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Maine Boating 2008 Laws & Rules
Maine State Library Maine State Documents Inland Fisheries and Wildlife Law Books Inland Fisheries and Wildlife 1-1-2008 Maine Boating 2008 Laws & Rules Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalmaine.com/ifw_law_books Recommended Citation "Maine Boating 2008 Laws & Rules" (2008). Inland Fisheries and Wildlife Law Books. 479. http://digitalmaine.com/ifw_law_books/479 This Text is brought to you for free and open access by the Inland Fisheries and Wildlife at Maine State Documents. It has been accepted for inclusion in Inland Fisheries and Wildlife Law Books by an authorized administrator of Maine State Documents. For more information, please contact [email protected]. STATE OF MAINE BOATING 2008 LAW S & RU L E S www.maine.gov/ifw STATE OF MAINE BOATING 2008 LAW S & RU L E S www.maine.gov/ifw MESSAGE FROM THE GOVERNOR & COMMISSIONER With an impressive inventory of 6,000 lakes and ponds, 3,000 miles of coastline, and over 32,000 miles of rivers and streams, Maine is truly a remarkable place for you to launch your boat and enjoy the variety and beauty of our waters. Providing public access to these bodies of water is extremely impor- tant to us because we want both residents and visitors alike to enjoy them to the fullest. The Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife works diligently to provide access to Maine’s waters, whether it’s a remote mountain pond, or Maine’s Casco Bay. How you conduct yourself on Maine’s waters will go a long way in de- termining whether new access points can be obtained since only a fraction of our waters have dedicated public access. -
Total Phosphorus Loads for Selected Tributaries to Sebago Lake, Maine
science for a changing world Total Phosphorus Loads for Selected Tributaries to Sebago Lake, Maine Water-Resources Investigations Report 01-4003 V Prepared in cooperation with the Portland Water District U.S. Department of the Interior U.S. Geological Survey U.S. Department of the Interior U.S. Geological Survey By Glenn A. Hodgkins Water-Resources Investigations Report 01-4003 Prepared in cooperation with the Portland Water District Augusta, Maine 2001 U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR GALE A. NORTON, Secretary U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Charles G. Groat, Director The use of firm, trade, and brand names in this report is for identification purposes only and does not constitute endorsement by the U.S. Government. For additional information write to: Copies of this report can be purchased from: District Chief U.S. Geological Survey U.S. Geological Survey Branch of Information Services 26 Ganneston Dr. Box 25286, Federal Center Augusta, ME 04330 Denver, CO 80225 http://me.water.usgs.gov CONTENTS Abstract.................................................................................... 1 Introduction................................................................................. 2 Description of the study area.................................................................... 2 Data collection and analysis .................................................................... 2 Data-collection networks in the Sebago Lake Basin.......................................... 2 Adequacy of current stream-gaging network .............................................. -
Price Schedule Lift Stations Maintenance Services
Solicitation No: FB-00706 SECTION 4: PRICE SCHEDULE LIFT STATIONS MAINTENANCE SERVICES GROUP 2: OTHER MIAMI-DADE COUNTY LIFT STATIONS Service Description: Monthly preventive maintenance tasks at lift station locations as per section 3.11.2 Estimated Annual Item No. Quantity Lift Station Location Unit Price Parks, Recreation and Open Spaces Department A.D. (Doug) Barnes Park 3701 SW 70th Ave Miami, Florida 33155 1 12 Months PS #971 $30 Per Month Amelia Earhart Park 401 E. 65th Street Hialeah, Florida 33014 2 12 Months PS #984-A $30 Per Month Amelia Earhart Park 401 E. 65th Street Hialeah, Florida 33014 3 12 Months PS #984-B $30 Per Month Arcola Lakes