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Chris Christie slams ‘selfish’ homeowners blocking coastal protection measures

Chris Christie slams ‘selfish’ homeowners blocking coastal protection measures

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Glynnis Jones

Some waterfront residents would rather risk devastating storm surges than lose their views.

Would you like a dose of utter destruction with that view?

In the wake of Superstorm Sandy, some New Jersey residents living in vulnerable oceanfront properties are stymieing efforts to build sand dunes and widen beaches along the coastline to block storm surges. Some fear losing their views. Others worry that new public-access beach areas could be opened up adjacent to their properties.

Gov. Chris Christie (R) said on Tuesday that he has “no sympathy” for property owners standing in the way of a $3 billion federal project to widen beaches and build protective dunes. He announced plans for dealing with these “selfish” property owners during a town hall meeting in Middlesex Borough.

State of New Jersey

Chris Christie tells them what’s what.

“We will go town by town and if we have to start calling names out of the selfish ones who care more about their view than they care about the safety and the welfare of their neighbors, then we are going to start doing that,” Christie said, according to CBS. “I will use my normal sense of gentle persuasion to try to make sure that we bring people along.”

From The Star-Ledger:

Christie has credited sand dunes — some man-made and others the work of nature — with protecting homes and businesses during Hurricane Sandy in October.

Towns without dunes were left vulnerable to devastating wind and rain …

Although Christie has said he will not condemn homes to buy out residents in flood-prone areas, he said last week in Manasquan that he would resort to eminent domain for beachfront property if necessary.

The Asbury Park Press reported in January that about half of the coastal homeowners in one town were resisting dunes and other beach restoration efforts:

[O]fficials are struggling to persuade half of the 127 oceanfront property owners here to sign construction easements that will allow the Army Corps of Engineers to rebuild a wider beach and thick, 22-foot-high dunes against the next storm.

To skeptics, the issue of easements always has been one of ceding private property rights. But to borough and state officials, it’s about saving the community.

Go get ‘em, governor.

John Upton is a science aficionado and green news junkie who

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Chris Christie slams ‘selfish’ homeowners blocking coastal protection measures

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Huge, unusual storm slams into Philippines because that is what happens all the time now

Huge, unusual storm slams into Philippines because that is what happens all the time now

This is Typhoon Bopha, as seen from the International Space Station.

Click to embiggen.

That’s what it looks like from space. It’s hard to get a sense of scale from that image, so here’s another, showing it against the arc of the Earth. It extends for more than 300 miles in diameter.

NASA

More importantly, here’s what it looks like from the ground.

The storm, which Capital Weather Gang refers to as a “beastly super typhoon,” made landfall as the equivalent of a category 5 storm. The site explains why this storm is unusual.

The relatively compact storm is tracking at an unusually far south latitude, not far from the equator. Writes Wunderground’s Jeff Masters:

“Mindanao rarely gets hit by typhoons, since the island is too close to the Equator, and the infrastructure of Mindanao is not prepared to handle heavy typhoon rains as well as the more typhoon-prone northern islands. Bopha is potentially a catastrophic storm for Mindanao.” …

Storms this strong do not usually occur this far south because the coriolis force, which helps storms spin up, is weak at such latitudes. Bopha became a typhoon just 3.8 degrees above the equator, says the UK Met Office.

Yahoo News describes its passage over the island earlier today.

About 40 people were killed or missing in flash floods and landslides near a mining area on Mindanao, ABS-CBN television reported, saying waters and soil had swept through an army post.

A television reporter said she saw numerous bodies lined up near the army base. A military spokesman earlier said about 20 people, including six soldiers, were missing. …

But the relatively low death toll was due in part to an early evacuation. More than 155,000 people were in shelters late on Tuesday.

The storm has moved into the South China Sea, where it is expected to weaken.

This story is part of Grist’s on-going series “Massive, unusual, deadly storms from around the globe.” The odds are good that the series will eventually become a daily feature. Maybe hourly.

CIMSS

Philip Bump writes about the news for Gristmill. He also uses Twitter a whole lot.

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Huge, unusual storm slams into Philippines because that is what happens all the time now

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