Fiscal Court approves community-center design and advances stream-stabilization plans for Elliott/Eovia Park

Letcher County Fiscal Court · February 16, 2026

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Summary

The court approved schematic work for the Blackhawk/Blackie Community Center and advanced FEMA Public Assistance-funded stream-stabilization plans that use hand-placed boulder 'j-hook' and 'weir' structures to reduce bank erosion at Elliott/Eovia Park.

Letcher County Fiscal Court on Feb. 16 approved schematic design work that will allow an architect to finish full plans and permitting for the Blackhawk (Blackie) Community Center and also advanced related flood-recovery stream-stabilization work at Elliott/Eovia Park.

Court staff said approval of the schematic will let the architect proceed with demolition plans, full mechanical/electrical/plumbing designs and permitting so the project can move to bid. An unidentified consultant and project engineers described a natural stream-channel approach to stabilize park banks, saying the plan uses j-hooks and cross‑bank weirs—hand-placed boulders weighing roughly 4,000–5,000 pounds—to shift high-velocity flow away from eroding banks and reduce repeated washouts seen after the 2022 and February floods. “The whole goal of this natural stream channel design is to remove the sheer stress, the high velocity away from the bank, to where it's in the center of the channel,” a consultant explained during the presentation.

Staff stressed that the structures are intended to reduce erosion but cannot prevent flooding; they said construction of each structure is typically rapid once permitted (about a week per structure) and that the work is a common practice in flood-recovery projects in several states. The court also discussed that some walkways and paved tracks adjacent to the park are included in FEMA public-assistance scopes and will be coordinated with the stream work.

The court voted to approve the schematic/design so the architect can prepare full design documents and begin permitting. The next steps are full plans, environmental reviews and then bidding; staff said they will circulate construction photos and timelines to commissioners when available.