Park 1301 NW 83rd Street Miami, Florida 33147 4 12 Months PS #1254 $30 Per Month Black Point Park & Marina 24775 SW 87th Ave Homestead, Florida 33032 5 12 Months PS #1097-A $30 Per Month Black Point Park & Marina 24775 SW 87th Ave Homestead, Florida 33032 6 12 Months PS #1097-B $30 Per Month Camp Matecumbe 11400 SW 137th Ave Miami, Florida 33186 7 12 Months PS #382 $30 Per Month Continental Park 10100 SW 82nd Ave Miami, Florida 33156 8 12 Months PS #1044 $30 Per Month Solicitation No: FB-00706 Estimated Annual Item No. Quantity Lift Station Location Unit Price Parks, Recreation, and Open Spaces Department (Continued) Country Club of Miami 6801 NW 186th Street Hialeah, Florida 33015 9 12 Months PS #397 $30 Per Month Crandon Park - Cabanas 4000 Crandon Blvd Key Biscayne, Florida 33149 10 12 Months PS #972-A $30 Per Month Crandon Park - Cabanas 4000 Crandon Blvd Key Biscayne, Florida 33149 11 -
Newsletter 8 Page.Pub
Raymond Waterways Newsletter Published by Raymond Waterways Protective Association “To protect and improve pond and lake water quality and foster watershed stewardship” June 2004 Dear Friends of Raymond Waterways; Inside this Issue: After experiencing a “non-winter” with cerned about and this one is very close to Milfoil Update 2 hardly any snow, we anxiously await a nor- us. Little Sebago Lake has a close relative mal summer, replete with warm tempera- of variable milfoil called Myrophyllum RWPA Structure 3 tures and sunny days. pinnatum. We know that this new (to us) Lake Associations 3 plant does not have flowers like variable First, a change of date... Thomas Pond 4 You may be a bit surprised by the early milfoil, making it even more difficult to Conservation Project arrival of this publication. We surmised identify! that most people’s interest in lake activities The first line of defense, our staff... Panther Pond 4 is greater in early summer rather than late We have been fortunate to acquire the ser- Watershed Survey in the season and it gives us a chance to let vices of Noralee Raymond as Executive Crescent & Raymond 5 you know about upcoming trainings and Director. She is in charge of education, Project Completed events, hence the change. Hope you agree. overall coordination, and is the person to Free Technical 5 And, what’s on our mind is... contact for all communications. She will Assistance Of course the milfoil situation. While it is be active in running both the Milfoil 2003 Water Quality 6 very true that Raymond is surrounded by Ranger Program and the Watershed Stew- Monitoring Results infected lakes (North-Parker Pond, East- ards Program. -
Jim Crow at the Beach: an Oral and Archival History of the Segregated Past at Homestead Bayfront Park
National Park Service U.S. Department of the Interior Biscayne National Park Jim Crow at the Beach: An Oral and Archival History of the Segregated Past at Homestead Bayfront Park. ON THE COVER Biscayne National Park’s Visitor Center harbor, former site of the “Black Beach” at the once-segregated Homestead Bayfront Park. Photo by Biscayne National Park Jim Crow at the Beach: An Oral and Archival History of the Segregated Past at Homestead Bayfront Park. BISC Acc. 413. Iyshia Lowman, University of South Florida National Park Service Biscayne National Park 9700 SW 328th St. Homestead, FL 33033 December, 2012 U.S. Department of the InteriorNational Park Service Biscayne National Park Homestead, FL Contents Figures............................................................................................................................................ iii Acknowledgments.......................................................................................................................... iv Introduction ..................................................................................................................................... 1 A Period in Time ............................................................................................................................. 1 The Long Road to Segregation ....................................................................................................... 4 At the Swimming Hole .................................................................................................................. -
