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Showing posts with label Beach Closure. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Beach Closure. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 28, 2020

County Receives Input on Beach Opening/Closing Meeting

New York's computer-monitoring bid to stop over-billing | CSNY
Nearly 800 written comments have been received by the county on the topic of whether or not to open our county's public beaches--read them all here if you'd like.


For the last week and a half, the county has maintained a portal where concerned citizens could voice their opinions in writing on the subject of the beach closure in Escambia County.

In addition to this portal, my office has received more than one hundred phone calls and emails on this topic.

The Administrator's office forwarded this 8MB file that captures every comment from every citizen that went to the website to voice comments and opinions.  Some very good comments on both sides of the argument.

This time around--as contrasted with 5 weeks ago--the sentiment is swinging much stronger to "open the beach"  among those citizens who have voiced opinions.  Here is the total breakdown as provided by staff at close of business (COB) yesterday afternoon.....


"508 Open the Beach (228 are “Open with Restrictions”)
+235 Close Beach
+50 Other Comments/Complaints (not regarding Beaches)
=793 Grand total"

The Board of County Commissioners will be voting this morning on this topic.

Saturday, April 25, 2020

Which Florida Beaches are Open, Which are Closed?

County staff have prepared the below chart indicating which Florida County public beaches are open and under what conditions they are opened, and also which beaches are closed.  Very interesting information ahead of our meeting on Tuesday..



Monday, April 20, 2020

36th Coffee With the Commissioner This Wednesday Morning Featuring Mark Faulkner, CEO of Baptist Healthcare Pensacola


Virtual Event, 36th  District 1 Coffee with the Commissioner April 22


Join District 1 Commissioner Jeff Bergosh at his virtual 36th Coffee with the Commissioner event Wednesday, April 22. The live stream will take place from 6:30 - 7:30 a.m. Guests will include Escambia County Administrator Janice Gilley, Escambia County Emergency Manager Eric Gilmore and Mark Faulkner, CEO, Baptist Health Care.

To join, simply go to the following Facebook page at 6:30 a.m. on April 22 and watch the live stream: 
https://www.facebook.com/CommissionerBergosh/.

Residents are encouraged to send virtual questions and comments they would like to discuss with their District 1 Commissioner during the event through Facebook.

For more information, contact District 1 Aide Debbie Kenney at 850-595-4910 or 
district1@myescambia.com. For District 1 updates, follow @MyDistrict1 on Twitter. 

Discussion topics will include 

--updates on Pensacola/Escambia response to COVID-19

--discussion on Opening the Beach

--Antibody testing--do we have this here in Escambia County? (Or is the closest location really Panama City?)

--update on local hospital capacity

--discussion on when the hospitals locally will once again commence with "elective" procedures

--is it prudent to open up the economy in early May as some are demanding?

--we will take your questions live on Facebook 


Sunday, April 19, 2020

Decisions of Immense Consequence are Coming Part II: Should We Re-Open Area Beaches Now?

There are very few things I enjoy more than spending a day with
my familyat one of our incredible beaches fishing from the surf.  My
ability to do so has been curtailed due to the Pandemic...
I grew up in Escambia County fishing all the local waterways with my dad and my brother.

I raised my own family right here doing the very same thing.  Our beaches are a vital part of our way of life here in Escambia County.  It's why many of us choose to live here, the tremendous quality of life and our beaches and the concomitant coastal way of life.

At this time of year, I would absolutely 100% be out fishing the surf for Pompano that are now running.  It is what I have done all my life.

But now our beaches have been closed at the urging of public health officials, local hospital CEO's and the Governor of the state.  COVID-19 has radically changed our way of life here.


I raised my sons locally fishing from the surf.  We haven't been fishing from
the beach this year--neither have many Escambia families.  Is there a safe way to
once again open up our beaches for fishing--maintaining social distancing
and other protocols to protect public health?
No fishing from the Gulf Surf anywhere nearby--unless one has a boat.  And like many constituents I represent--- I don't have a boat.  So no fishing, swimming, surfing, or walking the beaches.

Tremendous pressure is building, though, for us to re-open our beaches.  A special meeting has been called on April 28th to discuss this exclusively.

It will be contentious, and there are passionate voices for and against this action.

Once I was assured by our local Health Department director that being on the beach, maintaining social distancing, was in and of itself "safe"--I was an early voice supporting re-opening our beaches with restrictions in place.  That was three and a half weeks ago.


But my office was subsequently pilloried with calls and emails excoriating me for the audacity of even suggesting this.  "How dare you!" was the flavor of most of the calls.....


The sentiments remain split on whether or  not to re-open the beaches now.  But more and more are urging a phased re-opening to locals only for limited activities (running, walking, fishing, surfing, swimming).  Others are advocating limited hours for opening the beach daily.

For my 20% of the vote on the 28th--I'll be looking at the following three things in order to support re-opening May 1st:





1.  A phased-in, orderly opening plan (limits on grouping size, social distancing, etc) in coordination with what other regional jurisdictions are utilizing, so that we do not become a "magnet" for visitors who might be infected but who cannot use the beaches in their own jurisdictions and come here instead.

