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Trump orders Park Service to charge international visitors more for access, give U.S. residents priority for reservations

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The NPS Campground on Ocracoke Island, N.C. Photo: C. Leinbach/Ocracoke Observer

By Sam Walker SamWalkerOBXNews.com

President Donald Trump has issued an executive order that tells the National Park Service to charge visitors who are not residents of the United States higher prices for entry fees and passes to help fund long-delayed construction and improvement projects nationwide.

And the order demands a review of recreational access rules, telling the Secretary of the Interior to “take steps to rescind any that unnecessarily restrict recreation in national parks.”

No specifics have been released about how much the surcharges would be, or when they would go into effect.

The order issued July 3 titled “Make America Beautiful Again By Improving Our National Parks” says international visitors must pay more to enter parks such as Wright Brothers National Memorial, which charges each person, ages 16 and older a fee at the vehicle entrance off U.S. 158 in Kill Devil Hills.

Of the 475 parks around the country, 106 charge an entry fee like the one required to enter the site of man’s first powered, heavier-than-air flight.

And visitors from other countries would likely have to pay more to climb the Bodie Island and Cape Hatteras lighthouses, purchase an off-road vehicle permit, stay at one of the four campgrounds operated by the National Park Service campgrounds, or use the Ocracoke marina boat docks at Silver Lake, which are all in Cape Hatteras National Seashore.

It is also not clear if the surcharge would be required to be collected by privately-run concessionaires that operate in the United States’ first national seashore, such as the Oregon Inlet Fishing Center and Avon Pier.

“From the awe-inspiring Grand Canyon to the tranquility of the Great Smoky Mountains, America’s national parks have provided generations of American families with unforgettable memories,” Trump said in the order. “It is the policy of my Administration to preserve these opportunities for American families in future generations by increasing entry fees for foreign tourists, improving affordability for United States residents, and expanding opportunities to enjoy America’s splendid national treasures.”

Of the 2.8 million visitors to the Outer Banks in 2023, the most recent estimate available, around 3%, roughly 84,000, were from other countries.

Canada accounts for about 50% of international travelers to the region, according to Outer Banks Visitors Bureau statistics.

Coastal Review reported in April that a sizable number of Canadian visitors had already cancelled trips to the Outer Banks over tensions spurred from Trump previously calling for annexation of Canada and increased tariffs.

The order also calls for United States citizens to have priority access to reservations at parks, and rolls back diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives in the Park Service.

Trump’s order tells Interior Secretary Doug Burgum to “develop a strategy to increase revenue and improve the recreational experience at national parks by appropriately increasing entrance fees and recreation pass fees for nonresidents in areas of the National Park System that charge entrance fees or recreation pass fees.”

“Charging higher entrance fees to foreign tourists is a common policy at national parks throughout the world that supports both conservation and affordable access for residents,” The White House said Thursday in a follow up fact sheet.

“Increasing fees for foreign visitors will also ensure fairness,” the Trump Administration said. “American citizens fund national parks and public lands with their tax dollars, yet they are currently charged the same rate as foreign visitors who do not pay taxes, meaning that American citizens pay more to see their own national treasures than foreign visitors do.”

The White House said the Park Service’s maintenance backlog stood at $14.9 billion in 2020, and has since grown to $22.9 billion.

A budget proposal released in June by the Department of the Interior said a surcharge will help bring in more than $90 million, but did not detail how it would be generated.

“There could be a billion-dollar revenue opportunity without discouraging visitors,” Burgum said during a House Committee on Natural Resources oversight hearing in June.

That same budget proposal would slash the Park Service budget by more than $1 billion, the largest cut in history.

And it follows Trump signing into law on July 4 a budget reconciliation bill that rolls back $267 million of previously committed funding for national park staffing.

Beach closure sign on South Point. Photo: C. Leinbach/Ocracoke Observer

The National Parks Conservation Association released a report last week that shows the Park Service has lost 24% of its permanent staff since January.

Around 1,000 Park Service employees were laid off in February as part of cuts led by the White House’s Department of Government Efficiency.

The July 3 order directs Burgum to take “appropriate actions to grant American residents preferential treatment” including for permitting and access lotteries.

That would apply to waterfowl hunting blinds located soundside in the Bodie Island District of Cape Hatteras National Seashore, which are assigned by a random drawing each day during the hunting season.

