2026 -- H 7914 | |
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LC004991 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2026 | |
____________ | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO AGRICULTURE AND FORESTRY -- NATURAL FOREST PROTECTION | |
ACT | |
| |
Introduced By: Representative Evan P. Shanley | |
Date Introduced: February 27, 2026 | |
Referred To: House Environment and Natural Resources | |
(by request) | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Findings. |
2 | The General Assembly finds and declares: |
3 | (1) Rhode Island's natural forests on state lands are a valuable natural treasure of our state's |
4 | biological heritage, and damage to these forests is destruction of public property and is a harm to |
5 | all Rhode Islanders. |
6 | (2) Current Rhode Island laws do not provide protection for public forestland apart from |
7 | existing wetland protection laws. |
8 | (3) Rhode Island is the only state in New England that has no state-owned forests protected |
9 | in their natural state as wildlands. |
10 | (4) The world is facing a biodiversity crisis where populations of native species are |
11 | declining at an alarming rate and many species are facing extinction. Native species in Rhode Island |
12 | are at risk of becoming regionally extinct due to habitat destruction. |
13 | (5) The percentage of undisturbed natural forests in Rhode Island state forests is rapidly |
14 | decreasing due to even-age logging operations. |
15 | (5) The state's management areas allow for unlimited logging and are not designed for |
16 | forest preservation. |
17 | (7) Even-age logging operations lead to the spread of invasive plants, and forestry vehicles |
18 | crush native plants and disturb the soil. |
| |
1 | (8) Construction on state-owned land, including road construction by the Rhode Island |
2 | department of transportation, has been going forward without any environmental review to |
3 | determine if any rare or endangered species, old growth forest, or other rare forest ecosystem could |
4 | be affected, as well as erosion impacts from removed trees. |
5 | (9) Old growth forests are significant ecosystems and carbon sinks where native trees, |
6 | plants, and animals live. |
7 | (10) Old growth forests are more resistant to wildfire due to the cool, damp forest floor, |
8 | and lack of wind, from the massive tree canopy. |
9 | (11) Allowing natural forests to become old growth forests will benefit public recreation |
10 | from the spacing between trees and lack of underbrush that old growth forests provide which makes |
11 | these forests easier to walk through and less prone to ticks. |
12 | (12) Designation of natural area preserves would still allow for hunting, fishing, and other |
13 | forms of recreation in substantial portions of these state forest preserves. |
14 | (13) In 2007, the Rhode Island natural heritage program was discontinued. |
15 | (14) No natural area preserves have been designated since the passage of chapter 122 of |
16 | title 42 ("natural areas protection act of 1993"). |
17 | (15) It is a matter of public benefit that old growth forests and other natural forests be |
18 | protected in their natural state as wildlands. |
19 | (16) Humans have been part of nature for millennia and can coexist within and with |
20 | wildlands without intentionally altering their structure, composition, or function. |
21 | SECTION 2. Title 2 of the General Laws entitled "AGRICULTURE AND FORESTRY" |
22 | is hereby amended by adding thereto the following chapter: |
23 | CHAPTER 28 |
24 | NATURAL FOREST PROTECTION ACT |
25 | 2-28-1. Short Title. |
26 | This chapter shall be known and may be cited as the "Natural Forest Protection Act". |
27 | 2-28-2. Definitions. |
28 | For purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: |
29 | (1) "Extractive logging" means the felling or removal of any trees from a forest for any |
30 | purpose. Extractive logging includes even-age logging operations and selection management as |
31 | defined in this chapter. |
32 | (2) "Even-age logging operation" means a logging activity that: |
33 | (i) Creates a clearing or opening that exceeds one-fifth (1/5) acre; |
34 | (ii) Creates a stand in which the majority of trees are within ten (10) years of the same age; |
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1 | or |
2 | (iii) Within a period of thirty (30) years, cuts or removes more than the lesser of the growth |
3 | of the basal area of all tree species (not including a tree of a non-native invasive tree species or an |
4 | invasive plantation species) in a stand; or twenty percent (20%) of the basal area of a stand; |
5 | (iv) Includes the application of clearcutting, high grading, seed-tree cutting, shelterwood |
6 | cutting, or any other logging method in a manner inconsistent with selection management. |
7 | (3) "Forestry vehicle" means every vehicle which is designed for and used for forest |
8 | product operations purposes, and used by the owner of the vehicle or family member(s) or |
9 | employee(s) or designees of the owner, in the conduct of the owner's forestry product operations, |
10 | which use shall include the delivery of forest products produced by the forester but shall not include |
11 | commercial hire for non-forestry product operation uses including, but not limited to, hauling of |
12 | sand and gravel, and snow plowing, other than directly on the vehicle owner's forest land. |
13 | (4) "Natural forest land" means any tract or contiguous tracts of land, ten (10) acres or |
14 | larger bearing a dense growth of trees, including any underbrush, and having the quality of self- |
15 | perpetuation. |
16 | (5) "Natural heritage areas" means the mapped rare plant and animal natural communities |
17 | and locales where rare or endangered species listed in the Rhode Island natural heritage database |
