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Submitted by Tara A. Inniss. PhD (UWI) MSD (UNSW) BA (York). Department of History and Philosophy, Cave Hill Campus, The University of the West Indies, Barbados, innisst@yahoo.com, The History Forum Blog

When Gabby wrote ‘Jack’ in the early 1980s, he was responding to hoteliers asserting their rights over beach front property. Some almost 40 years later, Barbadians have felt secure in the notion that ‘The Beach Belong to We’. But no more. Many downplay beach access issues proclaiming that beaches in Barbados are public. However, we have witnessed increasing tension among property owners, watersports operators and beachgoers over the past 5-10 years with property owners asserting their rights over beach space above the high-water mark. But, to me, a disturbing trend has been the use of lines of (usually empty) beach chairs that create an artificial barrier (like a wall or fence) between beach users and properties. One only has to look at the aerial drone footage of beaches like the Crane, Mullins and even Carlisle Bay for evidence of this phenomenon. I believe that it is a way for property owners or even beach chair operators to conduct a ‘land grab’ at the expense of beach users. Although some complain that watersports operators harass their patrons, which is a legitimate concern, the majority of beach users pose little harm to their businesses.

In the context of access to recreational space, Barbados’ beaches have historically been the one of the few refuges that Barbadians have had access to for sporting activity and relaxation since Independence. Given the high incidence of Chronic Non-Communicable Diseases (CNCDs), these spaces are very important to providing access to free physical activity such as swimming, beach cricket, running, walking, etc. which Barbadians need to prevent diseases such as diabetes, obesity and hypertension. Access to these spaces and activities should not be limited because of predatory business practices which privilege the needs of the visitor over the Barbadian. Also, given that beach chairs are being used in this way, we should ask ourselves if a lazy day at the beach for the visitor should be prioritized over the potentially active lifestyles that we want Barbadian families to pursue.

Moreover, given our changing coastline, beach erosion is a severe and ongoing problem for property owners and insurers. We only have to look at the high surf conditions experienced in recent weeks to see the damage that is done to coastal properties which extend their structures on to beach spaces because the high water mark has altered over time. Carlisle Bay is a good example. When the Deep Water Harbour was built in the 1960s, it changed the entire coastline of Carlisle Bay with now increasing land accretion due to sand depositing in the Bay — but that is only one hurricane or storm surge away from changing and given the threat of Climate Change, Government should be making a move to ensure that coastal properties are protected — not expanded into beach zones! There is an economic and environmental cost to all of us when unregulated coastal development occurs.

I have done some quick research on how this matter has been dealt with in some jurisdictions. When concerns are raised, the use of beach frontage can be curtailed or regulated by the state through by-laws or other legislation.

In 2015, in a Florida town, residents complained about a similar phenomenon being promoted among condominium developments along the beach. The City intervened and only a percentage of beach frontage could be used for the purpose of beach chair provision. Since then, tensions have decreased significantly. http://www.nwfdailynews.com/1.488270 In Barbados’ case, we may wish to pursue a similar provision which allows only a certain percentage of beach frontage to be reserved for beach chair use and only when that is satisfied can property owners put out more chairs within the boundary of their properties.

Other jurisdictions go much further. In Phuket, Thailand, officials conducted a ‘Beach Clean Up’ meaning that ALL structures, temporary amenities (beach chairs, etc) were to be removed from the island’s beaches leaving them clutter free http://www.phuket.com/phuket-magazine/phuket-beaches-clean-up.htm. In Australia, nothing permanent is allowed on beaches including beach chair rental although some jurisdictions are experimenting with this kind of rental enterprise within regulations. http://www.bobinoz.com/blog/18397/whats-really-different-about-the-beaches-in-australia/. I think these measures might be too restrictive especially to the small beach chair concessionaire, but they do indicate that some major popular tourism destinations take a hardline.

