Court delves into Florida beach dispute

Steve Henn Dec 1, 2009
HTML EMBED:
COPY

Court delves into Florida beach dispute

Steve Henn Dec 1, 2009
HTML EMBED:
COPY

TEXT OF STORY

Kai Ryssdal: A lot of people out there would probably love to have a house right on the beach someplace. Unobstructed access to the surf and the sand. Tomorrow the Supreme Court is going to take up a case that’s mostly about that sand as Marketplace’s Steve Henn reports.


STEVE HENN: Owning a house on the beach is a beautiful thing, but in most parts of the country it’s also a big risk. That’s because your property line is tied to the water line, which shifts naturally.

JULIA WYMAN: When you buy a home on the water you sometimes get a little, you sometimes lose a little. And that’s why that’s sort of a dynamic boundary.

Julia Wyman is a lawyer representing coastal states. She says in many places if a storm washes away your front yard, c’est la vie. Florida is a bit different. There, the state can set a so-called erosion control line at the high-tide mark.

WYMAN: It’s a fixed line in the sand if you will.

Above that line is private property. Below it is a public beach. And it’s that line in the sand that’s led to this Supreme Court case. Every year, Florida officials dump tons of sand along miles of coast to preserve the state’s top tourism draw: its beaches. But the program also creates strips of new public beach.

Ilya Shapiro is an attorney at the Cato Institute. He says that’s a problem.

ILYA SHAPIRO: It has the potential of converting people’s beach-front property into beach-view property and that’s definitely a difference.

Meaning a beach-front house isn’t really on the water anymore and instead looks out on a public beach open to anyone. So six years ago, a half-dozen home owners in Walton County, Fla., sued to stop the state and local authorities from creating new public beach land between their homes and the Gulf of Mexico. They argued the state was taking away their exclusive access to the water without compensation. The Florida Supreme Court disagreed.

Lawyer Doug Kendall filed a brief in support of state authorities.

DOUG KENDALL: What the state has done is provide an enormous benefit to these property owners by guaranteeing, notwithstanding any hurricanes or erosion that nature may bring, that we will rebuild the beach in front of your property and spend millions of dollars to do so.

If the Supreme Court sides with homeowners, Julia Wyman, the lawyer for coastal states, says it would force Florida to pay waterfront property owners whenever new public beaches are created.

WYMAN: It would, I’m sure, add a layer of cost, certainly.

And it could tie the state’s hands at a time when the climate is changing, and she fears more intense storms and rising sea levels.

WYMAN: We’re going to be constantly facing these new threats, and allowing the states to best deal with these threats really is in the best interest of the nation as a whole.

Wyman says states should be allowed to protect the coasts, and federal courts should stay out of it.

In Washington, I’m Steve Henn for Marketplace.

There’s a lot happening in the world.  Through it all, Marketplace is here for you. 

You rely on Marketplace to break down the world’s events and tell you how it affects you in a fact-based, approachable way. We rely on your financial support to keep making that possible. 

Your donation today powers the independent journalism that you rely on. For just $5/month, you can help sustain Marketplace so we can keep reporting on the things that matter to you.