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The Debate on Off Road Vehicle Access at the Fort Fisher Recreational Area Roey Rosenblith. Background on Fort Fisher. just under 1 million visitors ever year crepe myrtles, marsh, and dune grass variety of seabirds, nesting for loggerhead sea turtles
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The Debate on Off Road Vehicle Access at the Fort Fisher Recreational AreaRoey Rosenblith
Background on Fort Fisher • just under1 million visitors ever year • crepe myrtles, marsh, and dune grass • variety of seabirds, nesting for loggerhead sea turtles • FortBuilt in 1861, Fort Fisher as a defense to keep the southern port open and protected from Union war ships. • It held down the first northern assault in 1864, but fell to the second in early 1865, breaking the Confederate supply line; the Civil War would end just three months later.
Off Road Vehicle Access • In the past, visitors and their vehicles have been allowed unfettered 24-hour access to the area • Many local fishermen took advantage of the extended hours by going on night fishing trips • But according to park rangers, who presently lack the fund for night patrols, this also allowed some visitors to get away with hundred of acts of vandalism and endangered the local wildlife
June 2003: Correspondence • Between Mike Seigh, Fort Fisher Park Superintendent and National Park Service (an Agency of DENR) • “current use [of off road vehicles]…results in loggerhead hatchlings becoming trapped in the incised vehicle tracks on their way to the ocean. Consequently, the young turtles move within the track, parallel to the ocean and eventually die from dehydration.”
Correspondence Cont. • “largest threat to the resources of Smith Island [aka Fort Fisher Recreational Area] is related to the use of recreational 4WD [4-wheel drive]…This causes significant impacts to the natural resources of the site, specifically survival of loggerhead sea turtle young and nesting shorebirds.” • “The park has submitted a proposal to the Director of the North Carolina Division of Parks and Recreation to restrict vehicular access to the shoreline during hours of darkness by setting gate hours for 4WD use.”
February 1, 2004: Two Major Changes • charging of fees for what had previously been free access • $10 for a one-day permit • $40 for an annual permit • estimated to generate $36,000 annual revenue $60,000 has been brought in • all of it goes to the State Park Service • State government agency (DENR) took visitor’s ability to drive on the beach between dusk and dawn
Friends of the South Endwww.friendsofthesouthend.com-Opposing • Organized by two local businessmen and longtime residents • Mike Robertson, owner of the Kure Beach Fishing Pier • Donald “Red” Lewis, owner of the Fort Fisher Trading Post
Audubon Society, Sierra Club, and NH Dem. Party-Supported • Major Players are Andy Wood, Audubon Education Director • Lenwood “Bo” Dean- Vice Chair of New Hanover County Democratic Party
February 12 when the Park Advisory Committee Meeting • Significant number of dissenting citizens and public officials were present • Including the mayors of Kure and Carolina Beach • Appointed State Senator Woody White • None allowed to speak • Mike Siegh claims no one asked to be put on the agenda before hand
Friends of the South End (FOTSE) • launched a petition drive that brought in more than 5,000 signatures • Held Protests nearly every Saturday at the Fort Fisher Gate
Supporting Groups • letter to State Senator Woody White, Andy Wood, the education director of Audubon, North Carolina, wrote that he had often found: • “vehicle killed species such as ghost crabs, marsh rabbits and various lizards. I also found several hatchling loggerhead sea turtles (a federally threatened species), least terns (also federally threatened), and other uncommon beach nesting water birds.”
FOTSE Counters: • since 1999, park records show that park visitors have destroyed only 3 turtle nests. • This claim was substantiated by park superintendent Mike Seigh who said: • “One nest was obviously poached. We found a plastic bag full of turtle eggs. One appears to have been dug up by a dog, and the other came before my time so I’m unsure what destroyed it.”
But…. Effects are Difficult to Measure • “Female loggerheads tend to lay eggs between May and September and nearly always at night; the presence of vehicles may prevent them from landing on the shore. Once on the shore they can easily be scared off.” • Park ranger Katherine Kellon reported that she once found: • “female turtle tracks all up and down the beach, and close after her tracks where the treads of a truck.”
FOTSE Says: Move the Eggs! • Moving turtle eggs not only can disrupt the growth of baby turtles, it decreases the hatch rate • Most migratory birds like the least tern and oystercatcher like to lay their eggs on flat sandy areas away from the dune vegetation which gives cover to predators. • Unfortunately this is usually right where the trucks like to drive
FOTSE Says: Trucks are Good for Environment • Trucks Scare off Predators, good for Birds and Turtles • In Santa Barbara, on a beach that closed visitor access they had so many predators that the population of turtles actually decreased every year until the public was allowed back in.
Compromise • Superintendent Seigh decided to open the park 24 hours during the peak fall fishing season • September 15 to November 30 • Most of the sea turtles have hatched and migratory birds have moved on • Satisfied some detractors of the policy, it has not satisfied everyone
House Bill 1414 • Republican State Representatives Bonner Stiller and Danny McComas • Introduced House Appropriations Bill 1414 which stated that individuals who pay the access fee “may have 24-hour access to For Fisher State Recreation Area.” • extra $25,000 for the park for increasing surveillance hours
Mike Seigh Responds • costs $30-40,000 for one commissioned park ranger a year • extending patrol hours into the night would take 6-7 rangers • At present there are only threepark rangers
Anti-24 Hour Access Protest • Supported by State Senator Woody White • lively anti-24 hour access protest ensued at a fundraising event he held at a Kure Beach residence on June 23 • White stated to a reporter that • “The state delegates authority to governmental agencies, but reserves the right to reclaim that authority when they act in the wrong.”
Clause Fails to Pass • Clause’s passage was bitterly contested • eventually was withdrawn by Senator Basnight and Garrou of Forsyth, Hagan of Guildford, and Dalton of Cleavland/Rutherford
Latest Action • N.C. General Assembly the State Parks commissioned a $25,000 UNCW study that will look at five factors: • the impact of vehicle access on sea turtles and nesting birds • the extent of sea turtle and shorebird nesting activity at the park compared with that at nearby coastal areas • the demand for vehicle access • the economic impact of restricting access; and, public comment. • Study began in October 2004
UNCW Faculty Involved • Faculty in four university departments will be involved in conducting the study: • Dr. David Webster, biological sciences • Dr. Chris Dumas, economics and finance • Dr. Jim Herstine, health and applied human sciences • and Drs. Robert Buerger and Jeffery Hill, environmental studies