From a short-term economic standpoint, owning a beachfront house makes sense. Individuals and companies own many such buildings for the sole purpose of making money--an old and respectable American tradition. In this sense, the North Carolina beachfront is a giant cash cow. no doubt about it, however, by ost other measures of societal and personal responsibility, owning a beachfront house is imprudent, if not irrational. Stan Riggs, a geologist at East Carolina University, has suggested that owning beachfront property is akin to having a picnic on an interstate highway, and image meant to convey how irrational it is to put your property as well as yourself and others at risk.
Thursday, April 3, 2008
from "How to Read a North Carolina Beach", by Pilkey, Rice and Neal
What's up? Well, the number of buildings is increasing along our Norht Carolina shorelines because we are in teh middle of a giant rush to the sea. The scramble to the beach is fuelded by a society with a lot of money, a love for the sea and desire to live beside it, a greedy development industry, an irresponsible real estate industry, local governments anxious to create more tax revenue and employ more local citizens, and a contempt for the forces of nature.
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