Long Beach

The seawall is a money pit.

  • The proposed project would cost Rockport $1,300,000, not the $700,000 claimed on the glossy postcards and brochure sent out by the tenants.
    Source: letter from the Select Board Chair
  • This would be more than $300 per Rockport household.
  • The proposed project would only repair about 10% of the seawall.
  • FEMA would pay the other 75% this time, but we have no guarantee FEMA would pay for future repairs.

We have no balance sheet for Long Beach.

  • Long Beach accounts for 8% of Rockport’s revenue, but an unknown percent of Rockport’s expenses.
    Source: Long Beach Options Committee meetings 2022
  • Long Beach accounts for about 4% of Rockport’s dwelling units, but is a high-maintenance area of town.

How bad is the seawall, really?

  • One section has wear and tear from the water side, but looks OK from the cottage side.
  • The Gloucester-side stairs have some damage from the water side, but look OK where people walk.
  • Would it be worth $5,200,000 of which Rockport would pay $1,300,000 to repair this now?
    Source: Finance Committee meeting on 2 April 2024

The seawall does not protect the cottages.

  • Due to waves overtopping the current wall, FEMA said the wall should be four feet higher, but Long Beach tenants did not want to obstruct their view.
    Source: Long Beach Infrastructure Committee meeting 2018
  • The seawall does nothing to protect the back rows of cottages because the storm surge reaches them from the marsh and Cape Hedge Beach.
    Source: Long Beach Options Committee meetings 2022

The seawall does not protect the marsh.

  • A natural dune would protect the march by moving as needed.
  • The seawall prevents the dune from moving.

The seawall harms the beach.

  • Downwash from waves scrubs the sand away.
    Source: Experts at Long Beach Options Committee 2022
  • The beach could repeatedly require tens of thousands of tons of sand to replenish.

Access to the cottages is deteriorating.

  • During increasingly frequent flooding, the road to many if not most of the cottages is impassable.
  • This endangers tenants and first responders in emergencies.

Nature will eventually reclaim Long Beach.

  • Coastal Zone Management predicts dire flooding in 2030 let along 2050.
    Source: CZM’s MA Coast Flood Risk Model
  • The Select Board recently renewed the leases for another 10 years with no exit strategy, so this will end in disaster unless…

Why don’t we have an exit strategy?

  • The Long Beach Options Committee reported to town meeting in 2022 with options that included an exit strategy.
  • The Select Board never met with the Long Beach Options Committee, and we don’t know whether they read the report.
  • The Select Board held executive sessions prior to renewing the leases effective 1 January 2024, but as of 4 April 2024 the minutes are not available.
  • Local expert Martin Ross explained the “disheartening” situation at Long Beach in his classic 2015 book Cape Ann, Its Physical and Environmental Geology.

What can be done?

  • Repairing the damaged section of the seawall would kick the can further down a very dangerous road.
  • The seawall damage and road flooding tell us where to begin an exit strategy.
  • Rockport should seek grants to relocate tenants in a planned manner guided by the increasing damage and risk.
  • An ongoing Harvard study recommends relocating the Long Beach housing, road, and seawall.
    Source: TownGreen webinar 2 April 2024