And that could mean U.S. citizens would have first crack at making online reservations through Recreation.gov for campsites, which is required for the Oregon Inlet, Cape Point, Frisco and Ocracoke campgrounds.

Also included in the president’s order is for Burgum to “especially scrutinize all recreational access rules or other restrictions promulgated or enacted during the prior administration.”

Over the past 25 years, off-road vehicle access within Cape Hatteras National Seashore has undergone significant regulatory changes aimed at balancing public access with the protection of sensitive coastal habitats and wildlife.

In the early 2000s, growing concerns over the impact of off-road vehicle use on nesting shorebirds, sea turtles, and dune ecosystems led to increased scrutiny from environmental groups and legal action.

A court-ordered consent decree temporarily limited ORV access in response to lawsuits.

The National Park Service implemented an interim ORV management plan during the President George W. Bush Administration in 2008, followed by a final rule in 2012 that formally established seasonal closures for nesting, and buffer zones around sensitive wildlife areas.

A major shift came during the President Barack Obama Administration when the NPS introduced mandatory ORV permits and user fees for the first time in the park’s history, which required drivers to purchase a 7-day or annual ORV permit to access designated beaches starting in 2012.

The NPS requires permits to drive 4WD vehicles on the beach. Photo: C. Leinbach/Ocracoke Observr

Subsequent adjustments in 2014 and 2017 further extended seasonal ORV routes, and adjusted wildlife buffers to improve visitor experience while maintaining ecological safeguards.

Trump’s order also rolled back a memorandum President Obama signed in 2017 to promote “Diversity and Inclusion in Our National Parks, National Forests, and Other Public Lands and Waters”, which was also directed at the U.S. Department of Agriculture, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

Additional reporting for this story provided by Joy Crist of the Island Free Press.

Shrimpers prevail; questions remain about ferry tolls

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A shrimp trawler in the Pamlico Sound. Photo by P. Vankevich/Ocracoke Observer

“Don’t you get tired of the fight?” someone asked after the June 17 Ocracoke Civic & Business Association meeting.

During that meeting, those present talked about how to screech to a halt the N.C. Senate proposal to enact or raise tolls on the ferries to our island.

Then a new battle popped up – a surprise amendment to a fishing bill in the N.C. General Assembly that would have effectively wiped out the local shrimp-fishing industry.

Hyde County Manager Kris Cahoon Noble alerted the OCBA to this latest affront and that the island, along with many others, should protest this amendment to House Bill 442.

This bill originally sought to expand the commercial and recreational fishing season for flounder and red snapper and was widely praised. It passed the House and went to the Senate.

But the Senate tacked on an amendment to prohibit shrimp trawling within a half mile of North Carolina’s coast then sent it back to the House Rules Committee for action.

The outcry was immediate and hundreds of shrimpers, seafood industry workers, local officials and concerned citizens descended on the Legislative Building in Raleigh on June 23 to try to prevent the bill from being passed before the Legislature recessed for the summer.

Bob Phillips, executive director of Common Cause and who owns a house on Ocracoke, sent us dispatches.

A long-time observer of the General Assembly, he said he had never witnessed such an impassioned and well-organized rally at the state capital, which included not only hundreds of people who traveled from eastern North Carolina, but also dozens of tractor-trailer trucks circling the state Legislative Building.

Sam Walker OBX News reported that just steps away from the main entrance to the building, giant insulated cold boxes were filled with thousands of pounds of fresh, brown shrimp on ice caught just a few days ago by the same trawlers that would be put out of business by the legislation.

To the credit of all, the protest was peaceful.

Ocracoke commercial fisherman Morty Gaskill sent us a letter to the editor (posted online) explaining how shrimping is not the environmental disaster it’s being painted as. It was widely shared via social media.

The people’s voices were heard and the next day the House Republicans decided not to move the bill out of the Rules Committee.

So, it is effectively dead for this session (and possibly forever) of the Legislature and coastal fish houses can breathe a sigh of relief for now and we can look forward to purchasing local fresh shrimp this year.

Unfortunately, the effort to increase the season for flounder and red snapper went down as well, and while the bill itself says the season can be allowed for six weeks between May 15 and Nov. 15 each year, it is unknown what will happen to this effort.

But the wrangling continues in Raleigh over whether to enact a toll on the Hatteras ferry (the most used ferry in the system) and raise tolls on the other tolled routes.

Noble and the OCBA mobilized, gathering talking points to use when contacting the N.C. legislators, particularly that no study was done to show the impact a Hatteras toll would have on island tourism, nor was there data on how much implementing a toll would cost vs. the estimated revenue.

