Press Herald article on enactment of waterfront moratorium Dec 18 2018

City freezes development on waterfront

The six-month pause gives a task force the opportunity to tackle concerns raised by fishermen and developers.

By RANDY BILLINGS Staff Writer

By RANDY BILLINGS Staff WriterX:\Main\manifest_PD_20181218_39.txt\\192.168.0.55\Olive\E-pub\Daily\Profiles\Portland Press Herald\XML Setting\MTPPH_Settings.xml

The Portland City Council voted unanimously Monday to enact a six-month moratorium on development along its working waterfront – a move meant to bide time to address long-simmering tensions between fishermen and developers.

City Manager Jon Jennings, who sponsored the moratorium, said he will convene a task force of about 11 people in the coming days to address myriad issues affecting the waterfront – from zoning to traffic to enforcing current rules. He also suggested the city look at granting tax breaks to pier owners who improve their piers.

“It’s time we get this right,” said Jennings, who suggested that the group could begin meeting next week. “There’s some urgency to this.”

The moratorium, which will expire June 15, was supported by both pier owners and fishermen, who have been collecting signatures for a citizen referendum that, if enacted, would block non-marine construction on the city’s piers for five years.

“I’m in favor of the moratorium. It’s a great time for people to cool off and think about this,” said Roger Hale, a pier owner who operates a construction business.

Fishermen, who were unnerved by a proposal by developer David Bateman to build a hotel on the waterfront at Fisherman’s Wharf, also supported

the moratorium. Several referendum supporters, however, noted that the working waterfront group had written to Jennings, the mayor and councilors in September proposing a moratorium, but did not receive a response.

That changed after they began collecting signatures.

“Nobody wanted a referendum, but it seemed the only way to force the city to address the negative impacts of non-marine development on the working waterfront,” said Willis Spear, a lobsterman who has fished out of Portland for the last 50 years. “It was born out of frustration.”

After the meeting, Spear said the group will continue collecting signatures for the referendum and decide later when and if to move forward.

The group has until Jan. 18 to submit at least 1,500 signatures for the current proposal. But the group, which set a 2,500-signature goal, could launch another effort in six months if progress isn’t made, said Orlando Delogu, who is helping with the referendum effort.

During the moratorium, the city will not accept or process a range of planning and building applications for the Waterfront Central Zone, which runs from the Maine State Pier to the International Marine Terminal. That includes new applications and existing applications, unless a substantive review of the latter already has been undertaken. The only exception would be to address immediate public safety threats.

City staff will work with a yet-to-be-named task force of waterfront stakeholders in meetings open to the public to look at zoning, transportation, berthing, ordinance enforcement, wharf access and possible public investments in the working waterfront.

Any recommended changes to the Waterfront Central Zone text would be forwarded to the Planning Board, which would provide a recommendation to the City Council.

The moratorium also will allow time for waterfront interests to be represented during the process of creating a Commercial Street Operations and Master Plan. A memo to the council says that staff from planning, economic development and public works will guide the study consultants to “respect the marine use priority.”

With respect to berthing, the city’s Economic Development Department is expected to monitor commercial berthing. If demand exceeds supply, the matter would be brought forward to the City Council, which would be tasked with finding additional space at private and public facilities.

The city also will investigate and enforce an ordinance provision that limits and prohibits expansion of commercial parking for off-site, non-marine uses within the Waterfront Central Zone.

The city wants to avoid a successful referendum that would cement strict zoning rules for five years and deal with lingering concerns about the Waterfront Central Zone. The zone was created in the 1990s to protect the working waterfront from an incursion of condominiums and other construction, but was amended eight years ago to allow more commercial development.

The council loosened restrictions in the zone during the recession as a way for pier owners to generate money for costly repairs to their wharves. Charlie Poole, who owns Union Wharf, said he recently spent $1.8 million to rebuild a 210-foot section of wharf.

Mayor Ethan Strimling said he hoped that pier owners would be willing to find ways to compromise.

“I just ask that, as this task force moves forward, all of you think about ways you can compromise for the greater good,” Strimling said. “This is going to be hard.”

City Councilor Belinda Ray, who represents the Waterfront Central Zone, said she’s hopeful about the outcome. She noted this is the third moratorium in her district to address development concerns in the last two years.

“That is a testament to the fact that we’re booming and we need to make sure we’re booming with balance,” Ray said. “And if we lose that balance, we lose a lot of what has brought so many of us here to Portland.”

Randy Billings can be contacted at 791-6346 or at: rbillings@pressherald.com

Back story: Twistlock, the key to container shipping

Invented in the mid-1950s by Keith Tantlinger, the simple device made it possible to stack cargo containers aboard ships and securely attach them to truck trailers and rail cars.

Twist locks are placed into the corner fittings of shipping containers, which can then be locked to others by turning a metal handle. They’re simple to operate and extremely secure.

To be useful, containers had to be standardized, and others had developed rival ways of stacking them. But after Mr. Tantlinger persuaded his former employer to release the patent royalty free, it was adopted as an international standard.

These standardized stackable containers quickly replaced the manual loading and unloading of cargo and the cost of transport plummeted, ushering in the current era of global trade.

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Casco Bay Lines meetings about schedule, new vessel, Terminal renovations

Casco Bay Lines - New Ferry and More

If you are interested in the replacement of the Machigonne II, the second phase of the CBL Terminal renovation, or new ferry schedules, here are a number of items for your consideration:

Wednesday, December 19th 4:00pm to 5:30pm CBL Terminal Conference Room Public meeting at which CBL will present plans and take comment regarding Phase II of the Terminal Renovation Project. Please see here for details: https://www.cascobaylines.com/ferry-news/public-meeting-notice-phase-ii-ferry-terminal-project/

Thursday, December 20th 7:45am to 8:30am CBL Terminal Conference Room Meeting of the Casco Bay Island Transit District Board of Directors at which there will be opportunity for public comment See here for details: https://www.cascobaylines.com/about-us/board/ In addition, the CBL website includes a status report on the following projects:

Fleet Evaluation Project (new Peaks Island Ferry): https://www.cascobaylines.com/about-us/fleet-evaluation-project/

Schedule Analysis Project: https://www.cascobaylines.com/schedule-analysis-project/

Terminal Renovation Project HERE https://www.cascobaylines.com/about-us/terminal-renovation-project/

Public Meeting Notice - Phase II Terminal Renovation Project - Casco Bay Lines

Please join Casco Bay Lines at an informational public meeting to discuss the advancement of the Phase II Terminal Renovation Project. Representatives of Casco Bay… Read More

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