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"We think we have big opportunities here, just because we've got land on the Gulf," Broussard said. "That's a big ticket." He acknowledges people reminisce about the old Holly Beach, but said it needs to be reborn. Among its flaws, Broussard said, were houses and trailers with shoddy septic and electrical systems, and property boundaries that were ignored. The trailers and rickety structures that once stood in town provided no defense against high winds and storm surge. Buildings under construction must meet new codes that should keep them standing even in big storms. Broussard said another step toward redevelopment is $4.1 million in state money that will go toward a municipal sewer system, which it still lacks. For now, Holly Beach usually stands quiet, aside from the few tourists who catch flounder, crabs and shrimp, or just stroll the beach. They're outnumbered by the swarms of mosquitoes that breed in the nearby marshes.
Craig Broussard, a Holly Beach homeowner, said he was encouraged that hundreds of people came to town for the July 4 and Labor Day weekends. The crowds camped out on the sand or drove in recreational vehicles, he said. "We're growing. We'd like it to go faster, but it's still making progress," said Broussard, who's not related to the parish planner. Resident Lee Stelly, who rents out two trailers to tourists and workmen, said he doesn't know what the town will look like in a few years, but it won't be like the Holly Beach of old. "It was a place people came to have a good time, that's what Holly Beach was all about," Stelly said. "It'll never be the same."
[Associated
Press;
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