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Biden nixed a Trump order. It left a beach without sand.

By Daniel Cusick | 04/26/2024 06:41 AM EDT

Wrightsville Beach in North Carolina had been sucking sand from a nearby inlet for decades. Then it became a casualty of the Biden-Trump war.

Sand is moved onto the beach during a rebuilding project in Wrightsville Beach, North Carolina, in January.

Sand is moved onto the beach during a rebuilding project in Wrightsville Beach, North Carolina, in January. Allison Joyce/Getty Images

A feud between the Biden administration and a North Carolina coastal town over pumping sand onto its beach from a federally protected area could be resolved under bipartisan legislation that passed the House earlier this month.

, sponsored by North Carolina Rep. David Rouzer (R), would restore the Army Corps of Engineers’ authority to siphon sand from a barrier island inlet just south of Wrightsville Beach, North Carolina, to rebuild storm-battered beaches. Masonboro Inlet, which for decades had provided soft, white sand to periodically “nourish” Wrightsville Beach, was placed off-limits by the Interior Department in 2021 because the inlet is within a federally protected coastal zone.

Rouzer’s bill would allow the corps to continue pumping sand from the inlet for emergency purposes but not for routine rebuilding projects, which have happened roughly every four years at Wrightsville Beach since 1965.

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“This legislation allows these beaches to continue to use their historic borrow sites for protection from storm damage, maintain their natural ecosystems, and protect our local economy,” Rouzer said in a statement after the bill passed April 11 and was referred to the Senate.

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