
BoatU.S.
Press Contact: Scott Croft, 703-461-2864, SCroft@BoatUS.com
May
10, 2007 Press
Release - May 10, 2007
Seven
BoatU.S. Recreational Boating Access Award Winners
For 2007
As
waterfront land values skyrocket, high taxes shutter marinas and residential
development overtakes the waterfront, recreational boaters have been
losing more and more access to the water. But some forward
thinking communities and organizations are working to turn back the
tide and today — at the 2007 Working
Waterways and Waterfronts – A National Symposium on Water Access
held in Norfolk, VA, May 9 - 11, 2007 — seven recipients were recognized with the first
ever BoatU.S. Recreational Boating Access Awards.
The
Award was created to honor a group, government body, business, individual
or non-profit organization that has succeeded in preserving or improving
public waterway access for boaters. Judging criteria included:
how well challenges were overcome; the direct impact of the solution;
and how adaptable the approach would be in other areas facing similar
water access challenges.
The
seven BoatU.S. Recreational Boating Access Award winners are:
Middle
Peninsula Planning District Commission ,
VA , for creation
of the Middle Peninsula Chesapeake Bay Public Access Authority in
response to legislation passed by the General Assembly. The Commission
provides a model institutional framework for local governments to
address public water access on a regional basis.
Shoreline
Property Owners and Contractors Association, WA ,
for their creation of an advocacy organization to preserve and promote
recreational boating access by advocating common-sense, science-based
permitting and regulation for boating facilities siting, development,
construction and maintenance. It is an excellent model for
grassroots organizing that joins boater/citizen stakeholders with
the affected marine business community in a pro-active, multi-pronged
campaign aimed at regulatory and legislative reform.
Carryover
of the Carolinas, NC ,
for the development of a unique technological solution — a boat lift
that provides waterway access between biologically separate and environmentally
sensitive water bodies while eliminating or minimizing environmental
impacts. The technology essentially allows boaters to use man-made
canals that formerly could not be accessed from any other waterway.
Scituate
Marine Park, MA , for
the successful public acquisition of at-risk waterfront land and the
subsequent development and operation of public facilities for boating
access as well as for related recreational, cultural and historic
uses of benefit to the larger community. This was a textbook
case on how to build grassroots momentum for improving boating access,
and is a model for local governments faced with imminent loss of waterfront
to develop a community supported, user fee-based boating facility.
Port
of Bellingham, WA , for
an industrial waterfront revitalization project that places recreational
boating access/facilities development at its core. It is a
model process on how to get the public engaged with recreational boaters
and the boating industry in a planning and development partnership
with local government. It is expected to meet current and future
demand for recreational boating facilities while preserving the city's
working waterfront.
City
of Trenton, MI, for successfully
restoring to environmental
health the “Black Lagoon,” and thereby transforming a contaminated
industrial site into a much-needed marina that will serve transient
boaters on the Detroit River. This provides an excellent and successful
model that capitalized on a “brownfields” industrial site for recreational
boating access facilities by engaging a wide variety of partners,
enlisting broad community support and leveraging multiple funding
sources.
North
Carolina General Assembly, NC
for its initiative in creating the state Waterfront Access Study Committee
in 2006, the subsequent comprehensive review and the resulting recommendations
to protect and promote North Carolina's working waterfronts.
This is an excellent example of a legislative response to a growing
challenge faced by one constituent group that other state legislatures
could adopt.