| Chapter 100 |
| 2025 -- S 0626 Enacted 06/23/2025 |
| A N A C T |
| RELATING TO WATERS AND NAVIGATION -- COASTAL RESOURCES MANAGEMENT COUNCIL |
Introduced By: Senators Gu, Kallman, McKenney, Urso, DiMario, Britto, and Sosnowski |
| Date Introduced: March 06, 2025 |
| It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: |
| SECTION 1. Section 46-23-6 of the General Laws in Chapter 46-23 entitled "Coastal |
| Resources Management Council" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
| 46-23-6. Powers and duties — Rights-of-way. |
| In order to properly manage coastal resources the council has the following powers and |
| duties: |
| (1) Planning and management.(i) The primary responsibility of the council shall be the |
| continuing planning for and management of the resources of the state’s coastal region. The council |
| shall be able to make any studies of conditions, activities, or problems of the state’s coastal region |
| needed to carry out its responsibilities. |
| (ii) The resources management process shall include the following basic phases: |
| (A) Identify all of the state’s coastal resources, water, submerged land, air space, fin fish, |
| shellfish, minerals, physiographic features, and so forth. |
| (B) Evaluate these resources in terms of their quantity, quality, capability for use, and other |
| key characteristics. |
| (C) Determine the current and potential uses of each resource. |
| (D) Determine the current and potential problems of each resource. |
| (E) Formulate plans and programs for the management of each resource, identifying |
| permitted uses, locations, protection measures, and so forth. |
| (F) Carry out these resources management programs through implementing authority and |
| coordination of state, federal, local, and private activities. |
| (G) Formulation of standards where these do not exist, and reevaluation of existing |
| standards. |
| (H) To develop comprehensive programs for dredging in tidal waters and related beneficial |
| use, disposal, monitoring dewatering and transportation of dredge materials. |
| (I) To accept and administer loans and grants from the federal government and from other |
| sources, public or private, for the carrying out of any of its functions, which loans or grants shall |
| not be expended for other than the purposes for which provided. |
| (J) To encourage, participate in, or conduct studies, investigations, research, and |
| demonstrations relating to dredging, disposal of dredge materials and transportation thereof in the |
| tidal waters of the state as the coastal resources management council may deem advisable and |
| necessary for the discharge of its duties under this chapter. |
| (K) To collect and disseminate information relating to dredging, disposal of dredge |
| materials and transportation thereof within the tidal waters of the state. |
| (L) To work with the appropriate federal and state agencies to develop as provided for in |
| this chapter and in chapter 6.1 of this title, a comprehensive plan for dredging in tidal waters and |
| related beneficial use, disposal, monitoring dewatering and transportation of dredge materials. |
| (M) To apply for, accept and expend grants and bequests of funds, for the purpose of |
| carrying out the lawful responsibilities of the coastal resources management council. |
| (iii) An initial series of resources management activities shall be initiated through this basic |
| process, then each phase shall continuously be recycled and used to modify the council’s resources |
| management programs and keep them current. |
| (iv) Planning and management programs shall be formulated in terms of the characteristics |
| and needs of each resource or group of related resources. However, all plans and programs shall be |
| developed around basic standards and criteria, including: |
| (A) The need and demand for various activities and their impact upon ecological systems. |
| (B) The degree of compatibility of various activities. |
| (C) The capability of coastal resources to support various activities. |
| (D) Water quality standards set by the director of the department of environmental |
| management. |
| (E) Consideration of plans, studies, surveys, inventories, and so forth prepared by other |
| public and private sources. |
| (F) Consideration of contiguous land uses and transportation facilities. |
| (G) Whenever possible consistency with the state guide plan. |
| (v) The council shall prepare, adopt, administer, and cause to be implemented, including |
| specifically through its powers of coordination as set forth in subdivision (3) of this section, a |
| marine resources development plan and such special area management plans as the council may |
| determine to be appropriate or desirable as follows: |
| (A) Marine resources development plan. |
| (I) The purpose of the marine resources development plan shall be to provide an integrated |
| strategy for: (a) improving the health and functionality of Rhode Island’s marine ecosystem; (b) |
| providing for appropriate marine-related economic development; and (c) promoting the use and |
| enjoyment of Rhode Island’s marine resources by the people of the state. |
| (II) The marine resources development plan shall include specific goals and objectives |
| necessary to accomplish its purposes, performance measures to determine progress toward |
| achieving such goals and objectives, and an implementation program. |
| (III) The marine resources development plan shall be prepared in cooperation with the |
| department of environmental management, the statewide planning program, and the commerce |
