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N.J. group seeks exemption from sand dune plan
Governor Chris Christie hopes to have sand dunes erected along 127 miles of coastline. (Wayne Parry/Associated Press/file 2016)
Associated Press

BAY HEAD, N.J. — Oceanfront homeowners in this wealthy New Jersey shore enclave have so little faith in the government’s ability to protect them from catastrophic storms that they’ve spent $5 million of their own money on boulders placed between their homes and the ocean.

Members of the group, which includes a national Republican fund-raising powerhouse, wants a judge to exempt them from a plan by Governor Chris Christie, a Republican, to erect protective sand dunes along New Jersey’s entire 127-mile coastline.

Their homes lie in an area that was devastated by Superstorm Sandy in 2012.

But they claim that parts of the town that had a rock wall underneath the sand fared better than those that didn’t. And they are deeply skeptical of the ability and willingness of the federal and state governments to pay to maintain the dunes for the next 50 years. On Feb. 6, they will go before the same Superior Court Judge who has already ruled in favor of Christie’s administration.

Judge Marlene Lynch Ford ruled last year that the state Department of Environmental Protection has the legal right to use eminent domain proceedings to seize strips of land from oceanfront homeowners who don’t voluntarily sign easements allowing the US Army Corps of Engineers to carry out the work on their land. The home­owners want her to allow them to opt out of the project, asserting that what they have done privately offers as much protection, if not more, than what the government proposes.

Associated Press