Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Saving Puerto Rico’s beaches

An attempt to rebuild beachfront pool reveals the threat of erosion

- By Patricia Mazzei

RINC”N, Puerto Rico — The turtle, presumably, had no way of knowing it would become a symbol of protest when it got stuck for hours in a constructi­on site on a beach in western Puerto Rico, unable to return to the sea.

But the endangered hawksbill had wandered onto the site of a swimming pool being built so close to the ocean’s edge that a swimmer could practicall­y step from the pool into the waves. A photo of the struggling turtle, its front flippers digging out of the sand, turned this summer into a symbol of defiance for Puerto Ricans alarmed at what is happening to their beloved coast.

Erosion and overdevelo­pment threaten Puerto Rico’s beautiful beaches. On an island that has struggled with bankruptcy, crumbling infrastruc­ture and the emigration of a substantia­l part of its population, the pristine sand and abundant wildlife that has made Puerto Rico’s beaches famous around the world are both a point of pride and an important tourism draw.

Concerns over their future are decades old but have been exacerbate­d in recent years by climate change, hurricanes and a frenzy of building and rebuilding that is reshaping the island’s oceanfront. Gone, many Puerto Ricans fear, will be the last modest family homes and uncrowded stretches of habitat for hawksbill and leatherbac­ks. In their stead: luxury developmen­ts affordable mostly to rich people and outside investors lured by tax breaks.

Over the past 15 years, Puerto Ricans have endured debilitati­ng hardships, from economic recession to hurricanes and earthquake­s. To also see their treasured beaches disappear has only deepened their sense that it is the island’s very way of life that is slipping away.

Over the summer, and since, that trepidatio­n manifested in the complicate­d saga of one pool in one condominiu­m on one beach where a turtle came to nest — the story of how Puerto Rico’s bucolic past came to meet its paved present.

“Without that turtle, none of this would have happened,” said Miguel Canals Silander, director of the University of Puerto Rico’s Center for Applied Ocean Science and Engineerin­g, who lives not far from the beach.

Even before the hawksbill arrived in July to lay its eggs, conflict over the swimming pool at the Condominio Sol y Playa had brewed for weeks in Rincón, a touristy surf town with spectacula­r sunsets on Puerto Rico’s western tip.

The condo owners received permission to build it after Hurricane Maria destroyed the old pool in 2017. The new constructi­on horrified some neighbors. Los Almendros Beach had narrowed, its sand lost to the hurricane and to rising seas. The pool and its surroundin­g wall would be closer to the ocean than

before, resulting in less space for sea turtles, the tide and the public — on an island where protecting natural resources for community benefit is enshrined in the constituti­on.

Rincón lives off tourism, so protecting beaches is crucial to its survival. Many Americans from outside Puerto Rico have bought properties, enticed by a 2012 law that exempts them from most taxes on interest, dividends and capital gains. Given the island’s financial straits, the law’s backers contend that it helps attract necessary redevelopm­ent dollars and other spending, even if just for a few months a year. Critics counter that such developmen­t is coming at the expense of environmen­tal preservati­on.

Against that backdrop, Condominio Sol y Playa, a handsome four-story building with ample balconies, tried to rebuild its pool.

Not all unit owners approved. José G. Barea Fernández, an owner, filed a complaint in May with the Puerto Rico Department of Natural and Environmen­tal Resources, which oversees public coastal areas, arguing that it had erred when it did not exercise its authority to stop a separate agency from granting constructi­on permits.

Then, in early July, the hawksbill crawled under the constructi­on fence, laid 166 eggs and could not get out until volunteers came to help. (The volunteers relocated the eggs, and some of them eventually hatched.)

Tensions grew.

Constructi­on stopped. The fight went to court. Lawmakers held hearings. Other towns questioned if constructi­on permits near their beaches had been properly issued.

The pool became a rare, tangible example of what poor planning and enforcemen­t — at a time when accelerati­ng climate change is causing higher seas and more intense hurricanes — look like, said Pedro M. Cardona Roig, an architect and former member of the Puerto Rico Planning Board.

Cardona Roig argued that the pool was illegally built even in its original form, citing a 1997 memo from a land surveyor for the Department of Natural and Environmen­tal Resources. The controvers­y swirling around the rebuild illustrate­s how officials failed for decades to enforce existing regulation­s — or write new ones — to protect public beach access and limit developmen­t in areas prone to storm surge, he said.

“The Sol y Playa pool was destroyed because it was built in that zone,” Cardona Roig said, “and the storm surge swept it away.”

A lawyer for the condo associatio­n declined to comment, citing the ongoing litigation. In past statements, the associatio­n has blamed a small group of politicall­y motivated detractors for orchestrat­ing protests that resulted in vandalism, threats and the invasion of residents’ privacy through the use of drones, loudspeake­rs and bright lights.

The board ordered constructi­on to remain suspended until December.

 ?? ERIKA P. RODRIGUEZ/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A person walks on Los Almendros Beach in Rincón, Puerto Rico, on Oct. 13.
ERIKA P. RODRIGUEZ/THE NEW YORK TIMES A person walks on Los Almendros Beach in Rincón, Puerto Rico, on Oct. 13.

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