| corporation, with the involvement of such other state agencies as may be appropriate, and with such |
| technical support as may be necessary and appropriate from the Narragansett Bay Estuary Program, |
| the Coastal Institute at the University of Rhode Island, and Rhode Island Sea Grant. |
| (IV) The plan shall be responsive to the requirements and principles of the federal coastal |
| zone management act as amended, including, but not limited to, the expectations of the act for |
| incorporating the federal Clean Water Act into coastal zone management programs. |
| (V) The marine resources development plan shall take into account local land use |
| management responsibilities as provided for under title 45 and harbor management responsibilities, |
| and the preparation of the plan shall include opportunities for involvement and/or comment by |
| cities and towns. |
| (VI) The marine resources development plan shall be adopted by the council in accordance |
| with the provisions of this subsection by July 1, 2005, shall as appropriate incorporate the |
| recommendations of the Governor’s Narragansett Bay and Watershed Planning Commission, and |
| shall be made consistent with systems level plans as appropriate, in order to effectuate the purposes |
| of systems level planning. The council shall update the marine resources development plan at least |
| once every five (5) years. |
| (VII) The council shall administer its programs, regulations, and implementation activities |
| in a manner consistent with the marine resources development plan. |
| (VIII) The marine resources development plan and any updates thereto shall be adopted as |
| appropriate as elements of the state guide plan pursuant to § 42-11-10. |
| (B) Special area management plans. |
| (I) The council shall adopt such special area management plans as deemed necessary and |
| desirable to provide for the integration and coordination of the protection of natural resources, the |
| promotion of reasonable coastal-dependent economic growth, and the improved protection of life |
| and property in the specific areas designated council as requiring such integrated planning and |
| coordination. |
| (II) The integrated planning and coordination herein specified shall include, but not be |
| limited to, federal agencies, state agencies, boards, commissions, and corporations, including |
| specifically the commerce corporation, and cities and towns, shall utilize to the extent appropriate |
| and feasible the capacities of entities of higher education, including Rhode Island Sea Grant, and |
| shall provide for the participation of advocacy groups, community-based organizations, and private |
| persons. |
| (III) The council shall administer its programs, regulations, and implementation activities |
| in a manner consistent with special area management plans. |
| (IV) Special area management plans and any updates thereto shall be adopted as |
| appropriate as elements of the state guide plan pursuant to § 42-11-10. |
| (2) Implementation.(i) The council is authorized to formulate policies and plans and to |
| adopt regulations necessary to implement its various management programs. With respect to such |
| policies and plans which relate to matters where the coastal resources management council and the |
| department of environmental management have concurrent jurisdiction and upon formulation of |
| the plans and regulations, the council shall, prior to adoption, submit the proposed plans or |
| regulations to the director of the department of environmental management for the director’s |
| review. The director shall review and submit comments to the council within thirty (30) days of |
| submission to the director by the council. The comments of the director shall include findings with |
| regard to the consistency of the policies, plans and/or regulations with the requirements of laws |
| administered by the department. The council shall consider the director’s comments prior to |
| adoption of any such policies, plans or regulations and shall respond in writing to findings of the |
| director with regard to the consistency of said policies, plans and/or regulations with the |
| requirements of laws administered by the department. |
| (ii)(A) The council shall have exclusive jurisdiction below mean high water for all |
| development, operations, and dredging, consistent with the requirements of chapter 6.1 of this title |
| and except as necessary for the department of environmental management to exercise its powers |
| and duties and to fulfill its responsibilities pursuant to §§ 42-17.1-2 and 42-17.1-24, and any |
| person, firm, or governmental agency proposing any development or operation within, above, or |
| beneath the tidal water below the mean high water mark, extending out to the extent of the state’s |
| jurisdiction in the territorial sea, shall be required to demonstrate that its proposal would not: |
| (I) Conflict with any resources management plan or program; |
| (II) Make any area unsuitable for any uses or activities to which it is allocated by a |
| resources management plan or program adopted by the council; or |
| (III) Significantly damage the environment of the coastal region. |
| (B) The council shall be authorized to approve, modify, set conditions for, or reject any |
| such proposal. |
| (iii) The authority of the council over land areas (those areas above the mean high water |
| mark) shall be limited to two hundred feet (200′) from the coastal physiographic feature or to that |
| necessary to carry out effective resources management programs. This shall be limited to the |
| authority to approve, modify, set conditions for, or reject the design, location, construction, |
