 08:50:09 AM Remove Comment

 
Everyone can enjoy the view of boats going in and out of the harbor from the boardwalk for free, with only a few dollars most can be a passenger on one of the boats in the Pass. Very few of us can afford one of the 2 million dollar gated estates inside Destin Pointe. Why are we even debating spending taxpayer dollars to "save" properties where millionaire owners have ignored their engineer's recommendations to fix their beach for 5 years? Elected Destin city council people, this is a very simple issue. Do what is right for the large majority of citizens. Dredge the harbor and the pass. Sanction HIIA. Demand HIIA, DP, and JE drop their objection. No more taxpayer handouts. Their greed has gone too far. And don't spend my Destin tax money on HIIA demands when they come crying the next time.

do what\'s right - Nov 19, 2009 07:58:59 AM Remove Comment

 
To thomas paine, Sorry for the confusion, I ran out of space so had to clip my sentances to fit. The statement 'with rocks being 200 ft from the sea' refers to the distance from where the dumptruck dumped the rocks on the roadside, to the waters edge. Dumptrucks could not access my beach to dump the rocks, so I had to use a bulldozer to tote the rocks from 'the main rock pile' in my driveway, through my yard to get to the waters edge. My driveway in my front yard is 200 feet from the water which is in my backyard. I provided this 'actual project' data so people could easily scale it up or down to fit thier own project needs, and so they could estimate thier cost and time realistically, so they could caulculate labor costs if they were paying 2 workman. I used a 'walk behind dozer' with a max speed of 2 mph, thus your cost is determined by a time, speed, distance triangle. I hope that helps!

Sand Bug - Nov 18, 2009 10:20:35 PM Remove Comment

 
The facts, I wrote comprehensively about this issue a few months ago as “common sense.” There haven’t been 11 relevant studies of our inlet. For that matter, please share with us the study two years ago that estimated sand transport. I will suggest that Panama City and Gulf Shores are too distant to be relevant comparables for our inlet, which is somewhat unique in its hydraulics. Recent studies, with latest state of the art equipment and techniques, suggest past estimates may be flawed, or were simply narrow snapshots in time that don't reflect all the variables. The current topographic, bathyspheric and real world observations support that they are flawed. Why do you guys cling so tenaciously to old information, simply because it’s what you want to hear? Remember, somebody once proved the world is round, and it actually revolves around the sun.

thomas paine - Nov 17, 2009 11:05:09 PM Remove Comment

 
thomas paine, I don't know if you were following this issue a few months ago. There have been 11 published studies documenting the predominant "longitudinal" flow is east to west in the Florida panhandle going back over 100 years and as recent as two years ago. The studies cover Panama City to Gulf Shores, AL. None have shown a net flow of west to east.

the facts - Nov 17, 2009 10:42:52 PM Remove Comment

 
Scientific observer, nature intends for sand to move west when it blows waves from the southeast, and intends for sand to move east when it blows waves from the southwest. "Sand that nature intended to move west" is a total simplistic fallacy promoted by Sherry with dribs of the old inlet study information. Sandbug, "200 feet away from the sea" at this point for DP and JE would likely be through the buildings. I think their point is, they don't have a 200 foot beach anymore.

thomas paine - Nov 17, 2009 08:37:37 PM Remove Comment

 
This is simply a case of greed by JE and DP. They know what they need to do. Coastal Tech told them, FDEP has said they will approve it post haste, yet they refuse to do it. Pre-filled breakwater. For those less technical, this is similar to the structures along the east side of the East Pass by Norriego Point. It should last 30 years, per Coastal Tech, was proposed in 2005, and could have been done in 2006. Don't blame everyone else that you have refused to fix YOUR problem.

a solution - Nov 17, 2009 05:47:45 PM Remove Comment

 
Protect YOUR property! A self made seawall 6 ft high, 4 feet thick, by 100 foot long can be built in 5 days, by 2 people working 7 hour days at an easy pace, with a rock pile dumped 200 feet away from the sea. Boulders cost 2,000 dollars, the same as jettys rocks about a quarter the size. Due to narrow access I used a hand driven 'walk behind' mini bulldozer rented locally 130 dollars per day. For deep sand or mud get steel waffle tracks to firm your path. PREP project before you rent. Mark boundariess, string guides for seawall. Measure the farthest run, inspect ground stability for areas to avoid. Flag all obstacles, sprinklers, spigots, wells, etc. Clear 'rock pile area' where dumptruck accessible, inspect for low hanging powerlines etc. Move vehicles, place road cones, notify neighbors. Schedule rock delivery after dozer arrives, you may need to rescue rocks that roll into road during dumping. TEST DRIVE dozer,ALL controls, gauges, fluids, steering, bucket AT THE SHOP the day before! Dont waste a rental day on technical difficulties! When ready, just scoop up rocks, tote em with bucket down, gently pile them along your stringline in sections. Use dozer bucket to maneuver and shift rocks. BEWARE round rocks will roll, so place them wisely, nested. When dozer retreats, have rockman wiggle, shift rocks snug and wedge small rocks into open spaces as interlocking wedges. Alternate dozer driver and rockman jobs since driving the dozer is fun, and hand building is very rewarding! WOMEN BEWARE, men will try to hogg the dozer, don't let him UNLESS your a total clutz or unsafe! Seawall will sink, settle thru time so plan to top off seawall once or twice over the years. GODSPEED to all who get off their arses and protect their own property!

SandBug - Nov 17, 2009 01:46:31 PM Remove Comment

 
Scientific Observer is my favorite geek this week and wins the squid up your nose award with this Quote, The inlet blocks the very sand that nature intended to move West. Ok, the condo's block natural wind patterns, hmm you think nature intended to have her sand dunes bull dozed flat. It is, what it is, There is a jetty, there are condo's that block natural wind sand movement and in case you missed the icing on the cake. The sand Dune are completely gone at the hands of supreme man. what where you saying agin, you deserve to have the sand because thats what nature intended. squid up your nose.

chofer - Nov 16, 2009 10:49:04 PM Remove Comment

 
Has DP always been a public beach? If so let's get the job done and restore all the beach's widen the Destin Harbor entrance, build parking garages especially a big 10 story public parking garage at Jetty East, get rid of security guards and make them life guards, no more fences, more public restrooms, and make the pavillion at Sand Piper Cove and JE a beach bar hang out, we will all prosper then!

BlindRef - Nov 16, 2009 06:47:04 PM Remove Comment

 



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WHAT DO YOU THINK?
Should the city continue to fund emergency beach restoration projects on Holiday Isle?
Yes, Holiday Isle is a tourism engine that benefits all of Destin with bed taxes
Yes, they are our neighbors and they need help
No, the beach keeps eroding, and we are flushing our money away
No, it is their private property and they should pay for more sand
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