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SB 734

Legislature: committees; membership on a bipartisan, bicameral oversight committee to review departmental or agency audits; modify. Amends title of 2003 PA 1 (MCL 13.101) & adds sec. 2. TIE BAR WITH: SJR G'25

2025-2026 Regular Session Introduced by Stephanie Chang and 3 co-sponsors

Excludes man-made ditches from estuarine waters, AECs, and marshland, narrowing CAMA protections and permitting for coastal drainage features.

REFERRED TO COMMITTEE ON GOVERNMENT OPERATIONS
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Bill Summary · SB 734

SB 734 — Clarifying Estuarine Waters AEC Under CAMA (North Carolina)

Status: Passed 1st Reading (Introduced Feb 21, 2025)
Primary sponsors: Senators Sanderson, Lazzara, and Hanig (author listed as Caballero)
Related/cross-filed: HB 251 (companion).

Main purpose

SB 734 narrows the scope of the Coastal Area Management Act (CAMA) by excluding certain man‑made drainage features from the statutory definitions of “estuarine waters,” “areas of environmental concern” (AEC), and “marshland.” The stated effect is to clarify that constructed ditches and similar artificial conveyances are not subject to AEC designation or the stricter CAMA regulatory regime.

Key provisions / statutory changes

  • Adds a new definition in G.S. 113A‑103(8a):
    • “Man‑made ditches” means constructed, altered, or excavated features used to convey water, including (but not limited to) artificial ponds, culverts, canals, swales, storm channels, minor‑drainage features, and roadside ditches.
  • Amends G.S. 113A‑113(b)(2) (definition of estuarine waters) to explicitly exclude man‑made ditches from the waters counted as estuarine waters.
  • Amends G.S. 113A‑113(b)(5) to exclude man‑made ditches from “areas such as waterways and lands under or flowed by tidal waters or navigable waters” that can be subject to public trust/access rights and AEC protections.
  • Adds G.S. 113A‑113(b1): the Coastal Resources Commission may not designate man‑made ditches (as defined) as Areas of Environmental Concern.
  • Amends G.S. 113‑229(n)(3) (definition of “marshland”) to state that marshland does not include any area contained within a man‑made ditch as defined in G.S. 113A‑103(8a).
  • Effective date: the act takes effect when it becomes law (Section 6).

Who is affected

  • Property owners, land developers, and transportation/public works agencies that construct, maintain, or alter ditches, culverts, canals, storm channels, and similar conveyances in coastal counties.
  • Coastal permitting applicants: features now classified as “man‑made ditches” would generally be outside AEC designation and its permit/consistency requirements under CAMA.
  • Coastal Resources Commission and state/local environmental regulators: reduced scope for designating/managing certain waters and marsh areas as AECs.
  • Environmental stakeholders and the public: potential effects on tidal marsh protection, habitat, and public trust uses where artificial features connect to tidal waters.

Potential impacts and considerations

  • Regulatory/administrative: likely reduces CAMA permitting requirements and AEC designation for features that meet the bill’s “man‑made ditch” definition, potentially speeding permitting and reducing compliance costs for construction and maintenance of such features.
  • Environmental: excluding artificial channels from AECs may reduce state regulatory oversight of sites where tidal influence, wetlands, or marsh habitat are present or could be impacted; potential concerns about habitat fragmentation, erosion, drainage, and saltwater intrusion where artificial channels intersect natural tidal systems.
  • Legal/interpretive: outcome depends on how narrowly courts and agencies interpret “man‑made ditch” (e.g., whether some modified natural channels remain protected); could generate disputes about classification of borderline features.
  • Fiscal: fiscal impacts are not specified in the bill text; effects would depend on permitting workloads and enforcement activities.

Procedural / timeline notes

  • Introduced Feb 21, 2025; passed 1st reading and referred to Rules and applicable committees.
  • Text indicates the bill becomes effective when enacted into law (no delayed effective date set).

For readers evaluating local projects or coastal policy, the central change is statutory — a categorical exclusion of specified artificial conveyances from AEC designation under CAMA — shifting regulatory boundaries between engineered drainage features and state coastal protections.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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