State of the Beach/State Reports/NC

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North Carolina

Summary

In contrast to many other states, North Carolina's policies and amount of available information regarding erosion and beach fill is exceptional. Beach access information is good, but areas in the state have inadequate access and/or parking. The ocean water quality testing program is adequate, but water quality is impacted by sewer spills, storm drains and agricultural area runoff in some areas. The state's Website is an excellent source of information on beach health indicators.

North Carolina Ratings


Indicators

(+) In October 2009 the Governors of North Carolina, South Carolina, Florida and Georgia announced an agreement to work together to better manage and protect ocean and coastal resources, ensure regional economic sustainability and respond to disasters such as hurricanes. The South Atlantic Alliance will leverage resources from each state to protect and maintain healthy coastal ecosystems, keep waterfronts working, enhance clean ocean and coastal waters and help make communities more resilient after they’ve been struck by natural disasters.

(+) Developing a Management Strategy for North Carolina's Coastal Ocean: Draft Report, prepared by the N.C. Coastal Resources Law, Planning and Policy Center through contracts with the Division of Coastal Management and the N.C. Sea Grant College Program, discusses five emerging ocean resource issues: sand resource management, ocean-based alternative energy development, ocean outfalls, marine aquaculture, and comprehensive ocean management.

(+) In February 2009 the N.C. Coastal Resources Commission and its advisory board unanimously passed a resolution asking the General Assembly to consider creating a state trust fund to help finance coastal infrastructure projects, including removal of structures encroaching onto public beach areas, beach fill, inlet channel realignment, beach access and dredging projects.

(+) Under new rules adopted by the Environmental Management Commission in January 2008, developers in 20 coastal counties will have to create wider vegetative buffers along waterways, expanding them from the current 30 feet to 50 feet for new projects. Developments that alter more than a quarter acre of land, up from the current one-acre threshold, will have to use cisterns or permeable pavement or other devices to keep stormwater from washing off the land.

(+) In 2007 the NC General Assembly appropriated $20 million for waterfront access projects in an effort to reduce the loss of public access to coastal waterways due to private development.

(+) NCAC 7H .0312, Technical Standards for Beach Fill Projects, which outlines new sediment criteria rules for beach nourishment projects, went into effect Feb. 1, 2007. It is the most comprehensive set of rules regarding beach nourishment for any coastal state.

(+) The state divisions of Coastal Management and Water Resources are developing the state’s first comprehensive Beach and Inlet Management Plan, or BIMP.

(+) Under the Coastal Area Management Act, each of the state's 20 coastal counties must submit plans to the state that show how they intend to grow and develop, while protecting the coastline and its natural resources. Many coastal cities and towns opt to submit plans of their own.

(+) North Carolina Beach, Inlet & Waterway Association gave North Carolina beaches a "B" and public access to beaches an "A" on their 2007 Report Card for the NC Coast.

(+) North Carolina’s coastal setbacks are based on local average coastal erosion rates. The average coastal erosion rate is multiplied by 30 or 60 depending on the size of the building to be built.

(+) The N.C. General Assembly fully funded the N.C. Clean Water Management Trust Fund for the first time in 2005 by providing a $100 million appropriation.

(+) NCDCM staff estimates that although only 40% of coastal lands are publicly owned, about 95% of the beaches are publicly accessible. They indicate that there are coastal access points about every one-half mile in urban areas and every two miles in rural areas.

(+) The Coastal Resources Commission ban on seawalls was incorporated into law. The NC Coastal Area Management Act was amended to permanently ban these structures.

(+) In 2007, NCDCM enhanced public access to public beaches and coastal waters through $2.9 million in grants for 23 projects in 19 local communities for public access projects. The grants help pay for a variety of projects to improve access to coastal beaches and waters, including walkways, dune crossovers, restrooms, parking areas and piers.

(+) The creation of the new Mason Inlet created a sanctuary for birds on the north end. More than 500 least turns nested at the north end bird sanctuary in 2005, making it the largest natural nesting site for that bird in the state.

(0) From 1965 to 1998, the Carolina Beach fill program has cost $26.3 million and the Wrightsville Beach fill program has cost $16.7 million.

(0) The cumulative cost of sand replenishment to protect the coast of North Carolina from a 20-inch sea level rise by 2100 is estimated at $660 million to $3.6 billion.