2.  Agreement and concurrence with our public health experts that such a plan is safe and responsible and that our local health infrastructure capacity (bed and ventilator numbers) can "handle" the upticks in cases that may invariably arise from the loosening of current restrictions.

3.  An enforcement mechanism, complete with appropriate citations, penalties, and or consequences for irresponsible people who blatantly disregard the board's guidance.

Absent any of these three conditions--opening the beach will be challenging.

And if there are no meaningful consequences for violations of the conditions for opening up the beach (like what was seen recently in a blatant disregard of the county, city, and state guidance on groupings at an area housing complex that had a huge Easter block party)---even a Limited conditional opening will naturally devolve into a free-for-all of civil disobedience absent the presence of an enforcement presence with the lawful power to enforce a county ordinance.

I mean, we love our Lifeguards and Code Enforcement Officers--but what happens if large crowds gather in open defiance of our "opening the beach" guidance---and what happens if the lifeguards and code enforcement officers are charged with enforcing this guidance--and what happens if these crowds collectively disobey in large numbers like the Easter Block party where there was no enforcement and no consequences for the open defiance?

Then what?  Are we prepared, collectively, to do what is necessary to enforce any rules we enact to intelligently open the beach?  Are we willing to accept the horrible optics created by potentially issuing citations to those that do not comply?  What if law enforcement becomes necessary due to large gatherings?  Will the ECSO make arrests if folks do not disburse and become disorderly?

This could create impossibly difficult situations for all of us--including law enforcement personnel...

Yesterday I spoke with a retired career law enforcement officer who spent 30 years at a large northeastern urban police department.  I asked him about what he thought as a law enforcement officer watching that Easter "Block-Party" scene where there was open, blatant defiance of the Governor's order, the Mayor's Order, and the County's order.  his response was pretty simple. 

"If they wanted to break it up, they needed a lot more cops.  Not 5 more, not 10 more.  If they were really going to break it up, they needed 40 officers brought in and they needed to tell the crowd to disburse and then make arrests if the crowd didn't comply.  I've had to break up parties like this Jeff, and it takes a big force of officers to do it and it's not easy and never pretty.  It would require arrests as well and the issuance of citations to appear with appropriate penalties..."

So we have to get it completely right on the front side of this.  We are living in unprecedented circumstances that none of us like.  It means we have to be patient and adaptable--just as we became after 9-11.  Who ever thought it would be completely acceptable taking off our shoes and going through a "see-through" x-ray machine complete with a physical "pat-down" just to fly on a plane?

We adapted, those of us that wanted to fly.

Now we have to be smart and adapt to the new temporary "normal" of living with this Pandemic and accepting of the trade-offs until we get this controlled with better testing and therapeutic treatments.

Decisions of Immense Consequence are Coming......Part I

Weathered Old Glory Flag Usa Photograph by Les Cunliffe



Liberty, Freedom, America.  Synonymous.

Terrorist attack, Counter-terrorism, "Patriot Act." 

AND

Pandemic, Social Distancing, Shelter at Home.   Events that happened and reactions that came.

We love our freedoms and our liberty in America.  We love the fact that people here enjoy more personal freedom and more civil liberties than anywhere else in the world.

But huge global events can put a dent in our freedoms.  We all remember 9-11.  And after that, we endured less personal freedom and tacitly accepted a loss of privacy and more invasive, intrusive surveillance of our lives and activities from our government to "prevent another act of large scale terrorism." 

And even the most ardent, liberty loving right-winger and the most strident civil libertarian liberal must agree on one thing:  The onerous, unprecedented civil surveillance that sprung from the global war on terrorism after 9-11 HAS, at a minimum, been effective at helping prevent another major terrorist attack on our homeland.

But at what cost--what is the price to pay for this and has it been worth it?

I believe most would say the answer to that is that "YES--it has been worth the cost"

Now we have the Chinese Coronavirus Pandemic upending our way of life.  COVID-19 has changed the world, our country, and our community locally.

We are enduring unprecedented financial consequences. We're stuck at home.  Life for many has radically changed. Businesses are closed.  Beaches are closed.  Unemployment is spiking.  Trillions of dollars we do not have are being printed and spent nationwide to confront the crisis. Tens of thousands of Americans have died from this disease, while experts struggle to ramp up a response.

Political timelines and artificial deadlines are now clashing with public health realities and epidemiologists' recommendations for rationally "opening" our country again.

And locally, by and large, this struggle between public health realities and economic despair will be on display on April 28th when the Escambia Board of County Commissioners will vote to either open our beach in a limited way----or we vote to keep it closed.

Passionate voices of support and opposition are aligning on both sides of this topic--- and this decision will be difficult.

Nationally and yes, even locally, decisions of immense consequence are coming........soon.


