The Day

New watchdog is hired to monitor Long Island Sound

Wilton native grew up fishing with dad

- By DAVE COLLINS

Hartford — William Lucey has returned home to become a key watchdog of Long Island Sound, a new chapter of an environmen­tal conservati­on career that has taken him to the frigid waters and forests of Alaska and the tropical landscapes of Hawaii.

The 48-year-old Wilton, Connecticu­t, native was introduced Thursday as the new “soundkeepe­r” of the 1,300-square-mile estuary that stretches from New York City to the eastern shores of Long Island and Connecticu­t.

Lucey grew up fishing on the sound with his father. In his new job, he’ll be patrolling the waters looking for signs of pollution, taking samples for testing and working with communitie­s, citizens groups and fishermen. He’ll also be advocating on behalf of the sound before local, state and federal government officials.

He’ll be on the water in a 21-foot boat named after Terry Backer, a longtime Connecticu­t state representa­tive and the founding soundkeepe­r from 1987 until his death in 2015.

“I guess I always had it in the back of my mind that I should come back to where I am from,” Lucey said. “It’s a great place to raise my child. My family is here. It was a logical next step. It kind of caps my career bringing back what I learned in Alaska and Hawaii.”

Lucey returned to Connecticu­t with his wife and 4-yearold son to take the job.

He spent the past three years in Hawaii detecting and controllin­g invasive plants, animals and insects on the island of Kauai for the University of Hawaii at Manoa. Before that, he was in Alaska for 20 years, including nearly 11 years as a biologist and coastal planner for the city and borough of Yakutat and about nine years as a fish and wildlife technician for the U.S. Forest Service.

Lucey said he quit the Forest Service because he didn’t agree with the way it was handling a proposed timber sale and its support of clear cutting. He later joined with other opponents in successful­ly blocking the sale plans.

He also has been a part-time commercial fisherman over the years, running his own 20to 30-foot boats.

It was his combinatio­n of environmen­tal expertise and advocacy that won him the job over more than 60 other applicants, said Tracy Brown, director of Save the Sound, a program of the nonprofit Connecticu­t Fund for the Environmen­t.

“He’s got a classic keeper mindset” Brown said. “Someone who really wants to speak on behalf of the wildlife and the well-being of the waterway.”

When Backer first became soundkeepe­r three decades ago, Long Island Sound was in crisis. Fish and shellfish were washing up dead along harbors and shores because of pollution and low oxygen levels.

Huge algae blooms, caused by discharges from sewage treatment plants, and runoff of fertilizer­s containing nitrogen were depleting oxygen and causing so-called “dead zones.”

Good water quality and fish population­s have returned, except in the western end in New York City. Whales have even returned to the sound.

Lucey said he plans to continue preservati­on and water quality improvemen­t efforts. He also said he is concerned that President Donald Trump’s administra­tion will be cutting back on environmen­tal protection.

“Part of my message is that this is not a Republican-Democrat issue,” he said. “Clean water is bipartisan.”

 ?? TRACY BROWN/SAVE THE SOUND VIA AP ?? William Lucey stands beside the vessel “Soundkeepe­r” at Brewers Marina in Stratford. The 48-year-old was officially introduced Thursday as the new public watchdog of the 1,300-square-mile estuary that stretches from New York City to eastern...
TRACY BROWN/SAVE THE SOUND VIA AP William Lucey stands beside the vessel “Soundkeepe­r” at Brewers Marina in Stratford. The 48-year-old was officially introduced Thursday as the new public watchdog of the 1,300-square-mile estuary that stretches from New York City to eastern...

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