The Gold Coast Bulletin

BEACHES OF DISCONTENT

- ANDREW POTTS AND RYAN KEEN

POLICE have already stepped up beach patrols after Mayor Tom Tate announced three of the Gold Coast’s busiest beaches would be shut from midnight tonight to slow the spread of COVID-19. Southern Gold Coast residents Anna Hammond and Max Whittaker (pictured) said they “live for the beach” and the decision would hurt locals.

A SOUTHERN Gold Coast couple who “live for the beach” say council’s decision to clamp down on social gathering will be “bad” for locals.

Bilinga resident Anna Hammond was on Coolangatt­a Beach yesterday morning while her boyfriend Max Whittaker was in the surf when police approached her and asked her to move on, just hours after the council announced it would close three beaches.

“I am not happy about this at all, I live for the beach,” she said. “I was sitting on the beach at Greenmount when a police buggy drove up and told me to either swim or get off the beach.

“I guess it has to happen to stop the spread of the virus but it’s not good especially now during the school holidays.

“It is going to make things tough for a while.”

Police yesterday afternoon stepped up beach patrols aimed at halting the spread of coronaviru­s, threatenin­g a four-strong group of German students playing volleyball with $1300 fines in Surfers Paradise.

But the students told the

Bulletin the rules were “confusing”, three of them lived together so they were part of the same “bubble” and that beach volleyball should be OK. They also felt the Australian response overall particular­ly shutting borders had been “too slow”.

Two police approached the group of Griffith University exchange students who had been sunbaking together before their volleyball started on the southern stretch of Surfers Paradise Beach.

One officer told them they were only allowed to be in pairs maximum and lucky not to get a $1300 fine each. They were told to consider themselves warned and to leave the beach immediatel­y.

The stretch of beach where they were was outside the area which will be off limits in central Surfers Paradise from midnight tonight.

The group said they had all opted to remain on the Gold Coast through the pandemic partly because of the nicer weather and tighter restrictio­ns back home.

Asked what they thought of the Australian response to coronaviru­s so far, one said: “Too slow. They should have shut down the borders way earlier.”

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 ?? Picture: GLENN HAMPSON ?? While Max Whittaker, 26, from Tweed Heads surfed yesterday, girlfriend Anna Hammond, 27, from Bilinga, was asked to leave the beach at Coolangatt­a.
Picture: GLENN HAMPSON While Max Whittaker, 26, from Tweed Heads surfed yesterday, girlfriend Anna Hammond, 27, from Bilinga, was asked to leave the beach at Coolangatt­a.
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