Feds vow to fast track plan to raise Miami homes, protect businesses from flooding

Click here to read the article in the Miami Herald.

An image from a June 2023 presentation by Miami Dade County maps out where some of the potential fixes included in the Army Corps of Engineer’s Back Bay study. Miami Dade County / Moffat + Nichol

Connor compared the Miami-Dade plan to Everglades Restoration, a two-decades-long saga of studies, projects and funding that aim to revive Florida’s historic wetlands.

“Let’s demonstrate to the community that we can move forward with projects they do see as valuable and build on that success,” he said.

Jim Murley, the county’s chief resilience officer, said protecting Miami-Dade’s critical infrastructure has always been the county’s priority, so they support the Corps’ plan to speed things along.

“It does accelerate the opportunity to bring benefits to parts of our community,” he said.

Speeding things up, in terms of the engineering arm of the federal government, would amount to shaving about two years off what could be a multi-decade-long process. If the Corps successfully delivers a report to Congress in 2024 with an estimate for how many buildings need to be raised or floodproofed, along with an estimated price tag, the legislature could approve continued planning and design for those elevations as soon as 2025.

Finishing that planning, then going back to Congress for money to make it happen, then actually building and elevating all those structures, could take more than a decade.

By 2026, officials say they hope to have another report — and another request for cash — ready for Congress. This time, the report would likely include the more complicated side of coastal protections, what to use to armor the coast.

The Corps’ original plan was to line Miami-Dade’s coast with tall walls and gates at the mouths of its rivers and canals. But after public pushback on the unsightliness of the walls and regulatory agencies questioning whether such an idea could ever be permitted, the Corps and County went back to the drawing board.

By 2026, officials say they hope to have another report — and another request for cash — ready for Congress. This time, the report would likely include the more complicated side of coastal protections, what to use to armor the coast.

The Corps’ original plan was to line Miami-Dade’s coast with tall walls and gates at the mouths of its rivers and canals. But after public pushback on the unsightliness of the walls and regulatory agencies questioning whether such an idea could ever be permitted, the Corps and County went back to the drawing board.

A rendering depicting what the Army Corps of Engineers’ proposed 10-foot high walls designed to protect downtown Miami from storm-surge flooding might look like at Brickell Bay Drive. Curtis + Rogers Design Studio and the Miami DDA

 What has emerged, so far, is a plan that kicks the protections even further out to include Miami Beach, relies much more heavily on nature-based ideas like mangroves and coral reefs, and a lower level of protection for the community overall.

Murley said the county’s drive to solicit resident feedback on those areas, and also on the home-raising side of things, won’t diminish or end just because the Corps is shortening the timeline.

“We need the input,” he said. “Even though we’re in an accelerated timeline, that won’t end.”

 Click here to read the article in the Miami Herald.

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