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Port Charlotte Beach overhaul: board approves phased prep, seeks public timeline
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Summary
County staff outlined a phased plan to remove damaged boardwalk, secure fencing and coordinate a dredge/beach-renourishment project tied to sales-tax funds and FEMA recovery. Commissioners authorized demolition prep and asked staff for a public portal and a refined timeline before any public re-opening.
Charlotte County officials presented a detailed recovery and redevelopment plan for Port Charlotte Beach on April 22, describing concurrent workstreams for boardwalk demolition, fencing changes, beach cleaning, pavilion evaluation and a county/MSBU-funded dredge and renourishment.
Parks director Tommy Scott said the project requires coordination across FEMA reimbursement steps and sales-tax-funded construction of a new recreation building and pool. "There is no timeline for FEMA," Scott cautioned, describing the agency's multi-step damage, description and pricing process. He recommended removing the oldest, undermined wooden pavilions now to reduce safety hazards and to streamline later reconstruction to modern wind/load codes.
Public works expects to bid the dredge and beach-renourishment package soon, with an earliest construction window around August–September 2025; dredging placement will be staged by contract and the county expects a shortfall of sand that will require additional county-funded fill. Commissioners asked staff to post project documents in a public portal, supply a clearer project sequencing chart, and proceed with demolition and site-prepare tasks where those reduce safety risk and do not jeopardize FEMA reimbursement.
Key next steps: staff to post project materials in a single portal, finalize dredge procurement documents and return with a coordinated timeline that overlays demolition, sales-tax construction, and renourishment activities.
