1639-24 Politics THU APR 26 1984 ED: FINAL
SECTION: LOCAL PAGE: 1C LENGTH: 1123 LONG
ILLUST: photo: Harry Plissner (2 ) ; diagram: beach property
lines
)URCE: JUANITA GREENE Herald Environment Writer
,DATELINE:
MEMO:
ACTIVIST MOUNTS FIGHT TO RETURN STRIP TO PUBLIC
Harry Plissner squinted in the glare as he strolled a wide vacant strip
of sand between the new boardwalk and the oceanfront buildings on Miami Beach.
He was casting a practiced eye on familiar territory. For more than 40
years, the 83-year-old civic activist has been fighting to protect the
public ' s right to the waterfront. Today, he thinks, he must do battle again.
"Now I ask you, " said Plissner, as the sun bore down on his dark blue
polyester sport shirt, "Is it in the public interest for the state to have
given this land away to the hotels?"
Then he answered his own question. "I say it is not. "
Plissner' s indignation is over a strip of sand between 10 and 75 feet
wide that runs 10 1/2 miles from Government Cut to Haulover Cut. The beach was
restored in the last decade by dredging sand offshore and pumping it up on
the eroded shore. The project cost nearly $80 million.
The strip that concerns Plissner is between a line set by the state and a
line set by the city. The state line, closest to the water, divides public
from private property on the newly widened beach. The city line is a bulkhead
line that set the limits for development on the old beach.
Between the two lines is the vacant strip, a sort of no- man' s land.
-ng the state line, an artificial dune has been built, with a new boardwalk
top. Along the bulkhead line are concrete walls that once served as
barriers against the sea.
Plissner claims this strip between the two lines once was public land
and should be still. Before the new beach was built, he said, the city
bulkhead line ran along the water' s edge and marked the limit of private
property.
The land between the two lines, now in the hands of beachfront hotels
and condominiums, once had to be kept vacant. But on April 4 , the Miami Beach
City Commission gave the owners the right to develop it for all kinds of
private, open-air use -- specifically, "shade structures, sidewalk cafes,
swimming pools, cabanas, hot tubs, showers, whirlpools, toilet facilities,
swimming pool equipment, decks, patios and court games when said games require
no fence. "
The council hopes the land will be used for cafes and such, helping to
attract people to the new boardwalk and create a new ambiance for the beach
area.
Plissner opposes private development of the strip. If the facilities are
needed, he said, the city would be better off to develop them itself . That
way they would be certain to be open to everybody. The city even could sell
concessions in the area and get some revenue from it, he said.
City officials say Plissner' s plan is a good one except for one
impediment. "The land is privately owned, " said city attorney Lucia Dougherty.
"It has really never been public property. "
Murray Gold of the Miami Beach Resort Hotel Association agrees. So does
file principal city planner, Richard Rickles. Permission to develop the strip
delayed after the new beach was built only to give the city time to draw
t.ne regulations and establish a design review board to oversee them, Rickles
said.
Plissner disagrees that the land always was private land. If it
technically is in private hands today, he said, the conveyors should be held
accountable. "The state Legislature, by giving away the beach area between
the boardwalk and the property line of the upland owners, is guilty of a
breach of public trust, " he said.
The state line, called the erosion control line, was set before pumping
the new beach. Everything west of the line became private property,
t .erything east -- toward the sea -- became public property.
Before this, Plissner said, the public ownership extended all the way to
the city line. County coastal engineer Edward Swakon said in some cases this
may have been true, but not in the majority.
"Definitely we are in a better situation now on public rights, " he said.
The public versus private debate long has been waged on Miami Beach.
Plissner has been in the thick of the fight, and has won some notable
victories. It was on the basis of a suit brought by Plissner that Circuit
Judge Charles Carroll made his landmark ruling in 1953 establishing the
public ' s right to the beach area between mean high and mean low tide. "Carroll
said private property ends at the city' s bulkhead line, " said Plissner.
Engineer Swakon said that a lot of new beach law has been passed since
the Carroll decision. One is the law that requires an erosion control line to
be set on all restored beaches to delineate public from private property.
Plissner expressed concern that if a hurricane washes away the new
beach, which scientists say is possible, only private property would be left
along the oceanfront. Metro Commissioner Harvey Ruvin, who claims a great
respect for Plissner, had his concerns researched by the county attorney' s
office. The conclusion was that if the public beach is lost, the state can
reclaim the land it has conveyed to the private upland owners.
"Fat chance, " was Plissner' s reaction to that opinion. He predicts the
private owners would fight to keep the land, then demand compensation if they
eventually had to relinquish it.
In battling almost singlehandedly to protect the public interest on the
ti ich, Plissner is being typically Plissner. He has led countless public
:vice crusades.
It was Plissner, joined by a small band of ardent supporters, who forced
an election in which the voters approved the requirement that a doctor be on
all city rescue vehicles. He took to the street again in his effort to have
Miami Beach buy Florida Power and Light Co. , getting enough petition
signatures for a referendum, but losing the vote.
He currently is suing the city for restricting the location of
"congregate living" nursing homes, claiming the action is unfair to elderly
residents.
To claim the beach strip for the public, Plissner said he had secured the
aid of attorney Jay Dermer, former Beach mayor and another champion of public
beaches. Dermer, said Plissner, was going to take on the case in the public
interest, charging no fee, but he died suddenly on April 5 .
Plissner is contemplating his next move. "Experience has taught us, " he
said, "that we are going to lose property unless we make a fight for it. " He
is now looking for an attorney to take Dermer' s place.
ADDED TERMS : mb protest land
END OF DOCUMENT.