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A
A
A
Thank
you
very
much.
I
really
appreciate
it
before
we
get
into
this,
since
I
am
no
longer
an
appointed
or
elected
official.
A
I
don't
believe
that
I
can
continue
to
chair
this
meeting,
even
though
it's
we
don't
have
a
quorum,
so
just
wanted
to
say
that
I've
really
appreciated
being
able
to
be
your
chair
for
a
number
of
years
and
may
look
forward
to
doing
something
with
somebody
different
in
the
near
future.
A
But
with
that
I'd
like
to
go
ahead
and
ask
the
vice
chair
to
go
ahead
and
take
over,
and
I
think
from
now
you'll
be
the
temporary
chair
until
there's
a
quorum
and
there's
either
an
election
or
appointment
appointment.
So
well,
there's
there's
no
replacement
for
you
at
this
point.
There
is
no
replacement
on
from
the
metropolitan
planning
commission
side.
A
My
last
meeting
our
last
meeting
that
we
had
most
everybody
was
virtual.
I
only
had
three
members
present,
and
so
we
went
ahead
and
did
a
temporary
chairmanship
for
the
mpc
at
the
last
meeting,
and
I
guess
he
will
continue
to
be
temporary
until
there's
enough
people
there
to
go
ahead
and
do
an
election.
A
We
have
one
new
one
new
member
that
replaced
me
was
there,
and
that
was
his
first
evening.
Okay,
they
did
not
elect
a
chair.
No,
no!
Okay,
no
decided
just
do
a
temporary
chair
all
right,
any
other
questions.
A
B
My
god,
I
and
I
know
members
of
this
committee-
thank
you
for
your
leadership
over
the
last
several
years
and
I
want
to
wish
you
all
the
successes.
I
know
you'll
continue
in
the
public
service
to
the
community,
so
best
wishes
for
that
as
well.
C
B
All
right,
I
I
assume
this
meeting
is
being
recorded,
so
we
could.
We
could
proceed
on
the
basis
that
the
presentations
will
be
of
value
to
those
who
may
tune
in
later,
or
we
could
postpone
them
until
another
time.
Another
meeting
is
there
any
preference
from
the
three
committee
members
here.
C
B
B
So
with
that
more
understanding,
I
will
proceed
forward
with
the
agenda
items.
Of
course,
the
public
notification
of
this
meeting
has
been
published.
We
can't
approve
the
minutes
from
march
25th
and
because
we
don't
have
a
quorum
to
do
that,
I
don't
see
any
citizens
either
here
or
on
rehybrid.
That
might
want
to
have
a
comment
for
us.
B
So
with
that
in
mind,
I
guess
we
can
proceed
to
discussion
items
for
purposes
of
the
video
that
will
be
produced.
First,
one
up
was
ladies
island
transportation,
update
from
jared
fralick's.
D
Yeah
I'll
be
standing
in
for
jared
he's,
not
he's
not
here
today.
Okay,
my
name
is
brittany
fields,
I'm
the
beaver,
county's
transportation
program
manager,
leading
the
2018
one
cent
sales
tax
program.
D
One
of
them
is
mayfair
court
that
was
put
on
hold
due
to
citizens
responses
of
connecting
that
road
to
a
private
road,
along
with
the
beaufort
high
school
realignment,
so
we're
for
the
high
school
realignment
looking
at
alternatives
to
to
make
their
current
entrance
better
for
transportation
needs.
D
Your
turn,
no,
I
met
mayfair
court
is
permanently
on
hold
beavered
high
school
realignment
it's
on
hold
at
the
moment
until
we
can
have
further
discussions
with
both
the
church
and
the
parks
and
rec.
D
D
And
I
can
yeah,
I
can
provide
that
powerpoint
slide.
We
went
to
the
public
facilities
committee
in
june
to
bring
some
alternatives
and
from
that
point
we
were
put
on
hold.
Okay,
the
mainline
corridor
sunset,
boulevard,
miller,
drive
west
and
hazel
farm
gay
drive,
along
with
the
new
realignment
of
ladies
island
drive,
are
all
in
design.
We're
working
through
scdot
comments.
C
So
highly
unfair
question,
since
the
one
cent
didn't
since
the
county
turned
down
the
infrastructure,
what
are
we
looking
at
for
funding
sources,
so
we
will
find
out.
B
D
I
would
imagine
it
has
through
the
2018
sales
tax,
we
did
collect
an
additional
about
16
million
dollars
which
has
been
allocated
to
the
pathways
sidewalks
program.
So
the
pathways
and
sidewalks
that
we're
looking
at
on
ladies
island
are
middle
road,
which
is
currently
in
design,
and
we
are
also
going
to
be
looking
at
meridian
road
for
a
pathway
and
sidewalk.
B
Anything
else
you
want
to
tell
us,
that's
it,
I'm
sure
we'll
be
looking
forward
to
the
further
updates.
Absolutely
chair.
Yes,
a
couple
questions
I
met
with
the
catholic
diocese
last
week.
A
As
an
extension,
so
to
speak
of
the
county,
but
my
conversation
with
the
diocese,
I
think
we
had
seven
or
eight
persons
there,
including
the
their
real
estate
attorney
and
the
diocese,
so
they
they
weren't
totally
objectionable
to
this
as
a
possibility.
A
They
understood
what
the
county
is
trying
to
accomplish
engineering-wise,
but
they
would
like
to
have
further
communication.
A
So
I
think
there's
there
are
some
positives
that
could
come
out
of
this
and
and
part
of
that
I
talked
about
the
potential
with
the
with
the
way
the
village
center
plan
is
developed,
that
there
may
be
able
to
be
shared
parking
at
some
point
in
the
future
between
their
facilities
and
what
develops
maybe
for
the
shopping
center,
that's
good
that
is
adjacent
to
them.