18 | carry out important life-cycle activities, including breeding, hibernating, feeding, etc. with |
19 | eligibility questions to be resolved by the coordinator of the natural heritage program. |
20 | (6) "Natural area preserve" means natural area preserve as defined in § 42-122-3. |
21 | (7) "Old growth forests" means an old growth forest as defined by the coordinator of the |
22 | natural heritage program. |
23 | (8) "Prescribed burning" means the intended controlled application of fire by the |
24 | department of environmental management, fire departments, or any other agency of the state. |
25 | (9) "Rare forest ecosystems" means a rare forest ecosystem as defined by the coordinator |
26 | of the natural heritage program. |
27 | (10) "Selection management" means a method of logging that emphasizes the periodic, |
28 | individual selection and removal of varying size and age classes of the weaker, nondominant cull |
29 | trees in a stand and leaves uncut the stronger dominant trees to survive and reproduce, in a manner |
30 | that works with natural forest processes; and: |
31 | (i) Ensures the maintenance of continuous high forest cover where high forest cover |
32 | naturally occurs; |
33 | (ii) Ensures the maintenance or natural regeneration of all native species in a stand; |
34 | (iii) Ensures the growth and development of trees through a range of diameter or age classes |
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1 | to provide a sustained yield of forest products, including clean water, rich soil, native plants and |
2 | wildlife; and |
3 | (iv) Ensures that some dead trees, standing and downed, shall be left in each stand where |
4 | selection logging occurs, to fulfill their necessary ecological functions in the forest ecosystem, |
5 | including providing elemental and organic nutrients to the soil, water retention, and habitat for |
6 | endemic insect species that provide the primary food source for predators, including various species |
7 | of amphibians and birds, such as cavity nesting woodpeckers. |
8 | (11) "Wildlands" means tracts of any size and current condition, permanently protected |
9 | from development, in which management is explicitly intended to allow natural processes to prevail |
10 | with free will and minimal human interference. |
11 | 2-28-3. Prohibitions. |
12 | (a) Extractive logging conducted in a natural area preserve is strictly prohibited, except as |
13 | provided in § 2-28-4. |
14 | (b) Any even-age logging operation is strictly prohibited on state-owned land, except as |
15 | provided in § 2-28-5. |
16 | (c) No forestry vehicle shall be used in any natural area preserve. |
17 | 2-28-4. Exception for hazard trees and invasive trees in natural area preserves. |
18 | (a) Felling of individual trees bordering trails that constitute a safety hazard as determined |
19 | by the natural heritage program may be permitted in natural area preserves subject to the approval |
20 | of the natural heritage program coordinator, and such trees shall remain in the forest and left where |
21 | they fell, or a short distance from the trail to avoid constituting an obstruction or hazard. |
22 | (b) Felling of invasive trees that are non-native to the state and threatening to native |
23 | ecosystems as determined by the natural heritage program may be permitted in natural area |
24 | preserves subject to the approval of the natural heritage program coordinator. |
25 | 2-28-5. Exception for authorized construction projects and selection management on |
26 | state-owned land that are not natural area preserves. |
27 | (a) Felling of trees for authorized construction projects not in natural area preserves may |
28 | be permitted on state-owned land, subject to the approval of the coordinator of the natural heritage |
29 | program and the director of the department of environmental management, and after a public |
30 | hearing and upon notice as specified in § 2-28-6. |
31 | (b) Selection management may be permitted on state-owned land that is not a natural area |
32 | preserve, subject to environmental review, and after a public hearing and upon notice as specified |
33 | in § 2-28-6. |
34 | 2-28-6. Requirements. |
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1 | (a) All extractive logging operations and prescribed burning operations in state-owned |
2 | natural heritage areas and natural forest land ten (10) acres or larger in size shall be subject to an |
3 | environmental review by the natural heritage program to ensure no rare or endangered species, old |
4 | growth forests, and other rare forest ecosystems are impacted. The natural heritage program shall |
5 | prepare a report of their review to be included in the notice for the extractive logging operation. |
6 | (b) All extractive logging operations and prescribed burning operations in state-owned |
7 | natural heritage areas and natural forest land ten (10) acres or larger in size shall only take place |
8 | after a public hearing and upon notice. The notice shall set forth the substance of the proposed |
9 | action and describe, with or without legal description, the area affected and shall set forth the time |
10 | and place of the hearing and shall be published at least twice a week for three (3) successive weeks |
11 | before the hearing in a newspaper published in the county where the property is located and in a |
12 | newspaper with statewide distribution. No action shall be taken by the state prior to the expiration |
13 | of sixty (60) days after the notice is published. |
14 | (c) The coordinator of the natural heritage program shall designate: |
15 | (1) All old growth forest stands on state-owned land identified by the natural heritage |
16 | program in their inventory of natural forest land in Rhode Island as natural area preserves; and |
17 | (2) All natural area preserves, all old growth forests and rare forest ecosystems subject to |
