The tidal wetlands act of 1973 was put through by the DEC (Dept of Environmental Conservation), and was meant to protect them from landscaping, or any building along those shorelines.
They run around the southern tip of Staten Island, the entire coast of Long Island, which includes Shelter and Gardiner's Island, the lower Hudson River, all the way up to Troy Dam.
Shelter's, and Gardiner's Island are at the end of Long Island, in between there and Rhode Island.
Staten Island is in between New Jersey and Brooklyn.
Lower Hudson starts between those three, and Troy Dam is in Albany.
Permits are required by the Tidal Wetlands Permit Program, which regulates any activities between these areas.
12 Tidal Wetlands include:
Old Place Creek - Northern Staten Island, 20+ miles away from me, 2 hrs by mta.
Lemon Creek - Southern Staten Island, 30+ miles away from me, 2 hrs by mta.
Titus Mill Pond State - New Rochelle, near Mt Vernon and Yonkers, 20+ miles from me, around 2 hrs by mta.
Inwood Bay - Inwood, near John F. Kennedy Airport, closest to me probably, 2 hrs by mta.
Piermont Marsh - Orange Town, NY, like 40+ miles away from me, 2 hrs by mta.
Petteanger Island State - Is near Jones Beach Island, 40 miles away from me, no mta.
Ludlows Creek State - Oakdale, way in Long Island, hella like 50+ miles away from me, 2 hrs by mta.
Babylon Marsh State - Babylon, near Jones Beach Island, between Hempstead and Bayshore, 35+ miles away from me, no mta.
Stillman Creek - Bluepoint, 50+ miles away from me, no mta.
Baiting Hollow - Baiting Hollow, near the Wildwood State Park in Long Island, 70+ miles away from me, no mta.
Fireplace Neck - Brookhaven, next to the Wertheim National Wildlife Refuge in Long Island, 60+ miles away from me, no mta.
Mount Sinai - Mt Sinai, in Long Island, 60+ miles away from me, no mta.
Long Island encompasses two counties and two boroughs; boroughs include queens and kings, and counties include suffolk and nassau.
Boroughs are technically Long Island but they're more so their own thing, while the counties are more encompassed by Long Island's geography.
Nassau is more established than Suffolk.
Nassau is to Suffolk what Livermore is to Castro Valley, in the East Bay.
And Nassau and Suffolk is to Queens and Kings what like Oakland and Hayward is to the Central Valley, essentially what the East Bay is to the Central Valley.
You might disagree, but that's the best I could come up w, being from Hayward and Oakland.
Bc like the Central Valley isn't like branching off into a peninsula the same way.
I just realized I live on an island, technically.
Brooklyn is a part of the ninth region
great blog post, truly good stuff
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