Fitzpatrick's Miami River Plantation
Richard Fitzpatrick's South Florida, 1822-1840 Part II: Fitzpatrick's Miami River Plantation By Hugo L. Black III* During the 1820's, most of the land in southeast Florida was owned by the government. By 1825, only six private claims from the Spanish period had been validated: the Polly Lewis, Jonathan Lewis, and Rebecca Hagan (Egan) Donations on the South side of the Miami River, the James Hagan (Egan) Donation on the North side of the Miami River, the Mary Ann Davis Donation on Key Biscayne, and the Frankee Lewis Donation on the New River.1 Notwithstanding the lack of settlement, even during this period, southeast Florida's suitability for plantations was recognized. James Egan emphasized this suitability in the following advertisement run on numerous occasions in the Key West Register during 1829, in which he offered his land on the Miami River for Sale: For Sale A Valuable Tract of LAND Near Cape Florida Situated on the Miami River. The Land is very good and will produce Sugar Cane and Sea Island Cotton, equal if not superior to any other part of the *Hugo Black, III, is a resident of Miami, a former state legislator, a graduate of Yale, and presently attending law school at Stanford University. This is the second part of an article written as a senior paper at Yale. For Part I see Tequesta, XL. 34 TEQUESTA Territory. There is at present a number of bearing Banana and Lime trees and the fruit is inferior to none raised in the Island of Cuba. The forest growth consists principally of Live Oak, Red Bay and Dog Wood. -
Segment 16 Map Book
Hollywood BROWARD Hallandale M aa p 44 -- B North Miami Beach North Miami Hialeah Miami Beach Miami M aa p 44 -- B South Miami F ll o r ii d a C ii r c u m n a v ii g a tt ii o n Key Biscayne Coral Gables M aa p 33 -- B S a ll tt w a tt e r P a d d ll ii n g T r a ii ll S e g m e n tt 1 6 DADE M aa p 33 -- A B ii s c a y n e B a y M aa p 22 -- B Drinking Water Homestead Camping Kayak Launch Shower Facility Restroom M aa p 22 -- A Restaurant M aa p 11 -- B Grocery Store Point of Interest M aa p 11 -- A Disclaimer: This guide is intended as an aid to navigation only. A Gobal Positioning System (GPS) unit is required, and persons are encouraged to supplement these maps with NOAA charts or other maps. Segment 16: Biscayne Bay Little Pumpkin Creek Map 1 B Pumpkin Key Card Point Little Angelfish Creek C A Snapper Point R Card Sound D 12 S O 6 U 3 N 6 6 18 D R Dispatch Creek D 12 Biscayne Bay Aquatic Preserve 3 ´ Ocean Reef Harbor 12 Wednesday Point 12 Card Point Cut 12 Card Bank 12 5 18 0 9 6 3 R C New Mahogany Hammock State Botanical Site 12 6 Cormorant Point Crocodile Lake CR- 905A 12 6 Key Largo Hammock Botanical State Park Mosquito Creek Crocodile Lake National Wildlife Refuge Dynamite Docks 3 6 18 6 North Key Largo 12 30 Steamboat Creek John Pennekamp Coral Reef State Park Carysfort Yacht Harbor 18 12 D R D 3 N U O S 12 D R A 12 C 18 Basin Hills Elizabeth, Point 3 12 12 12 0 0.5 1 2 Miles 3 6 12 12 3 12 6 12 Segment 16: Biscayne Bay 3 6 Map 1 A 12 12 3 6 ´ Thursday Point Largo Point 6 Mary, Point 12 D R 6 D N U 3 O S D R S A R C John Pennekamp Coral Reef State Park 5 18 3 12 B Garden Cove Campsite Snake Point Garden Cove Upper Sound Point 6 Sexton Cove 18 Rattlesnake Key Stellrecht Point Key Largo 3 Sound Point T A Y L 12 O 3 R 18 D Whitmore Bight Y R W H S A 18 E S Anglers Park R 18 E V O Willie, Point Largo Sound N: 25.1248 | W: -80.4042 op t[ D A I* R A John Pennekamp State Park A M 12 B N: 25.1730 | W: -80.3654 t[ O L 0 Radabo0b. -
Community Relations Plan
