A New Rule Balances Wildlife and Off-Road-Vehicle Use on a North Carolina Beach

A New Rule Balances Wildlife and Off-Road-Vehicle Use on a North Carolina Beach

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Five years ago tire tracks carved by recreational off-road vehicles traced a path of destruction over dead birds and demolished eggs. Today least tern chicks, nesting loggerhead sea turtles, and piping plovers are flourishing at North Carolina’s Cape Hatteras National Seashore. After a legal battle waged by Audubon North Carolina and Defenders of Wildlife, represented by the Southern Environmental Law Center, the National Park Service issued a new rule put into effect this past February that allows ORV access in certain areas within the seashore while also protecting sea turtles and birds. Yet despite this initial compromise, pending congressional legislation and civil litigation could negate the park service’s ruling, threatening bird species, other wildlife, and plants on the shore.

“Historically, Cape Hatteras National Seashore has been very important for birds that depend on the barrier islands for nesting, migratory stopovers, and wintering areas,” explains Walker Golder, Audubon North Carolina’s deputy director.

How to manage Cape Hatteras has been a conservation issue for decades. In 1972 President Richard Nixon issued an executive order requiring the Interior Department and the National Park Service to develop rules regulating ORV use on public lands for the purpose of protecting public safety, minimizing conflicts among land users, and protecting natural resources. President Jimmy Carter clarified the order five years later, saying federal agencies must close areas to ORV use whenever such use was adversely affecting natural resources.

In spite of the two executive orders, the National Park Service never finalized an ORV management plan for Cape Hatteras, relying instead on a draft interim plan developed in 1978.

But from what the Park Service has experienced in recent years, it is possible the draft was never finalized because of controversy and political pressure,explains Mike Murray, superintendent of the Cape Hatteras National Seashore. “ORV management at the seashore is a longstanding, emotionally charged, and highly polarized issue,” he says. “There was resistance to portions of the 1978 draft plan, such as a proposed ORV permit requirement, just as there’s resistance to the new plan and regulation. I can fully understand why it has been so difficult for the Park Service to complete an ORV management plan and special regulation at the seashore.”

As the years passed, growing numbers of people drove on the fragile shores. And more ORVs meant more people in remote areas. Protection for birds decreased, as did breeding productivity, while disturbance increased. The seashore’s bird populations began to decline. In 1992, 14 years after the NPS began managing the area based on the draft interim plan, only 12 piping plover breeding pairs made use of the shore. By 2003 that number dropped to two. Only one chick fledged that year (none fledged in 2002 and 2004). From 1995 to 2004 the number of common tern nests on the shore decreased 76 percent, from 739 to 180. By 2007 the number of terns and skimmers nesting on the seashore’s beaches had reached historic lows. Indeed, black skimmers and gull-billed terns were absent as a nesting species that year.

“When we began to see problems, we began to work with the seashore to raise awareness of the issues and the need to protect birds on the beach,” Golder says.

Because of this effort and to address a continuing decline in nesting bird populations, in 2006 the Park Service, after a yearlong feasibility assessment, issued an Interim Protected Species Management Strategy to provide resource protection guidance until a long-term ORV management plan and regulation could be developed.

“We commented repeatedly that the Interim Protected Species Management Strategy was inadequate,” says Golder. “They did focus on piping plovers in 2007 but ignored other birds, sea turtles, science, and the recommendations of the U.S. Geological Survey.”

“Unfortunately, the Interim Strategy did not even incorporate the measures that the government’s own scientists identified as necessary to protect wildlife at the seashore,” says Julie Youngman, senior attorney at the Southern Environmental Law Center. “The natural resources of Cape Hatteras were not being protected for future generations.” Jason Rylander, senior attorney for Defenders of Wildlife, adds, “It was not a legally valid ORV management plan by any means."

On October 18, 2007, Audubon and Defenders of Wildlife, represented by the Southern Environmental Law Center, sued the National Park Service, arguing that its governance of ORVs was inadequate. The Cape Hatteras Access Preservation Alliance, a pro-ORV lobbying group, and Dare and Hyde counties, where the seashore is located, intervened in the suit. After several months the parties agreed to implement another temporary but stricter science-based plan regulating ORV use on Cape Hatteras until the National Park Service finalized a formal ORV management regulation. Under these stricter protections, rare wildlife began to rebound, with several species breeding in record-setting numbers.  In 2010, for instance, the seashore had 15 fledged piping plover chicks, 26 fledged American oystercatcher chicks, and 153 sea turtle nests. The court agreement also set a deadline for the final rule to be adopted.

After several years of study, research, and public participation, the National Park Service put its final regulation into effect this past February. The rule allows for year-round ORV beach access on 28 of the shore’s 67 miles while simultaneously protecting birds and other wildlife. 

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Anna Sanders

Type: Author | From: Audubon Magazine

Comments

Orv ruts are not all over the

Orv ruts are not all over the place... many places without them..if you want to walk.. the villages are closed.. all summer..right now most areas are closed even to walkers..do you live Here??? I do try and walk...most all ramps and walkways are now closed..when they said they would be open....people who do not live here year round have not any idea how hard access is..come stay at my house.. and take a walk to the beach..with the bugs and hot sand its very long...its not like other beaches,,,,,

ORV ruts are all over ORV Beaches

Yes Pat I live here. The ocean beach has few bugs compared to everywhere else. Bugs are worse in the village.
Plenty of great beaches for pedestrians to get to and walk, for now. If the interim plan is put into place those beaches will become ORV beaches. This is what really erks me about you guys. You cry about the loss of pedestrian access but have an agenda of doing away with all the year round pedestrian access beaches. This is why you want the interim plan reinstated. if you were just concerned about pedestrians you would have had Congremen Jones write a proposal to deal just with resource closures.
Show me an ORV beach that doesn't have ruts criscrossing and meandering from dune to the timeline.