18 | the provisions of this chapter. |
19 | (d) Any challenge to a designation made by the coordinator pursuant to the provisions of |
20 | subsection (c) of this section shall constitute a contested case subject to the provisions of chapter |
21 | 35 of title 42 ("administrative procedures"). |
22 | 2-28-7. Preservation and protected funding. |
23 | Protecting the remaining areas of old growth forests and natural forest land shall be a |
24 | priority for the State of Rhode Island and annual application to the general assembly by the natural |
25 | historical preservation and heritage commission for appropriations to fund the natural heritage |
26 | program, and the department of environmental management for land acquisitions shall be made to |
27 | carry out the provisions of this chapter. |
28 | 2-28-8. Penalty for violations. |
29 | (a) Any person, firm, or corporation violating the provisions of this chapter or §§ 42-122- |
30 | 7 through 42-122-9, shall be subject to a fine of not less than five thousand dollars ($5,000) for |
31 | each offense. |
32 | (b) It is the duty of the executive director of the natural historical preservation and heritage |
33 | commission to conduct the prosecution brought by the coordinator of the natural heritage program |
34 | under the provisions of this chapter and chapter 122 of title 42("natural areas protection act of |
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1 | 1993"). |
2 | SECTION 3. Sections 42-122-3, 42-122-4, 42-122-5, 42-122-6, 42-122-7 of the General |
3 | Laws in Chapter 42-122 entitled "Natural Areas Protection Act of 1993" are hereby amended to |
4 | read as follows: |
5 | 42-122-3. Definitions. |
6 | As used in this chapter: |
7 | (1) "Coordinator" means the coordinator of the natural heritage program of the State of |
8 | Rhode Island. |
9 | (1)(2) "Director" means the director of the department of environmental management of |
10 | the state of Rhode Island. |
11 | (2)(3) "Natural area preserve" means areas of most environmentally sensitive land and/or |
12 | water containing habitat suitable for plant or animal life or geological features of biological, |
13 | scientific, educational, geological, paleontological, or scenic value worthy of preservation in its |
14 | natural condition which has been approved by the director. or ecologically valuable land and/or |
15 | water containing habitat suitable for plant or animal life or geological features of biological, |
16 | scientific, educational, geological, paleontological, or scenic value worthy of preservation in its |
17 | natural condition as wildlands, which has been approved by the coordinator with the consent of the |
18 | director, except as otherwise provided in § 42-122-9, with eligibility and boundary questions to be |
19 | resolved by the coordinator of the natural heritage program. Such determination shall constitute a |
20 | contested case as defined in § 42-35-1. |
21 | (4) "Rhode Island historical preservation and heritage commission" or "commission" |
22 | means the commission established pursuant to § 42-45-2. |
23 | 42-122-4. System of natural area preserves. |
24 | The director Except as otherwise provided in § 42-122-9, the coordinator shall establish a |
25 | system of natural area preserves and shall have the responsibility as set forth in this chapter for |
26 | selection of all natural area preserves within the system, and with the consent of the director. The |
27 | coordinator shall ensure that these preserves are maintained in as natural and wild a state as is |
28 | consistent with educational, scientific, biological, geological, paleontological, and scenic purposes. |
29 | The director coordinator shall also ensure the use of natural area preserves for research and other |
30 | purposes consistent with the intent of this chapter. The director coordinator may adopt regulations |
31 | for establishing and managing the natural area preserve system including, but not limited to, |
32 | procedures for the adoption and revision of a management plan for each designated natural area |
33 | preserve. |
34 | 42-122-5. Procedure for designation of non-state owned land as a natural area |
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1 | preserve. |
2 | (a) The director may approve non-state owned land as a natural area preserve only upon |
3 | the recommendation designation of the natural heritage preservation commission (established |
4 | under § 42-17.5-4) coordinator and only after a public hearing and upon notice. The notice required |
5 | under this section shall set forth a description of the proposed action, including a description of the |
6 | land to be offered, and the time and place of the hearing. The notice shall conform to the |
7 | requirements of § 42-35-1 et seq. |
8 | (b) The natural heritage preservation commission coordinator shall review requests from |
9 | municipalities, private land conservation environmental organizations, and private landowners |
10 | desiring designation of a parcel of land as a natural area preserve, and make recommendations to |
11 | the director. Any request must include the written consent of the private landowner before any |
12 | review shall commence. In making recommendations, it shall be guided by the natural heritage |
13 | program and other relevant sources of information about critical environmental resources. The |
14 | natural heritage preservation commission may also, on its own initiative, make recommendations |
15 | for designation of areas to the director. |
16 | (c) To be designated a natural area preserve the property owner must voluntarily grant to |
17 | the state of Rhode Island a conservation easement, which shall include the reasons for the |
18 | designation, and prepare a management plan for the preserve that defines the methods by which the |