They
saw
that
as
a
positive,
as
well
as
the
having
the
transportation
available,
so
just
wanted
to
share
that
great.
B
B
E
I
guess
to
make
a
long
story
short.
We
are
still
in
negotiations
with
the
firm
and
I
don't
really
want
to
go
into
great
detail
about
that.
But
the
the
plan
is
to
have
a
two
or
three
day
charades
or
workshop
on
the
village
center
community.
E
Probably
within
you
know
in
the
october
time
frame-
and
we
see
this
more
of
a
it's
more
of
an
implementation
plan
than
starting
from
scratch,
because
we
have
a
lot
of
good
groundwork
in
the
village
center
community
and
so
one
of
the
things
that
we're
working
on
in
our
communications
with
staff.
E
You
know
having
a
better
approach
to
that,
so
that
we're
there's
an
expectation
of
what
what
you
can
do
in
the
area,
but
also
that
we're
not
entertaining
development.
That
is
counter
to
the
to
the
vision
for
that
area.
So
and
the
idea
is
that
we
work
through
those
issues
kind
of
on
the
higher
level,
and
then
we
task
staff
with
implementing
them
in
the
ordinance
work.
E
So,
but
I
I
really
didn't
have
more
to
report
at
this
point
because
we're
still
in.
E
E
Yes
and
I'm
you
know,
I,
I
think
that
there's
a
real
opportunity,
because
you
know
I've
always
been
advocating
that
the
city
and
the
county
are
95
of
the
way
there
you
know
with
our
ordinances.
We
have
these
projects
coming
online.
We
have
a
lot
of
positive
things
happening,
and
I
see
the
purpose
of
this
village
center
is
kind
of
working
through
how
to
really
take
advantage
of
all
these
opportunities
build
on
them,
but
also
you
know.
E
I
think
that
one
of
the
our
issues
is
that,
with
this
vision
for
the
ladies
island
village
center
could
really
use
some
articulating
and
a
means
of
making
that
clear
to
the
public
or
to
developers
just
what
that
is.
You
know
we
have
everything
written
down
in
metrics,
but
it's
still,
I
think
a
lot
of
people
have
trouble
envisioning
that
area
transforming
over
time,
and
so
we
see
an
opportunity
to
do
that
through
this
process.
A
This
group
for
for
nurbik
and
the
task
force
has
not
met
because
this
has
been
kind
of
influx
now
for
a
long
time,
and
when
last
we
put
it
on
the
table,
you
all
voted
that
we
needed
to
move
forward
with
a
consultant.
So
that's
what
that's
what's
happening
or
what
that's
what's
in
the
process.
A
Now
at
that
at
that
point
and
the
work
the
task
force
had
done
up
until
then,
we
thought
we
were
fairly
solid
on
what
the
road
access
roads
were
going
to
be,
and
I
think
that,
if
there's
any
way
that
those
access
roads
can
be
tied
down
prior
to
actually
having
the
charette,
it
would
be
a
kind
of
a
chicken
in
the
egg.
I
think
it'd
be
really
at
least
at
the
minimum
helpful,
because
that
planning
process
really
needs
to
happen
around
the
determination
of
access
roads.
E
B
Well,
it
sounds
like
there's
a
lot
going
on,
as
it
relates
to
the
village
task
force,
the
development
of
the
village
center.
C
Good
has
the
has
the
financial
budget
been
a
pitfall
from
the
standpoint
of
the
consultant?
I
think
it's
it's
a
challenge.
Let's
put
it
that
way,
and
so
that's.
E
E
B
All
right,
the
last
discussion
topic
we've
got
we're
going
to
talk
just
about
everything.
I
guess:
climate
change,
sea
level
rise.
Resiliency,
that's
a.
F
F
An
update
on
the
most
recent
sea
level
rise
data
coming
from
noaa.
It
was
released
this
past
february
as
well
as
updates
on
some
of
the
things
the
county
is
doing
to
address
what
we
anticipate
coming
down.
The
pipeline
for
sea
level
rise
with
regard
to
improving
our
resilience
and
better
understanding
the
situation
here
on
the
ground.
I
am
going
to,
for
the
record,
say
my
name:
juliana
smith,
I'm
a
long-range
planner
here
at
beaver,
county's
planning
and
zoning
department.
B
F
Doing
so,
I
will
start
off
with
the
publication
that
came
out
this
past
february.
This
was
released
by
noaa.
It's
an
update
from
their
2017
technical
sea
level
rise
technical
report.
This
is
serving
us.
The
2022
sea
level
rise
technical
report.
What
the
scientists
did
is
they
went
in
with
the
most
updated
data
modeling.
F
They
have
added
observational
data
since
2017
and
updated
our
extrapolations
for
what
sea
level
rise
will
be
not
just
out
to
2100,
which
is
the
typical
time
horizon,
we're
thinking
about,
but
also
to
2050,
so
bringing
it
within
a
closer
range
over
the
next
28
years
and
they
broke
down
the
united
states.
They
gave
it
an
average
for
what
we
expect
for
the
entire
country,
but
of
course
an
average
is
pretty
broad
when
you're,
considering
that
big
of
a
land
piece
land
mass,
so
they
broke
it
down
into
eight
different
regions.
F
Each
region
has
its
own
average
of
sea
level
rise
to
be
anticipated.
Some
places
will
have
more,
some
will
have
less.
For
example,
alaska
is
expecting
to
see
a
sea
level
rise
or
sea
level
reduction
not
arise.
So,
to
start
us
off
the
united
states
in
general,
maybe
we
can
do.
