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This reminds me of the situation in Boston with the Harborwalk - a 43 mile
walking path that circles the entire harbor, except for the airport. It was possible because access to the water was guaranteed by old laws. It means that the fancy waterfront condos, marinas, and hotels have to provide a walking path along the docks. "Larry Weiss" wrote in message ... "Wayne.B" wrote: On Wed, 04 Feb 2004 13:48:56 GMT, Larry Weiss wrote: Basically we are talking about a local town public park and marina on the waterfront. The park is supposed to be for use by town residents only (the park land was donated to the town in 1942 by descendants of Teddy Roosevelt and that strict covenant is in the deed). Over the last few years, the town has stopped enforcing this restriction. Officials claim it is because of a law, which they are unable to cite, which states that they can not restrict access to the water. I believe they may be misinterpreting a law meant to prohibit restricting a boat's access to waterways from the water (which I recall hearing about somewhere), rather than a person's access to the water from land. Nobody on either side seems to be able to cite any law from either perspective. I'm just looking for something official to cite, one way or the other. =========================================== Larry, why would the good people of Oyster Bay want to block access to their dock by alien infidels like me (from NY, CT, FL and where ever)? Is the dock getting over crowded or is this just a territorial thing? You're reminding me of why I've always had issues with Long Island towns. :-) Sorry Wayne, its not about the water or the dock. Please come on over and enjoy Oyster Bay anytime. We love alien infidels like you. :-) Its the other infidels that are the problem ... As far as the issue at hand goes, I didn't clearly explain it because I was merely looking for a possible legal citation. But if you must know, the locals are concerned about the Town Park being over used - and trashed - by people from New York City who are coming out by train (the station is conveniently next to the park). Since it is a local park maintained by local taxes, and since the covenant specifically states it is to be used by locals, and since the out-of-towners (a.k.a. "the other infidels") are not treating the park or the park rules with any respect, the locals are getting upset. The Town says they can not enforce the residents-only rule because the law says they must allow access to the water. I think they are misinterpreting the law; that if there is such a law, it applies to boaters on their boats, not people on the land. I'm looking for something to back that up. Larry Weiss "...Ever After!" "a little after..." |
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