Shops on Main Street in Bar Harbor, Maine (Photo by Robert F. Bukaty, The Associated Press) |
The vote has local officials "pondering what this new economic landscape might look like, because the smaller ships with 1,000 or fewer guests account for just 5 percent of the annual ship schedule," Farragher notes. Kristi Bond, owner of FishMaine Restaurant Group and president of the Association to Preserve & Protect Local Livelihoods, told him, "We’ve built our town on wanting the tourists to come. Our town economy is getting 20 to 30 million dollars pumped into it with these people coming to our town. They come at 8 in the morning and they’re gone at 5 o’clock at night. I just don’t understand how it makes sense to anyone."
But Charles Sidman, who spent his career as a biomedical researcher, told Farragher that the cruise industry "is causing enormous damage . . . They’ve had totally improper monopolies granted by the town, and they want to protect them . . . On a busy cruise-ship day here, it’s like Times Square.’" As you might expect, there's a lawsuit. Businesses "claim the new restrictions jeopardize their livelihood and break federal laws," reports Victoria DeCoster of the Mount Desert Islander.
Farragher writes, "Kevin Sutherland, Bar Harbor’s town manager, said local frustration with congestion was the chief propellant for the new ordinance that took effect Dec. 8, a move local businesses fighting the measure have said immediately renders the town an unavailable destination port-of-call." Sutherland said, “For years, if you look at the cruise ship visits from the early 2000s, this community embraced and actually went out and asked the cruise ships to start doing tours in the Northeast. . . . This is the only thing I’ve been dealing with for almost a year." Farragher notes, "But over time, some residents say, it has all become simply overwhelming."
Bar Harbor is on the Gulf of Maine. (Google map) |
This season, "New rules are on the book," Farragher writes. "And those behind the counters and at the cash registers of local businesses say Bar Harbor’s economic future is hanging in the balance."
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