[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 146 (Tuesday, September 27, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6134-S6135]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO GROVER FUGATE
Mr. WHITEHOUSE. Mr. President, today I wish to honor the career of
one of Rhode Island's most respected ocean and coastal experts, my
friend Grover Fugate.
Grover has served as executive director of the Rhode Island Coastal
Resources Management Council, CRMC, for nearly 30 years, protecting
Rhode Island's coastal resources through research, regulation, and
restoration.
One of the shining jewels of CRMC's work has been its innovative
Special Area Management Plans, or SAMPs. These plans are ecosystem-
based management strategies developed in collaboration with government
agencies, municipalities, and other stakeholders to best manage coastal
systems. During Mr. Fugate's tenure, the council has developed eight
management plans, including the groundbreaking ocean SAMP, the first
formally adopted ocean spatial plan in the country. The ocean SAMP
guides future uses of Rhode Island's marine areas. In developing the
plan, CRMC engaged a diverse group of stakeholders and laid the
groundwork for cooperation among a multitude of regulatory agencies
that led the way for the successful development of the Nation's first
offshore wind farm off the coast of Rhode Island.
The council has also helped Rhode Island towns and residents
understand the increasing effects of sea level rise and storm surge.
Using the latest climate change predictions and state of the art
modeling, CRMC, in cooperation with the University of Rhode Island and
others, developed an online tool, STORMTOOLS, that gives anyone with an
Internet connection free access to information that can be used to help
decide everything from what neighborhood to buy a home in to where to
site a new stormwater treatment plant. Mr. Fugate has been a key leader
in establishing STORMTOOLS and educating decisionmakers about the
realities of sea level rise and flooding.
In addition to his work for the Coastal Resources Management Council,
Mr. Fugate serves as the State colead for the Northeast Regional Ocean
Council's Ocean Planning initiative and the Northeast Regional Planning
Body established under President Obama's 2010 Executive order. He also
serves as adjunct faculty for the University of Rhode Island's marine
affairs program and a guest lecturer of coastal and marine law at the
Roger Williams University Law School.
Mr. Fugate has earned many awards for his work, including the 2010
Susan Snow-Cotter Award for Excellence in Ocean and Coastal Resource
Management from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration,
the 2010 Regional Sea Grant Outstanding Outreach Award, the 2008
Coastal America Award for Habitat Restoration, and the 2008 Rhode
Island Sea Grant Lifetime Achievement Award. He has authored numerous
academic journal articles on coastal and natural resources management
issues.
[[Page S6135]]
Mr. Fugate's work on the ocean SAMP and Northeast Regional Planning
Body has placed Rhode Island at the forefront of ocean planning and
offshore wind development. He is a leader with a passion and commitment
to protecting ocean and coastal resources. His technical expertise,
ability to foster good working relationships with key stakeholders, and
talent for finding solutions within the existing regulatory framework
are a few of the many reasons I wish today to recognize him.
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