19 | educational, scientific, biological, geological, paleontological, and/or scenic purposes of the |
20 | designation shall be carried out. The conservation easement shall be recorded in the land evidence |
21 | records in the city or town where the parcel is located. |
22 | (d) In areas under the jurisdiction of the coastal resources management council (CRMC), |
23 | the director coordinator shall coordinate with the CRMC areas to be proposed for inclusion within |
24 | the program. |
25 | 42-122-6. Procedures for designation of state-owned land as a natural area preserve. |
26 | (a) A Except as otherwise provided in § 42-122-9, a request for designation of state-owned |
27 | land as a natural area preserve shall be made to the director coordinator, that request specifying the |
28 | area to be designated, the reasons for the designation, the proposed management strategy necessary |
29 | to protect the critical environmental resources within the area, and the changes that would be |
30 | required in current management practices. The request for designation may be made by the director |
31 | of any state agency for any parcel of land under the agency's control. The coordinator shall review |
32 | requests from environmental organizations and private individuals desiring designation of a parcel |
33 | of state-owned land as a natural area preserve. The coordinator may also, on their own initiative, |
34 | make designations of areas with the approval of the director. |
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1 | (b) The director may approve the designation of state-owned land as a preserve only after |
2 | consultation with the managing agency, and after a public hearing. Notice requirements for the |
3 | public hearing shall be the same as required under § 42-122-5(a). Before a preserve is designated, |
4 | a management plan must be approved by the director and adopted by the department managing the |
5 | preserve. |
6 | 42-122-7. Designation as a natural area preserve. |
7 | An area designated as a natural area preserve is declared to be put to its highest, best, and |
8 | most important use for public benefit and no interest in this preserve owned by the state shall be |
9 | alienated or put to any use other than as a natural area preserve, except upon a finding by the director |
10 | in consultation with the natural heritage preservation commission, that the qualifying features of |
11 | the land have been destroyed or irretrievably damaged and that the public purposes of the |
12 | designation have been utterly frustrated. Any transfer of ownership of a state-owned natural area |
13 | preserve which results in the state preserve land no longer being state-owned is strictly prohibited. |
14 | Any finding the director is required to make under this section shall be made only after a |
15 | public hearing and upon notice. The notice required by this section shall set forth the substance of |
16 | the proposed action and describe, with or without legal description, the area affected and shall set |
17 | forth the time and place of the hearing and shall be published at least twice (2) a week for three (3) |
18 | successive weeks before the hearing in a newspaper published in the county where the property is |
19 | located and in a newspaper with statewide distribution. No finding, which the director is required |
20 | to make, shall be effective until the finding has been published. No action shall be taken by the |
21 | state pursuant to the finding prior to the expiration of sixty (60) days after the finding becomes |
22 | effective. During the sixty-day (60) period, any finding may be appealed by any resident of this |
23 | state in a suit brought against the director in the superior court for the judicial district of Providence. |
24 | In any action, the court shall vacate the finding if it finds the director acted arbitrarily or illegally |
25 | in making the finding. During the pendency of an appeal the state shall take no action pursuant to |
26 | the findings of the director. |
27 | SECTION 4. Chapter 42-122 of the General Laws entitled "Natural Areas Protection Act |
28 | of 1993" is hereby amended by adding thereto the following sections: |
29 | 42-122-8. Natural heritage program. |
30 | (a) Establishment. There is hereby established, within the Rhode Island historical |
31 | preservation and heritage commission, a natural heritage program. |
32 | (b) Composition. The natural heritage program shall consist of a coordinator who shall be |
33 | appointed by the executive director of the Rhode Island historical preservation and heritage |
34 | commission, and support personnel appointed by the coordinator. The coordinator is required to |
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1 | have an advanced degree in one or more of the following: conservation biology, botany, |
2 | entomology, zoology, or forest ecology. In addition, the coordinator should have experience in |
3 | planning or managing natural forest ecosystems for the purpose of preservation through passive |
4 | management. The coordinator shall not have been previously employed in any capacity by the |
5 | timber industry, including advertising, legal, or lobbying. |
6 | (c) Powers and duties of the natural heritage program coordinator. The natural heritage |
7 | program coordinator shall have the following powers and duties: |
8 | (1) To find, monitor, and formulate policies and plans and to adopt regulations necessary |
9 | to implement protections for native biodiversity, natural forest land, old growth forests, rare forest |
10 | ecosystems, and rare and endangered natural species in the State of Rhode Island, and to carry out |
11 | the provisions of this chapter. |
12 | (2) To maintain the natural heritage database. |
13 | (3) To create a rare and endangered species list in coordination with the department of |
14 | environmental management. |
