27 °F Ocean City, US
December 5, 2025

Ocean City to use $3 million grant to raise Ocean Aire Condominiums

By BILL BARLOW/Special to the Sentinel 

OCEAN CITY – A federal grant will bring seven multifamily buildings above the level of future floods. 

On May 27, City Council approved a $3 million bond that will cover the cost of raising the 52 units of the Ocean Aire Condominiums, a block of seven two-story buildings on West Avenue starting at 43rd Street. 

The condos include two-bedroom and three-bedroom units. According to city Finance Director Frank Donato, all of the units are categorized as severe repetitive loss structures. That means the Federal Emergency Management Agency will fund the cost of flood protection work at the site, including lifting all seven buildings above the flood elevation. 

Donato said the city has aggressively gone after these kinds of grants since Superstorm Sandy.

During Sandy, he said, the ground floor units each had about two feet of water. That qualifies for FEMA funding. 

But that funding will only come once the project is completed. The bond ordinance will allow the city to loan the money for the project, with the assurance it will be repaid once the work is completed. He said it would be nearly impossible for a condo association to get a loan for this kind of work otherwise. 

“Obviously, you can realize the difficulty of dealing with 52 separate loans on a project like this” he said. 

The ordinance is set for a public hearing and final vote on May 27. A loan agreement will come before council at a future meeting for a vote, Donato said. 

“So we’re going to give them the money, and we’re going to get reimbursed by FEMA,” said Councilwoman Karen Bergman. 

“This is an example of multiple levels of government working together to make something good happen,” said Council President Bob Barr. 

He said condo residents have had water coming in their windows on a couple of occasions. 

Related articles

Bobby Barr: Transition from council to commission was seamless

Focuses include diversifying the economy, open space, veterans OCEAN CITY — Bobby Barr felt he had a seamless transition from representing a single community as an Ocean City councilman to representing 16 towns as a member of the Cape May County Board of County Commissioners. He said nothing surprised him because he has worked at […]

Cape May County COVID-19 cases spiked in November

By DAVID NAHAN/Sentinel staff Daily COVID-19 cases have risen almost nine-fold since August in Cape May County. Cases were on a slow but steady increase from the end of July through the end of October, but spiked in November. Over the past week, the county Department of Health reported five new fatalities with 510 active […]

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *