SANTA ROSA BEACH — Walton County's Leave No Trace ordinance, which regulates what can be left on the beach and what will be picked up and thrown away, has been put on hold while it is reviewed.
Tracy Louthain, director of public relations for the Beaches of South Walton Tourist Development Council, said TDC officials received word May 22 from County Attorney Mike Burke to "hold off and not remove any more items" from the beach until the ordinance could be refined.
Sonny Mares, executive director of the TDC, said the beach ordinance is "extremely important," but that it should be fair to both environmentalists who are concerned that items left out overnight interfere with sea turtle nesting, as well as to beachgoers.
Beachgoers should be given a reasonable explanation why they cannot leave their items on the beach overnight and have adequate time to remove their belongings before they are thrown away, Mares said.
The central issue is tagging, he added.
Under former Sheriff Ralph Johnson, deputies would tag items left on the beach with a message saying that the owners had 24 hours to remove them.
"If they weren't (removed), our beach crews were instructed to pick them up," Louthain said. And "anything left near public beach walkovers were removed, whether they were tagged or not."
But Sheriff Mike Adkinson, who took over in January, discontinued that practice because he said deputies should not be involved in code enforcement. Since tagging ended, any items left overnight at any of the eight regional beach accesses and public walkovers have been collected and thrown away with no prior warning.
"From my understanding, the county commissioners had concerns that the tagging part of the program wasn't being implemented and wanted the agencies to look at the process and how the tagging element could be put back into place," Louthain said. "We really don't want to throw people's stuff away."
TDC members and county officials, including code enforcement officers, county administrator Ronnie Bell and Burke, are working on an ordinance that addresses questions such as which items can be left on the beach and how much time owners should be given to retrieve them before they are thrown away.
Meanwhile, the TDC will continue to distribute flyers and brochures that ask people to take their items with them when they leave the beach.