Beach battleground: Coastal communities wary of 'biggest reform in a generation'

By Peter Hannam
Updated December 31 2016 - 1:08am, first published 12:15am
Stairway no longer reaches to heaven: Wamberal beachfront erosion after June's east coast low. Photo: James Brickwood
Stairway no longer reaches to heaven: Wamberal beachfront erosion after June's east coast low. Photo: James Brickwood
Pat Aiken, a regional co-ordinator of the NSW Coastal Alliance, near damaged properties at Wamberal. Photo: James Brickwood
Pat Aiken, a regional co-ordinator of the NSW Coastal Alliance, near damaged properties at Wamberal. Photo: James Brickwood
Residents at Collaroy make do after the June east coast low wiped out their swimming pool (buried beneath the sand). Photo: James Brickwood
Residents at Collaroy make do after the June east coast low wiped out their swimming pool (buried beneath the sand). Photo: James Brickwood
Sign of the times: Wamberal beach, with rubble still exposed. Photo: James Brickwood
Sign of the times: Wamberal beach, with rubble still exposed. Photo: James Brickwood
Properties along Wamberal Beach on the Central Coast, which received severe erosion damage during the June 2016 storm surges.  Photo: James Brickwood
Properties along Wamberal Beach on the Central Coast, which received severe erosion damage during the June 2016 storm surges. Photo: James Brickwood

Battlelines are being drawn along the NSW coast as seaside communities brace for what Planning Minister Rob Stokes dubs the biggest overhaul of coastal management in a generation.

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