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Flagler Beach commissions feasibility study for Palm Harbor drainage after McKimmon Creeds assessment
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Summary
The commission approved a targeted feasibility study (Fries & Nichols) to obtain surveys, modeling and refined options for the Palm Harbor stormwater project — the city’s top stormwater priority — with the study intended to narrow possible designs and costs following an earlier LiDAR-based report that produced a rough $4M estimate.
The Flagler Beach City Commission voted 4–1 on April 23 to authorize a feasibility study for the Palm Harbor drainage project, the staff‑identified No. 1 stormwater priority.
Staff told the commission that a prior McKimmon Creed study provided a high-level analysis using LiDAR and approximations but did not include field surveys. The approved Fries & Nichols scope will obtain surveys, run modeling, hold resident meetings and produce two probable design options with more accurate construction and cost estimates.
Commissioners noted the prior $4 million rough estimate and emphasized the need for better information before committing capital. One commissioner opposed the additional consultant expense, saying several studies already exist; supporters argued the new survey data is the essential missing step to identify workable alternatives such as curb and gutter, asphalt upgrades, conveyance piping or open-cell pavers.
Staff said the city will engage a local surveyor under the continuing services agreement to keep costs lower and that the study is intended to produce viable construction alternatives and budgets to move forward with capital planning.