Can
we
minimize
the
little?
F
It's
gonna
throw
me
off
down
here.
Yeah
there
we
go
so
for
the
united
states.
The
average
is
between
10
to
14
inches
by
2050,
so
over
the
next
28
years.
Now
here
in
the
southeast,
like
other
regions
in
the
the
lower
48,
we
expect
to
see
more
than
that
average.
We
will
see
in
the
southeast
region
12
to
19
inches
of
sea
level
rise
by
2050,
so
the
next
28
years.
F
Now
I
wanted
to
try
and
find
as
much
information
as
I
could
about
what
we
will
see
here
in
beaufort
county
locally,
because
the
southeastern
region
covers
four
different
states,
and
so
fortunately,
noah
has
gone
into
each
of
the
tide.
Gauges
the
or
nasa
actually
has
gone
into
each
of
the
noaa
tide
gauges
to
take
a
look
at
any
psyche
that
has
at
least
50
plus
years
of
data
and
extrapolate
sea
level
rise,
inches
or
meters
up
to
the
year
2050.
So
we
have
20
30
data.
We
have
20
40
data.
F
We
have
20
50
data,
but
I'm
going
to
be
taking
a
look
for
the
purposes
of
today,
sticking
to
that
2050
time
frame.
Now
here
in
beaufort
county,
we
don't
have
our
own
noah's
high
gauge,
so
I'm
going
to
use
the
two
closest-
and
this
is
actually
what's
done
to
predict
our
tight
schedules
on
a
regular
basis,
so
we'll
be
looking
at
fort
pulaski
and
charleston's
tide
gauges,
we'll
start
with
fort
pulaski.
F
F
We
have
seen
for
fort
pulaski
a
foot
of
sea
level
rise
since
the
1930s,
so
over
the
past
century.
What
we
anticipate
to
see
out
to
2050,
based
on
this
data
and
other
geological
processes
happening
here
locally,
is
between
a
foot
to
a
foot
and
a
half
by
2050.
So
we
will
see
the
same
amount
of
sea
level
rise
in
the
next
28
years
that
we
have
seen
over
the
last
century.
So
the
big
takeaway
there
is
there's
an
acceleration
and
the
rate
of
sea
level
rise
happening
now.
F
The
the
20,
the
this
range
right
here
really
has
a
lot
to
do
with
carbon
emissions.
So
your
foot
is
going
to
be
the
conservative
end
and
your
foot
and
a
half
is
dependent
on
how
extreme
those
carbon
emissions
get
over
the
next
30
years
and
it
is
about
the
same
for
charleston.
So
I
think
we
can
it's
pretty
safe
to
say
that
this
is
generally
what
our
region
will
see
by
2050
with
regard
to
sea
level,
rise
between
12
to
20
inches,
the
big
difference
here
or
and
big
it's
kind
of
minor.
F
Well,
we
know
we
have
a
lot
of
wetlands
here
in
beaufort
county,
so
about
50
percent
of
the
acreage
in
beaufort
county
is
so
marsh.
We
all
probably
in
this
room,
have
pretty
good
idea
of
what
sea
level
rise
will
do
with
regard
to
our
saltwater
surfaces,
we'll
have
marsh
migration,
we'll
have
open
water
where
salt
marshes
previously
existed.
F
So
we
can,
we
might
expect
some
of
those
freshwater
areas
to
become
saline
areas
over
time
with
sea
level
rise
or
to
cause
their
own
flooding
issues.
So
these
these
are
things
to
be
thinking
about
and
we're
thinking
about,
impacts
here
in
beaufort
county,
at
least
with
regard
to
sea
level
rise,
but
we
do
know
at
the
very
least,
we'll
expect
more
flood
days.
This
is
fort
pulaski
data
over
the
last
100
years.
F
F
A
doubling
of
the
flood
days
that
we're
seeing
on
average
at
the
fort
pulaski
tide
gauge,
not
just
for
definition's
sake
of
flood
day,
is
considered
a
day
where,
at
you
have
over
9.2
feet
above
mean
lower
low
water
and
mean
lower
low
water,
is
taking
the
lowest
slow
tide
of
every
day,
averaging
it
out,
and
that
number
so
9.2
feet
above
that
number
happening
at
least
once
a
day
equals
a
flood
day.
Does
that
make
sense?
I
know
it's
a
little
we're
tracking
that.
F
So,
if
we
reach
that
threshold
at
least
once
a
day,
you
get
a
flood
day.
So
that's
how
they
put
together
this
data.
So
we
we
know,
flooding
is
happening
more
in
the
area.
We
know
it
will
happen
at
an
increased
frequency
through
the
sea
level
rise
technical
report
data
that
just
came
out
in
2022
this
past
year
this
year
what
they
talked
about.
F
That's
not
necessarily
going
to
be
the
case
in
the
future,
as
we
have
sea
level
rise
happen,
we're
going
to
have
more
volumes
of
water,
and
so,
if
you
have
a
particularly
high
king
tide
with
the
right
winds
in
the
right
direction,
at
the
right,
speed
and
strength,
you
might
hit
a
major
coastal
flooding
event
without
even
having
that
tropical
event
kind
of
promoting
it
and
creating
it.
So
this
is
an
increased
frequency
is
our
takeaway
from
that.
We
will
see
this
more
more
frequently
and
more
to
the
norm
in
our
communities.
F
F
F
F
Of
this,
this
isn't
news
to
you,
but
one
of
the
really
exciting
new
things
for
our
comprehensive
plant
update
is
that
our
resilience
element
was
intentionally
interwoven
throughout
that
document.
So
it
helps
guide
many
of
our
recommendations
for
policies
and
actions
to
take
over
the
next
10
to
20
years
here
in
beaufort
county.
