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Stand Your Sand on South Walton Beaches

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Details
What: Stand Your Sand on South Walton Beaches
When: Monday, July 1, 2019
Time: 12:00 pm to 11:45 am
Where: Ed Walline & other Walton County Beach Accesses

Come out on Monday July 1st to Stand Your Sand at Ed Walline Beach Access in Gulf Place or any Walton County Beach Access. Join hands at NOON and Stand Your Sand for the love of Customary Use of our beaches here in South Walton Florida.

Link hands with your children, friends and neighbors. In the name of Customary Use, a peaceful, respectful gathering at your neighborhood TDC Walton County Owned Beach Access or anywhere you choose in the wet sand lawfully accessed by the wet sand.

Gather together at 12:00 noon and simply link hands with your back to the water and stand your sand for 10 minutes to embrace our beaches we have shared for centuries. Smile, be respectful, have fun.

CU at the Beach on July 1st!

Stand Your Sand 2019
Monday July 1 at 12pm
Ed Walline Beach Access or a  Walton County Beach Access Near You

Florida Beaches for All is a non-profit 501(c)4 founded August 13, 2018, by a group of concerned citizens regarding the use of the dry sandy beaches in Walton County, Florida. Simply put, the group's mission is to peacefully preserve and perpetuate the doctrine of Customary Use of ALL BEACHES in Florida.  Learn more: https://www.floridabeachesforall.org/.

Follow Florida Beaches for All on Facebook for updates on events and information about the Customary Use issue in Walton County, Florida. 

CUSTOMARY USE
A doctrine that describes the inalienable right of people to walk upon and lawfully and respectfully use ALL BEACHES for recreation as they have for thousands of years.

Surfrider Foundation News

DECEMBER 19 2018
Lawsuit Filed to Protect Customary Use in Walton County, Florida
by Staley Prom

On December 11, 2018, Walton County, located in the Florida panhandle, filed a lawsuit asking the Circuit Court for the First Judicial Circuit in Walton County to affirm the public’s right to recreationally use the county’s dry sandy beaches. Specifically, the County has asked the court to declare that the public’s use of the county’s sandy beaches has been ancient, reasonable, without interruption, and free from dispute, and therefore that the public has a right to continue to use the beaches based on the doctrine of “customary use.” 

Walton County previously adopted its own Customary Use Ordinance in 2016 (which it revised in 2017), recognizing and protecting the public’s historic use of the beach. In doing so, the County recognized that recreational use of its beaches is “a treasured asset of the County which is utilized by the public at large,” and that “the dry sand areas of all of the beaches in the County are a vital economic asset to the County.” Surfrider has been supportive of public beach access along Florida’s Emerald Coast and advocated for adoption of the ordinance. After being challenged by a beachfront property owner, the U.S. District Court for the Northern District Court of Florida (in Alford v. Walton County) upheld the ordinance, concluding that the county had home rule authority to adopt it. Subsequently, however, in March 2018, the Florida legislature adopted H.B 631, a bill preempting local customary use ordinances passed after January 1, 2016, unless adopted pursuant to a new process. Therefore, Walton County’s ordinance was taken off the books and the Alford decision was ordered vacated.

However, Walton County has remained committed to protecting beach access for its residents and visitors, and is now the first local Florida jurisdiction to begin moving through the new legislatively mandated process. On November 3, it took the first required step, by holding a noticed public hearing and adopting a formal notice of intent to affirm the existence of customary use rights on certain portions of private beachfront property. With the filing of its complaint on December 11th, the County has taken the second step, and pursuant to H.B 631, the complaint names the over 1,000 specific parcels of property upon which the County seeks to affirm the existence of recreational customary use. Those affected property owners may now intervene and become parties in the action.  Read more at surfrider.org: Lawsuit Filed to Protect Customary Use in Walton County, Florida

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