Policy analysis of shoreline restoration options on private shorelines of Puget Sound

Puget Sound shorelines have historically provided a diversity of habitats that support a variety of aquatic resources throughout the region. These valued natural resources are iconic to the region and remain central to both the economic vitality and community appreciation of Puget Sound. Deterioration of upland and nearshore shoreline habitats, have placed severe stress on many aquatic resources within the region (PSAT, 2007). Since a majority of Washington State shorelines are privately owned, regulatory authority to legislate restoration on private property is limited in scope and frequency. Washington States’ Shoreline Management Act (RCW 90.58) requires local jurisdictions to plan for appropriate future shoreline uses. Under the Act, future development can be regulated to protect existing ecological functions, but lost functions cannot be restored without purchase or compensation of restored areas. Therefore, questions remains as to the ecological resilience of the region when considering cumulative effect of existing/ongoing shoreline development constrained by limited shoreline restoration opportunities.In light of these questions, this analysis will explore opportunities to promote restoration on privately owned shorelines within Puget Sound. These efforts are intended to promote more efficient ecosystem management and improve ecosystem-wide ecological functions.From an economics perspective, results of past shoreline management can generally be characterized as both market and government failure in effectively protecting the publics’ interest in maintaining healthy shoreline resources. Therefore coastal development has proceeded in spite of negative externalities and market imbalances resulting in inefficient resource management driven by the individual ambitions of private shoreline property owners to develop their property to their highest and best use. Federally derived property rights will protect continuation of existing uses along privately owned shorelines; therefore, a fundamental challenge remains in sustainable management of existing shoreline resources while also restoring ecological functions lost to past mistakes in an effort to increase the ecologic resiliency within the region. (PDF contains 5 pages)

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Burcar, Joe
Format: conference_item biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 2010
Subjects:Conservation, Management, Ecology, TCS22,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1834/21551
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spelling dig-aquadocs-1834-215512021-06-26T06:35:53Z Policy analysis of shoreline restoration options on private shorelines of Puget Sound Burcar, Joe Conservation Management Ecology TCS22 Puget Sound shorelines have historically provided a diversity of habitats that support a variety of aquatic resources throughout the region. These valued natural resources are iconic to the region and remain central to both the economic vitality and community appreciation of Puget Sound. Deterioration of upland and nearshore shoreline habitats, have placed severe stress on many aquatic resources within the region (PSAT, 2007). Since a majority of Washington State shorelines are privately owned, regulatory authority to legislate restoration on private property is limited in scope and frequency. Washington States’ Shoreline Management Act (RCW 90.58) requires local jurisdictions to plan for appropriate future shoreline uses. Under the Act, future development can be regulated to protect existing ecological functions, but lost functions cannot be restored without purchase or compensation of restored areas. Therefore, questions remains as to the ecological resilience of the region when considering cumulative effect of existing/ongoing shoreline development constrained by limited shoreline restoration opportunities.In light of these questions, this analysis will explore opportunities to promote restoration on privately owned shorelines within Puget Sound. These efforts are intended to promote more efficient ecosystem management and improve ecosystem-wide ecological functions.From an economics perspective, results of past shoreline management can generally be characterized as both market and government failure in effectively protecting the publics’ interest in maintaining healthy shoreline resources. Therefore coastal development has proceeded in spite of negative externalities and market imbalances resulting in inefficient resource management driven by the individual ambitions of private shoreline property owners to develop their property to their highest and best use. Federally derived property rights will protect continuation of existing uses along privately owned shorelines; therefore, a fundamental challenge remains in sustainable management of existing shoreline resources while also restoring ecological functions lost to past mistakes in an effort to increase the ecologic resiliency within the region. (PDF contains 5 pages) National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration U.S. EPA Coastal Management Branch U.S. Geolgocial Survey NOAA Sea Grant 2021-06-24T15:56:00Z 2021-06-24T15:56:00Z 2010 conference_item http://hdl.handle.net/1834/21551 en http://nsgl.gso.uri.edu/coastalsociety/TCS22/papers/Burcar_papers.pdf http://www.thecoastalsociety.org/ http://nsgl.gso.uri.edu/coastalsociety/TCS22/TCS22index.html application/pdf application/pdf http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/3891 16 2011-09-29 16:47:44 3891 The Coastal Society
institution UNESCO
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-aquadocs
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Repositorio AQUADOCS
language English
topic Conservation
Management
Ecology
TCS22
Conservation
Management
Ecology
TCS22
spellingShingle Conservation
Management
Ecology
TCS22
Conservation
Management
Ecology
TCS22
Burcar, Joe
Policy analysis of shoreline restoration options on private shorelines of Puget Sound
description Puget Sound shorelines have historically provided a diversity of habitats that support a variety of aquatic resources throughout the region. These valued natural resources are iconic to the region and remain central to both the economic vitality and community appreciation of Puget Sound. Deterioration of upland and nearshore shoreline habitats, have placed severe stress on many aquatic resources within the region (PSAT, 2007). Since a majority of Washington State shorelines are privately owned, regulatory authority to legislate restoration on private property is limited in scope and frequency. Washington States’ Shoreline Management Act (RCW 90.58) requires local jurisdictions to plan for appropriate future shoreline uses. Under the Act, future development can be regulated to protect existing ecological functions, but lost functions cannot be restored without purchase or compensation of restored areas. Therefore, questions remains as to the ecological resilience of the region when considering cumulative effect of existing/ongoing shoreline development constrained by limited shoreline restoration opportunities.In light of these questions, this analysis will explore opportunities to promote restoration on privately owned shorelines within Puget Sound. These efforts are intended to promote more efficient ecosystem management and improve ecosystem-wide ecological functions.From an economics perspective, results of past shoreline management can generally be characterized as both market and government failure in effectively protecting the publics’ interest in maintaining healthy shoreline resources. Therefore coastal development has proceeded in spite of negative externalities and market imbalances resulting in inefficient resource management driven by the individual ambitions of private shoreline property owners to develop their property to their highest and best use. Federally derived property rights will protect continuation of existing uses along privately owned shorelines; therefore, a fundamental challenge remains in sustainable management of existing shoreline resources while also restoring ecological functions lost to past mistakes in an effort to increase the ecologic resiliency within the region. (PDF contains 5 pages)
format conference_item
topic_facet Conservation
Management
Ecology
TCS22
author Burcar, Joe
author_facet Burcar, Joe
author_sort Burcar, Joe
title Policy analysis of shoreline restoration options on private shorelines of Puget Sound
title_short Policy analysis of shoreline restoration options on private shorelines of Puget Sound
title_full Policy analysis of shoreline restoration options on private shorelines of Puget Sound
title_fullStr Policy analysis of shoreline restoration options on private shorelines of Puget Sound
title_full_unstemmed Policy analysis of shoreline restoration options on private shorelines of Puget Sound
title_sort policy analysis of shoreline restoration options on private shorelines of puget sound
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/1834/21551
work_keys_str_mv AT burcarjoe policyanalysisofshorelinerestorationoptionsonprivateshorelinesofpugetsound
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