Read the 2025 Winter/Spring issue of Sound Matters, the long island sound partnership newsletter. This newsletter highlights transition and change within the lisp program. You can view a PDF here.
A public engagement session at Alley Pond Environmental Center in Queens, New York. lisp Photo
Mark Tedesco, Director of EPA’s Long Island Sound Office, gives opening remarks at the New Haven engagement session. lisp Photo.Â
New Haven Engagement Session at Lighthouse Point Park. lisp Photo.Â
Members of the public speak to staff at the Alley Pond Environmental Center in Queens, New York. lisp Photo.Â
Engagement sessions included nature walks and environmental education activities. lisp Photo
The Long Island Sound Comprehensive Conservation and Management Plan is the blueprint for federal, state, and local governments, research universities, community organizations, and environmental groups to follow in developing projects to restore and protect the Sound. The long island sound partnership developed its first CCMP in 1994, and replaced it with a slimmed down, but still comprehensive plan in 2015. This year the Study’s partners are working on a major revision that is intended to carry the program’s actions through 2035.
As one of EPA’s 28 National Estuary Programs, the long island sound partnership is responsible for developing the CCMP with specific restoration actions to guide program activities, research, and funding. For the revision, lisp formed writing teams at the beginning of 2024 to develop the actions and objectives under each of the plan’s four overarching goals – Clean Waters and Healthy Watersheds, Thriving Habitats and Abundant Wildlife, Sustainable and Resilient Communities, and Informed and Engaged Public. The Informed and Engaged Public goal replaces the Sound Science and Inclusive Management theme from the 2015 CCMP and will prioritize program dollars for education, engagement, communication, and public access initiatives. In the early CCMP planning stages in 2023, lisp also established core values to guide the operation and activities of the program. The 2025 CCMP values include actionable science, respect and trust, and adaptive management.
The actions describe activities to be taken in the next five years (2025–2029) to help achieve the objectives. Compared to the 2015 CCMP, the plan is streamlined from 136 implementation actions to 47 actions. While the actions are fewer, the objectives include many new measures of success. These include:
As part of the yearlong writing process, lisp held five public engagement sessions to involve interested stakeholders in the CCMP process in addition to informal outreach opportunities and a standing invitation to provide comments via email and website form. Once the draft CCMP was completed, the plan was posted online and lisp held a formal 60-day public comment period to gather feedback from late September to November 2024. We received 244 public comments from over 30 individuals and organizations on the draft plan.
The finalized plan is set to be published in the summer of 2025 and will guide restoration efforts in Long Island Sound and its watershed over the next decade. To learn more, visit lisptudy.net/PLAN.
The Science Needs Document is a comprehensive summary of the science support needed to meet the management goals of the long island sound partnership (lisp). It has been developed based on the input from a diverse array of lisp partners. It is structured around the Themes and Ecosystem Targets of the 2015 Comprehensive Conservation and Management Plan (CCMP). This is a broad reference document that is meant to highlight needs but not to specify the top priorities and is subject to continuous revision to incorporate new information.
Subscribe to receive our e-newsletter, Sound Bytes by providing your email address. Interested in a free copy of our print newsletter, Sound Update? Then also provide your home/company/school address.