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Celebs draw line in sand over public beach access in Malibu
San Luis Obispo Tribune ^ | March 18, 2005 | ANGIE WAGNER

Posted on 03/21/2005 10:53:59 AM PST by tomball

MALIBU, Calif. - Just off the Pacific Coast Highway, where the Santa Monica Mountains tower over the ocean, some of Hollywood's biggest stars have settled into a slice of heaven.

Steven Spielberg. Danny DeVito. Goldie Hawn. Over the years, they have joined the lucky few who call Broad Beach home.

Their front yards open onto a mile-long, sandy stretch of California coastline. They spent millions to get here, and they'd like to be left alone.

Alan Latteri didn't spend a dime, and nobody's heard of him. But he figures he has as much right to the sand, surf and sun as any movie mogul.

The California Coastal Commission agrees. So do the residents of Broad Beach, as long as Latteri and others stay off their property.

The question is: Where does the front yard end and the public beach begin? So far, the answer is a crazy quilt of property lines, easements and No Trespassing signs that confuse all but the experts.

It takes a map, a tape measure and the soul of a surveyor just to figure out where to legally lay out a beach towel. A walk along the beach can require as many twists and turns as a Hollywood whodunit.

Staying in the wet sand is a safe bet for beach-goers. That's public. Beyond that, a day at the beach could involve a bucket of trouble.

Two security guards patrol on ATVs in the summer, making sure visitors don't stray into private areas. Some, like Latteri, claim they've been intimidated or harassed.

Homeowners complain that people hang out in their beachfront yards, dump their trash and defecate on the beach. They accuse the Coastal Commission of, in effect, trying to seize chunks of their land.

The commission and others say the dispute is all about guaranteeing public access to a state-owned beach.

"The problem really isn't about parking or restrooms or any of that," said Steve Hoye, founder of California's Access For All. "It's all about private property and public, and it's about privilege. People would like to think Broad Beach is private."

The clash over shoreline access goes on across the country, leading to lawsuits and disagreements in North Carolina, Michigan, Ohio and elsewhere. Private development along the New Jersey shore makes it almost impossible for the public to reach the beach in some areas.

But the battle at Broad Beach has something most beaches don't - star power. Add in politics, and pretty much everyone has an opinion about it.

"It's the wealthy against the average guy," said Jefferson Wagner, owner of the Zuma Jay surfshop in Malibu.

Celebrities have been living in Malibu, about 20 miles west of Los Angeles, since the 1920s, when Clara Bow, Bing Crosby and Joan Crawford helped turn the small community into an A-list hotspot. Today, many of Malibu's famous residents spend their summer here in homes that range from $3 million to $30 million.

The celebrities aren't eager to talk about the beach battle. But many Malibu residents support their Broad Beach neighbors and complain that the public doesn't respect the beach.

"They treat this like a huge garbage dump," said Ron Lawrence, a retired doctor out for a morning walk along Broad Beach. "I've seen people defecate on the beaches. They wouldn't tolerate it in the city."

Marshall and Winifred Lumsden aren't famous, but they live among their tinsel town neighbors in a cottage on Broad Beach, right next to one of two county-owned public pathways that lead from the road to the beach.

Families and surfers walk past their house to get to the sand, and some wash themselves with the water out of the Lumsdens' faucet.

Children want to play on the slide in their sandy front yard; dogs have run through their house. During the summer, people ask to use their restroom or plop down right in their sand.

"I'll go out and ask them to move down a little bit," said Marshall Lumsden, 82.

There are no public services on the beach - no restrooms, no lifeguards, no restaurants. But that doesn't discourage Latteri and others from wanting to soak up the million-dollar views for a few hours on the cheap.

"You gotta let us poor people have a little bit of fun," said Latteri, a 29-year-old who is in between jobs and drives here from Los Angeles.

Broad Beach visitors complain that security guards harass them or imply that the beach is private.

"He tried to scare me off," Latteri said of one guard.

