The
number of the state’s marinas certified through the
Clean Texas Marina Program has reached an all-time high this
year. A total of 42 marinas have been certified, and an additional
30 are on the program’s pledge list.
“Roughly 20 percent of the marinas
in Texas are participating in the program, which is the highest
participation of any state program in the country,”
said Dewayne Hollin, marine business management specialist
at the Texas Sea Grant College Program and director of the
Clean Texas Marina Program. “We’re seeing a lot
more interest.
“As far as marinas and boaters go,
clean water is just good business,” he said, adding
that marinas participating in the voluntary program receive
many direct benefits, including opportunities to:
- reduce waste disposal costs by using the best management
practices of the program,
- generate new sources of revenue,
- receive free technical assistance from the program’s
guidebook, training workshops and on-site visits,
- reduce legal liabilities by meeting all the regulatory
requirements,
- enjoy free publicity through the program’s website,
newsletter and boating guides,
- attract knowledgeable customers who follow clean boating
practices,
- improve water quality and habitat for living resources,
and
- demonstrate their good environmental stewardship with
special flags, signs and use of the program’s logo.
“The Clean Texas Marina Program is
an excellent way for marinas to reach out to recreational
boaters and demonstrate how their clean boating practices
can help minimize the impacts of recreational boating on the
marine environment,” Hollin said. “Reducing pollution
is a team effort between the marina and the boaters who use
the marina. Working together they can promote clean water
in all Texas waterways.”
By adopting the program’s pollution
prevention measures, marina operators also can take satisfaction
in the fact that they are doing their part to protect Texas
waterways.
“It’s the right thing to do.
We all want clean water and we need to lead by example,”
Gene Rutt, general manager of Kemah Boardwalk Marina in Clear
Lake, said about his facility’s participation in the
program.
“It’s also good marketing —
it is visible and important criteria for potential tenants
to make a decision about leasing from you,” he said.
Other marina managers agreed.
“We have made our current tenants happier
knowing that the marina where they store their vessel is doing
everything it can to be a friend to the environment and to
be conscientious of the waters that our marina is built on,”
said Stephen Alexander, manager of the Lake Austin Marina.
“We feel it is our duty to be a part of the solution
rather than a part of the problem when it comes to our waterways,
especially contributing to runoff and contributing to pollution.”
The Clean Texas Marina Program is a collaborative
project of the Texas Sea Grant College Program, Marina Association
of Texas, Texas General Land Office and Texas Commission on
Environmental Quality (TCEQ). It is part of a nationwide clean
marina initiative.
Marina operators that pledge to participate
conduct a self-assessment of their property using the Clean
Texas Marina Checklist and Clean Texas Marina Guidebook. The
assessment includes standards for the control and handling
of petroleum, sewage and hazardous waste, marina maintenance
and management, vessel maintenance and repair, and boater
education. Once the marina operator feels the marina meets
the standards, he or she schedules a confirmation visit that
includes an on-site inspection by Hollin and a representative
from the TCEQ’s Small Business and Environmental Assistance
Division to verify the items on the checklist.
Individual boaters can participate in the
affiliated Clean Texas Boaters Program, which recognizes boaters
participating with certified Clean Texas Marinas for doing
their part to keep Texas waterways clean by pledging to follow
a set of Clean Boating Tips.
More information: http://www.cleanmarinas.org
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