Las Vegas Review-Journal

No-wake zones proposed for Havasu National Wildlife Refuge

- The Associated Press

LAKE HAVASU CITY, Ariz. — A new proposal being floated by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service establishe­s a series of no-wake and restricted zones throughout the Havasu National Wildlife Refuge’s backwaters.

The proposal released Wednesday is a compromise after public outcry against stricter proposals in 2016, refuge Manager Richard Meyers said.

While the U.S. Fish and Wildlife service has restrictio­ns in mind for boaters in the refuge, Meyers said those restrictio­ns will do little to obstruct recreation­al boating in the refuge or on the Colorado River.

“We wanted to make sure there was no confusion,” Meyers said. “We heard from all sides last year. There was a lot of confusion in the public … people believed we wanted to make the entire refuge a ‘no-wake’ zone. That isn’t the case.”

There will be few changes to regulation­s at the refuge’s southern end, but the document would prohibit kite-boarding and hydro-flight equipment in waters south of Interstate Highway 40.

Waters inaccessib­le to boaters will be designated as backwaters under the new plan, prohibitin­g boaters from launching watercraft or operating personal watercraft in areas including Beal Lake, Pintail Slough, Lost Lake and Topock Bay. The stipulatio­n would prohibit towed recreation­al activities in these areas.

“We aren’t going to be changing the buoys,” Meyers said. “We will leave the open waters open. People will be able to ski or do any of the normal things they would want to do in those open waters.”

The Fish and Wildlife Service’s proposal would remove restrictio­ns on air-cooled outboard engines, while prohibitin­g the use of hovercraft within refuge waters.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service will host a public forum Aug. 17 to discuss its proposal.

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