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Fences on beaches cause uproar and confusion about new Florida law

Posted at 6:02 PM, Jul 02, 2018
and last updated 2018-07-03 13:57:10-04

INDIAN ROCKS BEACH, Fla. — Some people are not happy seeing a part of their favorite beach fenced off, but homeowners are saying a new Florida law states it's private property. 

Jack Tenney has lived on Indian Rocks Beach his whole life.

"It seems like every morning of the 4th of July is a fight to get beach space and we figured because we can, we’re going to fence it off and we have our own little beach access for the day," said Tenney.  

But most people do not share Tenney’s enthusiasm.

"The person who owns that building can do this, the person who owns that building and all the way down. Not even just this beach but the entire state of Florida, and that’s what confuses and scares me," said Michael Honcho who is visiting Florida. 

The new Florida law that went into effect on July 1 says beaches can be private for people who live on them up to the high tide line. 

"Then you see (people putting up fences) and it comes to real light that someone can actually do this now," said Honcho. 

But the city of Indian Rocks Beach says their city ordinance that was in effect before state law overrides it. Their law is that all beaches in the city are public. They’ve given Tenney 24-hours to take down his fence, or else he faces big fines. 

The Office of Governor Rick Scott released the following statement regarding the issue: 

“This law does not ‘ban’ or privatize any beach in Florida. If a local government wants to expand the public beach area, this bill simply outlines the legal process to accomplish that.” – John Tupp

But many say the law applying to the entire state without a public vote, still isn’t fair.

"Where does it stop, where does it stop?" said Honcho.