15 | (4) To conduct an inventory of natural forest land in Rhode Island to determine the extent |
16 | and condition of old growth forest stands, natural heritage areas, and other rare forest ecosystems. |
17 | (5) To create a detailed, comprehensive GIS map of Rhode Island's natural ecosystems, |
18 | including species of plants and animals, natural land features, soil, and other data, and which |
19 | incorporates the established science-based ecoregion system, and the conservation biology |
20 | principles of core and buffer and corridors, to help identify present and missing native species in |
21 | various areas throughout the state as well as the presence of non-native invasive species and toxic |
22 | herbicides, pesticides, or other chemicals present in the soil and water that may need remediation. |
23 | (6) To create a biodiversity protection plan in coordination with the department of |
24 | environmental management. |
25 | (7) To designate natural area preserves to be approved by the director, except as otherwise |
26 | provided in § 42-122-9. |
27 | (8) To create conservation biology-based forest management plans for the natural area |
28 | preserves and surrounding buffer areas and corridors with the aid of the maps and data of subsection |
29 | (c)(5) of this section. |
30 | (9) To manage the natural area preserves. |
31 | (10) To coordinate with the department of environmental management on the deployment |
32 | of forest rangers in the natural area preserves and staff to maintain facilities located in the natural |
33 | area preserves. |
34 | (11) To be notified of all felling of trees on state-owned land no later than thirty (30) days |
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1 | before the extractive logging operation takes place. |
2 | (12) To be notified of any change in land use, as well as any transfer of ownership of state- |
3 | owned land which results in the land no longer being state-owned. |
4 | (13) To conduct environmental review before extractive logging operations and prescribed |
5 | burning operations in state-owned natural heritage areas and natural forest land ten (10) acres or |
6 | larger in size. This shall include a before and after visual record of the forest areas logged. |
7 | (14) To prevent, postpone, terminate, or modify extractive logging operations and |
8 | prescribed burning operations in state-owned natural heritage areas and natural forest land if the |
9 | coordinator believes it threatens a rare or endangered species or a rare forest ecosystem. |
10 | (15) To approve felling of trees for construction projects on state-owned land in |
11 | coordination with the director of the department of environmental management. |
12 | (16) To retain by contract or employ counsel, auditors, engineers, appraisers, private |
13 | consultants and advisors, or other personnel needed to provide necessary services. |
14 | (17) To develop educational materials and to carry out educational programs for the public |
15 | about the native biodiversity in Rhode Island's old growth forests and natural areas, and the state's |
16 | natural history. |
17 | 42-122-9. Designation of natural area preserves to establish natural area preserve |
18 | system. |
19 | There are designated the following natural area preserves on state-owned land: |
20 | (1) Great Swamp natural area preserve. Certain land in the Great Swamp management area, |
21 | in Washington county, totaling approximately three thousand four hundred thirty-three and two- |
22 | tenths (3,433.2) acres, located east of South county Trail, south of Kingstown Road, west of South |
23 | Road, and north of Worden Pond. Not including the logging cuts from 1995 through 2025, and the |
24 | fields bordering the logging cuts to the southwest. |
25 | (2) Burlingame natural area preserve. Certain land in the Burlingame state park, in |
26 | Washington county, totaling approximately four thousand one hundred ten and four-tenths |
27 | (4,110.4) acres, located around Watchaug Pond, west of Kings Factory Road, east of Bradford |
28 | Road, and south of Collins Road. |
29 | (3) John L. Curran natural area preserve. Certain land in the John. L. Curran state park, in |
30 | Providence county, totaling approximately two hundred ninety-six and nine-tenths (296.9) acres, |
31 | located west of Laten Knight Road, east of Seven Mile Road, north of Hope Road, and south of |
32 | Scituate Avenue. Not including John L. Curran upper reservoir. |
33 | (4) Pawtuxet River Beech Peninsula natural area preserve. Certain land along the Pawtuxet |
34 | River forming Warwick's western border, in Kent county, totaling approximately fifteen (15) acres, |
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1 | located west of the Interstate 95 airport loop, east across the Pawtuxet River from Knight Street, |
2 | just south across the river from the intersection of Knight Street and Pontiac Avenue, and across |
3 | the river south from the Pontiac Canoe Launch. |
4 | (5) Cocumscussoc Brook natural area preserve. Certain land in the Cocumscussoc state |
5 | park, in Washington county, totaling approximately four hundred twenty (420) acres, located west |
6 | of Post Road, south of Stony Lane, east of Thornton Way, and north of Ten Rod Road. |
7 | (6) Arcadia Beach Pond natural area preserve. Certain land in the Arcadia management |
8 | area, in Washington county and Kent county, totaling approximately three thousand eighty-eight |
9 | and four-tenths (3,088.4) acres, located west of Escoheag Hill Road and Woody Hill Road, north |
10 | of Kenney Hill Road and Spring Street, and south of Hazard Road. Not including the 2020 195- |
11 | acre Mount Tom logging cut, the 2019 Skunk Hill Road logging cut, the 2017 Summit Road |
12 | logging cut, the 2022 Frosty Hollow Road logging cut, or the 2025 Dawley Park Road logging cut. |
13 | (7) Arcadia Black Spruce natural area preserve. Certain land in the Arcadia management |