(0) The populations of Camden, Currituck, Brunswick and Dare Counties have increased 20 percent in the last five years. The coast's population is expected to increase another 40 percent by 2030.

(-) Saying it would bring unnecessary regulation to eastern North Carolina, the Beaufort County Board of Commissioners voted unanimously in February 2011 to oppose a policy proposed by the state Division of Coastal Management intended to guard coastal communities against future sea-level rise.

(-) N.C. Senate Bill 832 is a serious threat to North Carolina's long-standing ban against hardened structures along the shore. The current bill rewrites G.S. 113A-115.1 and adds three important definitions that will open the door for "terminal groins" all along the beaches of North Carolina.

(-) Gov. Beverly Perdue transferred $100 million from the Clean Water Management Fund to the state general fund in February 2009. That could leave some land-acquisition, wastewater improvement and stream restoration projects in the lurch. Some 192 water and sewer projects, many of them already under construction, were halted across the state in the wake of Gov. Perdue’s decision.

(-) Approximately 441,448 acres of the state’s coastal waters are closed to the harvest of shellfish due to high bacteria levels or adjacent potential pollution sources. Approximately 43,188 additional acres are classified as Conditionally Approved and are temporarily closed after periods of heavy rainfall. The percentage of Hewlett’s Creek closed to shellfishing has increased from 54 percent in 1988 to 100 percent today. Pages Creek showed a similar increase, rising from 66 percent to 89 percent closed.

(-) Federal flood insurance has paid more than $500 million to repair hurricane damage in North Carolina since 1996. Builders have put up thousands of homes since hurricanes Fran in 1996 and Floyd in 1997, making the area one of the fastest-growing in the South.

(-) The state has lost more than 1 million acres of natural and rural areas to development over the past 10 years, as new homes, shopping centers and other developments swallow up 277 acres of natural or agricultural land every day.

(-) North Carolina's hog farms dump 13 million pounds of hog waste a day into open-air lagoons that are later sprayed on fields as fertilizer.

(-) There are 26 storm drains on the coast, and no sewage outfalls. However, nutrient pollution of rivers and estuaries from large-scale hog operations is still a serious problem.

(-) The state Division of Water Quality has stated that it has logged more than 500 wastewater releases in New Hanover County since 1997.

(-) Several Coastal Habitat Protection Plan (CHPP) initiatives were not included in the final 2005-06 or 2006-07 state budgets. The requested funds were for projects including an inventory of docks and piers ($750,000 has been appropriated for the initial phase of BIMP development), mapping submerged aquatic vegetation and mapping shell bottom.

Victories

  • Building Heights Limited in Kill Devil Hills The Town of Kill Devil Hills, in North Carolina's Outer Banks, put limits on the size of buildings constructed on ocean front property. Proposed loosening of the regulations would have allowed larger construction projects along the town's eroding shorelines. The Outer Banks Chapter worked with a coalition of other concerned citizens to pass the new rules.
  • Access 33 Kept Open - Wrightsville Beach Public Beach Access 33 in Wrightsville Beach, which has been used by the public for over 40 years, was recently taken away. When an adjacent property owner recently realized that the access lies within its property line, the Public Beach Access was restricted from further use by the public. The Town of Wrightsville Beach decided not to investigate alternatives for saving the public beach access. The closure of Beach Access No. 33 created the longest gap between accesses within the town. Through public pressure and petitioning, followed by negotiations with the Town and homeowner the Cape Fear Chapter was able to come to a compromise. With the Chapter's assistance the town will purchase a permanent easement to keep Access 33 open. This agreement also avoids setting a dangerous precedence of closing a public beach access. More info.
  • The Cape Fear Chapter started a Beachscape coastline mapping program in October 2001 at Wrightsville Beach. The chapter has now put a greatly expanded Beachscape program on their website, with multiple links to coastal information. Check it out at: http://www.surfrider.org/capefear/beachscape/

For a list of Surfrider Foundation's latest coastal victories, go here.



State of the Beach Report: North Carolina
North Carolina Home Beach Description Beach Access Water Quality Beach Erosion Erosion Response Beach Fill Shoreline Structures Beach Ecology Surfing Areas Website
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