Maine has 5,400 miles of mainland and island shoreline. Some of that land is privately owned. How does that work?

 

According to Public Shoreline Access in Maine: A Citizen’s Guide to Ocean and Coastal Law, about 12% of all that shoreline is in public ownership.

This is so Maine! You can actually own part of the ocean. Maine describes it very well with a spiffy picture:

maine.gov
maine.gov
loading...

Landowners can own part of the beach and even the ocean. But (and it's an important but) the public has some rights to “fish, fowl, and navigate.” That's from colonial times! It's a very delicate legal balance between public interests and respecting private property.

It can get touchy and slightly ugly. In March 1989, the Maine Supreme Judicial Court ruled on a conflict between public versus private rights to the shore in Maine over Moody Beach.  It was this case that has pretty much become the go-to reference for the conflict between public versus private rights to the shore in Maine. To boil it all down to the simplest form: the public has only very limited rights in the intertidal zone (see the chart above). Since the Moody Beach decision, access to the coast has been a bit of a sticky issue.

Public Shoreline Access Maine.gov
Public Shoreline Access Maine.gov
loading...

Are you on private property, but it's a beach? Don't set up your hot dog stand any time soon. There is an entire website dedicated to what you can and can't do. That's for both property owners and if you want to fish in that ONE particular area off the coast. It's Accessing the Maine Coast. I had no idea I had so many questions!

LOOK: Here are the 50 best beach towns in America

Every beach town has its share of pluses and minuses, which got us thinking about what makes a beach town the best one to live in. To find out, Stacker consulted data from WalletHub, released June 17, 2020, that compares U.S. beach towns. Ratings are based on six categories: affordability, weather, safety, economy, education and health, and quality of life. The cities ranged in population from 10,000 to 150,000, but they had to have at least one local beach listed on TripAdvisor. Read the full methodology here. From those rankings, we selected the top 50. Readers who live in California and Florida will be unsurprised to learn that many of towns featured here are in one of those two states.

Keep reading to see if your favorite beach town made the cut.

25 True Crime Locations: What Do They Look Like Today?

Below, find out where 25 of the most infamous crimes in history took place — and what the locations are used for today. (If they've been left standing.)

More From 97.5 WOKQ