The N.C. House drafted its own budget, which did not include tolls on the Hatteras ferry but differed in amount from that of the Senate. When that happens, a conference committee is formed to come up with a spending plan agreeable to both sides.

That has not happened and with the Legislature poised to recess for a bit, the current spending plans will continue to be in effect and several “mini” budgets may be passed before an overall budget may be enacted.

So, it appears that islanders can breathe another sigh of relief that there will be no tolls during the busy summer months, but all should remain vigilant.

Back in the late 1980s, islander Mickey Baker, co-owner of Ragged Sailor Trading Company, was one of the founders of LegaSea, a Manteo- and Ocracoke-based grass-roots group responsible for getting a 20-year moratorium on Atlantic offshore drilling.

Ocracoke members of the original LegaSea group included Baker, Carmie Prete, Ann Ehringhaus and Gary Coye.

The group trod the halls of legislators in Washington for five years, Baker said, and got the moratorium, which was renewed for another five years in March 2016.

Islanders might have to regird for that fight since the Trump Administration this year said it wants to develop a new schedule for offshore oil and gas lease sales on the U.S. Outer Continental Shelf.

Fighting is what we human beings do, whether for good or for evil, and sometimes it has a good impact, as shown by the Legislature’s capitulation on the HB 442 amendment.

But “fighting” has a connotation of violence. There are alternative terms.

Yes, we can’t tire of fighting for what we believe in, but let’s put it this way: We can’t tire of vigorously championing the cause we believe in.

We the people have a voice – enshrined in the Constitution – and we urge all to continue using those voices.

Ocracoke events July 7 to 13–updated

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The free Ocracoke Village Tram runs from 10:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. daily to Sept. 15 and stops at 10 places in the village. Photo: C. Leinbach/Ocracoke Observer

Editor’s note: Events are updated as needed.

Monday, July 7
Ocracoke Community Library: Used Book Sale continues during public hours: M-F, 3-7 pm; Saturday 9 am to 1 pm.

Hyde County Commissioners meeting, 6 pm. Community Center. See agenda below. Pre-meeting reception in Hyde County Government Center.

Ocracoke Oyster Company: Bryan Mayer, 7:30 pm

Tuesday, July 8
Ocracoke Preservation Society Porch Talks: The Lost Colony, Scott Dawson, 1 pm. Postponed.

MiniBar at Ocracoke Coffee: Family game night, 6-8 pm

1718 Brewing Ocracoke: Raygun Ruby, 7 pm

Ocracoke Oyster Company: Bryan Mayer, 7:30 pm

Wednesday, July 9
Ocracoke Community Library: Baby, toddler & preschool story time,10 am.

Community Market, Pony Island Inn lawn, 3-7 pm

MiniBar at Ocracoke Coffee: Island Trivia, 6-8 pm (Corrected)

Deepwater Theater: Ocrafolk Opry, 8 pm

DAJIO: Ray Murray, 8 pm

Thursday, July 10
OPS Porch Talk: Sea Turtles, 1 pm

Ocracoke Volunteer Fire Department meeting, New volunteers always welcome. 822 Irvin Garrish Hwy 6 pm.

MiniBar at Ocracoke Coffee: Brooke & Nick, 6-8 pm.

Ocracoke Oyster Company: Caldwell Grey, 7:30 pm

Friday, July 11
What’s Happening on Ocracoke: Guest: Brook Cox, director of Hyde County Emergency Medical Services, 11:30 am, 90.1FM on the island and online at wovv.org.

MiniBar at Ocracoke Coffee: Kate McNally, 6-8 pm

1718 Brewing Ocracoke: Ray McAllister Band, 7 pm

DAJIO: Noah Austin, 8 pm

Ocracoke Oyster Company: Raygun Ruby, 8 pm

Saturday, July 12
MiniBar at Ocracoke Coffee: artist TBD, 6 pm

DAJIO: After School Surf Club, 8 pm

1718 Brewing Ocracoke: Raygun Ruby, 7 pm

Sunday, July 13
Church services:
Ocracoke United Methodist Church, 11 am
Ocracoke Life Saving Church, 11 am
Stella Maris Chapel: Sunday afternoon Mass time varies. Go to Masstimes.org and type in the zip code 27960.
1718 Brewing Ocracoke: Open mic, 7 pm
Ocracoke Oyster Company: Ramblin’ Dan Stevens, 7:30 pm

National Park Service programs:
The following free programs run from June 16 to Aug. 28.
Banker Ponies at the Ocracoke Pony Pen: Every Monday and Wednesday, 8:30 am — 9 am
Ocracoke Lighthouse: Every Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, 11 am — 11:30 am
Life on a Barrier Island: Every Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, 2 to 2:30 pm. Outside the Discovery Center.
Morning Bird Walk: Every Tuesday from 8:30 to 9:30 am. Meet at NPS campground parking lot.

