
Tourist Storm Protection
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11 responses to “Tourist Storm Protection”
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Yep, I agree but the problem is that as long as there is Fed money “available”, you can’t leave it on the table…. but this is totally small potatoes compared to the Federal flood insurance program which basically encourages and rewards folks building in flood prone places.
If the Fed every pulled out of the subsidized flood insurance program , many beach places would be changed dramatically – starting for the banks who would no longer finance mortgages for such risk.
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I cannot argue with the sentiment that a locality or state should take advantage of any available federal funding. My larger point is that federal money should not be available for projects such as this.
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I totally agree with your sentiments.
I believe that Sandbridge has a special service district that levies a tax to pay for its sand widening projects. See: https://scholar.lib.vt.edu/VA-news/VA-Pilot/issues/1994/vp941102/11020476.htm
So, you can vacation in Sandbridge guilt free, knowing that you are paying your fair share of sand replenishment!
I’m not sure about the Virginia Beach resort area. I would note, however, that city inhabitants and visitors do pay a meals and lodging tax that should raise more than enough money to pay for the replenishment. Where that money goes, I’m not sure. I recall various efforts to capture that money for convention centers and other economic development projects.
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Oops, I didn’t did all my homework. I do note in the article you referenced that the taxing district was set up to raise only the city share of the cost. The city was still depending on state and federal funds for 65 percent of the cost.
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I know you specified Medicaid subsidies but did you know that regular employer-provided heath insurance is also subsidized and actually is the largest tax expenditure in the tax code?
So decisions are made with respect to whether the government should or should not (for instance) not tax employer-provided health insurance. I don’t consider not taxing health insurance or providing 410K/IRA that are not taxed until you retire – as “leaving money on the table” – in the same way that Fed grants are made “available” to localities if they apply for them.
but when it comes to health insurance – there are subsidies for most of it whether it’s employer-provided, or Medicare, or Medicaid or ObamaCare and one’s health care is a different critter than folks sunbathing on a beach for fun and taxpayers paying for it.
We subsidize health care and retirement – but that’s different fram sand beaches… I guess one could argue about what should or should not be subsidized but in the case of health care – as long as we have EMTALA – which requires hospitals to treat you even if you don’t have insurance – that’s also a “subsidy” right?
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You are right–we need to make decisions on what will be subsidized. Fifty years ago, the United States made the decision that ensuring a minimum level of health care for vulnerable citizens (Medicaid and Medicare) would benefit society as a whole. Providing wide beaches that primarily benefit property owners along those beaches does not measure up to the same level of societal benefit.
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Good post, Dick.
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How does this fit with the crazed rhetoric on climate change and rising sea levels? If things are as bad as some predict, we need to be moving uses away from the existing sea coasts.
And, yes Medicare and Medicaid are more important than rehabilitating beaches.
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No just rising sea level but the land is sinking. But we are talking a slow process. Meanwhile presumably with some adaption techniques such as building on stilts and beach management, there are potentially many decades of qulaity vacations there.
We used to have a cottage on Lake Erie and they had to be build on 6-ft stilts not due to climate change, but every spring the snow melt down the river caused a 5-7 ft deep floods of the cottages, on rare occasions into the first floor (what a mess). My grandparents on both sides had neighboring cottages.
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Not just rising sea level but the land is sinking. But we are talking a slow process. Meanwhile presumably with some adaption techniques such as building on stilts and beach management, there are potentially many decades of quality vacations there.
We used to have a cottage on Lake Erie and all of the cottages had to be build on 6-ft stilts, not due to climate change, but every spring the snow melt down the river caused a 5-7 ft deep floods of the cottages, on rare occasions into the first floor (what a mess). My grandparents on both sides had neighboring cottages. The Army Corp of Engr tried to fix the issue every year but it always got worse, unless they finally solved it.
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