Congress and the White House must meet a Sept. 30 deadline to fund the government. But the Corps efforts to protect drinking water fall under a different category.
Congress and the White House must meet a Sept. 30 deadline to fund the government. But the Corps efforts to protect drinking water fall under a different category.
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Mobilization underway for the Sunny Isles beachfill May 25, 2021, by Zlatan Hrvacevic
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Jacksonville District has just announced that mobilization is underway for the Sunny Isles Beach (FL) renourishment project.
The contractor, Eastman Aggregate Enterprises, LLC, will place 280,000 cubic-yards of beach-quality sand on approximately 2.3 miles of eroded shoreline.
Placement will begin in the north working southward with the contractor using the Ellen Wynne Beach Access first, then the former Travel Lodge Motel, and finally at Haulover Park, reported the Army Corps.
They also added that most of the beach will remain open throughout the duration of this project. Flagmen will be stationed throughout the project limits to ensure the safety of pedestrians entering the beach.
Sunny Isles beach renourishment begins May 14, 2021, by Eldin Ganic
The Sunny Isles Beach shoreline renourishment, part of the Miami-Dade County Beach Erosion Control and Hurricane Protection Project, will begin in the following days.
The contractor, Eastman Aggregate Enterprises, LLC, will renourish eroded shoreline in Sunny Isles Beach, using beach-quality sand from the Garcia Mine based in Hendry County, Fla.
The contractor will place an estimated 280,000 cubic-yards of beach-quality sand on approximately 2.3 miles of eroded shoreline to protect the shoreline during seasonal storms, as well as tropical storms and hurricanes.
According to USACE, the project is 100 percent federally funded via the Flood Control and Coastal Emergency Act (Public Law 84-99) and the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018 (Public Law 115-123).