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All Eyes Are on Vermont as February 1st LCAR Meeting Approaches
Vermont is not the only state currently seeking to manage wake boats and wake sports. Wisconsin, with its 15,000 lakes, has a lot at stake when it comes to the wake boat issue. As seen in the photo below, a few Wisconsin towns have already passed ordinances restricting wake boat activity as there is widespread…
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Preparing for the February 1st LCAR Meeting on the ANR’s Final Wake Boat Rule
On January 3, the Agency of Natural Resources (ANR) published their wake boat Final Rule. The next and final step in the ANR petition process –the Legislative Committee On Administrative Rules (LCAR) meeting – will take place on Thursday, February 1. Before the LCAR meeting is a great time for each of us to review how wake boats and wake sports differ from…
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Agency Disses Public Input — Issues Weak Rule Regulating Wake Boats
Yesterday, after a half year of silence following the conclusion of the Agency of Natural Resources’ (ANR) final public comment period, the Agency announced its Final Proposed Filing to manage wake boats on lakes. This rule includes the inadequate 500-foot minimum distance from shore rule for the operation of wake boats and wake sports. Of the 759 public…
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Vermont Organizations Supporting a Strong Rule for Wake Sports
Since submission of Responsible Wakes’ Agency of Natural Resources (ANR) petition over 2 years ago, public support for regulation of wake boat activities has burgeoned and continues to grow. In addition to the support from over 1,200 individuals endorsing our March 2021 petition to the ANR, more than 35 state, national, private, and public organizations have endorsed our initiative calling for a “strong…
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We’ve Incorporated
From our inception in March of 2021, Responsible Wakes for Vermont Lakes (RWVL) has operated as an unincorporated association of Vermonters who share deep concern and commitment regarding the negative impacts of wake boats and wakesports on our inland lakes and ponds. This informal structure has served us and our hundreds of supporters well up…
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Another Respected ANR Veteran Challenges the ANR Wake Boat Draft Rule
Angela Shambaugh is a long-time aquatic biologist who until October 2020 worked for Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) within the Agency of Natural Resources (ANR). After reading Bob Popp’s recent comments to the ANR recommending a total wake boat ban on Vermont’s inland lakes and ponds, Angela was inspired to write her own piece. In it she expresses her opinion as a professional, concluding…
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We Ignore the Warnings of Other States at Our Peril
Vermont continues to learn about wake boats from the experience around the country. We need to listen. The stories are chilling. In Vermont, wake sports are just beginning to take hold. But we ignore them at our peril. They are coming. They are gaining in popularity. The boats are getting bigger and heavier and more…
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A Thousand Words …
According to Wikipedia, Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen “is widely regarded as the foremost playwright of the nineteenth century.” He also coined the adage “a picture is worth a thousand words.” So, you may ask, why is RWVL talking about Ibsen in this newsletter? Well, we aren’t, at least not directly. But we are talking about…
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Weighing Whims of the Few Against Rights of the Many
Time goes by and the public is still waiting for the Agency of Natural Resources (ANR) to publish its final rule. While acknowledging that everyone feels frustrated by the delay, perhaps we can breathe hope into the fact that this process is taking so long. After all, there were so many public comments made in…
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Agency Veteran Challenges ANR Wake Boat Proposal
Bob Popp, a 30-year veteran botanist of Vermont’s Department of Fish and Wildlife, weighs in on the need to manage wake boats — he recommends a ban on Vermont’s lakes and ponds. Read Bob’s comments to the Lakes and Ponds Division of the Agency of Natural Resources (ANR) and send us back your comments. Bob Popp eating…