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State House representatives have removed the requirement from a proposed bill that would have ordered boat owners anchored or moored off the Florida Keys to move their vessels every 90 days if they were not moored in a regulated mooring field.
HB 639, and its Senate companion bill, SB 1068, included the 90-day requirement to help prevent Keys vessels from becoming derelict and sinking, which has become an expensive problem for the Monroe County government.
The 90-day provision remains in the Senate version of the state bill, which the Senate has passed. Also in the Senate version is a provision that before the law be enacted 300 new moorings be placed within a mile of Key West, 250 new ones and adding 50 to the City of Key Westâs mooring field.
Northland news briefs: Body found in stream, Fire permits no longer required
16 Apr, 2021 05:00 PM
3 minutes to read
The man s body was spotted in Raumanga Stream, near Herekino St, by a member of the public. Photo / Michael Cunningham
The man s body was spotted in Raumanga Stream, near Herekino St, by a member of the public. Photo / Michael Cunningham
Northern Advocate
Body found in stream
A body was found in Raumanga Stream in central Whangārei yesterday. A member of the public called police just before 2pm to report a body floating face-down. It is believed the body, which was near a vessel and mooring poles at the rear of Hihiaua Cultural Centre on Herekino St, became visible as the water dropped. Acting Senior Sergeant Shane Turner, of Whangārei police, said the body had been removed and the site had been blessed by kaumatua. The man had yet to be identified. There was nothing to indicate any suspicious circumstances. A police investigation into the cause of death
Expensive equipment from edge of Kāpiti Marine Reserve vanishes
12 Apr, 2021 12:48 AM
2 minutes to read
A buoy on the edge of the Kāpiti Marine Reserve is missing. Photo / Niwa
David Haxton is editor of Kapiti Newsdavid.haxton@nzme.co.nz
A search has been under way to find an expensive high-tech monitoring buoy and mooring which vanished from the edge of the Kāpiti Marine Reserve.
The buoy and mooring, worth about half a million dollars, was positioned in late November and has provided real-time measurements on currents and waves, salinity, oxygen and chlorophyll, water temperature, sediment, wind direction and speed.
With the stage set for state legislators to begin discussing a proposed bill that would prevent Key West from controlling its own seaport, city officials are beginning to consider what they would do if they could no longer limit cruise ship visits.
The original state Senate Bill 426 removing âhome ruleâ for all Florida seaports, instead giving that power to state authorities, recently found a companion bill, House Bill 267, which begins the formal process of committee hearings in preparation for the March 2 opening of the annual legislative session. The state Senate Transportation Committee is scheduled to meet Tuesday, Feb. 16, to begin discussing SB 426.