Initial Public Comment Shows Support for CRMC Changes
By ROB SMITH/ecoRI News staff
Rhode Island residents believe reform is needed for the beleaguered Coastal
Resources Management Council (CRMC), according to public comment solicited by
the House study commission on the agency. Members of the public recently
submitted more than a dozen oral comments and an avalanche of some 100
correspondences to the study commission, all in support of doing something to
reorganize CRMC.Photo by Will Collette
“A
family in Woonsocket has just as much interest in state waters as any
waterfront home or yacht owner,” Matt Behan, a Westerly resident and owner of
an eponymous oyster farm, said during a Jan. 19 meeting of the special House
commission.
The
public comments also took aim at the agency’s leadership. Unlike its counterpart,
the Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management, CRMC isn’t technically
a cabinet level-agency. All final decisions and application approvals flow
through a 10-member voting council, most of them political appointees decided
by the governor.
The
council has landed CRMC in hot water more than once and has blazed a controversial history
for itself by overriding recommendations from agency staff, even though few
council appointees have a background in coastal management.
Most recently, the council allowed Champlin’s Marina on Block Island to expand 170 feet into Great Salt Pond, a decision that was made behind closed doors and was later blocked by the state’s Supreme Court. Litigation over the affair is still ongoing.
“It’s
astonishing how new council members can take a whole term to learn the issues
CRMC handles,” said Michael Woods of the New England chapter of Backcountry
Hunters & Anglers. “It hampers the ability [for council members] to have
informed votes on issues.”
Local
resident and Uprise RI founder Steve Ahlquist told the
commission members they needed to consider social justice when reforming the
agency.
“What’s
not been brought up by anyone is CRMC’s woeful history of environmental
racism,” he said. “Environmental justice needs to be centered in its mission,
and I’ve not heard it once from this commission.”
Many
CRMC board members remain on the council even though their terms have long
since expired. Gov. Dan McKee has only appointed one new member of the council
in his time as governor, Lindsay McGovern, who
hasn’t attended a meeting in months.
Members
of the public also took time to praise CRMC staff, noting its work and
regulations were the envy of other states.
“I
consider CRMC the iron fist of the coast, and the fact that it is an individual
entity is great,” said Cameron Ennis. “There are certain elements that work at
CRMC … the aquaculture permitting process is renowned.”
Comments
from the public crystallized around reforming or abolishing the council,
increasing the agency’s existing staff and funding, hiring a dedicated
attorney, and appointing neutral arbiters for more controversial decisions.
The
agency operates on a $5 million annual budget, with half that funding coming
from state coffers and the other half coming from the federal government. CRMC
hired a new enforcement officer earlier this year, and now three officers are
responsible for overseeing hundreds of projects along more than 400 miles of
the Ocean State’s coastline.
The
study commission, chaired by Rep. Deborah Ruggerio, D-Jamestown, has been
meeting on average once a month since September with an eye on issuing
recommendations to the General Assembly this year. While the commission has not
issued any official statements, signs are pointing toward some kind of agency
overhaul.
Ruggerio
and Rep. Lauren Carson, D-Newport, who also serves on the commission, wrote a
recent joint opinion piece calling
for CRMC reform to be an issue in the 2022 governor’s race and reaffirming the
House’s commitment to reform.
“CRMC
needs to be a state priority,” they wrote. “The work of the agency has changed
dramatically during the past decade and certainly since it was first organized
under federal law in 1975.
The
schedule for future meetings of the study commission is unclear, but Ruggerio
estimates it will issue recommendations to the Legislature sometime in the
spring.