F
F
So
that's
some
of
the
work
that's
been
done.
Let's
talk
about
some
of
the
work,
that's
ongoing,
so
the
first
that's
happening
is
we
have
in
2018
a
sea
level
rise
task
force,
came
together
at
the
county
and
started
creating
a
long-term
resilience
plan.
Now,
of
course,
we've
worked
it
through
the
pandemic
and
staff
changes
and
all
of
the
things
that
happen
in
life
regularly
outside
of
that,
and
so
we
have
a
draft
it
is.
F
It
just
needs
some
buttoning
up
to
get
out
into
the
world
and
begin
to
make
the
rounds
and
be
official,
but
the
good
news
is
is
that
long-term
resilience
plan
has
several
action
items
that
were
incorporated
into
our
comprehensive
plan
through
that
update
process,
since
those
things
are
happening
side
by
side.
So
we
do
have
some
of
the
recommendations
in
this
plan
already
in
action
through
the
comprehensive
plan.
F
Overall,
though,
just
as
a,
I
guess,
a
a
preview,
the
general
strategy
outlined
in
the
long-term
resilience
plan-
and
this
mirrors
the
state's
upcoming
resilience
plan,
because
the
state
is
working
on
one
as
well-
is
a
general
policy
of
collecting
data
sharing
data
planning
based
on
that
data.
Taking
action
and
then
reevaluating
as
we
observe
more
impacts,
learn
more
information.
F
We
also
recently
installed
tide
gauges
here
in
beaver
county.
I
know
the
city
did
that
as
well,
and
this
is
really
important
because,
as
you
saw
from
our
previous
slides,
we
have
two
noaa
tide
gauges
within
the
region,
one
in
fort
pulaski,
one
in
charleston
and
we're
taking
extrapolations
from
those
tide
gauges
to
understand
the
real
life
things
that
are
happening
here.
F
So
this
past,
through
the
south
carolina
sea,
grant
consortium,
beaufort
county
and
the
city
of
beaufort
as
well,
was
able
to
purchase
tide
gauges
with
some
funding
assistance
and
have
them
installed
where
they
needed
them.
I
think
the
city
is
out
at
the
waterfront
park
right
on
the
marina
there
and
then
for
beaufort
county.
We
partnered
with
the
port
royal
sound
foundation.
They
put
one
up
out
at
their
maritime
center
onto
chassis
creek,
which
is
what
this
photo
is
right
here.
F
We
also
partnered
with
the
fripp
island
nature
center
to
get
one
out
on
the
waddell
fishing
pier
out
in
skull
creek.
So
the
tide
gauge
for
the
port
royal
sound
foundation
went
online
in
the
fall
and
the
frick
island
high
gauge
went
online
this
past
spring.
It's
still
going
through
its
90
days
getting
everything
right
period,
but
I
think
what's
really
interesting
is
we're
already
seeing
why
it's
important
to
have
local
tide
data.
F
So
if
you
take
a
look
at
that
chart
on
the
bottom
there,
that
is
thai
data
coming
from
this
past
june
and
what
you'll
see
when
you're
looking
at
it
is
the
bottom
light
color
dotted
line
that
light
blue
dotted
line.
That
is
the
noaa
prediction
for
our
tied
schedules
here.
So
this
is
the
information
that
they're
getting
from
the
charleston
gage
and
the
fort
pulaski
gage
to
estimate
what
we
expect
to
see
here.
F
The
dark
blue
line
is
what
we're
actually
observing,
so
we're
already
seeing
we're
already
learning
that
their
prediction
isn't
quite
what's
happening
here.
We
are
seeing
slightly
higher
tides
than
what
they
anticipate
that
we
will
see.
So
that's
that's
good!
We're
getting
real-time
data
as
we
collect
data.
This
will
give
us
a
better
picture
of
what
to
anticipate
in
the
future,
but
it's
also
impacting
resilience
today.
The
frip
island,
the
fritz
sea
island
rescue
team,
which
is
essentially
the
emergency
response
team
out
on
foot,
is
very
excited
about
the
tide.
F
Gauge
that's
been
installed
out
there
because
it
will
help
them
know,
what's
really
happening
around
fripp
hyper
locally
when
they're
responding
to
emergencies.
So
it's
giving
us
daily
resilience,
improvements
and
helping
us
plan
for
our
future
and
then
the
last
one
I'm
going
to
talk
about
is
one
of
the
big
projects
that
is
ongoing
right
now,
and
this
is
a
study
to
take
a
look
at
what's
happening
to
groundwater.
I
mentioned
at
the
top
that
we're
not
entirely
sure
how
our
freshwater
systems
are
going
to
respond
with
sea
level
rise.
F
The
big
one
of
the
big
priorities
for
this
project
is
to
better
understand
how
groundwater.
So
if
you
look
here,
that's
the
water
in
the
in
the
infographic
there,
the
water
beneath
the
surface
of
the
earth,
how
our
groundwater
will
change
with
sea
level
rise
and
what
that
means
for
our
underground
infrastructure,
one
of
our
higher
priorities
being
what
that
means
for
septic
systems
that
are
throughout
an
incorporated,
beaufort
county
here
on
our
this
side
is
one
of
our
groundwater
researchers
from
the
university
of
south
carolina
with
a
groundwater
monitoring.
F
Well
that
was
installed
out
at
southside
park.
So
that's
what
that
is
there.
There
are
two
sides
to
this
study:
there's
the
data
collection
on
groundwater
side
and
there's
also
the
community
capacity
engagement
site.