Ocrafolk Festival celebrates 25 years

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The All-Star Jam finale of the 2025 Ocrafolk Festival. Photo: P. Vankevich/Ocracoke Observer

By Connie Leinbach

Every year the Ocrafolk Music & Storytelling Festival aims to bring some new artists as well as many musicians who return each year.

The 25th anniversary of this event delivered, and Executive Director Dave Tweedie, who also is the fiddler for Molasses Creek, was happy with the music and the thousand-plus who attended the event on the Berkley Manor grounds the first weekend in June.

The Saturday night square dance in the Berkley Barn. Photo: C. Leinbach/Ocracoke Observer

Festival goers soundly praised the performers, a continuous refrain each year.

Many of the festival musicians are adept on more than one instrument, such as Josh Goforth, who is prodigious on the fiddle, guitar and the mandolin, “which blows you away,” said Lee Shaffer of Chocowinity.

But the camaraderie among the musicians was evident.

“They’re not just good,” Shaffer said. “They’re really, really good. There’s so much talent, and they’re not competing with each other. They’re friends with each other and go to see each other play.”

Saltare Sounds brings classical music to Ocracoke. Photo: C. Leinbach/Ocracoke Observer

Ed Stewart of Chesapeake, Virginia, saw this as he and his wife Allison, who have a house on the island, hosted two of the musicians and attended many of the concerts.

“The Saltare [Sound] kids were all over the place,” he said. “Friday night in the barn dancing to the Ocracoke Rockers; then they joined in with Beleza at 1718. The clarinetist [Louis Arques]  was watching over Berto’s [Beleza] shoulder and then picked up the music. Then they were doing the hula hoops at the kids’ area at the festival.”  

Luca Kevorkian of New York City, a violinist who organizes the group of classically trained musicians and has performed here for the last three years said the festival gets better every year.

“It’s the warmest reception I’ve ever received,” he said. “It’s incredible.”

Another Saltare member, violinist Elijah Wilson of NYC, also praised the warm reception for his “fiddle” playing.

And the difference between a violin and a fiddle?

Storyteller Donna Washington. Photo: P. Vankevich/Ocracoke Observer

“Gary says the fiddle has beer stains on it,” Wilson said about Gary Mitchell, who with his contemporary folk band Molasses Creek founded the festival in 2000.

Also getting high marks were storytellers Donald Davis and Donna Washington. This was her first time performing at Ocrafolk. Two of her amusing stories were how she tricked some young school children in order to get interested in reading and a ghost on the Outer Banks.

Mitchell would love to see more islanders attend because, “it’s a big commitment to go off island for a music festival,” he said.

Tweedie concurred, noting the logistics involved to go off island.

So, in starting an island festival, “we thought it would be good to bring high level talent here,” Mitchell said.

Many of the musicians who have performed here over the last 25 years are world-class.

Steve Lewis, the banjo player with the Jeff Little Trio, is the two-time national flat-picking guitar champion and a national banjo-playing champion.

Band leader Jeff plays the piano. Though not a typical bluegrass instrument, Little’s virtuosity on the piano is an exception.

“He was a sideman for Doc Watson,” Mitchell said. “And you don’t get anyone better playing that kind of music.”

One of the new groups, the Foreign Landers brought a delicate, Celtic-influenced sound, he said.

Then there was the Sam Fribush Organ Trio of Greensboro, who played Saturday night on the Golden Stage.

They brought a new sound of funk-rock-jazz to the festival.

“We like to have something rousing on Saturday night,” Mitchell said. 

The tone softened early Sunday morning. It began with quiet, peaceful Yoga sessions by Desiree Adams and Lipbone Redding and classical music and meditation with Saltare Sounds.

Following was the traditional Gospel Sing and Songs that Matter, led by Gary Mitchell and which included discussions of how the songs performed by Reggie Harris, Jeanne and Bob Zentz, Mitchell and Louis Allen relate to our culture today.