The "private property, do not trespass" signs don't help explain the boundaries, either. On this day, the signs put up by homeowners claim the private property line begins 22 feet toward the ocean from where the sign is placed.

Houses next door might have an unmarked easement that allows public access.

It's so complicated that the Coastal Commission posted a map of Broad Beach easements on its Web site last year to help explain it. But who prints out a map before they hit the beach?

The Coastal Commission wants the signs and the guards removed.

"If they are really concerned about the public trespassing onto their property or breaking into their homes, they can do what most of us do. We lock our doors," said Linda Locklin, access program manager for the commission.

"Most of us live in cities and most of us have a sidewalk in front of our houses, and the public goes on that sidewalk at all hours of the day," she said. "The rest of us have all come up with mechanisms to cope."

Homeowners have nothing against the public, said Marshall Grossman, an attorney and board member of Broad Beach's homeowners association. They just have to protect themselves.

Most of the confusion surrounds the easements.

When beachfront homeowners want to develop their property, remodel or put up a sea wall, they apply for a permit from the Coastal Commission. The commission often requires owners to offer a public access easement across their property.

Fifty-two of the 108 properties on Broad Beach have lateral easements; many just went into effect last year. Easements vary in depth, but all begin where the wet sand meets the dry sand and extend back toward the homes. The public gets down to the beach from the county-owned pathways, then can move across the beach, in dry sand, along public easements.

But because not every house has an easement, the sand is a checkerboard of public and private patches. Wet sand is all public.

"As a result, members of the public and homeowners alike are hopelessly confused as to where the public can walk or park themselves and where they can't," Grossman said.

Last summer, Coastal Commissioner and Malibu resident Sara Wan went to Broad Beach and sat down on public sand with her ice chest and towel. But almost as soon as she did, she was approached by a security guard on an ATV who reminded her to stay in the public sand. When she started walking, sheriff's deputies showed up, and she had to explain she really was on public land.

"The beach is basically a public asset. It shouldn't be just for those people who bought homes there," Wan said. "It should belong to everybody."

Grossman, a former Coastal Commission member, accuses the commission of scheming to get lateral easements from homeowners by making the permit process cumbersome. He cites a 1987 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that found the commission's practice of obtaining easements at the time to be an "out-and-out plan of extortion."

The homeowners want lateral access to be uniform along the beach, but refuse to get rid of the security guards. Grossman said homeowners are willing to remove the signs and place smaller ones on each property.

If the two sides can't agree, the commission could pursue a cease-and-desist order against homeowners or the whole mess could end up in court.

On Memorial Day weekend, Hoye and his Access for All group plan a beach brigade, passing out maps to the public, showing people exactly where they can sit on public land and encouraging them to do so.

"What will it take for these homeowners to chill on this operation?" he said. "Stop harassing people. If they want to go to war, we're prepared to."

Until summer comes, Broad Beach hardly seems set for war, even of the Hollywood variety. As waves rustled ashore and the sea air beckoned one recent morning, lawn chairs sat perfectly placed on the porches of sprawling celebrity homes. Dogs splashed in the water, and joggers pounded past the surf, ignoring the invisible lines in the sand.

 



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Extended News; Government; News/Current Events; US: California
KEYWORDS: hollyweird; hollywoodleftists; landuse; limousineliberals; malibu; privacy; propertyrights; publicaccess; rats
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To: RKV
I don't know how these celebrities property deeds read but ours is spelled out exactly what is our and that it has been deemed private property by the county Getting people to respect "private property" & "no trespassing" signs is another matter
41 posted on 03/21/2005 11:35:55 AM PST by boxerblues
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To: doug from upland

Count me in Doug. Wet sand is all public.


