Beach access bill targeting a North Florida county moves forward in House

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Redington Beach, Florida
Redington Beach, Florida by Lemanieh via iStock for WMNF News.

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A bill advanced in the House today targeting beach access in one county on the panhandle. 

It comes as some lawmakers say Walton County was unfairly affected by a 2018 law.  

House Bill 6043, sponsored by Republican Representative Alex Andrade, would repeal a 2018 law that ended customary use on beaches.

Customary use means the public can access parts of the privately owned beaches. 

Republican Representative Shane Abbott presented the bill. 

Abbott said the law grandfathered in ordinances made before 2016, which singled out Walton County.

“Walton County was not doing anything malicious or different than any other county in the state that had, and has, and still has customary use that would warrant targeting Walton County with a legislative fix. The bill did not fix a problem, but rather created one inside the county,” Abbott said.

Customary use was also a hot topic in Pinellas County

Last year, a federal judge sided with Redington Beach in a lawsuit with waterfront property owners over customary use. 

James Calkins is a resident of Walton County and spoke against the 2018 law during public comment. 

“What it did was it created a massive number of ‘no trespassing’ signs that locals that have lived there their whole life now walk to a public beach – they’re getting run off by owners of beach chair companies, security guards,” Calkins said.

The bill advanced unanimously in the House House Civil Justice & Claims Subcommittee.

A similar bill in the Senate also advanced through a subcommittee this week.

2 Responses to “Beach access bill targeting a North Florida county moves forward in House”

  1. Sharyn Black

    Bought a home in Santa Rosa Beach 3 yrs. ago. Didn’t realize this was going on. NEVER heard of a Beach that had been public forever being made private. How is that possible. How do you get rid of a prescriptive easement??? Been to many beaches, Outer Banks, Sc beaches,Alabama bchs, exc. What happened to Florida? Insane! Not sure we’ll stay. To much hassel

    Reply
  2. Andy Kennell

    Historic access to and customary use of the beaches should not have to be proven in the courts! Everyone knows the public, even those that now claim their beach is private, have for generations had unobstructed access to and use of all the beaches. The now closed off former public beach access points are proof enough the beaches were open to all!

    Reply

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