| alteration, and operation of specified activities or land uses when these are related to a water area |
| under the agency’s jurisdiction, regardless of their actual location. The council’s authority over |
| these land uses and activities shall be limited to situations in which there is a reasonable probability |
| of conflict with a plan or program for resources management or damage to the coastal environment. |
| These uses and activities are: |
| (A) Power generating over forty (40) megawatts and desalination plants. |
| (B) Chemical or petroleum processing, transfer, or storage. |
| (C) Minerals extraction. |
| (D) Shoreline protection facilities and physiographical features, and all directly associated |
| contiguous areas which are necessary to preserve the integrity of the facility and/or features. |
| (E) Coastal wetlands and all directly associated contiguous areas which are necessary to |
| preserve the integrity of the wetlands including any freshwater wetlands located in the vicinity of |
| the coast. The actual determination of freshwater wetlands located in coastal vicinities and under |
| the jurisdiction of the coastal resources management council shall be designated on such maps that |
| are agreed to in writing and made available for public use by the coastal resources management |
| council and the director, department of environmental management, within three (3) months of |
| [August 6, 1996]. The CRMC shall have exclusive jurisdiction over the wetlands areas described |
| in this section notwithstanding any provision of chapter 1, title 2 or any other provision, except as |
| provided in subsection (iv) of this section. Within six (6) months of [August 6, 1996] the council |
| in cooperation with the director shall develop rules and regulations for the management and |
| protection of freshwater wetlands, affected by an aquaculture project, outside of those freshwater |
| wetlands located in the vicinity of the coast and under the exclusive jurisdiction of the director of |
| the department of environmental management. For the purpose of this chapter, a “coastal wetland” |
| means any salt marsh bordering on the tidal waters of this state, whether or not the tidal waters |
| reach the littoral areas through natural or artificial watercourses, and those uplands directly |
| associated and contiguous thereto which are necessary to preserve the integrity of that marsh. |
| Marshes shall include those areas upon which grow one or more of the following: smooth cordgrass |
| (spartina alterniflora), salt meadow grass (spartina patens), spike grass (distichlis spicata), black |
| rush (juncus gerardi), saltworts (salicornia spp.), sea lavender (limonium carolinianum), saltmarsh |
| bulrushes (scirpus spp.), hightide bush (iva frutescens), tall reed (phragmites communis), tall |
| cordgrass (spartina pectinata), broadleaf cattail (typha latifolia), narrowleaf cattail (typha |
| angustifolia), spike rush (eleocharis rostellata), chairmaker’s rush (scirpus amercana), creeping |
| bentgrass (agrostis palustris), sweet grass (hierochloe odorata), and wild rye (etlymus virginicus). |
| (F) Sewage treatment and disposal and solid waste disposal facilities. |
| (G) Beneficial use, dewatering, and disposal of dredged material of marine origins, where |
| such activities take place within two hundred feet (200′) of mean high water or a coastal |
| physiographic feature, or where there is a reasonable probability of conflict with a plan or program |
| for resources management or damage to the coastal environment. |
| (iv) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsections (ii) and (iii) above, the department of |
| environmental management shall maintain jurisdiction over the administration of chapter 1, title 2, |
| including permitting of freshwater wetlands alterations and enforcement, with respect to all |
| agricultural activities undertaken by a farmer, as that term is defined in § 2-1-22(j), wherever |
| located; provided, however, that with respect to activities located partially or completely within |
| two hundred feet (200′) of the coastal physiographic feature, the department shall exercise |
| jurisdiction in consultation with the council. |
| (3) Coordination. The council has the following coordinating powers and duties: |
| (i) Functioning as a binding arbitrator in any matter of dispute involving both the resources |
| of the state’s coastal region and the interests of two (2) or more municipalities or state agencies. |
| (ii) Consulting and coordinating actions with local, state, regional, and federal agencies |
| and private interests. |
| (iii) Conducting or sponsoring coastal research. |
| (iv) Advising the governor, the general assembly, and the public on coastal matters. |
| (v) Serving as the lead state agency and initial and primary point of contact for dredging |
| activities in tidal waters and in that capacity, integrating and coordinating the plans and policies of |
| other state agencies as they pertain to dredging in order to develop comprehensive programs for |
| dredging as required by subparagraph (1)(ii)(H) of this section and chapter 6.1 of this title. The |
| Rhode Island resource recovery corporation prior to purchasing cover material for the state landfill |
| shall first contact the CRMC to see if there is a source of suitable dredged material available which |
| shall be used in place of the purchase cover material. Other state agencies engaged in the process |
| of dump closures shall also contact the CRMC to see if there is a source of suitable dredged material |
| available, which shall be used in place of the purchase cover material. In addition, cities and towns |
