Maine Working Waterfront Gets $25 Million Storm Resilience Boost

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Maine Working Waterfront Gets $25 Million Storm Resilience Boost
Storm ResilienceClimate ChangeWorking Waterfront
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A $25 million investment aims to fortify Maine's working waterfronts against the increasing threat of powerful storms.

A $25 million boost aims to make Maine's working waterfront more resilient to powerful storms. Last January, record back-to-back storms and tides battered working waterfront s from Kittery to Calais. 'The pier's designed to hold the pressure this way, and now Mother Nature's pushing it that way,” Portland Pier Manager Todd Colpitts said.Colpitts says most of the work they've done is below the water line, with new pilings and cross beams to keep the wharf from swaying and rocking in a storm.

This week, the city council accepted the money on behalf of four wharf owners.New funding raised devoted to strengthening and rebuilding Maine's working waterfront 'We spent the money,” Custom House Wharf Co-Owner John Jabar said. “You're standing on that. And a lot of it was additional repair you can't see, underneath your feet all the way down to our headwall.''We're all very much aware of climate change and what's going on,” Jabar said. “And we're at the front of it. So we got to do everything we can to save it.'Also read:'All the piers and wharves in Portland Harbor are vulnerable,' Portland Waterfront Coordinator Bill Needleman said. 'None of it is built to last forever, and all of it requires continual investment.' Portland Pier wants to build a 300-foot wave attenuator, which looks like a long floating wall, to knock down waves and stop them from damaging its wharf. 'It would protect DiMillos. It would Protect Chandlers Wharf. It would protect halfway down to Becky’s Diner,' Colpitts said. 'Floating infrastructure is a viable option,” Needleman said. “There are new marinas that employ floating wave attenuators as part of their docks.' Governor Janet Mills says working waterfronts are the lifeblood of coastal communities. She says this important funding is not only rebuilding damaged wharfs but making them stronger in the face of worsening weather

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