42 posted on 03/21/2005 11:37:25 AM PST by AGreatPer (Harley, an American Tradition. Clinton, an American Disgrace.)
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To: boxerblues
If you read the article in detail, its clear that there are public trails to the beach (and some other apparently poorly marked easements) - so people can legally be there. I live in Santa Barbara and have driven past this area for a number of years on business. We have similar problems here. The beach is getting much more use than in the past and that is a fact. It is also pretty clear that some folks are abusing private property. Its a mixed bag. I do admit to a chuckle when the limousine liberals show their true colors.
43 posted on 03/21/2005 11:41:08 AM PST by RKV ( He who has the guns, makes the rules.)
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To: boxerblues

In Sea Island, GA, there are no public beaches . There are public accesses to the beaches for the people who live or rent the cottages inland. The people who use these accesses are mindful of the private properties, but can set up tents and even have dinner parties on the beaches.

It's a matter of respect - both ways.


44 posted on 03/21/2005 11:41:34 AM PST by peacebaby (I'll get to Heaven, but I'll be on probation for a while.)
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To: tomball

Reminds me of that windmill problem in Martha's Vinwyard. Never in a liberal's backyard.


45 posted on 03/21/2005 11:46:07 AM PST by struggle ((The struggle continues))
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To: tomball

Nothing like sunbathing on wet sand.


46 posted on 03/21/2005 11:46:36 AM PST by Old Professer (As darkness is the absence of light, evil is the absence of good; innocence is blind.)
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To: tomball

The liberal lawmakers of Malibu should sponsor a program for the Homeless and the rehabilitated criminals to make use of the public facilities of Malibu. I'm sure all the caring libs who own the beach properties would be happy to share.


47 posted on 03/21/2005 11:50:02 AM PST by Inwoodian
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To: tomball
If they have to stay in the wet sand then I guess they won't be laying in the sun. If the beach is public then it shouldn't matter whose home is further back, the sandy beach is still PUBLIC.

The Hollywood elite like to claim that they champion the little guy, but in reality they want the little guy as far away from them as possible.

I suspect they don't buy it because that would prove it. Some of these celebs even dislike or hate having fans. They don't like being recognized. Makes one wonder what they thought being a celebrity would be all about, when they strove to be one.

48 posted on 03/21/2005 11:54:54 AM PST by Netizen (jmo)
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To: Military family member

I live in Santa Monica & have been down on these Malibu beaches. Although, most of the time I was an invited guest...I did once crash a 4th of July party at Robert Redfords home. That was priceless.....and a ton of fun.


49 posted on 03/21/2005 12:07:25 PM PST by Feiny (Too bad drinking scotch isn't a paying job or Kenny's dad would be a millionaire!)
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To: Netizen

"The Hollywood elite like to claim that they champion the little guy, but in reality they want the little guy as far away ...."

very good point.


50 posted on 03/21/2005 12:08:26 PM PST by peacebaby (I'll get to Heaven, but I'll be on probation for a while.)
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To: pabianice

The ad says, "fresh water flying only", so that wouldn't solve this problem.


51 posted on 03/21/2005 12:20:55 PM PST by RonF
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To: mountaineer
It is complicated all over the country. In MD, the tidal land is public. That is because it is Federal (I believe) Determining the mean sea level and riparian rights s a complicated problem all over the country.
52 posted on 03/21/2005 1:03:11 PM PST by Citizen Tom Paine (An old sailor sends.)
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To: tomball
"They treat this like a huge garbage dump," said Ron Lawrence, a retired doctor out for a morning walk along Broad Beach. "I've seen people defecate on the beaches. They wouldn't tolerate it in the city."

This guy's never been to San Francisco.

53 posted on 03/21/2005 1:08:56 PM PST by <1/1,000,000th%
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To: struggle

My thoughts exactly. The old `I have an armed bodyguard, but no guns for you'/jet to the Save the Polar Bears lib-limo syndrome. Absolutely shameless parasites.
(Here's the deal: they can have the beaches. And their `culture'. We'll keep everything in the middle, including the food.)