Miami International Airport Community Relations Plan Preface .............................................................................................................. 1 Overview of the CRP ......................................................................................... 2 NCP Background ............................................................................................... 3 National Contingency Plan .............................................................................................................. 3 Government Oversight.................................................................................................................... 4 Site Description and History ............................................................................. 5 Site Description .............................................................................................................................. 5 Site History .................................................................................................................................... 5 Goals of the CRP ............................................................................................... 8 Community Relations Activities........................................................................ 9 Appendix A – Site Map .................................................................................... 10 Appendix B – Contact List............................................................................... 11 Federal Officials .......................................................................................................................... -
Crandon Park
Crandon Park Crandon Park is one of seven heritage parks acquired by Miami-Dade County. The park sits on a barrier island, with two miles of beach to the east, and Biscayne Bay to the west. Possessing a rich coastal environment the Park is home to a fossilized mangrove reef (unique in the world), a barrier island shoreline, sea grasses, protected wetlands, coastal hammocks and bird estuaries. Amenities include Crandon Gardens, a Nature Center, Marina, Golf Course, Tennis Center, picnic areas, bicycle/running paths, a pristine sandy beach, swimming, birdwatching and tot lot, to include a historic carousel all of which offer unparalleled recreational opportunities. Crandon Beach and the Bear Cut preserve are listed birding sites in the Great Florida Birding and Wildlife Viewing Trail guide [1]. Two and one half miles of road, located in the Park, were designated as a State historic highway by the State of Florida [2]. The north side of Key Biscayne, what’s known today, as Crandon Park, was purchased by Commodore William John Matheson, a wealthy aniline dye businessman, in 1908. He purchased 1,700 acres of land and created a coconut plantation at least twice as large as any other in the United States employing 42 workers by 1915. Thirty-six thousand coconut trees and a variety of other tropical fruits were planted and in 1921 he introduced the Malay Dwarf coconut to the United States. This is now the most common variety of coconut found in Florida. By 1933, the world price for coconut products had dropped to about two-fifths of its 1925 level, and the plantation stopped shipping. -
Authorization; Providing for Implementation; and Providing for an Effective Date
RESOLUTION NO. 2018-11 A RESOLUTION OF THE VILLAGE COT]NCIL OF THE VILLAGE OF KEY BISCAYNE, FLORIDA, SELECTING KIMLEY HORN AND ASSOCIATES, INC. FOR PROFESSIONAL ENGINEERING SERVICES FOR THE SAFE ROUTES TO SCHOOL PROJECT; PROVIDING FOR AUTHORIZATION; PROVIDING FOR IMPLEMENTATION; AND PROVIDING FOR AN EFFECTIVE DATE. WHEREAS, the Village of Key Biscayne ("Village") issued Request For Qualifications No. 2017-08-03 ("RFq", for professional engineering services ("Services") for the Village's Safe Routes to Schools project ("Project"); and WHEREAS, in response to the RFQ, the Village received six (6) submittals; and WHEREAS, after review and consideration of the ranked submittals, the Village Manager recommends selecting Kimley Horn and Associates, Inc. ("Consultant") for the ooA"; Services, whose qualifications are attached hereto as Exhibit and WHEREAS, the Village Council desires to select the Consultant for the Services; and WHEREAS, the Village Council finds that this Resolution is in the best interest and welfare of the citizens of the