From the article in the previous post:
"Years later, officials in Cape May stopped the company from shipping sand off the beach at Cape May Point, fearing that it was the reason why the swimming beach was disappearing, Cook said.
But that wasn't the case, he said.
"The stopping of the railroad shipment did not change the natural movement of sand that moved away from the beaches from Sewell Point to Cape May Point," said Cook. "Nature changes things just like this one storm that exposed the trestle track work."
Isn't that kind of odd for him to make that case herein? It's like he has an ax to grind after all these years.