State of the Beach/State Reports/AL

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Alabama

Summary

Alabama has generally good beach access but little in the way of comprehensive beach access information. There is good beach water quality monitoring information but only fair water quality. Beach erosion monitoring data is fair to good but there is very little in the way of policies or guidance for erosion response. There is some beach fill information but very little information on the extent of shoreline armoring. Beach and wetlands ecology information is generally good. The Alabama Coastal Area Management Program website on outdooralabama.com has very little utility. It should at least link to ADEM's coastal programs website which does provide good water quality, coastal permitting and beach ecology information.

Alabama Ratings


Indicators

(+) The Gulf of Mexico Alliance is a partnership of the states of Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas, with the goal of significantly increasing regional collaboration to enhance the ecological and economic health of the Gulf of Mexico. The five U.S. Gulf States have identified six priority issues that are regionally significant and can be effectively addressed through increased collaboration at local, state, and federal levels: Water Quality, Habitat Conservation and Restoration, Ecosystem Integration and Assessment, Nutrients & Nutrient Impacts, Coastal Community Resilience, and Environmental Education.

(+) The “5 Rivers – Alabama’s Delta Resource Center” is a facility of the ADCNR State Lands Division and home of the Coastal Section offices. It provides public access to over 250,000 acres that comprise part of the Mobile-Tensaw Delta. Funding from the ACAMP helped to complete some of the facilities at 5 Rivers, including a power boat dock, canoe and kayak landing, walking trails, picnic shelters and tables, and some permeable parking.

(+) Alabama intends to develop a Coastal Area and Marine Spatial Planning guide that would involve a comprehensive, adaptive, integrated, ecosystem-based, and transparent spatial planning process, based on sound science, for analyzing current and anticipated uses of coastal areas. In practical terms, the guide would provide a public policy process to better determine how the coasts are sustainably used and protected now and for future generations.

(-) Alabama is the only Gulf state that does not have a law to require the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to place dredged sand on adjacent barrier island beaches.

(-) In response to the April 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil disaster, there was a panicky and ill-conceived effort to protect Dauphin Island. Large quantities of sand were excavated from a series of pits on the Mississippi Sound side of the island to build a berm along the Gulf side, a move designed to keep oil from washing up over the beach in case of a storm. The berm was never needed. 22 pits were dug into the Sound side of the island to excavate the necessary sand. These pits quickly became ponds of standing water. The ponds are steadily eroding and growing to the point that by April 2012 some were open to the sea, and subject to further erosion by waves and tide. More info and photos.

(-) Counting payments for the reconstruction of homes and infrastructure, and adjusting for inflation, the total of Federal funds spent since 1978 on Dauphin Island approaches $200 million – for an island with a resident population of 1,300 people. The Dauphin Islanders want even more help than that – as much as $60 million for a “beach nourishment” project in which sand would be dredged from seven miles offshore and pumped onto their beaches. Read more. A slightly revised version of this project was scheduled to begin in 2015.

(-) Alabama’s coastal construction rules were written so long ago that much of the land they were designed to protect disappeared underwater years ago due to chronic erosion. And, the way the rules were written, officials now have little if any authority over construction on the existing shoreline.

(-) Alabama puts a high priority on beach access but does not have an inventory of the number beach access locations or their condition.

(-) There is a complete lack of data and public knowledge and understanding of the affects of sea level rise in coastal Alabama. A strategy to implement a sea level rise educational program for local decision makers, especially local government officials and staff, should be developed.

(-) A "non-regulated use" may have a direct and significant impact on the coastal area but does not require a state permit or federal consistency certification. Examples of non-regulated uses include construction and other activities on Gulf beaches and dunes, commercial and residential development greater than five acres, groundwater extraction, and shoreline stabilization and erosion mitigation.

(-) NOAA noted in their latest evaluation of the ACAMP: "Perhaps the single greatest missed opportunity to reach the public with educational and coastal program information is the ACAMP – ADCNR website. It is located on the ADCNR website which is entitled “Outdoor Alabama” and is located at www.outdooralabama.com – not an easy connection for the general public to make. The ACAMP website is extremely brief, has only four or five links, two of which are “mis-connected,” and is of very limited value to a member of the public."

Victories

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