So
I'll
talk
about
where
we
are
on
both
of
those
and
give
just
a
general
overview,
but
these
groundwater
monitoring
wells
have
been
put
all
throughout
the
county
I'll
get
into
that
here.
Just
a
second
now
the
project
itself
is
called
beaufort.
County,
adapts,
sea
level
rise,
impacts
beneath
our
feet.
F
F
So
many
the
scc
grant
consortium,
I
wanted
to
say,
because
the
conservation
league,
because
jessica's
sitting
there,
the
university
of
south
carolina,
that's
our
groundwater,
researching
side
of
the
partnership,
the
college
of
charleston,
where
our
social
scientists
and
some
of
our
extra
gis
help
is
coming
from
and
the
south
carolina
department,
natural
resources,
which
is
helping
us
with
engagement
and
outreach
through
their
ace
base
in
our
program.
So
those
are
our
partners
on
this.
It's
a
two
year,
long
grant
period.
F
There
is
the
option,
the
option
to
take
it
further,
as
we
get
closer
to
that
timeline
and
see
if
we
need
more
information
and
data
and
what
it
is
doing
is
looking
at
groundwater.
So
this
is
just
an
extra
graphic
to
show
you
all.
I
think
some
of
the
to
kind
of
illustrate
some
of
the
concerns
we
have
about
what
groundwater
will
do.
If
you
look
at
the
dark
blue
area,
you're
before
sea
level
rise
versus
your
light,
blue
area
after
sea
level
rise,
it's
anticipated
that
sea
level
rise
will
shift
groundwater
up.
F
If
you
see
the
dark
black
line,
there,
that's
squiggling
across
the
graphic.
The
light
blue
is
above
that
line
in
some
instances,
and
this
is
your
land
line
here
and
so
you're,
seeing
how
previously
dry
areas
before
sea
level
rise
are
now
wet
area.
So
these
are
things
that
concern
us
and
we
want
to
make
sure
we
fully
understand.
So
we
can
prepare
so
to
do
this
project.
What
we
have
done
is
identified
four
low-lying
areas
throughout
the
county
that
we
know
have
chronic,
have
had
and
continue
to
have
chronic
flooding
issues.
F
In
some
instances
they
are
communities
in
saint
helena,
so
that
is
warsaw,
island
and
the
use
warsaw
island
in
the
corners
community.
We
have
the
mossy
oaks
community
in
the
city
of
beaufort,
the
shell
point
community
and
the
town
of
port
royal
and
the
all
joy
community
outside
of
bluffton.
So
these
are
the
four
communities
we're
working
in.
These
are
our
groundwater
researchers
on
the
far
side
here
and
the
black
is
dr
alicia
wilson.
She
is
our
premier,
groundwater
researcher,
that's
her
team
of
students
who
are
working
on
this
project
with
her.
F
They
got
15
groundwater
monitoring
wells
installed
in
beaufort
county
this
past
spring,
so
those
wells
are
augured
down
into
the
ground.
They
sit
10
feet
below
the
surface
of
the
earth.
They
are
taking
data
on
the
height
of
groundwater
as
it
moves
and
they
are
taking
data
on
the
solidity
of
groundwater.
That's
another
concern
with
with
sea
level
rise
and
salt
water
intrusion
into
our
groundwater
systems.
F
What
they
will
do
with
that
data,
which
they're
reflecting
over
at
least
the
next
year
is
they
will
compare
it
to
the
observed
tide
ranges.
We
have
here
in
beaufort
county
during
the
time
that
they're
collecting
the
data
on
the
ground
water.
They
will
compare
it
to
weather
events,
so
our
storms
we've
been
having
recently.
Hopefully
they
won't
have
hurricanes
to
compare
it
to.
But
if
that
happens,
that
type
of
information
and
then
comparing
it
to
droughts
in
order
for
us
to
understand
how
groundwater
reacts
to
these
different
impacts.
F
F
So,
as
far
as
where
these
things
are,
we
have
seven
groundwater
monitoring
wells
in
the
st
helena
area.
Three
of
them
are
on
warsaw
island.
We
worked
with
a
private
citizen
to
put
wells
on
his
property.
He
was
very,
very
great
to
work
with
us
on
that
two
are
along
highway:
21
between
warsaw
and
the
coroner's
community.
We
worked
with
the
beaufort
county,
open
land
trust.
F
To
do
that
you
can
actually
see
in
the
photo
is
one
of
the
wells
going
on
a
beaufort
county,
open
land
trust
property
over
there
by
superior
coffee,
and
then
two
we
worked
with
the
pen
center
to
get
placed
in
the
corners
community.
So
one
is
out
at
the
martin
luther
king
junior
park,
the
green
and
then
the
other
is
over
by
the
saint
helena
library
in
the
mossy
oaks
community.
We
have
four
wells.
Three
of
them
are
out
south
side.
F
We
work
with
the
city
of
beaufort
staff
to
get
that
done,
make
sure
we
put
those
wells
outside
of
the
envelope
of
the
improvements
that
we
expect
to
be
happening
there.
We
also
have
one
on
beaufort
county
property
over
the
pickleball
courts.
So
very
nearby
the
same
area
two
are
in
shell
points.
These
are
on
beaufort
county
parks,
property
with
the
shell
point
park
and
then
two
are
in
the
all
joy
community
on
passive
park
property
there.
F
So
wells
are
in
taken
data,
the
other
side
of
this
of
the
engagement
update.
So
we
have
we're
about
to
really
gear
up
our
public
engagement
and
community
engagement.
Side
of
this
what's
been
done
thus
far
is
we've
started,
making
contacts
and
relationships
in
the
shell
point
and
all
joy
communities,
and
we
have
had
a
one
public
meeting
so
far
with
the
warsaw
eustis
communities
out
on
st
helena.
