Contacts: Marjorie Weisskohl
703-787-1304
The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) has signed an agreement with Brevard County, Fla., and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Jacksonville District (Corps) authorizing the use of sand from federal waters for the Brevard County Shore Protection Project (North Reach and South Reach). Benefits from the beach nourishment are expected to reduce erosion resulting from Hurricane Matthew in October 2016.
BOEM is in contact with the Corps and Brevard  County as they begin to assess impacts from Hurricane Irma, potential new OCS  sand resource needs, and efforts to increase resilience of coastal communities.
   BOEM is also participating in the broader Department  of the Interior Federal Disaster Recovery Coordination  effort for hurricanes Irma and Harvey as state, local,  and federal agencies begin to assess the needs and response planning for  natural and cultural resources and for infrastructure. 
   “BOEM  stands with the citizens of Brevard County during this difficult period. As  long-term partners with Brevard and many other Florida coastal communities, we  are committed to providing offshore resources and working with these communities  to restore the shoreline as soon as possible,” said Acting BOEM Director Walter  Cruickshank. “We look forward to working with the Corps to proactively prepare  and expedite similar projects in the future to meet coastal restoration needs  in the wake of these massive storms.” 
   The current project is  intended to restore the shoreline back to its designed level of storm protection  that existed prior to the erosion from Hurricane Matthew. Benefits from the  project include less damage to property and infrastructure caused by future storm-induced  coastal erosion and to ensure the beach is suitable for recreation and wildlife  habitat.   
   The project, which authorizes the use of 1.7 million cubic yards of sand from  the seafloor of the federal Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) managed by BOEM, will  renourish approximately 13.4 miles of two publicly accessible shoreline locations. 
   The sediment will be dredged from Canaveral Shoals Borrow Area II (“CS-II”), a  borrow site approximately 9 to 21 nautical miles from the two placement areas. The  North Reach (9.6 miles) extends from the Canaveral Harbor entrance south to the  northern end of Patrick Air Force Base. The South Reach (3.8 miles) includes  the towns of Indialantic and Melbourne Beach. Construction will occur within  the appropriate environmental window to avoid impacts to nesting sea  turtles.  
“Through BOEM, Brevard County will have the  critical offshore sand source necessary to reduce risk to coastal communities  on the north and south reaches, which includes Coco, Indialantic and Melbourne  beaches,” said Corps Project Manager Liz Fiocchi.
   “The  partnership between Brevard County and BOEM, with the US Army Corps of  Engineers, is critical to maintenance of our beaches” said Mike McGarry,  Beaches, Boating and Waterways Program Manager for Brevard County. Virginia  Barker, Director of Brevard County’s Natural Resources Management Department  added, “We are pleased to continue this relationship that dates back to  2001 when Brevard signed its first lease in  Florida to use sand from the OCS for the construction and  renourishment of federal shore protection projects. This has been an important  sand resource for us.”  
   The environmental impacts  associated with dredging and placement of OCS sand resources along the Brevard  County shoreline were evaluated in several analyses the Corps and BOEM prepared  under the National Environmental Policy Act, or NEPA since 1996. For the 2017  renourishment project, BOEM took the lead in preparing a new Environmental  Assessment (EA), which is available on the Marine  Minerals Program Florida page, along with the Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI). 
   BOEM is the only federal agency authorized under the Outer  Continental Shelf Lands Act (OCSLA)  to convey OCS sand resources for shore protection, beach or wetland restoration  projects undertaken by a federal, state or local government. In exercising this  authority, BOEM may issue a negotiated non-competitive lease for the use of OCS  sand to a qualifying entity in response to a request.
BOEM has invested more than $40 million over the past 20  years to identify non-energy resources on the OCS, conduct world-class  scientific research, and lease OCS resources to coastal communities and other  Federal agencies in need. Information from environmental research and resource identification  has informed decisions concerning the use of OCS sand resources in beach  nourishment and coastal restoration.
   For  more information about BOEM’s Marine Minerals Program, visit the website, http://www.boem.gov/Marine-Minerals-Program/. 
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