These are matters that should be taken up with haste with the National Conservation Commission (NCC) and it would not be the first time that they were asked to help regulate the beach chair situation. With increased tourism development along the island’s coastline and our current economic, social and health challenges, regulation of beach spaces is an important consideration.

Photo credit of featured image: ecaribonline

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331 responses to “‘The Beach Belong to We’”


  1. Bajans are beginning to wake up, but the rate of awakening is too slow.
    You cannot change the status quo by reluctantly letting go of it
    Others introduce changes and we run around chanting our sacred mantras
    Lucky that election is in the air or the national collection of clowns/comedians would have remained silent.
    I


  2. peterlawrencethompson April 1, 2018 at 6:47 AM #
    @John on April 1, 2018 at 12:36 AM
    Sean O’Callaghan “… I am not a historian…”
    But thanks for letting me know that he preceded Martin and was spreading these lies since 1993 when he first visited Barbados.

    ++++++++++++++++++++++++

    No wonder ….. we already know historians are called twistorians … obviously O’Callaghan didn’t want the stain!!


  3. @John April 1, 2018 at 7:58 AM #
    … obviously O’Callaghan didn’t want the stain!!
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    Yes, both you and O’Callaghan avoid the stain of historical truth or facts.


  4. “And at least two attorneys, who joined him in protesting at the south eastern beach Saturday,

    say there could be legal ways to challenge the high water mark used by hoteliers to

    demarcate their properties.”


  5. Peter Lawrence Thompson March 31, 2018 at 11:59 AM #
    @Well Well
    My own tactic is simply to move empty beach chairs aside and place my own towel on the beach where I choose. If I am challenged by hotel employees I invite them to call the police and charge me with trespass. None have accepted my invitation so

    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    I guess most people on the beach for a tan and knowledgeable of the hook worm threat would consider you mad or just ignorant and not waste their time.

    This is probably why hotels provide beach chairs for their guests.

    So, next time you go to the beach for your tan, before you lie on your towel, remember, all those idiots on deck chairs are probably looking at you and wondering what sort of an idiot you could be.

    … and if you choose a south coast beach to lay down your towel for your constitutional tan, remember, there is a lot of sewage and poop in the area … besides any animal mess that might be on the beach!!

    Rent a beach chair like the tourists, don’t let the expense deter you like others on the blog.

    That’s one of the reasons I would never consider lying down on any beach, anywhere.

    As children we used to get ring worm which is not a worm and most Bajans experienced chiggers as children so I avoided lying down on any beach when I used to go to bathe in the sea.

    So, if you must get a tan like the tourists, rent a beach chair like them!!


  6. I see John that the two of us have iratated a lot of the regressive local populace. Now their not only blaming whitey(greedy & rich) for all their perceived ills but are are also including a significant portion of their own race(greedy & rich) as dysfunctional as well. They should look inward as they themselves maybe the problem and not the solution they perceive.

    It’s hard for some to be able to see the trees through the forest. No doubt this is the major issue for some Bagans as they have to blame someome/something for their precieved station in LIFE.

    NOT MY FAULT, well trust me, in a democracy everything is your fault.


  7. All well documented here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irish_indentured_servants

    No need to make up alternative facts.


  8. @David

    I like your “DAMAGE CONTROL” comment. Can I assume that someone from the blog either read or informed someone at the HOLIDAYING NCC, about the idiocy.


  9. @John April 1, 2018 at 8:37 AM #
    As children we used to get ring worm which is not a worm and most Bajans experienced chiggers
    +++++++++++++++++++++++

    Never got ring worm or chiggers or hook worm despite 6 decades of laying down, walking, running, singing, playing, jumping, standing, dancing, kneeling, sleeping, sitting, or digging on the beach. I must have a guardian angel.


  10. Perhaps the clear difference between the community-centric pre-disposition – such as that preached by Gabby (the beach belongs to (all of) WE – black/white/blue), and the albino-centric imperative (this beach is MINE – and wunna better keep off) is becoming much clearer to everyone.

    While we have all tended to adopt the selfish approach, it is globally clear that the NATURAL predisposition of the African has always been community-centric…… while the European has always generally tended to be self-centered and adversarial.

    All animals tend to have intrinsic characteristics which they can either develop and build on, or they can suppress and stifle.

    We blacks – GLOBALLY – have largely suppressed our community-centricity in favour of the much vaunted and highly promoted euro-centric selfishness preached by the albino-centrics that now control our world.

    Obviously, success comes from building on your STRENGTHS – and not from competing on OTHER people’s playing fields. It should therefore NOT be a surprise that Blacks around the world find ourselves at the bottom of all ladders.

    How, for example, modern Black people could opt for the various euro-centric political systems, which are built on selfishness and greed – RATHER than for co-operative models that thrive on COMMUNITY WILL, and true democracy – must surely go down as one of the great ‘own goals’ of all history.


  11. @Wily Coyote April 1, 2018 at 8:38 AM #
    NOT MY FAULT, well trust me, in a democracy everything is your fault.
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++

    Mirabile dictu! We have found something else to agree about Wily. I like to quote George Orwell “A people that elect corrupt politicians, imposters, thieves and traitors are not victims… but accomplices”

  12. Pieceuhderockyeahright Avatar
    Pieceuhderockyeahright

    Hahahahaha, “behold the recanting of their belligerence ALBEIT BEGRUDGINGLY, while joining forces”

    We will note that there won’t be anymore comments against Mr Thompson from the canine for a while but the other racist will now start his volley.

    Whuloss


  13. When I was a child we lived by the sea.

    It is so long ago that I forgot the perils of the beach and the various parasites present.

    Plus, I stopped going in the sea decades ago because of my understanding of sewage and water flow.

    There was one parasite referred to as beach worm but I suspect it could have been hook worm.

    I remember one of the treatments was to freeze the spot and vaguely recall some sort of spray or liquid that was used … or maybe it was ringworm I am confusing.

    Seriously though, there is a good reason for using a beach chair if you decide to get a tan on a beach in Barbados.


  14. haaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa, in your warped mind, History is facts not imagination.(Quote)

    It is amazing how an intellectually inward-looking people can so avoid what is taking place in the wider world of ideas, as I have said before. When I said this, some keyboard warriors came out to put a case for Barbados as an open society. It is not.
    Most of all, to say such nonsense as the above in April 1968, one month away from the 50th anniversary of the student Uprising in Paris, which triggered change around the world.
    Those of us who experienced some of that movement can no doubt remember the history workshops, when great historians such as E.H. Carr, E.P Thompson, Raphael Samuel the agit prop, and on home soil the elegance and depth of CLR James and his re-interpretation of the Haitian Revolution, and even Eric Williams’ Capitalism and Slavery.
    It was an enormous feeling of elation and intellectual curiosity: workshop on almost every imaginable discipline and the brightest and bet explaining the links between them: law and legal theory, and legal sociology and legal philosophy and legal history.
    Between history and politics and government and economics and finance, and property rights, and contract law – I can go on. An open mind absorbs all these connections.
    E.H. Carr, in his What is History, challenges the notion of history as fact as is perpetuated by Whig historians; E.P. Thompson, one of the central figures in the student uprising in Britain, was a Marxian historian, just read his History of the English Working Class, a bottom up history.
    Even the right-wing philosopher, Karl Popper, in his The Poverty of Historicism, has alternative views of history.
    Even in little Barbados we have produced such great men as Leroy Harewood, Richard B. Moore and others, all of whom have re-interpreted the history of slavery and colonialism from a black perspective.
    The point is that the ‘facts’ may be the same, but the interpretation varies. History as fact, in a strange way, is a right-wing theory of history being promoted by people who sees themselves as neo-nationalists.
    It suggests the end of history thesis, which catapulted the Japanese American Francis Fukuyama in to world prominence, has legitimacy.
    History is not just facts, although so-called facts may form the barebones of history; history differs according to the prism through which those ‘facts’ are interpreted.
    For example, if you are a Southern black man, or a black person in the so-called New World, your legal history differs enormously from that of the descendants of the oppressor class.
    It is the lack of serious public discussion that leads to this regular confusion and contradiction in arguments in BU almost on a daily basis.
    It is the outcome of self-taught Googlism, of making it up as you go along, of ignorance as grand theory, of waffle as scholarship.


