NORTH WILDWOOD, N.J. — A New Jersey resort community that has lived in fear of being wiped out by the next big storm voted Tuesday to end a decadelong battle with the state over the condition of its beaches and protective sand dunes that involved $42 million worth of fines and litigation.
The North Wildwood City Council voted to accept a settlement with the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection under which the state will cancel $12 million worth of fines it has levied against the city for conducting unauthorized and potentially harmful beach repair work.
The city will drop its lawsuit against the state seeking reimbursement for $30 million worth of sand it had trucked in and dumped on its ever-eroding beaches, which are popular with Philadelphia-area tourists.
''It's good to put this behind us and move forward,'' said Mayor Patrick Rosenello, the Republican mayor whose city tenaciously fought the state, insisting that it receive the same sort of beach replenishment project that virtually the entire rest of the Jersey Shore has gotten.
''All we wanted was to be treated the same as everyone else,'' he said.
Although it has been prone to severe erosion that recently whittled the protective sand dunes down to the height of Rosenello's knees, North Wildwood has not yet gotten a full beach replenishment project from the state and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, due in part to funding delays and difficulty in obtaining easements from private property owners.
The state Department of Transportation did an interim replenishment project last summer after Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy called the erosion in North Wildwood ''shocking.'' Rosenello said that work has held up well in the ensuing months.
The settlement will be subject to a 30-day public comment period before taking effect next year.