Rules & Licenses · Western New York
Newfane Shoreline Work Needs a Calm Permit Check
Newfane shoreline owners should treat Lake Ontario erosion, floodplain, CEHA maps, and local building review as a permit question before starting work.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026
Newfane’s Lake Ontario edge is beautiful, but shoreline work deserves a calm permit check. DEC’s coastal erosion program uses official maps called Coastal Erosion Hazard Areas. Work inside one of those mapped areas may need written approval.
That can include building, changing, or fixing a structure. It can also include major additions, grading, digging, filling, dredging, and other soil work. Owners should use CEHA maps and contact either the municipality or DEC, depending on whether the community is locally certified or state administered.
Niagara County’s notice about a Newfane REDI project is a good local reminder that flooding and shoreline stability are real planning issues there. That project provided shoreline stabilization and flood protection for infrastructure and homes along the shoreline. The Town of Newfane code also has a Flood Damage Prevention chapter.
This is a before-you-build check, not a reason to avoid the lake. Check the map, ask whether DEC or the town is the right office, and keep paperwork ahead of shoreline work.
Lake Ontario is part of Newfane’s appeal. The permit check is how an owner keeps that appeal tied to a plan that can actually move forward.