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    • AIWA 2018 Accomplishments and Plans for 2019

      Cruisers Net is proud to be a member of the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway Association whose lobbying work is crucial to keeping the Waterway navigable. Your membership dollars directly impact their vital work. Please join and encourage your boating neighbors to do likewise, regardless of their homeport.


      Greetings from the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway Association (AIWA).  This year is going to be very busy for the AIWA in every state along the waterway and we rely heavily on the support of our members. Below is a list of some of our major accomplishments from 2018 and early efforts this year.

      • Worked with Congress and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (Corps) to increase funding for the dredging of the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway (AIWW). For federal Fiscal Year 2019 (FY19), which started in October 2018, we received a total of $23.944 million. This is the highest non-disaster amount we have received in years and is in addition to over $40 million in FY18. As of this letter, maintenance dredging projects are underway in all five
      states along the AIWW.

      • In early March, our Board of Directors met with twelve Congressional Offices in Washington, D.C. to request funding for additional dredging needs for FY20 and they were supportive of our efforts. We also met with staff at Headquarters of the Corps during the visit to highlight the importance of the AIWW. From our advocacy efforts, we were able to secure support from Congressional offices in six states (FL, GA, SC, NC, VA and NJ) to join a multi-state, bipartisan delegation letter asking for a total of $180 million in additional funding for dredging projects that could include the AIWW. We don’t yet know how much more money will be included by Congress, but this is
      a major step forward in highlighting the AIWW as a project with national significance due to its interconnectivity along the eastern seaboard of the U.S.

      • We presented our annual meeting to bring decision-makers and stakeholders together to discuss issues impacting the AIWW. Our annual meeting was held on November 15-16, 2018 in Charleston, South Carolina. Some of the topics included: State of the Waterway and ongoing maintenance efforts after Hurricanes, Engineering with Nature and beneficial use of dredge materials including a pilot project in Georgia, commercial and industrial waterway access, and dredge material management challenges and opportunities. We were also joined by Mayor John Tecklenburg, City of Charleston, Lieutenant Colonel Jeffrey Palazzini, Charleston District Commander of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Captain John Reed, 5A Market Street Beaufort, SC 29906 (843) 379-1151, Charleston Sector Commander for the U.S. Coast Guard, Kyle Ward of NOAA, and Fran Bohnsack of the U.S. Department of Transportation’s Maritime Administration in addition to many other stakeholder groups.

      • We are working with non-federal partners to establish non-federal funding for the dredging of the AIWW. Florida and North Carolina have established non-federal funding programs and we are raising awareness of the benefits of providing non-federal funding in South Carolina and Georgia. This will be critical in the long-term maintenance of Marine Highway 95.

      • We participated in regional and national coalitions to increase awareness of AIWW issues. We are an active board member and on the Executive Committee of the National Waterways Conference, Inc., and partner with numerous other national organizations. In 2018, we were presenters at the Local Government Meeting of NCBIWA, America’s Great Loop Cruisers’ Association Rendezvous, and the American Boating Congress in Washington, D.C. We also participated in the National Dredging Meeting, Western Dredging Association Meeting, and were invited to participate in the U.S. Army Corps’ of Engineers Engineering with Nature initiative due to our work on the Jekyll Creek Pilot Project. This March, we gave a presentation at the Marine Trades Association of New Jersey 2019 Conference to build support in the northeastern U.S.

      • We continue outreach with other federal agencies such as the Maritime Administration of the U.S. Department of Transportation, NOAA, and the U.S. Coast Guard to support many efforts including the Marine Highways program and chart mapping efforts, especially in areas where maintenance dredging is needed.

      • We publish monthly newsletters of our efforts and distribute to our members. We hope you saw the March 2019 issue, and it can be accessed from the News section on our website at https://atlanticintracoastal.org/news/.

      As you can see, we had a fruitful 2018 and we have hit the ground running in 2019. We hope that we can
      continue to be the Voice of the Waterway in 2019 and beyond.

      Respectfully,
      Brad Pickel
      Executive Director

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    • LNM: USCG Navigation Center Survey Request

      If you have AIS equipment aboard, please respond to this USCG request for survey input.