  15. @Wily

    The concerns of Barbadians ere aired in the traditional and social media, BU cannot take credit.


  16. TheGazer April 1, 2018 at 7:36 AM #

    “Saw a side of Wily that surprised me”

    +++++++++++++

    Me as well……..especially his response to PUDRYR re: “Shut up you MORON, my ancestors settled this little god for saken island before your kind knew the new world existed.,”

    And these the same white people that came and found the Arawaks & Caribs who, at that time, had settled in most Caribbean Islands.

    Just goes to show that white people still think we are inferior.


  17. The smell of baked pork is wafing out of the kitchen, wife preparing An Easter feast for the family.

    Wily wishes all a HAPPY EASTER, friends and advesarries both.


  18. @Hal Austin April 1, 2018 at 9:00 AM #
    History is not just facts, although so-called facts may form the barebones of history; history differs according to the prism through which those ‘facts’ are interpreted.
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++

    You are completely correct Hal. The problem with John & Wily and the people they quote is not that they have a different interpretation of facts, but that they make up falsehoods that have no basis in reality at all. Stuff like ‘indentured servitude was the same thing as enslavement.’


  19. @Artax April 1, 2018 at 9:03 AM #

    When Barbados was discovered by Europeans the island was not populated by either Arawaks or Caribs. Rest my case that history is massaged by some who would like the facts presented in their own mindset.

  20. Well Well & Cut N' Paste At Your Service Avatar
    Well Well & Cut N’ Paste At Your Service

    Wily just exposed the fact from yesterday that he is not so wily after all and was just on the blog like Lieasalot to deceive and perpetrate fraud against the majority population. .as minorities by default do to continue their own ability to live off others…

    He cant go back now, too late, all he tail and tales showing..lol


  21. @Bush Tea April 1, 2018 at 8:50 AM #

    And what about Switzerland, the country on top? Isnt´t that country snow white on top of the giant mountains and community centered?

    They practice lots of popular votes, all parties are in government (consociationalism), low taxes, have only a few civil servants and minimum wage is 7000 BBD per month?

    In my opinion, there is only good or bad governance. And Barbadians have no say but to read crazy manifesto fairy tales every five years, full of lies and deception. The Westminster system is outdated.

  22. Well Well & Cut N' Paste At Your Service Avatar
    Well Well & Cut N’ Paste At Your Service

    Happy Easter to you too, not so wily after all.


  23. I am so glad that the sewage problem was solved before this issue came to light..

    What if we had two or three problems occurring at the same time…… one or two would have to fall off the radar..

    The simple act of Natlee going to church catspraddle a few of us as we are wondering if she is still a lady of temptation or a churchgoer

    OH! Why does life has to be so complicated

  24. Well Well & Cut N' Paste At Your Service Avatar
    Well Well & Cut N’ Paste At Your Service

    Swiss ciitizens also have the power to recall whole governments for whatever reason…only a petition/referendum of 1000 signatures are needed, they can recall a government a year…..among all the other positives they have as citizens.


  25. https://www.freetheslaves.net/about-slavery/slavery-today/

    So, using the logic on display here, is it correct to assert that slavery exists today as most people accept, including bloggers on here?


  26. … is “mental slavery” …. well …. slavery?

    Do we need to make up a whole new slew of terms?

