File #: 17-0320    Version: 1 Name: RES - agreement with Bay Area Coastal Protection Alliance
Type: Agenda Item Status: Approved
File created: 5/3/2017 In control: City Council
On agenda: 5/23/2017 Final action: 5/23/2017
Title: Consider and take action on a resolution authorizing an agreement with the Bay Area Coastal Protection Alliance for marketing services related to the creation of a regional coastal barrier system in an amount not to exceed $15,000 (Council Member Long and Council Member Millican)
Attachments: 1. Data Sheet, 2. Proposed Resolution, 3. Request from Mayor Bechtel, 4. Exhibit A - Proposed Agreement, 5. RES 2013-29, 6. Aerial View of Coastal Region
Title
Consider and take action on a resolution authorizing an agreement with the Bay Area Coastal Protection Alliance for marketing services related to the creation of a regional coastal barrier system in an amount not to exceed $15,000 (Council Member Long and Council Member Millican)

Background:
Approval of this item will authorize an agreement with the Bay Area Coastal Protection Alliance (BACPA) for marketing services related to the installation and implementation of a regional coastal barrier system in an amount not to exceed $15,000.

The BACPA is a nonprofit corporation that researches alternatives for storm surge protection in the Gulf Coast region, provides information and resources to educate the public about the economic, security, and public safety benefits of such alternatives, and carries out other charitable, scientific, literary and educational activities.

The current focus of BACPA is raising the necessary funds to create a marketing video that advocates for the creation of a coastal barrier system. A coastal barrier stops the ocean surge at the coast where it is about 17 ft. If left unchecked, a storm surge could fill up Galveston Bay with a massive amount of water and the wind and water behind it would push the surge up to 24 ft. or higher causing significant damage to property, sensitive ecosystems, and the loss of human life.

A coastal barrier system could be developed using manmade sand dunes (revetments covered with sand and natural grasses) along the length of the coast connecting to the existing Galveston Seawall. Bolivar Roads and San Luis Pass could be protected by large moveable flood gates that would be closed in the hours before landfall of the storm but would not impact shipping or the ecology of the bay when open.

BACPA has been working on the concept of a coastal barrier system for some time. Originally called the "Ike Dike,” an informal name derived from Hurricane Ike, which made landfall in Galveston, Texas, on Septem...

Click here for full text