14 | area, in Kent county and Washington county, totaling approximately seven hundred thirty-three |
15 | (733) acres, located north of Plain Road, south of the Alton Jones Campus, west of the 2024 logging |
16 | cut on Matteson Plain Road, and east of the logging cut on Plain Road where Plain Road goes north |
17 | at latitude 41.597024, and longitude -71.727768. The preserve includes all the Shelter Trail north |
18 | of Plain Road. |
19 | (8) Stepping Stone Falls natural area preserve. Certain land in the Arcadia management |
20 | area, in Kent county and Washington county, totaling approximately one thousand one hundred |
21 | seventy-nine and eight-tenths (1,179.8) acres, located south of Muddy Brook Road, west of |
22 | Wickaboxet Pond and Arthur Richmond Road, and northwest of Plain Road with the |
23 | Hazard/Lauriston parcel serving as the preserve's southern boundary. |
24 | (9) Rockville-Ell Pond natural area preserve. Certain land in the Rockville management |
25 | area, in Washington county, totaling approximately one thousand forty-four and six-tenths |
26 | (1,044.6) acres, located west of Fenner Hill Road, north of Stubtown Road, south of Spring Street, |
27 | with the preserve's western boundary being the Rhode Island/Connecticut border. |
28 | (10) Adamsville Brook natural area preserve. Certain land in Bristol county, totaling |
29 | approximately two hundred ninety-eight and eight-tenths (298.8) acres, located north of East Road, |
30 | east of Lake Road, west of Crandall Road, and south of Jacqueline Way. |
31 | (11) Simmons Mill natural area preserve. Certain land in the Simmons Mill management |
32 | area, in Bristol county, totaling approximately four hundred thirty-six and five-tenths (436.5) acres, |
33 | located west of John Dyer Road, north of Amesbury Lane, east of Long Highway, and south of |
34 | Shuttle Drive. |
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1 | (12) Eight Rod Farm natural area preserve. Certain land in the Eight Rod Farm |
2 | management area, in Bristol county, totaling approximately four hundred forty-six and one-tenth |
3 | (446.1) acres, located east of Main Road, west of Southlake Road, north of Harold E. Watson |
4 | Reservoir, and south of East Road. |
5 | (13) John H. Chafee Rome Point natural area preserve. Certain land in the John H. Chafee |
6 | Rome Point Preserve, in Washington county, totaling approximately two hundred forty-three and |
7 | nine-tenths (243.9) acres, located northeast of Boston Neck Road, northwest of Plantation Lane, |
8 | and south of Terre Mar Drive. |
9 | (14) Durfee Hill natural area preserve. Certain land in the Durfee Hill management area, |
10 | in Providence county, totaling approximately one thousand nine hundred eighty-two and sixty-two |
11 | one-hundredths (1,982.62) acres, located west of Pine Orchard Road, east of Reynolds Road, south |
12 | of Putnam Pike, and north of Ponaganset Reservoir, with the preserve's southwestern boundary |
13 | being the Dark Swamp and the western boundary being the northernmost parcel which Willie |
14 | Woodhead Road goes through. |
15 | (15) URI North Woods natural area preserve. Certain land in the University of Rhode |
16 | Island Kingston campus, in Washington county, totaling approximately two hundred sixty-four and |
17 | five-tenths (264.5) acres, located north of Flagg Road, west of Old North Road, east of Plains Road, |
18 | and south of Stony Fort Road. Not including the farm field, parking lot, or solar fields. |
19 | (16) Buck Hill Wallum Lake natural area preserve. Certain land in the Buck Hill |
20 | management area, in Providence county, totaling approximately one thousand two hundred nine |
21 | and three-tenths (1,209.3) acres, located on the western and southern edge of Wallum Lake, east of |
22 | Buck Hill Pond, north of Buck Hill Road, with the preserve's northern boundary being the Rhode |
23 | Island/Massachusetts border. Not including the 2008 logging cut or the logged nine hundred forty- |
24 | two (942) acre land added to the Buck Hill management area in 2024. |
25 | (17) Croff Farm Brook natural area preserve. Certain land in the Buck Hill management |
26 | area, in Providence county, totaling approximately three hundred fifty-two and three-tenths (352.3) |
27 | acres, located south of Buck Hill Road, west of Staghead Drive, east of Croff Road, and north of |
28 | Wakefield Road and Cedar Swamp Pond. |
29 | (18) Black Hut natural area preserve. Certain land in the Black Hut management area, in |
30 | Providence county, totaling approximately one thousand eight hundred sixty-three and two-tenths |
31 | (1,863.2) acres, located around Spring Lake, east of Cherry Farm Road, north of East Avenue, west |
32 | of the Douglas Turnpike, and south of West Ironstone Road. |
33 | (19) Blackstone River High Rocks Gorge natural area preserve. Certain land along the |
34 | Rhode Island/Massachusetts border, in Providence county, totaling approximately ninety-four and |
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1 | two-tenths (94.2) acres, located east of Tanglewood Road, north of Old Great Road, and across the |
2 | Blackstone River west of Saint Paul Street. |
3 | (20) Diamond Hill natural area preserve. Certain land in the Diamond Hill management |
4 | area, in Providence county, totaling approximately four hundred fifty-nine and nine-tenths (459.9) |
5 | acres, located west of Diamond Hill Road, east of West Wrentham Road, north of Tower Hill Road, |
6 | and south of Pine Swamp Road. |
7 | (21) Stillwater natural area preserve. Certain land in the George Washington Grove, in |
8 | Providence county, totaling approximately eight-five and seven-tenths (85.7) acres, located |
9 | southwest of John Mowry Road, northwest of Washington Highway, and east of Farnum Pike. |
10 | (22) Powdermill Ledges natural area preserve. Certain land in the Powdermill Ledges |
