Those that live on the
seashore are the real free loaders of society. They have their
insurance premium supported by the people that live inland.
Naturists should file lawsuits opposing beach renourishment with
taxpayer money in counties that ban the use of beach areas to naturists.
Denying Equal Access is un-Constitutional.
We do support the county against land take-over by shoreline property owners.
With almost 900 miles of Florida shoreline, there should be more
designated areas than the 1/4 mile at Haulover Beach Park next the city
of Sunny Isles Beach.
There should be designated naturist beach areas in several state
parks. This would increase park beach attendance 80% or more and park
revenues accordingly.
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Beach Rights Versus Property Rights
December 01, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)
FWC Outlaws The "Cruel Practice" of Fox Pens
The Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission has put a lurching halt the unseemly practice of canned fox and coyote hunts. The unsporting practice, a northern Florida pursuit, entailed setting loose hounds on the wild animals inside fenced enclosures. The foxes and coyotes, some illegally imported from other states, were often ripped apart by the hunting dogs.
The FWC found this indefensible. The commission's news release:
The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) voted Wednesday to move forward with a draft rule prohibiting the operation of fox and coyote enclosures. The decision followed consideration of a suite of options to improve the process governing the enclosures and listening to several hours of comments from the public.
The presentation by Maj. Curtis Brown with the FWC's Captive Wildlife and Investigations Section focused on humane treatment of foxes and coyotes and translocation of disease. He proposed three options for consideration, including prohibiting the enclosures outright, continuing to allow the enclosures with stricter regulations or phasing out the enclosures by January of 2013.
After
six hours of discussion and testimonies from about 80 members of the
public, whose responses varied from calling the practice a "valued
family tradition" to a "cruel practice and threat to traditional
hunting," Chairman Rodney Barreto began the decision-making portion of
the meeting. "As long as I've been with the
Commission, we've vigorously supported hunting in Florida. I don't
believe this is fair chase," Barreto said. "I feel Florida needs to be a
leader in America. We need to end the use of these enclosures and end
them now."
For nearly a year, the FWC has been working to make the right decisions regarding the controversial practice of chasing foxes and coyotes with dogs within enclosures. FWC staff and Commissioners have worked with the public to improve both the permit process for the enclosures and the methods by which they are maintained.
Last September, FWC Commissioners directed the
agency's law enforcement staff to review the permitting process and
research the history and number of such enclosures in the state. The
Commission also ceased issuing fox and coyote enclosure permits at that
time.
At the February 2010 Commission meeting, Commissioners approved the temporary prohibition of chasing foxes and coyotes in enclosures. FWC staff was directed to work with stakeholders to address certain issues of concern regarding the enclosures and to draft rules guiding them.
FWC staff will publish a
draft rule that details the definition of an enclosure, contains
language addressing the prohibition and establishes a timeline for
relinquishing foxes and coyotes currently in possession. Staff was
directed to bring a final rule back for consideration to the September
meeting in Weston. FWC staff also agreed to explore further options for
dog-hunting of foxes and coyotes on open public lands around the state.
December 01, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (3) | TrackBack (0)