  27. Well Well & Cut N' Paste At Your Service Avatar
    Well Well & Cut N’ Paste At Your Service

    “my ancestors settled this little god for saken island before your kind knew the new world existed.,”

    A very clear and dangerous lie…any ship that left Africa or Europe to run around stealing lands that were already inhabited by native Tiano or other Indians in the Caribbean….were navigated by African, Spanish Moors or other Black who had already navigated the world thousands of years before and had experience europeans did not in circumnavigating the earth.

    There are paintings hanging in the british parliament and in museums which clearly shows black males navigating pirate and enslaver ships for Spain, Portugal and othe european countries.

    The not so wilies believe the more lies they tell, the more it will turn into reality…


  28. There were African Slaves, Irish Slaves, Scottish Slaves, Jewish Slaves, …. any other kind of slaves you care to mention.

    The Irish Slaves had an extra black (pardon the pun) mark against them at the time of Cromwell …. they were Roman Catholic.


  29. … and along came the Quakers, sent by God perhaps!!!

  30. Well Well & Cut N' Paste At Your Service Avatar
    Well Well & Cut N’ Paste At Your Service

    And I may add that the Black Moors of UK who were in UK and Germany long before the African slave trade, who after foolishly….just like the halfassed ministers ya got in Barbados ….. gave up the information to the beasts of buckingham palace of that day, about the wealth of Africa and how to exploit that wealth…were then deported from UK to Spain….many also ended up in US where there were already people of African descent because of their travels thousands of years before.

    All this information is well documented and can be found in museums and other places.


  31. There are only three times that people have been released from enslavement that I can think of and each time God was involved.

    The Israelites …. Moses sent by God

    Abolition of slavery …. Quakers motivated by God

    Slavery to Sin …… Jesus … Easter …. today

    It doesn’t matter if you are African, Irish, Scottish, Jewish, Turkish or whatever, God loves you!!

    Happy Easter all!!

  32. Well Well & Cut N' Paste At Your Service Avatar
    Well Well & Cut N’ Paste At Your Service

    Charles 1 I think his name was, already King of Germany in the 1200s or earlier, there were at least 3 or 4 Black queens in UK…in that same time period, one of them grandmother a few times removed to the current dying beast in buckingham palce…that is presuming they did not kill the rightful heirs and steal their place as they were well known for back then and are still well known for today.

    All this information is available and should be taught in Barbados and other schools in the Caribbean and stop these frauds like Wily not so, Liesalot, Watson and all the others from making up lies to circulate among the majority black populations. …to benefit mediocre minorities.

    Time to remove the current lies being taught in the schools for the last 60 years and replace it with the truth of the greatness of Africans, their ancestors and descendants.

  33. Well Well & Cut N' Paste At Your Service Avatar
    Well Well & Cut N’ Paste At Your Service

    A black King….Charles 1 I think his name was, already King of Germany in the 1200s or earlier.


  34. @ Tron
    What the Swiss, Danish and other Euro-centric nations have been able to do VERY well is to leverage and build on their natural characteristics…. in their case, of albino-centricity.

    These countries exhibit a collective, extended-family-like ability to work all matters in their collective interests -even when the central philosophy is capitalism and selfishness.
    The won’t have people like Gabby and David C projecting contrary positions – even when they accept and hoard gazillions of illegally gained moneys from the demons and despots of this world in their banks.

    As long as these ‘dividends’ are distributed in the form of social services, welfare payments and undeservedly high minimum wages (you should also research the basic prices of goods – as Bushie found out when last there) everyone is ‘happy’

    Problems come when a country tries to go against its natural tendencies.
    Our Credit Unions do well because people sub-consciously support the ‘meeting-turn’ type of mentality where we-all help you today, and you-all help me tomorrow.
    Yet, we build national systems around the capitalist-investor type arrangement – where rich people like Doyle, Stewart, Massy and Emera – RATHER THAN THE COLLECTIVE COMMUNITY- ends up making all the decisions about ownership, rights, dividends and benefits.