I guess you have not been out

I guess you have not been out of your house much..and yes there are few bugs on the beach,, but you have to get there..I have trouble walking so its hard..this area was not planned for walkers.. we could always get to the beach by driving..there is no parking at the beach fronts..show me??? I not saying there should not be some control, but whats is in place is to much.. How about more working together, then the special interest groups leaving the table...lets get together and make our beach, have more access For everyone............

Beach access

Pat I get out of the house a lot.
Here are a list of nice beaches you can walk on without ruts unless S. 2372 is passed.
1. Beach in front of Hallover (Canadian Hole)
2 Beach N of ramp 43 the old loran road all the way to the Hallover with a 2 huge parking lots and easy access at the old lighthouse site.
3. The bath house in Frisco, showers and bathroom easy wooden boardwalk to beach.
4. Sandy Bay parking lot on the soundside just outside Hatteras, easy walk across street to a boardwalk

That is not counting the 1000's of visitors that everyday walk out of their rental cottage over the subdivision boardwalk to the beach, some subdivision are less restrictive than others as far as parking access, none of them will say a word if you are walking there.

There are lots of places to park on the side of highway 12 and easy, no more than a big city mall walk  for you to get to the beach if you ask around.

That would be dune to the

That would be dune to the tideline (darn iPhone)

Pedestrian Access

" A Bad  Bill for Pedestrian Access"

What  the ORV groups don't want you to know is the Interim plan is short for the Interim  Protected Species Management Plan (IPSMP). The Interim plan was designed to deal just with protecting and managing protected species and ORVs until  a comprehensive  ORV  plan could be  developed.  The Interim Plan did not manage where ORV routes would be, the safety of pedestrians, recreational  conflicts with ORV  use, or safe operation of ORVs. Those things were decided in an exhaustive development plan where extensive public comments were used  to decide the final rule.

If the bill passes the Senate and the Interim plan is reinstated it will all but eliminate  the established pedestrian access only areas in CHNS. This is because the management of pedestrians and ORVs under the Interim Plan defers  to a 1978 draft interim ORV plan that was never approved. This draft plan has been interpreted  by different superintendents using the CFR (code of federal regulations) and Superintendent Orders. There was no written plan with public input to manage ORVs. There is little administrative history as to what beaches allowed ORV use and what beaches did and most importantly why some beaches did not allow ORV access for over 30 years.  

Management of ORVs will be directed by this morphed 1978 never approved draft interim plan. It is hard to say how ORVs will be managed under the  "Interim Plan". There will be no  guarantee  of year round pedestrian access only beaches. Visitors seeking beaches without tire ruts , parked vehicles and an ORV route  that extends from the base of the dune to the tide line will soon be out of luck. 

If the Interim plan is used to manage  ORVs for CHNS then CHNS will be without an ORV plan. This will be  in defiance of a Federal Judge's orders. It is possible all  ORV use could be banned in CHNS if this bill is passed.

The constant complaint about the economic consequence of the NEPA approved ORV Management plan  is a red herring. Dare county has just released the economy indicators for the County which include Hatteras Island. It appears the only correlation that can be made is that visitors are adjusting to the Park's new management plan and the economic news is very favourable for Hatteras Island. 

If you support multiple recreation opportunities, see value in desolate beach seascapes and value resource conservation please consider calling or writing your senator and the members of the energy committee and ask them to vote no on, S. 2372, the Preserving Public Access to Cape Hatteras Beaches Act. Don't be mislead this  issue is about ORV access not local economics or pedestrian access.

Link to energy committee:
http://www.energy.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/contact-form

Link to senate contact:
http://www.senate.gov/general/contact_information/senators_cfm.cfm?State=WA

Dare economic report

Dare Economic report is available through the chamber of commerce. The numbers don't support economic collapse for Hatteras island .  Only the Tri- villages which  suffered catastrophic damage from last the last hurricane (that is still being repaired) economic numbers were down. 

Please refer to, Dare County Gross Occupancy By District, chart to compare data for the actual villages on HI.
Here is the link . 

http://www.outerbankschamber.com/clientuploads/Economy%20Reports/economi...

We have a rental house in Frisco and out yearly rentals are great. 

it seems interesting thanks

it seems interesting thanks for this update.

Hatteras ecomony in trash can

To say that the hatteras island economy is doing fine is an outright lie.... I started going to hatterAs island shortly after returning from southeast Asia , about 1966. My family and bought land and built a house which we rent to visitors on a weekly basis. In the last five years, our house usage has gone down 70% , With this year so far looking to be the worse ever. The total lack of real time data and constant lies from the Eco-nazi groups is a true disgrace. The title of the park is "The Cape Hatteras National Seashore and Recreational Area". It does not say Wildlife Refruge". recreation for ALL the people......

Hatteras ecomony in trash can

To say that the hatteras island economy is doing fine is an outright lie.... I started going to hatterAs island shortly after returning from southeast Asia , about 1966. My family and bought land and built a house which we rent to visitors on a weekly basis. In the last five years, our house usage has gone down 70% , With this year so far looking to be the worse ever. The total lack of real time data and constant lies from the Eco-nazi groups is a true disgrace. The title of the park is "The Cape Hatteras National Seashore and Recreational Area". It does not say Wildlife Refruge". recreation for ALL the people......

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