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FLAGLER BEACH - After months upon months of being one holdout away from the start of a major dune restoration project, Flagler County has finally reached an agreement that will allow things to proceed. Cynthia D'Angiolini owns a property on the beach i. ....
FLAGLER BEACH - The Flagler County government is suing two property owners in Flagler Beach who're holding up a dune restoration project which has been in the works for over a decade. If the suits are successful, the county will acquire the property te. ....
7 hours ago Share County Attorney Al Hadeed was granted permission from the County Commission to legally take the property if necessary, using eminent domain powers. As the 2021 hurricane season approaches, Flagler County strives to secure the final properties needed to repair the dunes that were damaged in previous hurricanes.
Season begins June 1 Emergency Management Director Jonathan Lord told the County Commission on May 17 that 17-20 named storms are predicted by weather experts this year; the average is 14. Last year, there were a record 30 named storms. However, Lord said, “None of this matters. I don’t care if it’s the mildest hurricane season ever we have to be prepared for a storm no matter what.” ....
It’s just 2,500 square feet of yellow sand, opposite the house on the other side of State Road A1A, at 2732 South Ocean Shore Boulevard. Flagler County government has been trying to convince Leonard Surles, the homeowner who lives in South Florida, to sign an easement and join nearly 100 other property owners who have done so to enable the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to rebuild dunes along 2.6 miles of beachfront in Flagler Beach. The dunes are expected to prolong the life of the barrier island against rising seas, especially the homes and businesses along A1A. The easement changes nothing about property owners’ rights. It merely grants the Corps access to dump and shape sand into dunes, and to do so periodically, for maintenance, over the next 50 years. The parcel remains private property. Nothing may be built there, unless the homeowner wants to build a walkway that complies with city rules. If anything, the easement is a form of property insurance–at no cost to the h ....