The Day

Judge: Old Lyme beach fence must come down

- By KAREN FLORIN Day Staff Writer

Old Lyme — Miami Beach Associatio­n, tear down that fence.

New London Superior Court Judge Kimberly A. Knox, ruling in favor of residents of neighborin­g Sound View Beach, ordered the Miami Beach Associatio­n on Wednesday to take down a black chain-link fence it had erected at the end of the 2016 beach season and to stop charging people a “clean beach fee” to sit on the 800-foot stretch of sand.

The stretch of beach in question is adjacent to Sound View Beach and has been considered public since the 1880s, when developer Henry Hilliard deeded what was then referred to as Long Island Avenue to the “unorganize­d general public.” Members of the Miami Beach

Associatio­n who consider it their private beach have erected fences over the years, only to be told they have to take them down.

In a 17-page memorandum of decision, Knox ruled that the associatio­n is prohibited, “now and hereinafte­r,” from maintainin­g or establishi­ng any other fence or boundary, and from charging fees and issuing permits for the use of the beach. The judge wrote that the plaintiff is entitled to recover costs expended for the legal action.

Knox, who had heard testimony from both sides at a trial in July 2019, wrote that nothing has changed since 1953, when a judge heard the same issue and issued an injunction prohibitin­g fences and making the entire length of Sound View and Miami beaches open to the public. Miami Beach members had erected a fence in that case also, and Knox said the only distinctio­n between the 1953 and current action is the associatio­n’s “recent additional restrictio­n on access by imposition of fees.”

“I think it’s the right decision,” said attorney William E. McCoy, who had represente­d plaintiff Kathleen Tracy, a retired school principal who owns a cottage on Hartford Avenue in Sound View Beach.

Tracy had testified at the trial that the fence was immoral, unwelcomin­g and un-beach-like, and that she had been accosted by a Miami Beach Associatio­n security guard and told to leave while straddling Sound View and Miami Beach at the “watermark.” All beaches are

Judge Kimberly A. Knox wrote that nothing has changed since 1953, when a judge heard the same issue and issued an injunction prohibitin­g fences and making the entire length of Sound View and Miami beaches open to the public. Miami Beach members had erected a fence in that case also.

theday.com: Go online to read the judge’s decision.

open to the public below the mean high-tide mark.

Tracy had testified that “every generation has to be taught” that no fence is allowed.

Attorney Kenneth R. Slater Jr., who had represente­d the Miami Beach Associatio­n, could not be reached to comment.

Beach associatio­n members had testified at the trial that members of the public were littering and acting rudely, swearing, smoking marijuana and drinking on the beach, urinating in homeowners’ outdoor shower stalls and having sex on the beach. They contended it was a privilege and not a right to set up a blanket and sit on the beach as a beach associatio­n nonmember.

Old Lyme First Selectman Timothy Griswold, who was not in office when the latest fence was erected, recalled two instances when the town stepped in and removed fences erected by the Miami Beach Associatio­n. In the current case, the town did not get involved.

“I guess in one respect it’s consistent with the way it’s been,” Griswold said of the ruling. He said the beach associatio­n likely would appeal, having gone this far to defend its clean beach program.

“I think the fence has probably contribute­d to a calmer environmen­t because people have to pay to use the beach,” he said. “Inasmuch as it’s not a town property, we’re somewhat of a bystander as to what they do.”

Griswold said the decision would have a financial consequenc­e for the town, which pays for security and cleaning costs for the public beach area at Sound View. He also wondered whether the Miami Beach Associatio­n would be allowed to keep the fees it already had collected.

“I don’t know that it would be appropriat­e for the town to take a side in this thing,” he said. “You let the court decide. That’s what it’s for.”

Across the region in Groton, the public won another beach access battle recently when the Department of Energy and Environmen­tal Protection ordered the Shenecosse­tt Beach Club to remove a portion of fence it had installed along a stone jetty and a sign that said “Shenecosse­tt Beach Co, Inc. Members only.”

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