      Good Afternoon Everyone,

      USCG Navigation Center (NAVCEN) created a survey to better understand the use of AIS-ATON during major storms of 2018 (Hurricane Florence, Hurricane Michael, etc).  In order to generate a more robust response, the NAVCEN request your participation with this survey by April 19, 2019. Please feel free to distribute as necessary. The survey can be located from the following url; 

      https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/CG-AIS-ATON

      Please direct any questions to the NAVCEN Waterways Division POCs:
              – LT Marcus Fair (703-313-5998)
              – CWO Wayne Horn (703-313-5815)

      Thanks for your time.

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    • Depth Issues Reported in Redfish Pass, Western Florida ICW, Statute Mile 14


      Redfish Pass, between Captiva and North Captiva Islands, has always been an issue for deep keel cruisers due to shoaling and off-station markers.  See Clarification, Channel and Detailed Notes.

      I tried to leave out of Captiva this morning and could not get out. Grounded left, right and center with 6ft keel at high tide. Where the charts say 20 it’s 12. Where they say 12 it’s as low as 6.
      James Bostick

      Click Here To Open A Chart View Window, Zoomed To the Location of Redfish Pass

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    • SCDOT Weighs in on Concrete Falling from Hwy 17 Bridge, SC AICW Statute Mile 347


      SC DOT says there’s nothing to be concerned about when it comes to the integrity of the structure of the bridge. Let’s hope that is true. Falling concrete would be devastating to a vessel and crew, especially from 65ft! Nixons Crossroads Bridge, aka Little River/Hwy 17 Bridge, is a fixed span with a 65ft vertical clearance just north of the Little River Swing Bridge in Myrtle Beach, SC.

      Click here for SCDOT weighs in on concrete falling from Hwy 17 bridge
      by Elizabeth Thomas,  wpde.com/news

      Click Here To View the South Carolina Cruisers Net Bridge Directory Listing For Little River Bridge

      Click Here To Open A Chart View Window, Zoomed To the Location of Little River Bridge

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    • Comments on St. Andrew Sound, GA AICW Statute Miles 685-690


      In this Facebook posting on Bob423, Tom Hale describes his recent  St Andrew Sound passage. St Andrew Sound can kick up nasty conditions in the shallows of the Waterway’s magenta line east around infamous Marker 32. Alternative routes have been explored and suggested as long as I can remember. See Robert Sherer’s alternate route for more on this often challenging sound.

      Click Here To Open A Chart View Window, Zoomed To the Location of the AICW’s Passage Across St. Andrew Sound

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    • Comments on Jekyll Creek Problem Stretch, GA AICW Statute Mile 683

      In this Facebook posting, Tom Hale is referring to Dredging to Begin, Jekyll Creek Problem Stretch, GA AICW Statute Mile 683 on Bob423’s blog.

       

      Click Here To View the Cruisers’ Net’s “AICW Problem Stretches” Listing For Jekyll Creek

      Click Here To Open A Chart View Window, Zoomed To This AICW Problem Stretch

      AREA SPONSORING MARINA

      Click Here To View the Cruisers’ Net’s Georgia Marina Directory Listing For Jekyll Harbor Marina

      Click Here To Open A Chart View Window, Zoomed To the Location of Jekyll Harbor Marina

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    • Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway Association E-News March 2019

      The lobbying work of AIWA is crucial to keeping the Waterway navigable and your membership dollars directly impact their vital work. Please continue to do your part by joining and encouraging your boating neighbors to do likewise, regardless of their homeport.

       

      Click here for Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway Association E-News March 2019

      Comments from Cruisers (1)

      1. Bruce Whyte -  March 27, 2019 - 5:51 pm

        Thank you for all you are doing to protect and possibly enhance our waterway. I would love to help if you need volunteers in VA, NC, SC, GA. Just depends where I drop the hook!

        Reply to Bruce
    • Sunday Evening Docktails at Ortega Landing Marina, off the St Johns River, Jacksonville, FL


      Stop in and give a big Welcome to one of our newest Sponsors! Only a mile or so upstream from downtown Jacksonville, Ortega Landing Marina, now A CRUISERS NET SPONSOR, is the first facility on your starboard as you enter the Ortega River from the St. Johns.

       

      Click Here To View the Cruisers Net’s Eastern Florida Marina Directory Listing For Ortega Landing Marina

      Click Here To Open A Chart View Window, Zoomed To the Location of Ortega Landing Marina

      1 Facebook Likes, 1 Facebook Reactions

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