F
That
public
meeting
was
specifically
about
sea
level
rise,
but
we
also
took
that
opportunity
to
introduce
our
project
team
and
this
project,
so
we
can
begin
forming
those
relationships
and
get
ready
for
the
next
phases.
There
will
be
several
community
meetings
to
start
getting
information
from
our
community
members
about
what
they
see,
what
they
think
the
adaptation
pathways
are,
what
their
capacity
is
to
deal
with
these
issues,
and
then
we
will
also
have
our
social
science
researchers
out
there
with
the
graduate
students.
That's
starting.
F
In
addition
to
that,
we
have
a
community
engaged
intern
who
is
serving
through
the
summer
with
us,
with
the
sea,
grant
consortium
she's
working
on
creating
public
outreach
products
and
materials
to
better
explain
groundwater
there's
a
lot
of
confusion,
understandably
between
storm
water
and
groundwater,
and
they
do
intermix.
They
do
have
impacts
on
each
other,
but
we're
specifically
looking
at
the
groundwater
side
of
things.
So
we
want
to
make
that
as
clear
as
possible.
She's
also
helping
us
create
a
website,
and
then
this
is
from
our
meeting.
F
We
worked
with
councilman
glover,
but
this
past
spring
to
get
a
meeting
with
the
eustace
warsaw
community,
so
we'll
be
gearing
that
up
more
here
in
the
coming
months
to
get
more
information
and
more
outreach
happening
in
our
selected
communities.
But
that
is
where
that
project
stands.
It's
it's
supposed
to
wrap
up
the
end
of
2023,
but
we'll
see
we
might
make
it
go
longer
and
with
that
those
are
my
updates
on
everything.
So
if
you
all
have
any
questions,
I'm
open
for
that,
the
contact
information
there,
if
you
don't.
B
I
have
a
question
yeah
mentioned
further
faces
after
your
research
is
complete
and
you've
collected
the
data
and
you've
analyzed
it
I'm
going
to
tell
you
I
don't
know,
but
are
you
preparing
for
some
involvement
for
their
involvement
down
the
road?
When
you
say
these
further
phases
or
corrective
action
plans
or
mitigation
efforts
or.
F
I
think
and
rob
can
back
me
up
or
not
on
this
depending
on
what
I
say,
but
the
data
will
give
us
a
baseline
to
work
with
on
what
we
anticipate
a
timeline.
We
anticipate
impacts
happening
to
underground
infrastructure
and
how
much
how
big
those
impacts
are
going
to
be
so
that
will
help
give
us
guidance
on
what
needs
to
be
done.
I
don't
know
yet
that
we
know
if
specific
recommendations
will
come
from
this,
so
at
least
we'll
have
the
data.
F
Now,
with
regard
to
our
community
side
of
things,
the
intention
is
to
start
creating
this
relationship,
so
we
can
work
with
them
on
finding
solutions
and
understand
their
capacity
to
find,
go
along
and
be
a
part
of
implementing
those
solutions
as
well.
So
that's
that's
where
we
are
with
that.
If
that
answers
your
question,
yeah
I'll
just
say
that.
E
One
of
our
concerns
is
you
know
in
the
eustace
and
warsaw
island
community
has
been
wonderful
to
work
with.
You
know
I
that
I
think
there's
going
to
be
a
point
in
the
future
where
it's
like
now
what
you
know,
what
what?
What
can
we
do
to
take
action,
and
so
that's
something
that
we're
looking.
We
want
to
look
at
carefully
and
you
know
part
of
the
danger.
Is
we
don't
want,
there's
a
lot
of
grant
money
out
right
now
and
a
lot
of
ideas,
and
we
don't
want
to
over
promise.
B
E
Been
very
careful
about
offering
solutions,
and
so
we
want
to
make
sure
that
we
want
to
learn
from
the
study
and
and
figure
out
what
are
some
steps
we
can
take.
You
know
to
help
places
like
warsaw
island,
where
your
families
have
been
there
for
generations
remain
on
the
island.
You
know,
but
certain
you
know,
there's
a
certain
point.
Where
there's
things
we
can
do
and
things
we
can't
do
I
mean
I
don't
think
that.
F
I,
I
will
add,
you
know
we're
working
on
understanding
the
groundwater,
our
stormwater
department's,
working
on
understanding
the
surface
flooding
the
storm
water.
So
when
we
get
all
of
our
data
independently
and
bring
it
together
to
give
us
a
fuller
picture
of
the
impacts
happening
as
well,
so
hopefully
open
more
avenues,
yeah!
B
B
Die
plants
die,
people
are
somewhat
not
thinking
about
their
usage
of
water.
I
mean
some
magic,
real
educational
awareness,
understanding
of
the
criticality
of
our
groundwaters
and
saltwater
water
intrusion,
a
lot
of
the
negative
things
happening
to
our
water
system
from
things
like
septic
tanks
and
seepage
right
yeah.
So
it's
an
extremely
important
issue
and
you
can't
get
started
too
soon.
We've
been
talking
about
these
things
for
a
long
time.
C
You
know
we've
we
need
that
advocacy
needs
to
be
fine-tuned
because
they
really
need
to
be
more
tuned.
E
To
what's
happening
from
that
standpoint
yeah,
and
I
think
you
know
we
certainly
had
a
we
had
to
kind
of
take
a
step
back.
You
know
we
were
working
on
notification
or
disclosure,
and
I
think
that
that
maybe
at
this
point
is
a
step
too
far,
but
I
think
that
education,
you
know
that,
having
a
realistic
view
of
these
low-lying
areas,
you
know,
and
and
as
we
do
this
work
on
a
day-to-day.
