Reny also said that in order to change the laws, regulations, and the aquaculture leasing criterion, residents need to work with their legislators, not the department of marine resources.
“(The DMR) can’t use criteria that doesn’t exist or make one, but we can make one, tell us what you want,” Reny said.
According to the DMR website, in order for an aquaculture lease to be approved, it may not reasonably interfere with the ingress and egress of riparian owners, navigation, fishing, or other uses of the area; other aquaculture uses; the ability of the site and surrounding areas to support ecologically significant flora and fauna; or the public use or enjoyment within 1,000 feet of beaches, parks, or docks owned by local, state, or federal governments or certain government-owned conserved land.
Additionally, for standard leases, which are leases up to 100 acres for 20 years, the applicant must demonstrate that there is an available source of organisms to be cultured for the lease site. The lease must not result in unreasonable impact from noise or light at the boundaries of the site, and it must comply with DMR rules to minimize the visual impact.
David Kallin, an attorney with Drummond Woodsum representing Preserve Maine’s Fishing Heritage Foundation, a nonprofit working on banning industrial scale aquaculture leases from Maine waters, said at the meeting that the letter the DMR put out asserting its jurisdiction was inaccurate, and that the view of the foundation is that there’s room for local regulation.
“Maine is a home rule state, one of the things that’s always been great about Maine is it has the ability to have different local communities make different decisions,” Kallin said.
South Bristol Select Board member Adam Rice advocated for an unbiased overview of the leasing process and commended the aquaculture committee in South Bristol for its efforts in finding common ground.
Waldoboro Town Manager Julie Kiezer said the town of Waldoboro doesn’t want aquaculture leases to populate the Medomak River; something she said could affect the clam population of the river.
“Damariscotta may be the oyster capital of Maine, but we’re the clam capital,” Kiezer said. “We have families that rely on our mudflats.”
Kiezer said that Waldoboro was in a good place to impose a moratorium because the town has so few aquaculture leases on the Medomak River, and that a study on the health of the river could be completed now.
While Waldoboro does not currently have someone lined up to do the study, Keizer said the town is in the process of seeking state funding and finding a faculty member from the University of Maine who would be interested in taking it on.
Glenn Melvin, vice chair of the Waldoboro Shellfish Committee and 40-year clamdigger, said he wasn’t willing to risk hurting the soft-shell clam population the way Damariscotta did when the oyster farmers reintroduced oysters.
“We don’t have any interest in following you or being you, we being Waldoboro,” Melvin said. “You may consider it a success story. We may consider it a disaster.”