2022 -- H 8055 | |
======== | |
LC005560 | |
======== | |
STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2022 | |
____________ | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO WATERS AND NAVIGATION -- COASTAL RESOURCES MANAGEMENT | |
COUNCIL | |
| |
Introduced By: Representatives Cortvriend, Filippi, Fogarty, Ruggiero, Carson, Craven, | |
Date Introduced: March 25, 2022 | |
Referred To: House Judiciary | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Legislative findings. |
2 | (1) The general assembly finds that the lack of a workable, readily identifiable right of |
3 | access to the shore by the public has led to confusion, conflict and disputes between those |
4 | attempting to exercise their rights and privileges to the shoreline and the rights of property owners |
5 | along the shore. |
6 | (2) The general assembly recognizes and declares the public's rights and privileges of the |
7 | shore of this the ocean state are not only guaranteed in the constitution but have enjoyed a long use |
8 | going back to our founding documents, including the 1663 Rhode Island Charter from King Charles |
9 | II. The general assembly further acknowledges the use and enjoyment of the shore by Native |
10 | Americans for thousands of years prior to that. |
11 | From the Rhode Island Charter (1663-1843) |
12 | "Our express will and pleasure is, and we do, by these presents, for us, our heirs and |
13 | successors, ordain and appoint that these presents, shall not in any manner, hinder any of our loving |
14 | subjects, whatsoever, from using and exercising the trade of fishing upon the coast of New England, |
15 | in America, but that they, and every or any of them, shall have full and free power and liberty to |
16 | continue and use the trade of fishing upon the said coast, in any of the seas thereunto adjoining, or |
17 | any arms of the seas, or salt water, rivers and creeks, where they have been accustomed to fish, and |
18 | to build and set upon the waste land belonging to the said Colony and Plantations, such wharves, |
| |
1 | stages and workhouses as shall be necessary for the salting, drying and keeping of their fish, to be |
2 | taken or gotten upon that coast." |
3 | (3) Rhode Island's historical commitment to the public rights and privileges of the shore is |
4 | so strong that is was written into our Constitution in 1843 making us unique to other states: |
5 | From the Rhode Island Constitution (1843) |
6 | "The people shall continue to enjoy and freely exercise all the rights of fishery, and the |
7 | privileges of the shore, to which they have been heretofore entitled under the charter and usages of |
8 | this state. But no new right is intended to be granted, nor any existing right impaired, by this |
9 | declaration". |
10 | (4) The general assembly also recognizes that its public trust duty to preserve the public's |
11 | rights and privileges of the shore is a progressive and evolving doctrine that is expected to adjust |
12 | to changing circumstances. In this spirit voters of Rhode Island overwhelmingly supported the |
13 | reinforcement of these rights and privileges in 1986 following the constitutional convention of that |
14 | same year. |
15 | Added to the constitution in 1986 |
16 | "Section 16. Compensation for taking of private property for public use -- Regulation of |
17 | fishery rights and shore privileges not public taking. |
18 | Private property shall not be taken for public uses, without just compensation. The powers |
19 | of the state and of its municipalities to regulate and control the use of land and waters in the |
20 | furtherance of the preservation, regeneration, and restoration of the natural environment, and in |
21 | furtherance of the protection of the rights of the people to enjoy and freely exercise the rights of |
22 | fishery and the privileges of the shore, as those rights and duties are set forth in Section 17, shall |
23 | be an exercise of the police powers of the state, shall be liberally construed, and shall not be deemed |
24 | to be a public use of private property. |
25 | Section 17. The people shall continue to enjoy and freely exercise all the rights of fishery, |
26 | and the privileges of the shore, to which they have been heretofore entitled under the charter and |
27 | usages of this state, including but not limited to fishing from the shore, the gathering of seaweed, |
28 | leaving the shore to swim in the sea and passage along the shore; and they shall be secure in their |
29 | rights to use and enjoyment of the natural resources of the state with due regard for the preservation |
30 | of their values; and it is the duty of the general assembly to provide for the conservation of the air, |
31 | land, water, plant, animal, mineral and other natural resources of the state, and to adopt all means |
32 | necessary and proper by law to protect the natural environment of the people of the state by |
33 | providing adequate resource planning for the control and regulation of the use of the natural |
34 | resources of the state and for the preservation, regeneration, and restoration of the natural |
| LC005560 - Page 2 of 5 |
1 | environment of the state." |
2 | (5) In the past, the public's rights to the shore has been defined by the mean high water |
3 | (MHW) line. However, the changing state of general understanding of scientific knowledge has |
4 | caused greater dissemination of information and measurements. This has revealed difficulties in |
5 | using the MHW line. MHW is not a water mark or debris line that can be seen on the beach. Because |
6 | it is an elevation and not a natural feature, MHW cannot be determined by the naked eye and |
