Below is the
information you requested. Please note that much of what follows are
concepts. The details of beach-front property rights and beach renourishment
are more involved. We can certainly provide the details, but they would
not be helpful for most people.
First, the entire length of Perdido Key Beach is public –
south of the mean high-water line. So, a person could walk (sunbathe,
fish, collect shells, etc.) for the entire 6 miles from Johnson Beach all the
way to the Flora-Bama without intruding on private property as long as they
remain south of the mean high-water line. The challenge, of course, is
that the mean high-water line is dynamic and changes with the tide and the
topography of the beach. If someone wanted a visual reference, it is
generally accepted to remain in the “wet sand” area adjacent to the Gulf of
Mexico. The strand line, which is the mark created by seaweed, shells, and
other debris that are washed ashore by the tide, is another visual reference
(again these are just conceptual, not a strict legal definition; neither visual
reference is an accurate representation of specific location of the mean
high-water line).
Second, the entire beach at Perdido Key State Park and
Johnson Beach National Seashore are public (subject to regulation by the state
and federal governments).
Third, the 64 lots in Gulf Beach Subdivision (13785 Perdido
Key Drive west to the State Park) have an additional 75 feet of “dry sand”
beach north of the mean high-water line that is available for public
use. That area is contiguous with Perdido Key State Park, so the
length of the public beach between the two areas is about 3 miles. The
County also owns Beach Access No. 4 (the former Sundown condominium) west of
the State Park, which is another 300 feet of public beachfront.
Fourth, whether a beach renourishment project creates new
public beach depends on whether the project increases the elevation on existing
beach or places sand south of the mean high-water line in the Gulf of Mexico
(i.e., builds up or builds south). Building up does not create any new
public beach while building south can. Beach restoration projects
are heavily regulated by the Florida Department of Environmental Protection
(Chapter 161, Florida Statutes), and if a project extends the beach south the
County must undertake a lengthy approval process that includes surveying the
mean high-water line and recording it as a new boundary between the private and
sovereign submerged lands. The “fixed” mean high-water line is called the
Erosion Control Line. Projects that add beach south of the Erosion
Control Line create new public beach.
Please let me know if I can provide further explanation.
(I am copying Tim with this email so he can supplement this email with
information on the prior beach restoration projects after Hurricane Ivan and
Dennis.)"
4 comments:
Was an ECL line established already? Surely since the state already issued a permit you have that already documented.
You could check with FDEP.
Why would the county start the process then stop midway through of beach restoration.
Not from a legal perspective but just what is the story behind that. Why would countless dollars be spent then thwarted, like on the 4 lane also?
Who does that benefit.
What is the plan when another hurricane erodes the beach up to the condominiums and washes out the road?
Are we on our own?
Is Alison and Tim going to apply for federal money again to start the renourishment process, go to the state, get FDEP involved.. then what? Drop the ball again?
Why was the ball dropped and what is the plan going forward?
What is the plan for the up coming hurrican season on Perdido Key. Is there a resiliency plan in place?
I'd like to know what happens if the road is washed out and my car in the parking lot is under water and the Gulf is swirling all around the building.
Will my HOA fees take care of that minor annoyance?
Should I keep a kayak in my living room since apparently all the other owners out here want their own private Gilligan's Island?
What would the legal perspective be when the condos get washed out after the next hurricane and it is clear the beach renorishment that was started wasn't completed prior?
Is the county now more vulnerable not only by coastal resilience but also for dereliction of duty?
I know this conversation was about access but now that you are talking legal perspective and lawsuits it seems natural to be able to go there.
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