Kelli Levy, Pinellas County director of public works, stands at the erosion control line amid vegetation on a stack of rolling sand dunes on July 25, 2022, on Indian Rocks Beach.

Kelli Levy, Pinellas County director of public works, stands at the erosion control line amid vegetation on a stack of rolling sand dunes on July 25, 2022, on Indian Rocks Beach. (Douglas R. Clifford/Tampa Bay Times/TNS)

TAMPA, Fla. — Cookie Kennedy was out for a walk with a friend one day this winter when she felt a familiar dread creep up on her. As the pair strolled the north shore of Indian Rocks Beach, the small Pinellas County city where Kennedy is mayor, they were forced to weave their way through a thickening crowd of beachgoers. The land where they stood had shrunk.

Pinellas County’s beaches are washing away. For decades, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers replenished them, pumping tons of sand every few years onto an 8½-mile stretch of Sand Key, the barrier island home to the county’s beach communities.

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