Dottie Nist reported in yesterday's DeFuniak Herald / Beach Breeze that property owners from the western Grayton drive-on access to the Grayton State Park dunes area to the west requested and were granted that vending not be allowed.
When does this take place, looking forward to getting our beach back to us and a place to park our trucks on Beach.
This is on the non-driving area of Grayton.
there's only one LAW , why can't deputies be taught or trained on LAW enforcement. One day , on one beach ( on 30A) this will all explode and a judge will have to decide, why Law Enforcement could get their act together....one beach enforcer told me they don't like to issue citations because if challenged they will have to spend time in a court room....:seriously:Lots of confusion recently on who can be where and on what beach... Deputies are telling several different versions. Some cite the "20 foot rule", others the "wet sand" and yet others feel the whole beach is public. I don't think anyone knows and it's like the lottery depending on what deputy you get when you call for service. What gives the Wedding Planner / Party the right to move the Beach Chairs in the first place? If its a public beach, can't do it. If its private and the beach chair guy has a permit, can't do it... This county needs to clarify their enforcement stance on this and other issues. Personally, I feel from what I've seen about this incident, the Wedding Group was completely at fault and should have been, at a minimum cited with a Criminal Infraction. While the Beach Vendor could have retreated, he may not have been able to and with thousands of dollars of equipment (his chairs and umbrellas) he probably didn't want to leave them to be damaged by the "Tourists". Nothing would have been done had they damaged his property anyway. He'd be out $$$ and the Wedding must go on. There is a growing trend this season of Local vs. Tourist, be it on the beach at a local restaurant, its growing.