Open in App
  • U.S.
  • Election
  • Newsletter
  • Rome News-Tribune

    Here's How to Find Georgia Streams Open to Recreational Paddlers

    By ContributedFrom staff reports,

    2 days ago
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1YfLdK_0ufA9ryT00
    An online map allows river users to document which sections of rivers and streams they’ve boated on in the past. The goal of the map is to give paddlers a way to contribute information about some of the streams and rivers they’re using. Contributed

    Georgia legislators meeting later this year to solve the prickly issue of which streams in the state should be open to the public for recreation will have another tool to inform the debate thanks to a coalition of outdoor recreation organizations.

    The tool is an online map that allows river users to document which sections of rivers and streams they have boated upon in the past. Interested boaters can input their trips at: https://arcg.is/1Dr95C1

    “The goal of the map is to give paddlers a way to contribute information about some of the streams and rivers that they are using,” said Kevin Colburn, national stewardship director with American Whitewater which created the online tool, “Georgia leaders need to know the extent to which even small streams support the state’s robust outdoor recreation and tourism economy.”

    In 2022, boating and fishing were responsible for more than $1 billion in economic activity in Georgia. The state’s rivers and streams support some 70 canoe/kayak/tube outfitter businesses and countless fishing guides along with businesses ranging from outdoor retailers and manufacturers to convenience stores and hotels.

    The Freedom to Float Coalition (FTFC), which includes American Whitewater, Georgia Canoeing Association, American Canoe Association, Tennessee Valley Canoe Club and Georgia River Network is urging lawmakers to preserve existing river uses and protect the public’s ability to float down these streams.

    Top outdoor recreation business leaders have signed on to this initiative in a letter to legislators asking them to defend the right to boat Georgia’s rivers and streams.

    Some of these leaders include High Country Outfitters, Nantahala Outdoor Center, Southeast Adventure Outfitters, Outdoor Foundation, Trust for Public Land as well as Georgia-based manufacturers like Dreamboats Kayaks and Suspenz Kayak Carts & Storage.

    The House Study Committee on Navigable Streams, set to meet in the coming months, grew out of controversy surrounding where Georgians have the right to boat, fish and hunt on the state’s waterways. Current state law guarantees the public’s right to access all of the state’s navigable streams, but the state’s definition of “navigable” dates back to 1863 when steamboats and cotton barges were the most common vessels seen on the state’s rivers.

    That 1863 definition asserts that for a stream to be navigable it must be capable of floating a boat loaded with freight.

    “Aside from being vague — what qualifies as freight? — that definition no longer reflects how we use our rivers today,” said Andrea White, community programs coordinator with Georgia River Network and a member of the American Canoe Association board of directors, “None of Georgia’s inland rivers currently support boats loaded with commercial freight, but they do support hundreds of businesses that serve a robust river recreation economy.”

    Whether a stream is deemed “navigable” has far-reaching implications because of the state’s property laws. Along navigable streams, property lines end at the low water mark along the bank, but state law provides that landowners along non-navigable streams own the streambed to the center line.

    In the 1990s, the Georgia Supreme Court ruled in two separate cases that a landowner possessing both sides of a stream can restrict the public from passing down that stream.

    To date, those decisions on Ichawaynochaway Creek in Southwest Georgia and Armuchee Creek in Northwest Georgia represent the only two instances where the courts or the state legislature has deemed a stream “non-navigable” in the modern era, according to the FTFC.

    Earlier this year, in an effort to clarify where the public can boat, fish and hunt, lawmakers introduced legislation that named sections of 64 streams and rivers as “presumed navigable.” It was met with opposition from both landowners and outdoor recreation advocates and led to the creation of the study committee on navigable streams.

    Left off that “navigable” list were dozens of popular tourism destinations, including streams like Ebenezer Creek, South Chickamauga Creek and Big Cedar Creek and the Cartecay River and Upper Chattahoochee River where outfitters provide canoe, kayak and tube rentals.

    “In these locations if the stream is presumed “non-navigable” a single property owner could shut down businesses that have operated for decades,” said Dan MacIntyre, river access chairman with Georgia Canoeing Association. “The legislature needs to preserve these existing uses and protect the right to float or pass down these streams regardless of whether they meet the state’s outdated definition of navigability.”

    The FTFC is urging citizens to contact their legislators about this issue. Additional information and links to action alerts can be found at: garivers.org/protect-our-freedom-to-float-georgia-rivers/

    Expand All
    Comments / 0
    Add a Comment
    YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
    Most Popular newsMost Popular

    Comments / 0