| may contact the CRMC prior to closing city or town controlled dump sites to see if there is a source |
| of suitable dredge material available, which may be used in place of the purchase cover material. |
| (vi) Acting as the state’s representative to all bodies public and private on all coastal and |
| aquaculture related matters. |
| (4) Operations. The council is authorized to exercise the following operating functions, |
| which are essential to management of coastal resources: |
| (i) Issue, modify, or deny permits for any work in, above, or beneath the areas under its |
| jurisdiction, including conduct of any form of aquaculture. |
| (ii) Issue, modify, or deny permits for dredging, filling, or any other physical alteration of |
| coastal wetlands and all directly related contiguous areas which are necessary to preserve the |
| integrity of the wetlands, including, but not limited to, the transportation and disposal of dredge |
| materials in the tidal waters. |
| (iii) Grant licenses, permits, and easements for the use of coastal resources which are held |
| in trust by the state for all its citizens, and impose fees for private use of these resources. |
| (iv) Determining the need for and establishing pierhead, bulkhead, and harbor lines. |
| (v) Enforcing and implementing riparian rights in the tidal waters after judicial decisions. |
| (vi) The council may require an owner or operator of a commercial wharf or pier of a |
| marine commercial facility, as defined in 300.3 of the Rhode Island coastal resources management |
| program, but not including those facilities defined in 300.4 of the Rhode Island coastal resources |
| management program, and which is capable of offloading cargo, and is or will be subject to a new |
| use or a significant intensification of an existing use, to demonstrate that the commercial wharf or |
| pier is fit for that purpose. For the purposes of this subsection, a “commercial wharf or pier” means |
| a pier, bulkhead, wharf, docking facility, or underwater utilities. The council may order said owner |
| or operator to provide an engineering certification to the council’s satisfaction that the commercial |
| wharf or pier is fit for the new use or intensification of an existing use. If the council determines |
| that the commercial wharf or pier is not fit, it may order the owner or operator to undertake the |
| necessary work to make the commercial wharf or pier safe, within a reasonable time frame. If the |
| council determines that the commercial wharf or pier, because of its condition, is an immediate |
| threat to public health and safety it may order the commercial wharf or pier closed until the |
| necessary work to make the commercial wharf or pier safe has been performed and approved by |
| the council. All work performed must conform to the council’s management program. The council |
| is also given the authority to develop regulations to carry out this provision and to impose |
| administrative penalties of five thousand dollars ($5,000) per day up to a maximum of twenty |
| thousand dollars ($20,000) consistent with § 46-23-7.1 where there has been a violation of the |
| orders under this provision. |
| (5) Rights-of-way.(i) The council is responsible for the designation of all public rights-of- |
| way to the tidal water areas of the state, and shall carry on a continuing discovery of appropriate |
| public rights-of-way to the tidal water areas of the state. |
| (ii) The council shall maintain a complete file of all official documents relating to the legal |
| status of all public rights-of-way to the tidal water areas of the state. |
| (iii)(A) The council has the power to designate for acquisition and development, and |
| posting, and all other functions of any other department for tidal rights-of-way and land for tidal |
| rights-of-way, parking facilities, and other council related purposes. |
| (B) Further, the council has the power to develop and prescribe a standard sign to be used |
| by the cities and towns to mark designated rights-of-way. |
| (iv) In conjunction with this subdivision, every state department controlling state-owned |
| land close to or adjacent to discovered rights-of-way is authorized to set out the land, or so much |
| of the land that may be deemed necessary for public parking. |
| (v) No use of land for public parking shall conflict with existing or intended use of the land, |
| and no improvement shall be undertaken by any state agency until detailed plans have been |
| submitted to and approved by the governing body of the local municipality. |
| (vi) In designating rights-of-way, the council shall consider the following matters in |
| making its designation: |
| (A) Land evidence records; |
| (B) The exercise of domain over the parcel such as maintenance, construction, or upkeep; |
| (C) The payment of taxes; |
| (D) The creation of a dedication; |
| (E) Public use; |
| (F) Any other public record or historical evidence such as maps and street indexes; |
| (G) Other evidence as set out in § 42-35-10. |
| (vii) A determination by the council that a parcel is a right-of-way shall be decided by |
| substantial evidence. A copy of the final council determination, and all official documents related |
| to the council determination, shall be provided to the municipality in which the right-of-way is |
| located. |
| (viii) Municipalities shall be required to identify and maintain a current list of public rights- |
| of-way to the tidal water areas in their municipality that have been designated by the council in |
| accordance with this section. Municipal identification of the council’s designated public rights-of- |