7 | requires special surveying expertise and equipment, thereby making it impossible for the general |
8 | public to know where the line is. Moreover, the dynamics of the sea, such as waves, push water up |
9 | the beach such that MHW is typically seaward of the actual position of the water on the beach. In |
10 | other words, the velocity of the surf results in a pervasive and predominant situation in which the |
11 | actual location of the water is significantly landward of the MHW. Furthermore, the profile or shape |
12 | of the beach changes constantly, thereby affecting the relative position of the water and MHW. The |
13 | general assembly accepts the conclusions of the coastal scientists from the University of Rhode |
14 | Island who have documented that: (i) MHW is a calculation with no visible marker on the shoreline; |
15 | (ii) The actual location of the water on beaches is usually landward of MHW; and (iii) Because the |
16 | beach profile changes constantly as waves move sand onshore, offshore and alongshore, the |
17 | location where MHW intersects the beach likewise changes. Data shows that, on most days, due to |
18 | the dynamic action of the surf and other factors, the dry sand is exposed below MHW for, at most, |
19 | only a few hours. This occurs only at or near the time of low tide. In addition, two years of near- |
20 | weekly beach transects in the town of Charlestown show that the position of the MHW line |
21 | migrated back and forth across a one hundred twenty-five foot (125') swath of the beach profile. In |
22 | sum, using a rule based on MHW results in the public only having meaningful access at or near the |
23 | time of low tide if at all. Moreover, the MHW leads to a nearly indeterminable boundary. Thus, |
24 | using a rule based on MHW, the constitutional right and privileges of the shore may be illusory. |
25 | (6) The general assembly further recognizes and declares that the public's rights and |
26 | privileges of the shore along the sandy and rocky shores of Rhode Island are critical to the state’s |
27 | tourism economy. Rhode Island's 400 miles of coastline and Narragansett Bay make us a |
28 | destination for a variety of recreational activities including beach going, swimming, saltwater |
29 | fishing, surfing, kayaking, and wind-surfing. |
30 | (7) The general assembly acknowledges that private property owners may maintain a title |
31 | interest to the sandy and rocky shores, but certain components of ownership, such as the ability to |
32 | share in reasonable use of the shore, are held in trust for the general public under the state |
33 | constitution and must be defined and secured. |
34 | (8) The general assembly also recognizes that it has the duty to protect the public's rights |
| LC005560 - Page 3 of 5 |
1 | and privileges in the dry-sand portions of our sandy beaches and rocky shores. |
2 | SECTION 2. Chapter 46-23 of the General Laws entitled "Coastal Resources Management |
3 | Council" is hereby amended by adding thereto the following section: |
4 | 46-23-26. Recognizable High Tide Line for the Public's Rights and Privileges of the |
5 | Shore. |
6 | (a) For purposes of this chapter, the "recognizable high tide line" means a boundary which |
7 | is ten feet (10') landward from the line or mark left upon tide flats, beaches, or along shore objects |
8 | that indicates the intersection of the land with the water's surface level at the maximum height |
9 | reached by a rising tide. The recognizable high tide line may be determined by a line of seaweed, |
10 | oil or scum along shore objects, a more or less continuous deposit of, fine shell or debris on the |
11 | foreshore or berm, other physical markings or characteristics, or other suitable means that delineate |
12 | the general height reached by the water's surface level at a rising tide. The line encompasses the |
13 | water's surface level at spring high tides and other high tides that occur with periodic frequency, |
14 | but does not include the water's surface level at storm surges in which there is a departure from the |
15 | normal or predicted reach of the water’s surface level due to the piling up of water against a coast |
16 | by strong winds, such as those accompanying a hurricane or other intense storms. |
17 | (b) The public's rights and privileges of the shore are established by Article 1, Sections 16 |
18 | and 17 of the Rhode Island Constitution. |
19 | (c) The public's rights and privileges of the shore may be exercised, where shore exists, on |
20 | wet sand or dry sand or rocky beach, up to the recognizable high tide line; provided, however, that |
21 | the public's rights and privileges of the shore shall not be afforded where no passable shore exists, |
22 | nor on land above the vegetation line, sea walls, or other legally constructed shoreline |
23 | infrastructure. |
24 | (d) Any landowner whose property is subject to the exercise of the public's rights and |
25 | privileges of the shore as defined in this chapter shall be afforded the liability limitations pursuant |
26 | to § 32-6-5. |
27 | SECTION 3. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
======== | |
LC005560 | |
======== | |
| LC005560 - Page 4 of 5 |
EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO WATERS AND NAVIGATION -- COASTAL RESOURCES MANAGEMENT | |
COUNCIL | |
*** | |
1 | This act would provide a definition of the recognizable high tide line for the public's rights |
2 | and privileges of the shore. |
3 | This act would take effect upon passage. |
======== | |
LC005560 | |
======== | |
| LC005560 - Page 5 of 5 |