11 | conservation area, in Providence county, totaling approximately fifty-two and five-tenths (52.5) |
12 | acres, located west of Interstate 295, south of Putnam Pike, east of Sanderson Road, and north of |
13 | Greenville Avenue. |
14 | (23) Ponagansett River North natural area preserve. Certain land in the Ponagansett River |
15 | management area, in Providence county, totaling approximately fifty-six and three-tenths (56.3) |
16 | acres, located west of Pray Hill Road, east of Mount Hygeia Road, south of Acciardo Drive, and |
17 | north of Hartford Pike. |
18 | (24) Ponagansett River West natural area preserve. Certain land in the Ponagansett River |
19 | management area, in Providence county, totaling approximately one hundred thirty-one and four- |
20 | tenths (131.4) acres, located west of Mount Hygeia Road, east of Burgess Road, south of Hartford |
21 | Pike, and north of East Killingly Road. |
22 | (25) Ponagansett River East natural area preserve. Certain land in the Ponagansett River |
23 | management area, in Providence county, totaling approximately three hundred ninety and five- |
24 | tenths (390.5) acres, located south of Hartford Pike, east of Mount Hygeia Road, west of Winsor |
25 | Road, and north of East Killingly Road. |
26 | (26) Killingly Pond natural area preserve. Certain land in the Killingly Pond management |
27 | area, in Providence county, totaling approximately seven hundred sixty-seven (767) acres, located |
28 | west of Mount Hygeia Road, north of Hartford Pike, far south of Killingly Road, and bordering the |
29 | eastern edge of Killingly Pond with the preserve's western boundary being the Rhode |
30 | Island/Connecticut border. |
31 | (27) George Washington natural area preserve. Certain land in the George Washington |
32 | management area, in Providence county, totaling approximately one thousand six hundred ninety- |
33 | one and five-tenths (1,691.5) acres, located in the western and central portion of the George |
34 | Washington management area with the western edge of the preserve starting at the Rhode |
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1 | Island/Connecticut Border along the northwestern edge of Peck Pond, but not the southern edge of |
2 | Peck Pond with the southwestern edge of the preserve being the 2021 logging cut north of center |
3 | trail. The preserve consists of the southern portion of the George Washington management area |
4 | east of Cold Spring Drive to the intersection of Central Trail and George Washington Trail, |
5 | including the northern edge of Wilbur Pond, but not the logging cut to the southwest of Wilbur |
6 | Pond. The preserve consists of the northern portion of the George Washington management area to |
7 | the intersection of Munyon trail and Wilson trail where the eastern edge of the preserve extends to |
8 | the 2010 logging cut south of Richardson trail and west of Olney Keach Road along Ross trail. |
9 | Also not including the 2015 logging cut. |
10 | (28) Casimir Pulaski natural area preserve. Certain land in the George Washington |
11 | management area, in Providence county, totaling approximately seventy-nine and nine-tenths |
12 | (79.9) acres, located in the parcel named Burrillville Six-98 which is west of Olney Keach Road, |
13 | east of Center Trail and Wilbur Pond, north of Putnam Pike, and along the southern edge of the |
14 | swamp that is directly south of Olney Keech Pond. |
15 | (29) Jerimoth Hill natural area preserve. Certain land in Providence county, totaling |
16 | approximately nine and six-tenths (9.6) acres, located south of Hartford Pike, west of Burgess |
17 | Road, east of Riley Chase Road, and north of Gilead Swamp. |
18 | (30) Nicholas Farm natural area preserve. Certain land in the Nicholas Farm management |
19 | area, in Kent county, totaling approximately ninety-seven (97) acres, located along the Rhode |
20 | Island/Connecticut border and consisting of the portion of the Nicholas Farm Management Area |
21 | south of Newport Road and west of Hazard Road. Not including the 2018 and 2015 logging cuts. |
22 | (31) Big River natural area preserve. Certain land in the Big River management area, in |
23 | Kent county, totaling approximately eight thousand five hundred eleven (8,511) acres, located west |
24 | of Carrs Pond Road, north of Victory Highway, east of Twin Brook Lane, and south of Whaley |
25 | Hollow Road. |
26 | (32) Queens Fort natural area preserve. Certain land in the Queens Fort Historic site, in |
27 | Washington county, totaling approximately sixty-two and five-tenths (62.5) acres, located east of |
28 | Lantern Lane, south of Stony Lane, west of Cassandra Lane, and north of Ten Rod Road. |
29 | (33) Silver Spring natural area preserve. Certain land in the Silver Spring management |
30 | area, in Washington county, totaling approximately one hundred twenty-six and five-tenths (126.5) |
31 | acres, located west of Pendar Road, east of Congdon Hill Road, south of Butternut Drive, and north |
32 | of Pheasant Run. Not including Silver Spring Lake. |
33 | (34) Nokewa natural area preserve. Certain land in the Camp Nokewa management area, |
34 | in Washington county, totaling approximately one hundred forty-five and four-tenths (145.4) acres, |
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1 | located east of Tower Hill Road, south of state Route 138, north and west of Gilbert Stuart Road, |
2 | and bordering the western edge of Carr Pond in North Kingstown. |
3 | (35) Susanna's Woods natural area preserve. Certain land in Washington county, totaling |
4 | approximately seventy-three and eight-tenths (73.8) acres, located north of Post Road, west of Red |
5 | House Road, east of Gravelly Hill Road, and south of Sand Plains Trail. |
6 | (36) South Shore natural area preserve. Certain land in the South Shore management area, |
