FIVE COMMUNITIES SHOW HOW BOATING ACCESS CAN BE IMPROVED
BoatUS Access Awards Highlight Success
Stories to Share
When pigs fly. A snowball’s chance in hell. These colorful expressions
have accurately portrayed the odds for success that communities have often
faced when trying to improve access to the water for recreational boaters.However,
with today’s announcement of five 2009 BoatU.S. Recreational Boating Access
Award winners , there is proof that naysayers can be overcome. By learning
from these winning examples, communities across the U.S. can succeed with
their own waterfront access plans and begin to enjoy the economic benefits
that boaters bring to merchants, restaurants and service providers.
Boat
Owners Association of The United States (BoatUS) created the award
program in 2007 to highlight successes in protecting water access as
boaters and communities were losing marina slips, service yards and boat
launching areas. This year’s winning projects – in Oregon, Florida, and
Ohio – offer a range
of innovative solutions for communities struggling to keep their waterfronts
open to boaters, anglers, and citizens.
The 2009 BoatU.S. Access Award
Winners:
On the Oregon Coast, Polishing a Gem
In 2003 the Port of Siuslaw (pronounced sigh-YOU-slaw), which lies adjacent
to Florence (pop. 8700) on Oregon’s mid-coast, began discussions with
the community on how to revitalize the entire port. However, the process
took time and by 2007, the former recreational boat transient dock was
literally cut off from the town because it was deemed too decrepit and
dangerous, leaving no transient boater access to Florence. Working with
the community including a group of supportive commercial fishermen and
citizens as well as the Oregon State Marine Board, a comprehensive plan
was created. But without enough funds to do the project, the Port had
to rely heavily on media publicity efforts to secure a combination of
an urban renewal tax credit and Marine Board, federal Clean Vessel Act,
Boating Infrastructure Grant and port matching funds to complete the
project. Today, the dock provides a welcoming and safe access to the
town’s historic area, offers boat sewage pumpout services,
and is a safe haven from Pacific storms. Florence is now gaining renewed
interest from transient boaters as well as tourists – who all spend money
in town.
At Kissimmee Lakes FL: Stopping the Freight Train
In Florida, the Kissimmee River Valley Sportsmans Association (KRVSA)
was able to stop and turn the “train” around, literally at the last minute,
when it saved critical public boating access on Lake Kissimmee in Central
Florida. On the day the South Florida Water Management District (SFWMD)
was set to transfer Shady Oaks Fish Camp and The Speight Family Ranch
to a big developer — who
had no future plans to offer public boating access — KRVSA intervened
and stopped what everyone thought was a done deal. Instead, after spirited
discussion, SFWMD agreed to set aside 136 acres of waterfront property
from the ranch and provide $1 million for launch site improvements. The
District agreed to cede the property to Polk County, which initially
balked but later agreed to accept the land and maintain the property
as a county park. When completed next year, the 136-acre Shady Oaks parcel
will provide the second publicly owned vessel launch facility on Lake
Kissimmee, and will include campsites, vessel launch facilities and other
amenities for a diverse group of users. To top it off, the KVRSA backed
an effort by the Florida Airboat Association to have Florida state policy
changed, so that "surplussed" lands bought with
tax dollars cannot be sold to any private developer until government
agencies have decided not to accept them.
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This stretch of shoreline will soon be a county park with launching
facilities. |
Boaters will have access to Lake Kissimmee, seen here from the
future boat launch site. |
Seen from the sky, the new park and boat launch
will also have plenty of campsites to attract many types of users. |
In Florida, The Tax Man Cometh
In Florida, an Access Award went to Raymond Graziotto, President and
COO of the Loggerhead Club & Marina, a chain of 11 marinas located around
the state, and a board member of the Marine Industries Association of
Palm Beach County, for his work in leading the effort to gain passage
of FL Amendment 6. The Amendment will move forward a plan to provide
some tax relief for water dependent businesses. Prior to Amendment 6,
some marine-related businesses were receiving property tax bills under
a system of “highest and best use” taxation, which
allowed counties to tax on the potential use of the land, such as a high-end
condo development with hundreds of units, instead of the current use
of the property. Some marinas had their tax bills double in just two
years, threatening Florida’s $18 billion marine industry. Graziotto
provided seed funding, led fundraising efforts to hire attorneys and
brought the issue to voters who overwhelmingly approved the measure.
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| Banners at marinas help publicize the FL Amendment
6. |
Boaters were enlisted to help get
the message out. |
Flyers were also used to get
support of FL Amendment 6. |
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Reaching out the marine
industry was part of Graziotto’s efforts to get tax relief
for Florida marinas. |
On
Lake Erie, Village Leaders Rehab an Underutilized Lakeside Asset
Small
towns can win at access too, and in North Perry, OH on Lake Erie, the
Village Council and Mayor, winners of a 2009 Access Award, can prove
it. In 2001 the Lake County Coastal Plan Committee embarked on an ambitious
agenda that included recognizing the need for public boating access improvements,
so it asked local communities for their wish list – gaining critical
grassroots support in the process. The Council and Mayor of North Perry,
pop. 1,000, found kindred spirits in the Coastal Plan Committee and used
the Plan to help redevelop a run down, unprotected, single launch ramp
on the turbulent lake into a full fledged harbor with a safe, protected
three-lane launch ramp with docks, fishing facilities, swimming beach,
walking trails and park for the community. They had to overcome regulatory
issues and the shifting coastal sands of Lake Erie, going so far as to
have the proposed new harbor’s design wave-tank tested to ensure the
sand would continue its movement down the shoreline even in the biggest
storms. Now also a critical a harbor of refuge, the new access point’s
16 transient slips will contribute to the long-term economic development
of the village and surrounding communities.
A Strong State Agency + Affordable
Ramp Construction = New Access in Ohio The Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources Division of Watercraft is one of the few state-level boating
agencies in the U.S. that is significantly involved with the boating
access issue, helping local communities with funding, planning and other
resources. With two grants from the agency in 2003 and 2007 providing
a majority of the funds, the Village of Tuscarawas in northeast Ohio
was able to build a new ramp at a location on the Tuscarawas River that
was formerly only available to paddle sports enthusiasts. The ingenious
new ramp incorporates two pre-fabricated concrete and wire mats that
were simply lifted into place on top of a bed of gravel on the river
bottom. This construction method was faster, easier and less expensive,
eliminating the need for erecting expensive cofferdams and poured concrete,
and was also easier on the environment. Boater access to the river is
now possible year round no matter where the varying seasonal water level
may be, and ramp erosion from river currents as well as boaters’ powerloading
maneuvers has been solved. A gravel parking lot, lighting and floating
boarding docks completed the project.
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The newly completed
launch ramp facility on the Tuscarawas River includes a generously
sized parking area. |
The view of the ramp prior to laying
the prefabricated concrete and wire cable mat. |
A close up shows how the mat’s
concrete “blocks” are held together by wire cable. |
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Installing the ramp without the need for cofferdams
saves time and money. |
The mat is placed on a bed of gravel to prevent
scouring. |
The new launch facility is disabled friendly. |
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With a floating dock, seasonal fluctuations in
water levels are no problem. |
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