Penobscot Bay Dredging Called Off, for Now

By Aiswarya Lakshmi
Thursday, September 10, 2015

 The Army Corps of Engineers withdrew on Tuesday its state permitting application for a Penobscot Bay dredging project opposed by lobstermen, tourism business owners and environmentalists.

The Portland Press Herald reports Corps project manager Barbara Blumeris sent a letter to the Maine Department of Environmental Protection on Tuesday saying that the federal agency was withdrawing its application for requisite state permits.
Opponents of the controversial $12 million dredging project for the local harbor hailed news Wednesday that state and federal officials had withdrawn their permit application from the Maine Department of Environmental Protection.
John Henshaw, director of the Maine Port Authority, says the department is still committed to the project, but needs more time to prepare for the public hearing process.
The project aims to improve and upgrade Searsport, Maine’s second-busiest port, by expanding its turning basin and deepening the approach channel from 35 to 40 feet. 
Categories: Dredging Environmental Government Update Legal

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