E
F
C
And
I
appreciate
the
commentary
about
the
living
shorelines
because
I
remember
a
huge
study
they
did
down
in
florida
regarding
the
living
shorelines
and
implemented
millions
and
millions
of
dollars
only
for
it
to
erode
away
yeah
because
it
didn't
work
so
resiliency
to
the
resiliency
plan
would
be
really
smart.
E
You
know
they're
they're,
seeing
the
impacts
of
water
creeping
up
in
our
property
and
you
get
into
a
situation
where
we're
you
know
saying:
hey
look
at
us:
we're
do
you
know
we're
helping
you
we're
doing
this
living
shoreline
and
if
it
doesn't
work,
then
I
think
we're
in
a
worse
situation
in
the
future,
and
you
know
so
I
think
just
having
a
very
realistic
view
of
what
what
can
be
done.
What
can't
and
trying
to
take
those
steps,
that'll.
B
C
Thank
you,
I
think,
with
the
norwalk.
This
next
item
is
the
prioritized.
B
List
of
items
since
the
last
update
of
325,
I'm
sure
there's
a
lot's
going
to
be
updated.
I
don't
know
how
formed.
C
I
mean
I
read
over
them
when
I
got
the
review
for
it
for
today,
and
I
think
most
of
it's
pretty
much
current
we're.
You
know
where
we
are
and
what
we're
looking
at
the
things
that
we're
still
analyzing
the
things
we
basically
put
on
hold
are
basically
where
we
are
so
I
don't
think
there's
any
major
shifts.
B
I
had
two
things
that
I
just
wanted
to
bring
up
real
quickly.
I
see
there
impact
fees
was
added
at
the
march
reading
by
mayor
murray.
I
haven't
heard
anything
much
recently.
Do
you
know
where.
C
Things
stand
well,
we've
gotten,
I
mean
we
have,
we
have
progressed,
we've
got
an
agi
review
on
one
that
we've
been
we've
received
and
staff
is
reviewing
and
there
were
some
questions,
and
so
I
mean
we
are
working
on
that
so
and
I
think
I'm
not
speaking
for
the
other
municipalities,
but
I
think
they've
all
we
all
got
it
at
the
same
time.
So
so
there
is
a
working
committee
or
working
group
yeah,
I'm
not
really
back.
B
Here
to
speak
on
okay
progress
of
it
right
now.
All
right,
I
understand,
did
you
want
to
anything
rob
regarding
the
northern
plan
improvement
in
governmental
agreement
revisions.
E
And
I
have
nothing
to
add
at
this
point.
I
think
that
we're
we,
you
know
we're
kind
of
a
little
bit
on
hold
just
because
of
the
transition.
The
city's
going
through,
with
the
you
know,
hiring
a
planning
director.
I
think
that
that's
a
project
that
involves
that
joint
land
use
plan
or
agreement
on
future
zoning
in
the
eustis
community,
and
that's
something
that
I
think
you
probably
want
to
work
with.
E
B
Planning
director
once
they're
on
board
yeah,
the
eustace
community,
also
the
northern
regional
corridor,
yeah
okay,
I
don't
have
any
other
questions
regarding
the
action
items.
It's
just
one.
One
thing
I
wanted
to
bring
up
is
you
know
we
really
don't
have,
and
this.
E
B
Well,
I'm
glad
you
brought
that
up.
I
was
going
to
be
one
of
my
comments
again,
but
I'll
I'll
pay
you
back
on
you.
Yes,
you
know
the
with
the
turnover
and
a
few
county
council
people.
These
are
not
elected
officials,
but
you
know
so
that's
just
something
you
know:
we've
lost
both
the
member
and
the
chair
yeah.
I
am
station
committee
when
I
first
came
on
the.
B
I
remember
that
discussion,
I
think
from
mayor
murray
and
mayor
devito
regarding
the
alternate
use
of
the
chairs
for
the
mpc
and
and
planning
beaufort
county
planning.
Commission
I've
been
up
to
be
able
to
find
anything
in
writing.
Anything
I
can
put
my
hands
on
any
of
the
emotions
is
something
that
probably
over
the
years.
B
B
All
right,
actually
that
was
going
to
be
my
round
table
comment
mike
did
you
do
you
want
to?
Well,
I
guess
that's
where
we're
at
with
round
table
comments.
Do
you
have
anything?
Did
you
like
to
add
at
this
point.
C
Well,
we've
been,
I
mean
in
in
conversation
with
the
sea
level
rise
and
the
groundwater
course
with
the
with
the
study
that
we're
doing
on
the
point
in
the
downtown
area
for
for
drainage.
That
was,
they
did
their
last
presentation
on
friday
and
it
was
very
well
received
and
we've
had
several
ryan's,
been
to
councilwork
sessions
and
we've
done
reviews
of
what
they're
finding
as
far
as
the
project
core
over
28
million
dollars
for
potential
mediation,
but
for
mitigation.
C
But
we
have
prioritized
with
about
half
that
expense
with
like
10
or
10
or
11.
Points
of
that
would
make
major
impacts
as
far
as
that
is
concerned
in
the
downtown
area
right
and
that's
being
very,
very
closely
dovetailed
with
sea
level
rise
and
the
the
resiliency
issues
that
we've
been
talking
about,
because
we
recognize
the
importance
of
that
as
well,
and
the
county
has
been
a
partner
with
that
up
on
us
in
several
aspects.
So
it's
a.
C
It
is
definitely
a
regional
issue
and
we're
all
dealing
with
it
so
and
the
city,
and
it's
in
its
topographical
location,
is
specifically
burdened
with
dealing
with
those
kinds
of
issues
as
well,
which
is
why
we're
very
happy
to
have
the
noah
gage
on
this
waterfront
park
as
well.