    Your pet peeve about productivity is a DIRECT casualty of a system where workers are expected to expend high levels of productivity – which then disproportionately benefits the owners of capital – and blatantly disadvantages the COMMUNITY….

    What kind of idiot goes out on the limb (or even up the trunk) in such circumstances…?
    Would you….?


  35. Can you imagine a History of Barbados written by John, Wily and few others here?


  36. These countries exhibit a collective, extended-family-like ability to work all matters in their collective interests

    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    That’s what Christianity does!!!


  37. 1At the same time came the disciples unto Jesus, saying, Who is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven?

    2And Jesus called a little child unto him, and set him in the midst of them,

    3And said, Verily I say unto you, Except ye be converted, and become as little children, ye shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven.

    4Whosoever therefore shall humble himself as this little child, the same is greatest in the kingdom of heaven.

    5And whoso shall receive one such little child in my name receiveth me.

    6But whoso shall offend one of these little ones which believe in me, it were better for him that a millstone were hanged about his neck, and that he were drowned in the depth of the sea.


  38. 6But whoso shall offend one of these little ones which believe in me, it were better for him that a millstone were hanged about his neck, and that he were drowned in the depth of the sea.


  39. These countries exhibit a collective, extended-family-like ability to work all matters in their collective interests -That’s what Christianity does!!!
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    Yup.
    Practically ALL mobs do it.


  40. 6But whoso shall offend one of these little ones which believe in me, it were better for him that a millstone were hanged about his neck, and that he were drowned in the depth of the sea.
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    Just another way of saying..
    “Touch not the Lords anointed….”


  41. This is called a movement.

    http://www.loopnewsbarbados.com/content/watch-mighty-gabby-ready-lead-brownes-beach-protest-soon#.WsDSSb0HCFI.facebook

    “Going forward Gabby said as it relates to Crane’s issue with the beach vendors, “I believe that there will be dialogue,” and he placed the blame for the entire unfortunate situation on the shoulders of Crane Resort’s owner Paul Doyle and the National Conservation Commission (NCC). He said those two parties had every right to nip this in the bud in the early, instead of using antiquated laws to push agendas.”

    “This is the beginning. We don’t want to see this nonsense happening at Dover. We will go to Browne’s Beach in time to come because we have a situation where in front of that Boatyard they are bringing the chairs all the way down to the sea and telling people they can’t pass…

    “We are on the ball; we will not let that happen!

    “You’re going to soon hear about the protest by the Boatyard on Browne’s Beach.”

    Then he went on to say that over the years there have been very subtle attempts to privatise beaches along the West Coast, and noting 11 windows to the sea, he asserted, “we want them opened again, we want access to the beach, easy access to the beaches.”

    At the end of the day, The Might Gabby stressed that all persons need to “respect the fact, that the beach belong to we.”


  42. Practically ALL mobs do it.

    +++++++++++++++++++

    But only one mob has stood the test of time!!


  43. Just another way of saying..
    “Touch not the Lords anointed….”

    +++++++++++++++++++++

    … and you claim parables cannot be understood!!!!


  44. Wily, not so …in all his rage yesterday exposed himself all for nothing…..

    ….an unstoppable movement from “dah beach is mine” has emerged from Doyle’s stupidity and NCC inaction to protect the population’s rightful access to the beaches….

    ……which will then transfer itself to the formation of other movements to set boundaries for ministers, governments and minorities, those spinoff movements will emerge to be the people protecting themselves from criminals within the aforementioned groups who seek to continue the practices of disenfranchisement of the people…

    a win win for the people..more power to the people.


  45. @Bush Tea April 1, 2018 at 10:49 AM #

    The “high levels of productivity” enable workers in the factory a 13th and 14th month salary, shares, dividends, private extra pensions and to drive around as a big Wabenzi. It also serves the common good since higher individual and corporate taxes enable the communities to build and maintain swimming pools and other public places. So the private greed and the common good are somehow in an equilibrium.

