The Public’s Radio — Rhode Island House Judiciary Committee passes shoreline access bill

Shoreline rights activists Scott Keeley, left, on the beach in South Kingstown in 2020. ALEX NUNES - THE PUBLIC'S RADIO

May 26, 2022

By Alex Nunes — A bill intended to clarify shoreline rights along Rhode Island’s coast is moving forward in the House.

The House Judiciary Committee passed the shoreline access bill Thursday night. One of the bill’s sponsors, Rep. Terri Cortvriend, says she expects it will come to the full House next week for a floor discussion and vote. 

The bill is an amended version of the original legislation that came out of a commission formed last year to study shoreline access. It defines where the public can be along Rhode Island’s shore as being up to 6 feet landward from the wrack line where seaweed and other debris wash up. The earlier version set the threshold at 10 feet landward. 

The bill says beachgoers can exercise their shoreline rights on wet or dry sand and rocky beach, but those rights don’t extend to where there is no passable shore, rocky cliffs, sea walls, or land above the vegetation line. 

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Boston Globe — R.I. shore access bill advances in House, but faces Senate inaction

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WGBH — Barriers at the Beach: State law and town rules keep most of Mass. shoreline off-limits