Jeanne McDougal Zentz and Bob Zentz. Photo: P. Vankevich/Ocracoke Observer

The staff of WOVV, Ocracoke’s community radio station, interviewed several of the performers in a live broadcast. These podcasts are on the station’s website wovv.org.

The Sunday afternoon coda, the All-star Jam, which brings many of the performers on stage to jam, was cut a bit short when a thunderstorm stuck the island.

The Sam Fribush Trio brings funk, blues and jazz to the festival. Photo: C. Leinbach/Ocracoke Observer
Making bubble with Jef the Mime. Photo: C. Leinbach/Ocracoke Observer
Recent Ocracoke School grad Mira Barnes creates a painting during the festival. Photo: C. Leinbach/Ocracoke Observer
The Paperhand Puppet parade. Photo: C. Leinbach/Ocracoke Observer
The Ocracoke Rockers are among the local musicians on the festival bill. Photo: C. Leinbach/Ocracoke Observer
Sunday morning meditation and Yoga Nidra with Saltare Sounds and Lipbone Redding. Photo: P. Vankevich/Ocracoke Observer

Stormy weather heading our way

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From our news services

As of Saturday morning, the cyclone off the southeastern coast remains identified as Tropical Depression Three. It has begun slow movement north-northwest towards the Carolinas.

The forecast anticipates that the system will strengthen into a weak tropical storm, impacting the region from Saturday night through Monday.

However, torrential downpours could begin as early as Saturday afternoon, with forecast totals increasing from yesterday to 1 to 3 inches, and isolated areas possibly receiving over 4 inches. This could lead to localized flash flooding.

The probability of experiencing tropical storm-force winds has slightly increased from Friday but remains low. Winds will be at least up to 20 mph on occasion on Sunday. If the winds pick up, they will most likely occur beginning late Sunday afternoon and evening.

An elevated rip current risk is also expected to persist for area beaches into early next week.

North Carolina’s landmark study offers insight into fisheries management, days after ‘Shrimpgate’

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A shrimp boat. Photo: P. Vankevich/Ocracoke Observer

By Joy Crist, Island Free Press

In a sweeping three-year study mandated by the North Carolina General Assembly, the North Carolina Collaboratory has released its long-anticipated findings on the state’s coastal and marine fisheries.

While the report was intended to be a neutral and science-driven evaluation of fish populations and habitats, it has also become a flashpoint in the debate over House Bill 442, a controversial legislative proposal that aimed to restrict shrimp trawling in state waters.

The study’s results, particularly concerning shrimp and southern flounder, offer new data on fishery health but stop short of endorsing any policy like the now-dormant HB 442.

“Multiple comments by legislators in both chambers of the North Carolina General Assembly (NCGA), as well as statements circulating in the media, suggested the Senate was aware of the contents of this report and this advance knowledge drove actions to amend the legislation to include a shrimp trawling ban prior to the report’s release,” stated Collaboratory Executive Director Dr. Jeffrey Warren in a letter attached to the study.

“These statements remain untrue and undermine the credibility of this multi-year research study carried out by nine researchers across four UNC System campuses.”

A study three years in the making
The Legislative Study of Coastal and Marine Fisheries, launched in 2022, was initiated in recognition of two key anniversaries in coastal policy: the 25th anniversary of the state’s Fisheries Reform Act of 1997 and the 50th anniversary of the Coastal Area Management Act of 1974. With $1 million in state funding, the North Carolina Collaboratory brought together researchers from UNC-Chapel Hill, East Carolina University, NC State University, and UNC-Wilmington.

Their directive was to assess the long-term viability of 13 critical marine species — including shrimp — and evaluate the habitat and policy structures that support them. The report was submitted to the legislature on June 30, 2025, along with a transmittal letter and a promise of a more extensive implementation report by year’s end.

Shrimp
According to the Collaboratory’s findings, brown shrimp abundance has increased over recent decades, with particularly strong catch rates reported inside Primary Nursery Areas (PNAs) — state-designated habitat zones meant to protect juvenile marine species.

The report also notes that North Carolina’s shrimp fishery is among the most heavily regulated in the Southeast, with restrictions on gear, seasons, and fishing areas already in place. Yet the study stops short of evaluating the effects of shrimp trawling gear on non-target species or habitat degradation, stating explicitly that the issue was outside the scope of the research.

