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Coastal News Today | ME - Unlikely Friendship? The Story of Eelgrass and Oysters
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Lawsuit could settle legal debate over who owns beach in the intertidal zone
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Updated April 22
Lawsuit could settle debate over who owns Maine beaches between low- and high-tide lines
The state s top court has said beachfront owners own all the way to the low-tide mark. A lawsuit filed Thursday challenges that precedent.
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A sign on Moody Beach tells visitors that the area north of the Wells-Ogunquit line is private. A group is challenging a law that gives ownership of the intertidal zone to property owners instead of the state.
Ben McCanna/Staff Photographer
Bonnie Tobey works for a Brunswick company that has long harvested rockweed in Quahog Bay off Harpswell. But, she said, restrictions by coastal landowners have changed the business and forced the processing plant to reduce its number of shifts in recent years.
Lawsuit could settle debate over who owns Maine beaches between low- and high-tide lines
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Harpswell temporarily closes quahog harvesting in Quahog Bay
Harpswell selectmen unanimously approved the closure Thursday. The town s request will be reviewed for approval by the Maine Department of Marine Resources within 20 days.
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HARPSWELL Harpswell’s Quahog Bay may be closed to quahog harvesting until June 20 to allow the bay’s mudflats to stiffen and the quahog population to recover.
The town’s Marine Resources Committee requested the closure after harvesters reported a drop in the bay’s quahog population and that the mud had become too soft to dig effectively, according to Paul Plummer, Harpswell harbormaster and marine resource administrator.