| way shall also be incorporated and displayed on official maps in accordance with § 45-23.1-1. Non- |
| compliance with this municipal responsibility shall have no effect on the council designation |
| process or final determinations by the council that are set forth in this section. |
| (viii)(ix) The council shall be notified whenever by the judgment of the governing body of |
| a coastal municipality, a public right-of-way to tidal water areas located in such municipality has |
| ceased to be useful to the public, and such governing body proposes an order of abandonment of |
| such public right-of-way. Said notice shall be given not less than sixty (60) days prior to the date |
| of such abandonment. |
| (6) Pre-existingPreexisting residential boating facilities.(i) The council is hereby |
| authorized and empowered to issue assent for pre-existingpreexisting residential boating facilities |
| constructed prior to January 1, 1985. These assents may be issued for pre-existingpreexisting |
| residential boating facilities, even though such facilities do not meet current standards and policies |
| of the council; provided, however, that the council finds that such facilities do not pose any |
| significant risk to the coastal resources of the state of Rhode Island and do not endanger human |
| safety. |
| (ii) In addition to the above criteria, the applicant shall provide clear and convincing |
| evidence that: |
| (A) The facility existed in substantially the same configuration as it now exists prior to |
| January 1, 1985; |
| (B) The facility is presently intact and functional; and |
| (C) The facility presents no significant threat to the coastal resources of the state of Rhode |
| Island or human safety. |
| (iii) The applicant, to be eligible for this provision, shall apply no later than January 31, |
| 1999. |
| (iv) The council is directed to develop rules and regulations necessary to implement this |
| subdivision. |
| (v) It is the specific intent of this subsection to require that all pre-existingpreexisting |
| residential boating facilities constructed on January 1, 1985, or thereafter conform to this chapter |
| and the plans, rules and regulations of the council. |
| (7) Lease of filled lands which were formerly tidal lands to riparian or littoral owners.(i) |
| Any littoral or riparian owner in this state who desires to obtain a lease from the state of Rhode |
| Island of any filled lands adjacent to his or her upland shall apply to the council, which may make |
| the lease. Any littoral or riparian owner who wishes to obtain a lease of filled lands must obtain |
| pre-approval, in the form of an assent, from the council. Any lease granted by the council shall |
| continue the public’s interest in the filled lands including, but not limited to, the rights of |
| navigation, fishery, and commerce. The public trust in the lands shall continue and run concurrently |
| with the leasing of the lands by the state to private individuals, corporations, or municipalities. |
| Upon the granting of a lease by the council, those rights consistent with the public trust and secured |
| by the lease shall vest in the lessee. The council may approve a lease of filled lands for an initial |
| term of up to fifty (50) years, with, or without, a single option to renew for an additional term of |
| up to fifty (50) years. |
| (ii) The lessor of the lease, at any time, for cause, may by express act cancel and annul any |
| lease previously made to the riparian owner when it determines that the use of the lands is violating |
| the terms of the lease or is inconsistent with the public trust, and upon cancellation the lands, and |
| rights in the land so leased, shall revert to the state. |
| (8) “Marinas” as defined in the coastal resources management program in effect as of June |
| 1, 1997, are deemed to be one of the uses consistent with the public trust. Subdivision (7) is not |
| applicable to: |
| (i) Any riparian owner on tidal waters in this state (and any successor in interest to the |
| owner) which has an assent issued by the council to use any land under water in front of his or her |
| lands as a marina, which assent was in effect on June 1, 1997; |
| (ii) Any alteration, expansion, or other activity at a marina (and any successor in interest) |
| which has an assent issued by the council, which assent was in effect on June 1, 1997; and |
| (iii) Any renewal of assent to a marina (or successor in interest), which assent was issued |
| by the council and in effect on June 1, 1997. |
| (9) “Recreational boating facilities” including marinas, launching ramps, and recreational |
| mooring areas, as defined by and properly permitted by the council, are deemed to be one of the |
| uses consistent with the public trust. Subdivision (7) is not applicable to: |
| (i) Any riparian owner on tidal waters in this state (and any successor in interest to the |
| owner) which has an assent issued by the council to use any land under water in front of his or her |
| lands as a recreational boating facility; any alteration, expansion or other activity at a recreational |
| boating facility (and any successor in interest) which has an assent issued by the council, which |
| assent was in effect as of June 1, 1997; and |
| (ii) Any renewal of assent to a recreational boating facility (or successor in interest), which |
| assent was issued by the council and in effect on June 1, 1997. |
| SECTION 2. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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| LC001772 |
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