Southern Flounder
Of the species studied, southern flounder was flagged as one of the most imperiled. The fish is classified as both overfished (population size is too low) and experiencing overfishing (harvest rate is too high), based on the most recent stock assessments, which occurred around 2019.

The report also examined flounder presence in PNAs, finding that while juvenile flounder are slightly more abundant and overall catch rates are low and declining in these protected areas.

Commercial vs. Recreational Fishing
While the shrimp findings formed the most high-profile element of the study’s public reception, the report also captures the broader complexity of managing North Carolina’s coastal resources — particularly when it comes to balancing commercial and recreational interests.

“Viewed holistically, the data reveal a significant shift in the entire socio-ecological system of NC over the last ~30 years and since the passing of the FRA in 1997,” reads the report.

“Of 132 indices eligible for formal statistical analyses based on data structure and longevity, 51% of these indices manifest statistically significant changes over decadal scales, including most notably: increases in human population density and development along the NC coast; decreases in Phosphorus loading and increases in Nitrogen loading (after normalizing for flow); increases in total (not just economically prized) finfish and penaeid shrimp abundance, but decreases in abundance of nekton in shallow estuarine habitat; increases in coastal river and air temperatures; and a rate of sea-level rise higher than the global average.

“Coincident with these shifts, the commercial fishing sector had exhibited declines in number of licenses, registered vessels, participants, trips, and landings since the passing of the FRA, while increasing trends were observed for recreational fishing participation as indicated by the increase in number of licenses and trips over this same period. Both commercial and recreational sectors have been characterized by significant shifts in target species throughout the last 45 years.

According to the study, the two sectors often have competing objectives, methods, and expectations. Commercial fishers rely on consistent access to waters and sustainable catch volumes to support income and supply chains. Recreational anglers, meanwhile, are increasingly focused on ecosystem preservation, fish size, and catch quality — factors influenced not just by fishing pressure, but also by coastal development, water quality, and climate variability.

The Collaboratory found that these stakeholder groups sometimes lack trust in state regulators and in each other. Building that trust, the report argues, is essential for future management.

One proposed solution is to improve transparency and credibility in decision-making through the creation of a Science and Statistical Committee — an independent body modeled after similar institutions used in federal fisheries management, designed to vet data, guide quota decisions, and build consensus.

Key Policy Recommendations
The report concludes with five major recommendations, aimed at strengthening North Carolina’s fisheries management:

  • Establish an Independent Science and Statistical Committee to ensure transparent, peer-reviewed advice for fisheries regulation.
  • Improve stakeholder participation and communication to rebuild trust between fishers and regulators.
  • Adopt ecosystem-based management, shifting away from single-species models to address interconnected environmental factors.
  • Prevent habitat degradation, particularly in marshes, oyster reefs, and submerged aquatic vegetation (SAV).
  • Reevaluate and adapt the PNA network, which may no longer provide sufficient protection for key juvenile species.

These recommendations do not advocate specific regulatory actions, such as banning shrimp trawling, but they provide a framework for future policy conversations.

A call for science-driven policy
As state lawmakers prepare for the next legislative session, the findings from this landmark study are likely to remain central to the conversation. Both supporters and critics of HB 442 have pointed to the report to justify their positions, reflecting the deeply divided nature of fisheries politics in North Carolina.

Yet, as Dr. Warren emphasized, the goal of the study was to “analyze the status of North Carolina’s fisheries and develop policy recommendations to better manage the overall health of fisheries and fisheries’ habitats” — not to dictate specific laws.

For more information:

Slow-moving front to bring thunderstorms with heavy rain, strong winds today; ‘Color’ glow party set for Thursday night

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All of ENC today (July 2) has the potential to see thunderstorms with heavy rain, according to the National Weather Service out of Morehead City.

Wunderground’s forecast is calling for showers this morning with windy with thunderstorms developing in the afternoon. Storms may contain strong gusty winds with a high around 83 degrees and winds southwest at 20 to 30 mph. Chance of rain is 90%.

The Weather Prediction Center of the National Weather Service has expanded the slight risk (at least a 15% chance of flash flooding) to include nearly the entire forecast area.

The Shave Shack on Ocracoke has scheduled a Color Glow Party at dark on Thursday (July 3) following the Ocracoke Square Dance. See flyer below.

See here for more July 4 week events.

Ocracoke fireworks canceled due to threat of inclement weather

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The Ocracoke fireworks have been canceled due the threat of thunderstorms and high winds forecast for July 2.

