Fence blocking the Peconic River is legal
A fence behind Evelyn Koubek blocks a portion of the Peconic River from public use.
On the Peconic River, where it passes beneath Connecticut Avenue in Manorville, I’m able to canoe east to Peconic Bay if I carry my boat over land in spots. But westbound, the passage is blocked by a chain-link fence owned by the Peconic River Sportsman’s Club. I thought there were laws in New York that precluded blocking a common waterway.
After we called, the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) investigated the fence in Manorville, and it's an exception to the rule..
The state’s Freshwater Wetlands Act requires a permit for any obstruction to freshwater wetlands. However, since the fence was erected before the act was passed in 1975, there’s no violation.
“It predates the law, so it was grandfathered in,” said DEC spokeswoman Maureen Wren. “If the club were to change or replace the fence, they’d have to apply for a freshwater permit.”
The club's property covers about 400 acres that house several historic buildings, a game preserve, a 38.5-acre fishing lake, and archery, rifle and pistol ranges.
The fence dates to 1932, when the property was still part of the Woolworth-Donahue estate, according to the club’s secretary John Hall.
Long Islanders with concerns regarding freshwater obstructions should call the DEC’s regional office at 631-444-0200.
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