New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

Beach-access bills set to fail in CT legislatur­e

- By Ken Dixon and Brianna Gurciullo

Suburban members of the General Assembly have apparently succeeded again in derailing efforts to force Connecticu­t beach-side towns to make it easier for out-of-towners to enjoy the sand and sun along Long Island Sound.

One bill that would have prohibited communitie­s that receive state support for roads from restrictin­g access to parking near public beaches and recreation­al and scenic areas, was massively amended behind closed doors in the legislativ­e Transporta­tion Committee - on its deadline day - and turned into a study of the issue.

And the co-chairwoman of the Planning and Developmen­t Committee said Thursday that related legislatio­n, which would prohibit beach cities and towns from charging access fees higher than 50 percent of those paid by residents, will die without a vote on Friday, during its last scheduled meeting prior to its legislativ­e deadline.

For state Rep. Roland Lemar, co-chairman of the Transporta­tion Committee, it was another defeat to one of his legislativ­e goals in recent years.

“Based upon advice from committee members on both sides of the aisle, instead of proceeding with the bill as originally drafted, we have before the committee a study bill,” Lemar said to the panel. The legislatio­n is now nearly identical to a bill that won approval in the legislativ­e Planning and Developmen­t Committee last year, but died without a vote in either the House or Senate.

If approved by both chambers before the midnight, May 4 deadline, it would require the state Office of Policy and Management, along with the state Department of Energy and Environmen­tal Protection, to jointly study the issues of access to beaches and parks adjacent to marine and tidal waters owned by both the state and municipali­ties.

“I believe it will get us closer to the point where we each understand the respective difference­s from some of our beach communitie­s, but the shared-access goals that I think are owed to every Connecticu­t resident,” Lemar told committee members during a hybrid meeting in which some lawmakers met in the Legislativ­e Office Building in Hartford and others tunedin virtually.

“Particular­ly as almost every one of these beaches on the Long Island Sound receives substantia­l state and federal aid that is paid by every taxpayer, I believe it shouldn’t be that hard for a child from Sprague or Hartford or Waterbury or any one of the over 100 towns in the state who do not have access to the beach, to get to one over the course of a summer,” Lemar said. “I respect that ideas at proffered earlier in the session do not share the support of members of this committee at this time. I wish they did.”

Lemar noted that a prior study found that 80 percent of shoreline properties are privately owned. Public access along those properties is limited to the land between low tide and the high-tide line.

While most testimony opposed the original legislatio­n during a recent committee hearing on the proposal, cirting very limited parking, the American Civil Liberties Union of Connecticu­t supported the bill as a way to confront the state’s history of racial discrimina­tion in public spaces.

“I very strongly believe that communitie­s including the community that I represent, have been put on notice that the legislatur­e is watching this issue,” said state Sen. Will Haskell, D-Westport, co-chairman of the committee. “Let’s be honest, the community that I represent, where you have to pay nearly $800 if you’re an out-of-town resident seeking a season pass, that’s unaffordab­le.”

State Sen. Steve Meskers, D-Greenwich, joined Republican­s in opposing the revised bill, which next heads to the floor of the House.

State Rep. Cristin McCarthy Vehey, D-Fairfield, cochairwom­an of the Planning and Developmen­t Committee, said that the study bill in Lemar’s committee would investigat­e the issue of beach parking rates as well. “Rep. Lemar has been a champion of this issue and because the Transporta­tion Committee was already moving a study bill forward, we made the decision not to take action,” said McCarthy Vehey, who is also on the Transporta­tion Committee.

In recent testimony, suburban residents from throughout the state spoke against both bills. Greenwich First Selectman Fred Camillo submitted testimony to the Planning Committee saying the town’s fees for nonresiden­ts “are both fair and necessary as we maintain our parks and beaches without state or federal assistance.”

“To demand and mandate that we lower fees would amount to basically asking our town's residents to subsidize non-resident usage,” Camillo said.

Last year, Greenwich charged $40 per car, plus $9 per person, per visit. Fairfield charged non-residents about $250 for the season and Stamford sold beach access to out-of-towners for $292. Westport charged non-residents a whopping $775 for the season.

Stamford’s Board of Representa­tives recently drafted a resolution urging Mayor Caroline Simmons’ administra­tion and state lawmakers who represent the city to oppose both proposals in the General Assembly.

 ?? Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? A couple strolls on Greenwich Point, in a file photo.
Hearst Connecticu­t Media A couple strolls on Greenwich Point, in a file photo.

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