Healthy
Rivers Equal Healthy Communities
Riverfront Community Development Bond to Promote Sustainable Development
along Maine’s Rivers
Communities across the state have rediscovered clean and healthy rivers
as a key to increasing economic opportunities and preserving Maine’s
way of life. To seize this opportunity, leverage community investments,
and bring about river-based economic revitalization projects, a bi-partisan
group of legislators has introduced a $25 million Riverfront Community
Development Bond. With more than 30,000 miles of rivers in the state,
and more than half of Maine citizens living in riverfront communities,
the potential benefits of a river bond are enormous.
The lives of Maine people have always been intimately intertwined
with the region's waterways.
• For thousands of years, Native Americans used Maine’s
rivers for travel, food, and commerce.
• In the 1800’s rivers like the Penobscot, Kennebec and
Androscoggin yielded tremendous catches of river herring, sturgeon and
salmon and later powered the saw mills, tanneries and textile mills
that led Maine into the industrial era.
• In many cases, water quality declined and populations of our
once legendary fisheries suffered.
• Yet over the past 35 years, thanks in part to the Clean Water
Act, the health of Maine rivers has improved dramatically.
In recent years, it is as if Maine citizens are seeing our
rivers anew.
In many rivers across the state, people can once again swim, fish,
and canoe, and local communities are intent on re-vitalizing their riverfronts
to improve the quality of life in their towns. Habitat restoration projects
on rivers across the state have begun to bring back long-diminished
runs of sea-run fish and have helped to make our river ecosystems healthier
and more vibrant.
The Riverfront Community Development Bond will create a competitive
grants program to support voluntary, community-driven projects across
Maine.
The River Bond will:
• Promote and enhance environmentally sustainable economic activity
along rivers;
• Help local communities revitalize their riverfronts by transforming
run-down areas along rivers into productive use;
• Restore and improve habitat for fish and wildlife;
• Develop and promote a range of public uses supporting new jobs,
public access, boating and fishing;
• Allow communities to invest in riverfront parks and trails;
and
• Leverage other private and public resources (All projects will
require at least a $2 match for every $1 from this fund).
For too long, the tremendous economic and natural values of
Maine’s rivers have gone unrealized.
The Riverfront Community Development Bond will help ensure our rivers
remain healthy while also promoting community revitalization and compatible
economic development, bringing economic returns year after year, and
improving the quality of life for Maine citizens.
For more information, contact: John Burrows, Atlantic Salmon Federation,
(207) 725-2833, asfjb@blazenetme.net.
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