    However, you are totally right that it does not work this way in Barbados. The highly profitable supermarkets, the tourism industry, the white construction magnates, they do not enrich their workers. Most owners of private companies exercise too much greed and do not spread the wealth.

    The same is true for politics and the public service. Most Barbadian politicians, at least the ruling ones, treat the state of Barbados as their personal ATM, they do not serve the common good of Barbados. And the public servants are not aware that they damage the country with their work ethic.

    Barbados needs a spiritual turn.

    Maybe we can consent that American and British capitalism are no role model for Barbados. Too much greed and class.

    to be continued –

    Happy Easter!


  46. @ Tron
    100% correct…
    Plus 5 extra marks for conciseness.
    The scenario which you painted in your first paragraph would take place in a community-centric organisation …OR in an albino-centric one – where brassbowlery was not endemic.

    @ John
    Not surprisingly…
    Wrong on all counts…

    1 – THAT ….is NOT a parable.
    2 – No one said that parables could not be understood
    3 – Bushie did not CLAIM anything. The bushman merely quoted Jesus himself. Do you think that GP would even have farted on Bushie’s personal opinion?


  47. Today’s Advocate editorial is a shameful misreading of the National Conservation Commission Act Cap. 393.

    Error #1: “First, it is our understanding that the NCC claims the right to license the vendors’ activity based on its function at section 5 (c) to control, maintain and develop the beaches of Barbados.” WRONG!! Read as far as section 16. (1) and you will se the right to license explicitly set out. “Any person who desires to operate a business of selling goods or services in a public park, in a public garden or on a beach shall first obtain from the Commission a licence for the purpose.”

    Error # 2: “Since the right not to be deprived of one’s property is in the nature of such a right, this lends some force to the argument that “control” does not in law extend to licensing anyone to conduct business on the property of another.” This is shown to be complete BULLSHIT by section 16 cited above, but the error goes even deeper. Properties in Barbados conventionally include title to the road allowance. The property owner holds the title but the Ministry of Transportation and Works has control. Control means control. Period. So it is with NCC control of beaches in Barbados. These mealy mouthed excuses for trying to subvert the clear meaning of the NCC legislation are contemptible.

    Error # 3: The editorial speaks of “… the general maintenance-related nature of the mandated functions under section 5…” in an effort to obscure the clear language of this section. It reads “5. (1) The functions of the Commission are […]
    (c) to control, maintain and develop the public parks, public gardens and beaches of Barbados;…” Look at that carefully; “… public parks, public gardens and beaches…” not public beaches, but ALL beaches, whether on Crown land or private property. Then there is the matter of control. The parallel construction of the sentence makes it crystal clear that the NCC is to exercise exactly the same measure of control over ALL beaches that they do over public parks and public gardens. In other words TOTAL control within the constraints of the Coastal Zone Management Act Cap. 394 which the NCC Act references.

    Error # 4: the editorial points out “… there exists a presumption in statutory interpretation that the state does not intend to legislate in contravention of its Constitutional obligations.” So let’s go and read exactly what the effing Barbados Constitution says about property rights instead of floating amorphous nonsense with no facts to back it up. It’s very clear in section 16. Property rights are NOT absolute! 16. (4) states unequivocally “Nothing contained in or done under the authority of any law shall be held to be inconsistent with or in contravention of this section to the extent that the law in question makes provision for the compulsory taking possession in the public interest of any property, or the compulsory acquisition in the public interest of any interest in or right over property…” This obviously states in no uncertain terms that the Barbados Legislature has the right to make laws that provide for “the compulsory acquisition in the public interest of any interest in or right over property…”

    The Advocate needs to print a retraction of this abominably erroneous editorial.

    https://www.barbadosadvocate.com/columns/editorial-public-beach-and-private-property


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