
The Southern Shores Town Council is poised to commit at its Tuesday meeting $201,071.00 more to pay for design work and permitting for a 2027 beach nourishment project in which the Town may not participate, according to the packet posted online with the meeting agenda.
(For background, see The Beacon, 8/24/25.)
Tuesday’s meeting will be held at 5:30 p.m. in the Pitts Center.
You may access the agenda and the meeting packet here:
Agenda Item No. 6 in the packet, titled “Continuation of consideration of Coastal Protection Engineering (CPE) proposal for the 2027 Beach Nourishment Project Permitting and Design,” recaps the action taken by the Town Council to date on the proposed project and includes an accounting of the money that officials thus far have authorized spending.
If the Town Council should approve spending an additional $201,071.00 to “fully fund [CPE’s] proposal,” as the agenda item reads—in order to “maintain the Town’s option to participate in the 2027 project”—the Council will have authorized a total expenditure of $327,477.00.
Agenda Item No. 6 states that, even with this new allocation—which we anticipate the Council will unanimously approve—there will be about $1.8 million in the Beach Nourishment Capital Reserve Fund.
The item does not explain, however, how the Town happens to have such a flush reserve fund. This is information the beach nourishment tax-paying public is entitled to know.
The Town Council has until May 2026 to decide whether to proceed with re-nourishing all or a portion of the Southern Shores beaches, according to CPE consultant Ken Willson, who spoke to the Council at its Aug. 5 meeting, presenting an extremely positive picture of Southern Shores’ 3.7-mile shoreline. (See The Beacon, 8/24/25.)
Presumably, CPE would move up its annual beach monitoring survey from mid- to late-June 2026 to April or May 2026. This year, it conducted the survey earlier in June in order to give Mr. Willson some preliminary shoreline and sand volume data to present to the Town Council.
It is well known that the beach is at its widest in late July and early August. We do not believe that any data collected by CPE in April or May will be very helpful to the Town Council. Shortening the time interval between surveys also renders the data less reliable.
The Towns of Duck, Kitty Hawk, and Kill Devil Hills—whose beaches have higher erosion rates than Southern Shores’—have already signed contracts with CPE for the 2027 project.
ALSO ON THE AGENDA FOR TUESDAY’S MEETING . . .
A PUBLIC HEARING will be held on Zoning Text Amendment 25-05, which was submitted by the Town and proposes the addition of Section 1-14 to the Town Code chapter on general provisions and an amendment of Code Section 36-414(a), which pertains to requirements for proposed zoning text amendments.
See ZTA 25-05 at https://www.southernshores-nc.gov/media/12501.
The purpose of the wordy ZTA is explained by the Town in its public-hearing notice as “to establish requirements for reconsideration of disapproved development and amendment requests . . . and to establish application and formatting requirements for proposed zoning text amendments.”
In Planning Director Wes Haskett’s Agenda Item, the Section 1-14 addition is explained as establishing “that if an application for an administrative development approval, zoning map amendment, regulation amendment, or any other legislative development request is denied by the decision-making authority, on any basis other than the failure of the applicant to submit a complete application, no same application proposing the same or similar development on all or part of the same land or the same or similar text amendment shall be submitted within one year after the date of denial,” unless the decision-making authority waives this time limit for one of the reasons stated in the section.
We perceive this as an attempt to limit the number of “bites of the apple” that a property owner applicant has to challenge the denial of a development request, such as a requested subdivision of his property.
Two of the reasons stated for a waiver of the year waiting period include the submission of a new application that is “materially different” from the prior application and a finding that the final decision on the prior application was “based on a material mistake of fact.”
According to the Agenda Item, a House Bill currently in the N.C. General Assembly would prohibit a waiting period, such as the one proposed in ZTA 25-05. In the event H.B. 926 becomes law, the Town would propose language amending Section 1-14, Mr. Haskett states, assuming the Town Council approves the ZTA Tuesday.
We see no reason to expect it to do otherwise.
The Planning Board unanimously recommended approval of ZTA 25-05, 4-0, at its Aug. 18 meeting.
AN UPDATE ON THE MERGER OF THE FIRE DEPARTMENT WITH THE TOWN: At the Aug. 5 Town Council meeting, Fire Chief Ed Limbacher said he would probably announce new hires by the SSFD at the Sept. 2 meeting. Other merger business will be discussed as well.
A GRANT TO PAY FOR REPLACEMENT OF A SECTION OF THE DUCK ROAD SIDEWALK: Town Manager Cliff Ogburn is seeking the Town Council’s approval to apply for a Dare County Tourism Board “Tourism Impact Grant” (TIG) to help fund replacement of the sidewalk/multi-use path on the east side of Duck Road (N.C. 12) from Hillcrest Drive to 13th Street. The preliminary cost estimate for the construction is about $320,000, according to Mr. Ogburn. The Town must match any TIG it receives with 50 percent.
A VIEWING OF “WRECKS OF PAUL GAMIELS HILL”: Once located on the Hillcrest Beach in Southern Shores, the Paul Gamiels Hill Life Saving Station operated an active rescue service from 1878 to 1937. The station was reactivated during World War II, deactivated shortly afterward, and then burned to the ground in the early 1960s.
During the Station’s 59 years of service, seven vessels came ashore during Atlantic storms, according to Town of Southern Shores records. Rescue efforts by Station crews saved the lives of dozens of people.
The Town Council’s meeting agenda does not delve into the origin or format of the film, but it does note that a discussion will take place after the viewing.
Planning Board: The Town Planning Board has re-elected Andy Ward as its chairperson for another fiscal year and elected Jan Collins as its vice-chairperson during the same period. The Town Council is handling its approval of these elections in its consent agenda.
Regretfully, we will be unable to cover Tuesday’s meeting, but we will report on any action taken by the Town Council on beach nourishment that differs from what we have predicted.
By Ann G. Sjoerdsma, The Southern Shores Beacon, 8/31/25



