Digest>Archives> Sep/Oct 2022

Push continues for Plum Island to be declared a national monument

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For over a decade, environmental advocates like Save the Sound have pushed for the preservation of the small island that resides seven miles off the coast of Connecticut. Now, advocates for preserving the federally owned Plum Island are continuing to press President Joe Biden to declare it a national monument.

“Those efforts have ramped up this summer,” said Louise Harrison, the New York natural areas coordinator for Save the Sound.

She emphasized that a presidential declaration would help ensure the island’s future.

“If the proclamation says, ‘I hereby proclaim Plum Island a national monu­ment for the purposes of ecological conservation, historical preservation and the discovery and celebration of our shared cultural heritage,’ then the management plan will follow those items,” Harrison said.

A provision of the Antiquities Act outlines how a president can preserve land in this manner.

U.S. Senators Richard Blumenthal and Chris Murphy, Connecticut Democrats, are among the lawmakers who signed a letter to Interior Secretary Deb Haaland in April pushing for a national monument designation.

“Protecting Plum Island is squarely within the goals outlined in the Biden ad-ministration’s ‘America the Beautiful Initiative,’ including supporting locally-led conser-vation efforts and protecting biodiversity and historic and cultural resources,” the letter reads.

Pressure from lawmakers comes after the federal government took the island off the auction block in 2020, in part due to grassroots advocacy over concern that the area would be developed once purchased.

But Harrison noted that a major stake in protecting Plum Island is that it has over 100 species of conservation concern.

“And they need protection from future human impact as well as from invasive species,” Harrison said. “So, the stewardship of Plum Island is key.”

“The island also includes sites that are significant to indigenous culture,” she added.

Harrison said that the group is continuing to collect support from citizens and lawmakers alike, but while they’re urging for this designation, other options are on the table.

“But if the Department of Interior feels that Plum Island ought to be, let’s say, just a wildlife refuge, we’ll take it,” she said. “We want protection for Plum Island.”

This story appeared in the Sep/Oct 2022 edition of Lighthouse Digest Magazine. The print edition contains more stories than our internet edition, and each story generally contains more photographs - often many more - in the print edition. For subscription information about the print edition, click here.

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