B
B
C
I
would
encourage
it's
been
it's
recorded
in
our
both
friday's
meeting
and
the
work
session
meeting,
which
was
about
three
weeks
ago
with
ryan
phillips
and
the
engineering
group
from.
C
I
would
encourage
you
to
watch
that
it
is
it's
very
interesting
I
know
rob
you've
seen
it
you've
seen
the
presentation
haven't
you.
I
don't
know.
If
I
have
the
the
most
recent
one
is
the
update
that
they've
done
on
that
one
is
is
pretty
interesting
and
of
course,
a
lot
of
it
is
technical,
with
reference
to
engineering
and
outfalls
and
and
all
of
that
stuff.
C
But
you
come
to
the
reality
which
I'm
sure
all
of
the
entities,
all
the
constituencies
will
come
to
the
reality
that
much
of
what
we're
dealing
with
as
far
as
the
problems
are
the
fact
that
outdated
systems
are
just
failing
and
they're.
Not
it's
not
that
the
engineering
of
what
they
intended
to
do
is
is
inappropriate
as
the
fact
that
silt
and
and
collapse,
and
otherwise
have
created
non-functioning.
C
F
Sure
watch
rain
rain
trends,
rainfall
we
anticipate
impacts
as
a
result
of
climate
change,
but
we
have
no
data
to
look
back
on
to
see
what
that
might
be,
and
we
currently
don't
have
sensors
out
there
to
really
collect
that
information
other
than
citizen
scientists,
who
might
be
a
part
of
the
coco
ros.
So
that's
definitely
something
that
we're
thinking
about,
and
you
know
just
want
to
put
that
out
there.
We
need
more
information
on
that.
B
There's
a
citizen
science
group,
as
you
know,
probably
port
royal
sound
foundation,
they've
trained
about
75
people,
but
they
do
mostly.
You
know:
sampling
water
sampling,
salinity
turbidity,
all
of
that,
but
I
can't
see
why
rain
gauges
couldn't
be
part
of
their
their
work.
B
They've
done
some
they've
got
some
presents
significant
presence
on
callawase
island,
but
I
believe,
also
old
field
spring
island,
and
you
know
we
could
spread
that
out.
Obviously,
but
that
could
be
a
source
of
some
information.
This
is
a
science
group.
Thank
you.
I've
got
rain
gauge
in
my
yard.
I
can
always
tell
you
what
it
is.
If
I
can
remember
yeah,
if
I
can
remember
to
empty
it
out
after
the
first
time.
C
Information
is
there
a
statewide
the
program
statewide.
Is
that?
Can
you
disseminate
that,
with
reference
to
the
how
you
put
how
you,
because
I've
seen
one
of
those
programs
is
that
is
that
the
one
that
tells
you
how
to
monitor
your
gauges
and
where
to
place
them
and
all
that
stuff?
And
you
do
because
that
would
be
very
helpful.
I
think
you
go
through
a
training
if
you're.
F
A
part
of
the
official
program,
I
believe,
you're
reporting
every
every
morning.
It's
my
basic
understanding.
What
you
see
in
your
tie,
gauge
or
don't
see,
depending
on.
C
I'm
like
I'm,
not
really
sure
that
that
would
probably
be
realistic,
but
maybe
it
could
be,
they
can't
be
really
available
in
packs.
Well,
I
can
pull
what's
out
there
and
share
it.
F
We
can
do
that
sure,
and
if
you
are
on
that
same
vein,
I
could
put
the
sea
level
rise
technical
report
in
there,
if
you're
interested
in
looking
at
it.
They
also
published
an
application
guide
for
coastal
planners
and
leaders
to
what
do
we
do
with
this
data
and
now
that
we
have
it
yeah
which
I'm
working
through?
I
can
share
that
to
you.
If
you
all
are
interested
and.
C
E
C
That's
perfectly,
you
know
we
have
kind
of
a
foot
in
the
door
already
and
intrusion.
I
mean
going
back
to
the
coleman
and
you
know,
initiatives
from
the
from
dhak
and
from
this,
the
state
health
department,
when
the
water,
the
well
waters
being
in
in
infiltrated
by
the
the
groundwater
issues
and
the
septic
systems
and
so
forth,
and
that
was
50
years
ago.
I
mean
it's
the
same.
F
Systems
and
exposures
yeah,
and
we
did
have
a
meeting
with
dx
septic
department
who
issues
those
permits
to
just
learn
more
about
it,
since
it
is
such
a
concern
for
us
here,
groundwater
impacting
those
systems
and
one
of
the
things
that
really
was
kind
of
a
wow
factor
for
me,
walking
away
from
that
meeting
is
that
they
do
not
keep
track
of
where
these
septic
systems
are
or
how
old
they
are.
So
you
don't
know,
there's
a
problem
unless
someone
notices
it
and
reports
it
otherwise,
they're
in
the
ground
having
these
impacts
happening
to
them.
C
But
then,
when
new
wells
are
drilled
and
people
fail
to
recognize
that
the
distance
to
and
from
and
very
few
of
the
well
drillers
worry
about
that
as
much
as
they
should
from
the
standpoint
of
where
your
septic
system
is
where
your
drain
fills
are
and
so
forth.
So
there
can
be
unintentional
infiltration
where
you
know
it
was
not
obviously
as
keen
from
the
awareness
of
where
things
are
located,
but
yeah
realtors
could
help
some
there
or
hinder
depending,
but
we
would
be
happy
to
give
a
presentation
I'll
talk
to
janet.
C
B
Okay,
with
that,
I
don't
think
do
we
have
anything
else
for
the
agenda.