According to both Hyde and Dare County fire marshals, a specific forecast for Ocracoke gives a 90% chance of thunderstorms and high winds Wednesday (July 2) into Thursday.

“For the safety of our residents and visitors of Ocracoke, we made the decision to cancel the fireworks show,” said Albert O’Neal, Ocracoke Volunteer Fire Department (OVFD) chief. “It’s disappointing, but we feel that given the high probability of a storm, this was the best option.”

The decision to cancel was made after a meeting among staff of the National Park Service, the OVFD, the Ocracoke Civic & Business Association and Hyde County.

The pre-fireworks music also is canceled.

A decision has not yet been made to reschedule the fireworks later this year.

Dare County Fire Marshal Steve Kovacs shared the Ocracoke specific forecast, which says an approaching front is expected to stall across eastern N.C. on Wednesday with showers and thunderstorms likely, with heavy rain and strong wind gusts greater than 40 mph are possible.

The rest of the July 4 activities will continue as planned. Other Ocracoke activities can be found here.

Thursday, July 3
4 pm. Fundraising Fish Fry for the OPS. Island Inn Commons, 4 pm.

7 to 8:30 pm Old fashioned Ocracoke Square Dance in the Berkley Barn with Molasses Creek. Charge at the door: $5 for adults 13 and over.

Friday, July 4
9:30 am – Noon: 44th Annual Sand Sculpture Contest at the NPS Lifeguard Beach.

10 am to 12:30 pm and 1:30 to 4:30pm:Ocracoke Lighthouse open for viewing the inside. No climbing.

4 pm: Independence Day Parade. (No theme this year)

All are welcome to enter the parade to vie for Best Walk & Roll, Best Wheels, Best Float, Best Theme and Best in Show. No political themes/messages allowed.

Sign up starts at 3 p.m. at Old Beach Road and Irvin Garrish Hwy. Line-up also starts there at 3:30 p.m. Parade ends at NPS parking lot.

5:30 pm Awards presentation for Parade & Sculpture Contest winners at Books to Be Red yard.

6 pm: Fundraising cookout at the Ocracoke United Methodist Church

7 to 10 pm: Community Beach Fire under the Stars at the Ocracoke Day Use Area/NPS Lifeguard Beach. BYO beach blankets, chairs, marshmallows and roasting sticks.

Stay tuned to Hyde County Public Information and OCBA Facebook pages for further updates.

Use and possession of fireworks are illegal on all Cape Hatteras National Seashore beaches

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MANTEO, N.C. — Cape Hatteras National Seashore (Seashore) reminds visitors and adjacent homeowners that it is illegal to detonate fireworks, or have fireworks in your possession, on all Seashore beaches, including the beaches on Ocracoke Island and all the beaches in Rodanthe, Waves, Salvo, Avon, Buxton, Frisco and Hatteras Village.

Fireworks of any kind also are prohibited in Ocracoke Village.

In addition to fireworks being illegal and a significant fire risk to local communities, the personal use of fireworks can be a considerable nuisance to humans, pets and wildlife.

Seashore law enforcement rangers will be patrolling the beaches throughout the Fourth of July holiday week.

Visitors are encouraged to travel to Hatteras and Ocracoke islands to view the only two permitted fireworks shows within the Seashore.

Permitted Fireworks Shows

  • 9:15 p.m. Wednesday, July 2, at the south end of Ocracoke Island
  • 9 p.m. Friday, July 4, at the Avon Fishing Pier

Text NPSOBX to 333111 for park text alerts.

Text CAHAORV to 333111 for beach access text alerts.

Visit us online: Cape Hatteras National Seashore: Official Website | Facebook | Instagram | Twitter

Youth Center to host baseball camp

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The Ocracoke Youth Center will hold a baseball camp for players aged 8 to 14 from July 14 to 17. Photo: C. Leinbach/Ocracoke Observer

Ocracoke Youth Center will offer its first ever Ocracoke Baseball Camp from July 14 to 17 at the Community Ballfield.

The camp is for players aged 8 to 14 of any skill level, locals and visitors.

They will be coached by Harrison Aiken and Luke Davis.
Registration is now officially open, and space is limited.

Registration form here  https://forms.gle/NuxsvrB1toDqfjti9 and then

Pay the $200 registration fee (per child) here  https://www.paypal.com/ncp/payment/ABXATJSQTE5FE.