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Pilkey is James
B. Duke Professor Emeritus of earth sciences in the Nicholas
School of the Environment and Earth Sciences
Photo:Jim Wallace |
It was August 1969 when I watched
TV with dismay as the eye of Hurricane Camille passed within
ten miles of my parents' home in Waveland, Mississippi. Camille,
with its 200-mile-per-hour winds, turned out to be the greatest
storm to cross an American shoreline in the twentieth century.
I arranged for someone to teach my class at the Duke Marine
Lab and, accompanied by my brother, rushed down to bail out
the folks. Dad was a manager for G.E. at the Saturn Test
site and all employees--along with their families, dogs,
and even goldfish--crowded into a building designed to resist
an errant Saturn engine blast. My parents' home, three blocks
back from the Gulf, was still standing, but the twenty-foot
storm surge brought five feet of water inside.
A couple of months earlier, I had accompanied my civil-engineer
father on a tour of beachfront houses to look at construction
quality. He showed me which beachfront houses would survive
hurricanes and which wouldn't, and explained why.
Post-storm, he and I made a second house tour. Camille was
a Category 5 hurricane, and so none of the houses, well-built
or otherwise, survived. I remember one in particular that
was missing altogether--it had been so lightly attached that
its pilings weren't bent or damaged in the slightest.
It took a long while before the Mississippi Coast recovered.
A decade later, there were still vacant lots along the shoreline
with steps leading to nowhere.
Ten years later, Hurricane Hugo, a Category 3 storm, struck
Charleston, South Carolina. By then, we were a wealthier
society: We had the Federal Emergency Management Agency,
and the post-storm response was different, to say the least.
Hugo became an "urban-renewal project." Larger
and more costly buildings immediately replaced damaged small
buildings. Beachfront property prices held steady, and, within
two years, the South Carolina coast was far more vulnerable
to a bad hurricane than it had been in 1989. Subsequent storms
along our East and Gulf coasts have, without exception, also
amounted to urban-renewal projects.
Hurricane Camille piqued my interest in things coastal. I
was a deep-sea sedimentologist and one of the world's leading
experts on abyssal plains. (This is a fair statement, given
that there were only six such specialists in the world at
the time.) But after Camille, I wrote a book, How to Live
With an Island, that included a section on high-wind construction
written by my father. The book was three-eighths-inches thick
and was sold by the state for $1.50. It was an instant success.
I can't recall ever getting a single phone call about abyssal
plains, but I was deluged with calls about my $1.50 book.
That was the start of things. I organized the Program for
the Study of Developed Shorelines and began (with the help
of fellow geologist Bill Neal) to create Living With the
Shore (Duke University Press), a series of state-specific
books about coastal hazards that now number twenty-four.
In the process of writing and editing the books, we walked
the beaches from Miami to Fire Island and Seattle to Inupiat
villages north of the Arctic Circle. The books offered detailed
maps of hazards, gave shoreline erosion rates, and mapped
high-risk zones in readable fashion, even using street names.
Surely, people would not build in very dangerous places if
they knew the hazards, we thought. But we were so wrong!
Buildings continue to be constructed in the highest of high-risk
places. My naïvetè was finally cured
when I saw a large, brand-new house on Topsail Island, North
Carolina, built in the middle of a shallow inlet formed during
Hurricane Fran (1996). It was clear that this parcel of land
had been, and would again be, a storm inlet. And our book
had said so.
The potential for damage from hurricanes increases every
year. Sea level is rising and the rate of this rise should
soon accelerate. Global warming is expected to increase storminess
in the North Atlantic, and more storms generally mean even
more erosion. More buildings crowd the retreating shoreline,
and, each year, the average size of threatened beachfront
buildings becomes larger, as mom-and-pop cottages from yesteryear
are replaced. Few beachfront buildings being built now cost
less than $1 million. So it is probable that the political
power of the beachfront lobby increases every year as well.
The only bright spot is increased enforcement of high-wind
building codes, leading to shorefront buildings that are
considerably tougher than the cottage in Waveland, Mississippi,
toe-nailed to its pilings.
Now we are entering a new hurricane season. Hurricane guru
William Gray of Colorado State University predicts more storms
than average in 2005, although perhaps not as bad a season
as last year's, when Ivan, Charley, Frances, and Jeanne all
crossed the shorelines of Florida. It seems that even four
storms in one state in one year didn't change a thing--no
pause for reflection. Our response to those events simply
cemented the notion that nature at the beach is something
to be confronted and defeated. Just to replace the sand on
Florida's storm-eroded beaches cost taxpayers $240 million.
Sooner or later our society must back off the beaches as
concerns increase about beach quality and as preservation
of major coastal cities becomes a higher priority. The first
step will be to discourage beachfront urban renewal. That
would mean moving or demolishing threatened buildings, prohibiting
the rebuilding (and certainly the super-sizing) of destroyed
buildings, and ending further subsidy of beachfront development,
including tax-supported beach nourishment and federal flood
insurance. It's time to learn to live with the shoreline,
not on it.
Pilkey is James B. Duke Professor Emeritus
of earth sciences in the Nicholas School of the Environment
and Earth Sciences.
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