7 | in Washington county, totaling approximately forty-five and three-tenths (45.3) acres, located west |
8 | of Moonstone Beach Road, east of Robert Frost Way, south of Thoreau Lane, and north of |
9 | Matunuck School House Road and not including the state-owned farm fields. |
10 | (37) Woody Hill natural area preserve. Certain land in the Woody Hill management area, |
11 | in Washington county, totaling approximately seven hundred forty-five and three-tenths (745.3) |
12 | acres, located west of Ross Hill Road, east of Dunns Corner Road, north of South Woody Hill |
13 | Road, and south of Woody Hill Road and Canton Street. |
14 | (38) Crandall Swamp natural area preserve. Certain land in the state-owned portion of the |
15 | Crandall Swamp, in Washington county, totaling approximately twenty-eight and nine-tenths |
16 | (28.9) acres, located east of Pound Road, south of Westerly Bradford Road, and west of Dunns |
17 | Corner Road. |
18 | (39) Carolina natural area preserve. Certain land in the Carolina management area, in |
19 | Washington county, totaling approximately one thousand five hundred fourteen (1,514) acres, |
20 | located south of Kenyon Hill Trail, east of Switch Road, north of Pine Hill Road, and west of |
21 | Richmond Townhouse Road. Not including the 2017/2018 logging cuts south of Pine Hill Road or |
22 | any of the Carolina management area south of Pine Hill Road. Also, not including the one hundred |
23 | fifty-four and eight-tenths (154.8) acre fish hatchery along Richmond Townhouse Road. |
24 | (40) Taney Brook natural area preserve. Certain land in Washington county, totaling |
25 | approximately two hundred forty-four and three-tenths (244.3) acres, located west of Del Bonis |
26 | Drive, east of Richmond Townhouse Road, south of Kingstown Road, and north of Shannock Hill |
27 | Road. |
28 | (41) Alton Jones natural area preserve. Certain land in the URI Alton Jones Campus, in |
29 | Kent county, totaling approximately five hundred ninety-four (594) acres, located in the eastern |
30 | portion of the campus from the eastern edge of the logging cuts near the western edge of |
31 | Eisenhower Lake and Parker Lane east to Poor Farm Road and including the Alton Jones Campus |
32 | land to the east of Matteson Plain Road. The preserve goes south to the southern boundary of the |
33 | campus with the northern edge of the preserve being just south of the fields along Wheatley Road. |
34 | Not including the 2024 Arcadia logging cut along Matteson Plain Road which extends into the |
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1 | Alton Jones Campus or the logging cuts dominating the western and southwestern portions of the |
2 | Alton Jones Campus west of Eisenhower Lake. |
3 | (42) Black farm natural area preserve. Certain land in the Black Farm management area, |
4 | in Washington County, totaling approximately three hundred twelve and three-tenths (312.3) acres, |
5 | located west of Switch Road, north of Woodville Road, south of Interstate 95, and east of Woodville |
6 | Alton Road. |
7 | (43) Johnston Interstate 295 Canyon natural area preserve. Certain land surrounded by |
8 | Interstate 295 in Johnston, in Providence county, totaling approximately sixty-eight (68) acres, |
9 | located east of the Pocasset River, west of Atwood Avenue, north of Grand Army of the Republic |
10 | Highway, south of Greenville Avenue, with its western boundary being Interstate 295 south and |
11 | the eastern boundary being Interstate 295 north Providence Beltway. |
12 | (44) Snake Den natural area preserve. Certain land in the Snake Den state park, in |
13 | Providence county, totaling approximately eight hundred sixteen and eight-tenths (816.8) acres, |
14 | located east of Brown Avenue, south of Greenville Avenue, north of Grand Army of the Republic |
15 | Highway, and west of Interstate 295 south Providence Beltway. Not including the Pallozi Farm or |
16 | the state-owned farms along Brown Avenue. |
17 | (45) Lincoln Woods natural area preserve. Certain land in the Lincoln Woods state park, |
18 | in Providence county, totaling approximately six hundred fifty-four (654) acres, located east of |
19 | Eddie Dowling Highway, north of Olney Pond, west of Barney Pond, and south of Breakneck Hill |
20 | Road and Great Road. |
21 | (46) CCRI/Kent County Beech Forest natural area preserve. Certain land in the community |
22 | college of Rhode Island Knight Campus, in Kent county, totaling approximately four and eight- |
23 | tenths (4.8) acres, located east of Commonwealth Avenue, west of Health Lane, north of Toll Gate |
24 | Road, and south of Keareage Road and the roadway going through the southwestern portion of the |
25 | Knight Campus. |
26 | 42-122-10. Distinction from the natural heritage preservation program as set forth in |
27 | § 42-17.5. |
28 | The natural heritage program as set forth in this chapter shall be a separate entity from the |
29 | natural heritage preservation program as set forth in chapter 17.5 of title 42. Nothing contained in |
30 | chapter 17.5 of title 42 shall be applicable to or restrict the natural heritage program as set forth in |
31 | this chapter. |
32 | SECTION 5. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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LC004991 | |
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EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO AGRICULTURE AND FORESTRY -- NATURAL FOREST PROTECTION | |
ACT | |
*** | |
1 | This act would protect Rhode Island natural forests by banning extractive and even-age |
2 | logging on state lands and preserves, allowing only limited safety, invasive removal, or selection |
3 | management after review, hearings, and fines for violations. |
4 | This act would take effect upon passage. |
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LC004991 | |
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