Coralations: SEA DREAM CRUISE SHIPS REPORTED ANCHORING OFF USFWS REFUGE CAY of CULEBRITA…again

One of the Sea Dream ships left Ensonada Honda Sat., Dec 17th, 2011, but did not head directly to the USFWS Refuge Cay Saturday night.  We are not sure where it anchored over-night.

 

One of the vessels was reported anchored at the refuge cay on Sun., Dec 18th, 2011.  Based on yesterday’s report, it appears that despite the public out-cry, USFWS continues to issue federal permits for the Sea Dream Cruise Ships to disembark passengers on the public National Wildlife Refuge Cay of Culebrita.    There is no mooring or pier at the cay – only Critical Habitat listed sea grasses and corals.
Sea Dream markets the Culebrita stop as “off the beaten path” tourism – as this unsustainable brand of tourism beats Culebra’s corals and sea grasses to death.

 

The ships obviously cannot control wind direction and swing.  When not directly anchoring atop corals and sea grass, easterly and south eastery winds swing the boat so the stern faces the reef. As their huge propellors engage to make way –  sand and debris known as “prop wash” sand blast what’s left of these Culebrita corals.    The Sea Dream disembarks passengers to the cay off speeding zodiacs, and provides wave runners to passengers which disturb and threaten the Caribbeans few remaining sea turtles and manatees.  Photos of corals damaged as anchor passed over them were submitted to NOAA.  Like with the mud impacting the reefs of Flamenco Beach – the NOAA Restoration Center made a site visit but took no action.

 

But wait – there’s more….
Sea Dream captains are environmentally reckless throughout the Caribbean.  On Culebrita we have reported the Sea Dream vessels to the U.S. Coast Guard for reckless endangerment of their passengers as they anchor these vessels in waters marked on nautical charts as

 

Multiple written complaints have been issued to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, U.S. Coast Guard, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, U.S. EPA, and the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration – all with jurisdictional authority to stop this permit, environmental impact and threat to passengers!

 

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Piratas Playa Flamenco 
NOTICIAS – NEWS PLAYA FLAMENCO  
 
Primera Hora, lunes, 5 de diciembre de 2011
                       
(Online Google Translation) 
                                       Follow the Environmental Damage on Flamenco Beach
 
 
Primera Hora, jueves, 8 de diciembre de 2011

DRNA investigarla supuesto movimiento ilegal de terreno en Culebra

                        

English (Online Google Translation) 

                                        DNER investigate alleged illegal movement of land on Culebra

 

 

CONTACT INFORMATION: 

 

Edwin Muñiz,

Field Supervisor

United States Fish and Wildlife Service

Boqueron Field Office

P.O. Box 491,

Boquerón, Puerto Rico 00622

Jack Arnold

Deputy Assistant Regional Director

United States Fish and Wildlife Service

Regional Office

1975 Century Boulevard, Suite 400

Atlanta, Georgia 30345-3319

Lisamarie Carrubba

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

Protected Resources

Caribbean Field Office

Cabo Rojo, PR 00622

 

Erik Hawk

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

Protected Resources

Southeast Regional Office

St. Petersburg, FL 33701

 

Carl Soderberg, Director

U.S. EPA Region II

Caribbean Environmental Protection Division

Edif Centro Europa Apt 417

1492 Avenida Ponce de Leon

San Juan PR 00907-4127

 

Judith Enck

Regional Administrator

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

EPA Region 2

290 Broadway

New York, NY 10007-1866

Seeking Your Input on the U.S. Open Government National Action Plan


On September 20, 2011, on the margins of the U.N. General Assembly, the President announced the U.S. Open Government National Action Plan.  The Plan was developed through a process that involved extensive consultations with external stakeholders, including a broad range of civil society groups and members of the private sector, to gather ideas on open government.  As we continue our work to implement the National Action Plan, we want your help.  Specifically, we’d like your input and recommendations on how to improve and help facilitate public participation – your participation – in government.
The United States committed to undertake 26 Open Government initiatives in the National Action Plan, and we are working to implement each of them now.  For example, the White House recently announced that Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar will be the senior U.S. official to lead implementation of the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative, an effort to ensure that taxpayers receive every dollar due for extraction of our natural resources.  A major milestone was also reached in the development of an open government platform that will enable governments around the world to stand up their own open government data sites. And just last week, the President fulfilled a commitment made in the National Action Plan to begin a government-wide effort to reform and modernize records management policies and practices.
We are now requesting your assistance with one of the initiatives in the U.S. National Action Plan designed to promote public participation:
Develop Best Practices and Metrics for Public Participation. We will identify best practices for public participation in government and suggest metrics that will allow agencies to assess progress toward the goal of becoming more participatory. This effort will highlight those agencies that have incorporated the most useful and robust forms of public participation in order to encourage other agencies to learn from their examples.”
Given the focus of this initiative, we thought it would be most appropriate to invite you to provide input and ideas on best practices and metrics for public participation, including but not limited to suggestions and recommendations that address the following questions:
·         What are the appropriate measures for tracking and evaluating participation efforts in agency Open Government Plans?
·         What should be the minimum standard of good participation?
·         How should participation activities be compared across agencies with different programs, amounts of regulatory activity, budgets, staff sizes, etc.?
·         What are the most effective forms of technology and web tools to encourage public participation, engage with the private sector/non-profit and academic communities, and provide the public with greater and more meaningful opportunities to influence agencies’ plans?
·         What are possible mechanisms for agencies to increase the level of diversity of viewpoints and backgrounds brought to bear in their activities and decisions?
·         What are the most effective strategies for ensuring that participation is well-informed?
·         What are some examples of success stories involving strong public participation, as well as less-than-successful efforts, and what lessons can be drawn from them?
Please send your thoughts to us at opengov@ostp.gov or use the web form provided, by January 3, 2012.  We will consider your ideas and input as we continue to implement the U.S. National Action Plan and develop this best practices guidance on public participation.
Special thanks to Richard Charter