New MPT Program
Explores Critical Area Law as Maryland Legislators Meet to Debate
Stricter Chesapeake Bay Waterfront Development
OWINGS MILLS, MD - As the Maryland General Assembly meets to
debate new, stricter regulations on Chesapeake Bay waterfront
development, Maryland Public Television (MPT) airs a riveting new
program that examines Maryland’s Critical Area Law.
MPT’s Weary Shoreline, airing Wednesday, February 27 at 9 p.m.,
explores how Maryland’s Critical Area Law—enacted in 1984 to preserve
sensitive Chesapeake Bay shoreline by limiting growth—has instead
fostered development, lawlessness and community animus through its
complexity and ambiguity.
Weary Shoreline scrutinizes the impact of Critical Area violations on
Chesapeake Bay water quality and its ecosystem in heavily and
sparsely-populated regions The program captures violations on tape and
brings both little-known and high-profile cases to light on the
Nanticoke, Patuxent, Magothy, West, Rhodes and Severn Rivers. Included
in the program are the controversial issues of construction on Dobbins
Island and Little Island in the Magothy River.
Political figures interviewed include Anne Arundel County Executive
John Leopold, former Anne Arundel County Executive Janet Owens and
Maryland Attorney General Douglas Gansler.
Fervent discussion over HB 1253—set for General Assembly debate
February 28 (the day after Weary Shoreline’s premiere)—is expected.
Among several proposed changes to this controversial law, the bill
mandates that new development (including houses, outbuildings, decks,
patios, driveways, landscaping and swimming pools) be even farther away
from the bay shoreline than the current 100 feet. Instead, the inner
Critical Areas shoreline buffer would be expanded from 100 feet to 300
feet.
For more information visit mpt.org.