Boston Herald

L Street Beach opens Tuesday

- By Lance Reynolds lreynolds@bostonhera­ld.com

It won’t be long until people can finally put their toes in the water at Southie’s L Street Beach.

The beloved beach will reopen Tuesday, three years after it closed to make way for the $31.2 million renovation of the Curley Center. Piping plovers, a threatened beach-nesting bird species, caused further delays, but officials say the chicks have fledged, meaning they can sustain flight.

Southie residents and Curley Center members will get the chance to cool down next week after the Conservati­on Commission on Wednesday approved an operations and maintenanc­e plan, which outlines conditions the city needs to take for access not to have an adverse effect on the piping plover.

Boston Centers for Youth and Families opened the Curley last month, and some city officials and dignitarie­s became skeptical that the piping plover was the reason behind the prolonged beach closure.

Mass-Wildlife determined earlier this month that beach access would not harm the threatened piping plover as long the city meets the conditions outlined in the management plan.

“BCYF is excited to welcome South Boston residents back to the BCYF Curley Community Center beach,” a city spokespers­on said in an email to the Herald Thursday evening. “BCYF is working to get the beach in top shape as soon as possible. We’re thankful to our partners at the state and local level who helped us come up with a plan that protects the threatened piping plover birds while letting our residents enjoy Boston’s coast.”

One condition in the beach management plan features “a qualified shorebird monitor” regularly monitoring the presence of the piping plover from April 1 through Aug. 31, with the areas of habitat delineated with fencing and warning signs by April 1.

Piping plover fledges and adults may remain at the site, feeding before their long migration, but the city says it will make sure the birds are protected as it follows the management plan and existing state and federal guidelines.

At the next-door M Street Beach, signs from the state Department of Conservati­on and Recreation outline why the chicks “didn’t cross the street.” The beach features coconut-filled coir rolls which serve as a barrier for the baby piping plovers.

 ?? HERALD FILE PHOTO ?? Southie residents and Curley Center members will get the chance to cool down at L Street Beach next week after the Conservati­on Commission approved an operations and maintenanc­e plan.
HERALD FILE PHOTO Southie residents and Curley Center members will get the chance to cool down at L Street Beach next week after the Conservati­on Commission approved an operations and maintenanc­e plan.

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