Preserve your public access rights

to a pristine Seapowet waterway.

Proposed oyster farms impede recreational fishing, navigation, safety, access, public use, natural ecology.


Mission

Preserve the valuable habitat at the Seapowet WMA and Tiverton Coastal waters, protect the public’s recreational use and uphold riparian rights as guaranteed in Rhode Island’s Constitution.

Vision

A Seapowet Wildlife Management Area (WMA) and surrounding waterway that is protected from commercial development and remains free for public use now and for future generations.

Core Values

Conservation. We value the pristine and natural settings of Tiverton’s public waters. We want to protect wildlife habitats, open space, coastline, and adjacent conservation areas.

Stewardship. We treasure the Sakonnet River and watershed as a resource that should be appropriately shared as a public resource. We believe in responsible stewardship of Tiverton’s natural resources and coastline where the benefits that accrue to the many should not be outweighed by the commercial interests of a few.

Access. We appreciate public access to the recreational activities and beauty of historical natural settings provided by the Tiverton coastline. Highly used public waters must be protected for public use.

Inclusion. Meaningful inclusion of stakeholder input on the siting of commercial aquaculture operations must be central to granting aquaculture licenses. Aquaculture applicants should be required to notify and to engage abutting property owners, surrounding community members, and other stakeholders.

Integrity. Integrity of the application and applicant disclosures must be truthful and transparent.

Goals

Keep Tiverton’s waterway including the Seapowet WMA, Audubon’s Emilie Ruecker, and Fogland Beach protected for conservation and recreational opportunities.

Work with the CRMC and other stakeholders to create policies and find suitable locations that reduce conflict with aquaculture and existing users of the waters.

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A pristine coastline at risk

The Seapowet Marsh and Sakonnet coastline are protected by well maintained private property, conservation land and public use areas, available for all to enjoy by land and water. The proposed oyster traps will take away the rights of everyone to share in this pristine coastline.

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Lack of public discussion

To erect a new building in Tiverton, regulation requires the builders to notify and discuss their plans with abutting neighbors. But current regulation does not require that aquaculture farmers notify abutting neighbors, although it would have signifiant impact on their shared right to access the water. We believe this policy needs to change, and that the law require consideration of the surrounding residents impacted.

 
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Acres of equipment

There were two proposed oyster farms - one on the south side and one on the north side of Seapowet Point. The application on the south side is still being considered by the CRMC. The proposed location is nearly an acre of traps that will block recreational activity, recreational shellfishing and fin fishing access on the southeastern beach, and will be exposed at low tide.

On the north side, thanks to our advocacy, the applicants withdrew their proposal for three acres of floating traps that would require gas powered equipment to clean the traps, blocking recreation and compromising our ecology.

But it’s not too late to make your voice heard and stop the permanent installation of acres of damaging plastic, metal and gasoline along the Seapowet shoreline.

 

Donate

We are raising money for a legal defense fund because we need your help to navigate the policies of the Coastal Resources Management Council.
100% of the funds raised will go towards legal expenses. Thank you for your support.