Hurricane Ike, which struck the Texas coast one year ago
September 13th, is barely a memory for most of the country. But for
the worst-hit parts of Texas, the storm's impact is still felt, and
recovery is just beginning. On the Bolivar peninsula, trucks are
still carting away the last of 2.2 million cubic yards of debris,
reports the Houston Chronicle ("Officials
hope Bolivar will be reborn as better place," by Harvey Rice).
The storm destroyed 3,593 structures and severely damaged 401,
officials said; so far, just 200 construction permits have been
issued for the peninsula.
In nearby Galveston, recovery is coming faster, according to
television station KTRK ("Galveston's
west end is hot property," by Cynthia Cisneros). "Since May,"
reports Cisneros, "beach home purchases have more than doubled.
Home sales in Galveston have reached $66 million in the past six
months."
Rebuilding plans got a boost in August when Texas Land
Commissioner Jerry Patterson published a new official "vegetation
line" establishing the boundary between the public beach and
private land under the Texas Open Beaches Act ("Land
Office sets line defining public beach post Ike," by Harvey
Rice). Beach erosion can eat away at homeowners' property, and Ike
threatened to permanently erase many privately owned lots,
preventing owners from rebuilding. But a year after Ike, many
owners are glad to find that the new line leaves their land rights
largely intact. Among the relieved homeowners is state legislator
Wayne Christian, author of a controversial act intended to defend
private ownership of beachfront lots on Bolivar, including his own
property. He needn't have bothered, Land Commissioner Patterson
says: the new line leaves Christian with plenty of room to rebuild
his destroyed vacation house.
Meanwhile, an effort to overturn the Open Beaches Act on
constitutional grounds suffered a loss in the Texas Court of
Appeals, reports Brazoria County newspaper The Facts ("Court rules
for state in public beach lawsuit," by Nathaniel Lukefahr).
Redrawing the line of vegetation after a storm doesn't constitute a
"taking" for which owners must be compensated, the three-judge
panel unanimously ruled. According to The Facts story, the opinion
states: "“This is not a governmental taking because the
government did not create the easement that exists seaward of the
vegetation line...Rather, the historical dedication of the land
seaward of the vegetation line created the easement. The act of
nature moved the line of vegetation landward of where the
owners’ houses were located; this was not the act of the
government.”
And far inland from Texas, Ike's aftereffects are still being
felt. In central Ohio, reports Columbus television station NBC4i,
some roofs remain unrepaired a year after Ike's winds tore off
their shingles ("Roof
Repairs Linger After Hurricane Ike; Deadlines Loom," by Tanya
Hutchins). "Blue tarps remain on roofs," says Hutchins. "Many
insurance companies have deadlines of one year to complete
repairs."

New public beach boundary maps like
thisoneshow the
effects of replacing the temporary 4.5-foot elevation line that has
been used since Hurricane Ike with a new line (red) that is 200
feet landward of the average daily low tide measured over the past
19 years.