Friday, April 17, 2020

Escambia County Commission Will Hold Special Meeting on Beach Opening April 28th at 10:00 AM



BOCC to Hold a Special Meeting April 28 at 10 a.m.
The Board of County Commissioners will hold a special meeting Tuesday, April 28 at 10 a.m. to discuss reopening Pensacola Beach, and the public is strongly encouraged to participate electronically to comply with the Governor's Safer at Home Executive Order 20-91. This meeting will be streamed live and archived online for virtual viewing. The meeting will be in the Ernie Lee Magaha Government Building, 221 Palafox Place, BCC Meeting Room.

The public is strongly encouraged to provide input on this agenda item prior to the Board meeting. A public input form has been made available. In an effort to utilize options made available by Governor’s Executive Order 20-69 as well as to maximize social distancing, citizens are encouraged to comment or ask questions by submitting the form above. Comment forms must be submitted prior to the vote on the referenced agenda item. Comments or questions submitted will be read into the record during the meeting. 
We encourage you to stream the meeting live at myescambia.com/ectv, channel 4/1004 on Cox, channel 98 for Spectrum and Mediacom (Pensacola Beach) subscribers and channel 99 for AT&T U-verse subscribers. The meeting can also be watched later at ECTV On Demand
For a complete schedule and information regarding all county meetings, please view the calendar. For more information, please contact the Escambia County Office of Community and Media Relations at 850-595-3476 or CMR@myescambia.com.

Related Pages
COVID-19 Information for Escambia County

Thursday, April 2, 2020

Escambia's Public Beaches Will Remain Closed Pending Further Action by the Board of County Commissioners

Escambia County officials say Pensacola Beach will remain open ...



By a 4-1 vote at this evening's Board of County Commissioners meeting, the Board voted to keep the public beaches of Escambia County closed for the near term.

This closing of the beaches is being done in order to curb the spread of COVID-19 in our area--in conjunction with other drastic measures being taken statewide and county-wide. 

The precise motion was that the beaches would remain closed until such time as the Board takes action to open the beaches.  There was a discussion among board members and many comments from the community were submitted electronically.

Commissioners Bender, May,  Barry and I voted to keep the beaches closed.

Commissioner Underhill wanted the beaches to be reopened, and was the lone vote against the motion to keep the beaches closed.

Thursday, March 26, 2020

I'll be on 1370 WCOA This Morning Discussing the County and COVID-19

Image result for wcoa 1370



I'll be on Good Morning Pensacola on 1370 WCOA this morning discussing the County's response to the COVID-19 Pandemic.

I'm fairly certain the topic of Pensacola Beach will come up as well, in the wake of this article in today's PNJ.

Looking forward to the discussion.  When I get the audio recording, I will link it here.

Should Pensacola Beach be Re-Opened?

Image result for pensacola beach



If it can be done safely--then yes, it should be.

But if we are told that it absolutely cannot be done safely---then we should not open the beach.

But either way--we should have the discussion on April 2nd.

The CDC issued guidelines do not mandate beach closure.  Florida Governor Ron DeSantis has not MANDATED all beaches to close.

But the Escambia Board of County Commissioners voted last week to close all beaches for at least two weeks at the urging of our health care executives and the health department director.

Meanwhile, the physical area of Pensacola Beach is open;  many of the beach businesses are still open.  Restaurants are selling meals to go, and hotels are accepting reservations and taking-in guests at Pensacola Beach right now as I type this.

Rooms are exceptionally cheap right now, too.   And although guests at Pensacola Beach hotels cannot currently, legally go on the sandy portions of the beach (because these are all closed until at least April 2nd by order of the County Commissioners)--they are still allowed to use the pools and spas and hot tubs and sunbathe around the pool. 

So folks are still coming to the beach anyway--even if the sandy portions of the beach are technically and legally closed.  I have also heard, anecdotally, that some visitors and others  are still going onto the sandy portions of the Gulf of Mexico side of the beach on Pensacola Beach despite our rule prohibiting this. (Obviously, there are a lot of miles of beach and a limited number of public safety personnel and sheriff's deputies to patrol the whole area--so who knows to what extent this order is already being violated). 

Meanwhile, back at the Pensacola Beach hotels--if groups are gathered at the pools instead of on the beaches (where with more room on the sandy beaches they could better disperse as a crowd maintaining even more distance between one another)--the social distancing is much more difficult to control.  And who is patrolling the hotel's pools to insure the distancing protocols are being followed?

I get it that folks are nervous about out of towners coming in from New Orleans or New York and seeking refuge at Pensacola Beach.  But wait--they are doing this right now as we speak---it's just that nobody is talking about that.  And unless we are shutting and sealing our Florida borders, who are we to say they can't come here?

So if we can enforce social distancing on the beach and safely allow locals back on the beach to fish or enjoy the outdoors with their families--why shouldn't we do this?  I would like to hear rational reasons why not.


Friday, March 20, 2020

Leaders in the Medical Community Urging Escambia County to Close the Beaches, Libraries, and Restaurants

Last night at 7:41PM --all commissioners received the below letter from area leaders from the medical community..............urging draconian action to stop the spread of the Chinese Coronavirus