Members of the Ocean City High School girls JV8+ crew team are honored by City Council for their national championship.
By Donald Wittkowski
Ocean City is lining up the funding for a series of road, drainage and dredging projects that will get underway in the fall.
City Council introduced a $9 million bond ordinance Thursday night that includes $4.2 million to rebuild roads and alleys, $1.8 million for drainage improvements and $3 million for dredging.
The projects are part of an ongoing strategy to protect the island from flooding, replace aging drainage pipes and clear out lagoons along the bay backs that are choked with sediment, said Frank Donato, the city’s chief financial officer.
“It’s obviously been a major component of our capital plan year after year. This is a continuation of that effort,” Donato explained of the city’s emphasis on upgrading its infrastructure.
Construction work is expected to begin in the quieter fall months to avoid disruptions during the peak summer vacation season.
The road, alley and drainage projects go hand in hand. They will be scattered across the city as part of an aggressive program to ease flooding throughout the low-lying barrier island.
Roads will be elevated to make them more flood-resistant. Aging drainage pipes that date back decades will be replaced. Donato said that pipes in some parts of the city could be close to nearly a century old.
Meanwhile, dredging is scheduled to start in the fall at North Point Lagoon at the end of Bay Avenue in the Gardens section of town. The same area is also known as the Gardens Lagoon.
In the past three years, the city has been spending millions of dollars to methodically clear out channels and lagoons along the back bays that are laden with mud and silt.
The funding will continue the dredging program for lagoons and channels along the back bays.
In 2018, Ocean City became the first municipality in New Jersey to receive a state permit allowing it to dredge along the entire length of the island.
Members of the Ocean City High School girls JV8+ crew team are honored by City Council for their national championship.
In other business at Thursday’s Council meeting, the Ocean City High School girls JV8+ rowing team was honored with a city proclamation for winning the title in May at the Scholastic Rowing Association of America’s National Championship Regatta at Dillon Lake in Ohio.
The JV8+ coxswain boat captured the national championship a week after the team won the gold medal at the prestigious Stotesbury Regatta in Philadelphia.
Members of the championship team included McKenzie Thurlow, the coxswain, and Ryleigh Mack, Alexis O’Keefe, Vanessa Karayiannis, Michaela Carroll, Julianna Giardina, Maggie Clunn, Carly Dougherty and Alexia Schmidt.
It was the first time in Ocean City High School history that the girls rowing team had won both the national championship and the Stotesbury Regatta.
“Winning the nationals is a big deal,” Councilman Michael DeVlieger told the team members as they stood in the Council chambers for the proclamation ceremony.
He also told them that even when they grow older, they’ll always cherish the memories of their championship and will remember the teammates who were in the boat with them.