Village. NO\il, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE VILLAGE COUNCIL OF THE VILLAGE OF KEY BISCAYNE, FLORIDA AS FOLLOWS: Section 1. Recitals. Each of the above-stated recitals are hereby adopted, confirmed, and incorporated herein. Section 2. Selection. The Village Council hereby selects the Consultant for the Services for the Project. Section 3. Authorization. The Village Council hereby authorizes the Village Manager to negotiate arL agreement with Consultant for the Services for the Project. If an Page 1 of2 agreement cannot be reached, the Village Manager is authorized to negotiate an agreement with the next highest ranked firm(s), in order of ranking, until an agreement in the best interest of the Village is reached. -
BISCAYNE NATIONAL PARK the Florida Keys Begin with Soldier Key in the Northern Section of the Park and Continue to the South and West
CHAPTER TWO: BACKGROUND HISTORY GEOLOGY AND PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF BISCAYNE NATIONAL PARK The Florida Keys begin with Soldier Key in the northern section of the Park and continue to the south and west. The upper Florida Keys (from Soldier to Big Pine Key) are the remains of a shallow coral patch reef that thrived one hundred thousand or more years ago, during the Pleistocene epoch. The ocean level subsided during the following glacial period, exposing the coral to die in the air and sunlight. The coral was transformed into a stone often called coral rock, but more correctly termed Key Largo limestone. The other limestones of the Florida peninsula are related to the Key Largo; all are basically soft limestones, but with different bases. The nearby Miami oolitic limestone, for example, was formed by the precipitation of calcium carbonate from seawater into tiny oval particles (oolites),2 while farther north along the Florida east coast the coquina of the Anastasia formation was formed around the shells of Pleistocene sea creatures. When the first aboriginal peoples arrived in South Florida approximately 10,000 years ago, Biscayne Bay was a freshwater marsh or lake that extended from the rocky hills of the present- day keys to the ridge that forms the current Florida coast. The retreat of the glaciers brought about a gradual rise in global sea levels and resulted in the inundation of the basin by seawater some 4,000 years ago. Two thousand years later, the rising waters levelled off, leaving the Florida Keys, mainland, and Biscayne Bay with something similar to their current appearance.3 The keys change. -
Real Estate Tax Commitment Book
Casco Real Estate Tax Commitment Book - 15.600 08/07/2020 12:20 PM 2020 - 2021 Fiscal Year Tax Page 1 Account Name & Address Land Building Exemption Assessment Tax 1 STATE OF MAINE 9,322,000 462,800 9,784,800 0 0.00 (SEBAGO LAKE STATE Acres 528.00 901 State-ME PARK) 635 MEADOW RD CASCO ME 04015 340 STATE PARK RD 0001-0001 10 PYSKATY, DAVID P & 23,800 224,100 0 247,900 3,867.24 STEVEN J CO-TRUSTEES OF THE Acres 0.22 PYSKATY REALTY TRUST 143 PARK ACCESS RD 1,933.62 (1) 1,933.62 (2) CASCO ME 04015 143 PARK ACCESS RD 0001-0001-A B30073P295 10/30/2012 B12344P181 11 DYER, JOHN & JUDITH 27,900 100,600 28,520 99,980 1,559.69 19 RIGGS RD Acres 1.00 41 Korean Vet Widow 01 Homestead Exempt 779.85 (1) CASCO ME 04015 779.84 (2) 19 RIGGS RD 0001-0004-B 6 HURLL-MONTANARO, KAREN 57,300 375,500 28,520 404,280 6,306.77 20 LITTLE TOAD LN Acres 15.70 01 Homestead Exempt 22 WW2 Widow Res 3,153.39 (1) CASCO ME 04015 3,153.38 (2) 20 LITTLE TOAD LN 0001-0005 B15791P97 10/17/2000 13 BOUCHER, LISA J 28,600 97,200 0 125,800 1,962.48 127 POINT SEBAGO RD Acres 1.37 981.24 (1) CASCO ME 04015 981.24 (2) 127 POINT SEBAGO RD 0001-0005-B B9143P344 14 SMITH, SARA E 27,900 125,600 0 153,500 2,394.60 111 POINT SEBAGO RD Acres 1.00 1,197.30 (1) CASCO ME 04015 1,197.30 (2) 111 POINT SEBAGO RD 0001-0005-C B34020P183 Land Building Exempt Total Tax Page Totals: 9,487,500 1,385,800 9,841,840 1,031,460 16,090.78 Subtotals: 9,487,500 1,385,800 9,841,840 1,031,460 16,090.78 Casco Real Estate Tax Commitment Book - 15.600 08/07/2020 12:20 PM 2020 - 2021 Fiscal Year Tax Page 2 Account