54 posted on 03/21/2005 1:12:16 PM PST by OkieDoke
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To: tomball

-"I've seen people defecate on the beaches. They wouldn't tolerate it in the city."-

Sure they do. Liberal cities everywhere give free reign to public bums.


55 posted on 03/21/2005 1:14:50 PM PST by AmericanChef
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To: feinswinesuksass

My wife and I lived in the colony for a short time. The only person that we saw using the beach was tom hanks. He was nice. Other neighbors sting etc never used the beach. Brian Keith just sat in a lawn chair in his garage all day, no wonder he shot himself. Most of these people are so self absorbed and they really do not have much of a life so they make gigantic deals out of nothing. Generally pathetically little lives that are based on others for their validity. Er go buying a beach house and trying to make it your own beach. which is property they did not buy because in california you cant.


56 posted on 03/21/2005 1:19:29 PM PST by Walkingfeather (q)
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To: Tacis
Here's some creative progressives:
New Times L.A. Apr 11, 2002

Even now, in what might be described as a battle of the haves and the have mores, lawsuits are flying after a remarkable piece of beach-money politics involving a trio of Malibu heavyweights: billionaire philanthropist Eli Broad, billionaire television mogul Haim Saban (Mighty Morphin Power Rangers) and Nancy Daly Riordan, wife of the ex-Los Angeles mayor [Richard Riordan] and failed gubernatorial candidate. In exchange for being allowed to build huge mansions near each other on Carbon Beach that would illegally obstruct ocean views, the three friends overcame the commission’s objections by the most old-fashioned of means. They wrote checks for a combined $1 million to buy and donate a strip of shoreline 80 feet wide for public access -- not near their homes, but at nearby La Costa Beach.

The “gift” would provide the only access point in one of the most inaccessible of Malibu’s residential beach corridors. But La Costa homeowners -- among them actor Ryan O’Neal and record producer Lou Adler -- weren’t keen on having the public hordes invade the empty beachfront just off their balconies. They’ve sued the coastal commission and its sister agency, the state Coastal Conservancy, to prevent the site, known locally as “the cove,” from getting opened to the public. Agreeing with them, a Los Angeles Superior Court judge last July scolded Broad, Daly Riordan and Saban for maneuvering to transfer a “nuisance” to their neighbors down the beach. The commission has appealed the ruling. But regardless of whether the “the cove” is ever opened, Broad, Daly Riordan and Saban can’t lose. At a cost of a million dollars divided by three, they got approval for the houses they wanted, leaving the La Costa folks to duke it out with the state in court.


57 posted on 03/21/2005 1:22:30 PM PST by calcowgirl
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To: rockabyebaby
Hmmm, why don't these celebs just buy the beach outright, they have enough money, end of story,

Uh. No. There are regulations that prevent it.

58 posted on 03/21/2005 1:22:46 PM PST by lepton ("It is useless to attempt to reason a man out of a thing he was never reasoned into"--Jonathan Swift)
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To: tomball
And so the downward spiral of FR continues. In the state of California it is legal to own private property down to the mean high-tide. That means cities like Hermosa Beach and Huntington Beach legally own their beachs all the way down to the mean high-tide line. (LA county controls most of the other beaches in front of beach towns such as Manhattan Beach.)

It also means individuals have the right to own property down to the mean high-tide line. Broadbeach creates problems because it is a continuation of LA County's Zuma Beach. At the first private property line, the entire public beach is narrowed down to the wet sand in the mean high tide zone.

Where Broadbeach gets confusing is that certain homeowners have allowed public easements up past the wet sand onto their private property ie dry sand. That's what creates the checker board look.

However, regardless of one's wealth or political affiliation, the bottom line is that this is a private property issue.

59 posted on 03/21/2005 1:26:45 PM PST by lemura
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To: HamiltonJay
Never bothered us much, but then again, we weren't rich arrogant farts either.

You, alas, were done in by the embarrassment of having sh*t that stinks...

60 posted on 03/21/2005 1:27:58 PM PST by r9etb
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