Galveston, Texas is a barrier island.
And it is where I was born and lived for most of the first 65 years of my life; the last three in Dallas.
I know the island so well -- its past and its present -- that for 10 years I wrote its history and its people's stories through weekly columns for the Galveston paper. And I told them on camera for a Houston TV station's news reports.
I continue to write them for the monthly editions of Texas Escapes magazine.
My book, Bill Cherry's Galveston Memories (Van Jus Press 2000) has sold thousands.
Today I face thoughts and ideas that I have glossed over in the past.
After 108 years, with the visit of Ike, the Island has seen destruction that would likely be on par with the famous 1900 Storm if it weren't for the many-mile seawall that was completed in 1902, and that has been added to several times since.
But the facts remain the facts. God and nature never meant for life and property to be safe on barrier islands.
Yet enormous amounts of building has been allowed to continue, year after year, on Galveston Island, and most of it no better protected from destruction than those that went down in 1900.
You see, during my lifetime, massive amounts of residences, primarily vacation homes, have been built on those parts of the island that are at water's edge and that are not protected by a seawall. Some of those homes cost $2 million or more. Today, we find many have been reduced to toothpicks by Hurricane Ike that came for a visit on September 12-13.
Zillions of dollars worth of toothpicks that will be the only collateral for insurance claims. And all of them, even those that survived without extensive damage should have never been built. Not one of them.
God and nature never meant for life to be safe on barrier islands.
And then there is the machoism, the machoism I once subscribed to. "I'm not afraid. I'm not evacuating. I'll ride it out at home." Another idiotic and a very selfish decision.
So what's the purpose of my piece? It is to ask that the public, mortgage lenders and property insurers will discontiue supporting further building on land in Galveston that is not quasi-protected by a seawall.
And it is to ask that the state pass legislation that will allow the governor to put entire areas under martial law when a threat like Ike is near; thus giving the right to law enforcement officers to arrest those who refuse to leave.
After all, why should the public pay for the poor financial decisions of the cavalier? Why should public servants risk their own safety to straddle idiotic personal decisions of others gone bad?
In the meantime, how will this mess that has been left behind ever be sorted out? How will life ever return to normal for those who live on Galveston Island? I pray it will and that it will soon.
BILL CHERRY, REALTORS DALLAS
214 503-8563
Our 43rd Year Selling Texas
Bill,
You are so completely right on this. I'm from the East Coast, but Galveston has always reminded me of North Carolina's Outer Banks. The fact is permanent structures should not be built on these sandbars. The islands themselves are in constant motion! I just wonder where it was we decided that it was the government's job to pick up the pieces after people made risky decisions.