Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
United States News

Billionaire Khosla Wins Ruling Threatening Public Beach Access (bloomberg.com) 130

Billionaire venture capitalist Vinod Khosla's long-running fight to block public access to a stretch of Pacific Ocean beach adjacent to his property got new life thanks to an appeals court ruling that could make it harder for surfers and sun seekers to get to the crescent-shaped cove an hour south of San Francisco. From a report: The beach had been open to the public for decades before Khosla bought the 89-acre property in 2008 for $32.5 million and shut off the lone road leading there. Many thought Khosla had hit a dead end last year when the U.S. Supreme Court refused to take up his cause, but the ruling Monday breathed life into it, finding the prior owners' willingness to let beach goers use the road didn't amount to a "public dedication" because they collected fees for parking. That strengthens Khosla's position if and when he obtains a permit from the California Coastal Commission to restrict the hours when a gate at the top of the road is open. The Friends of Martin's Beach, which has been sparring with the billionaire for years, wanted the court to find there was a long-established precedent for keeping the road open. Instead, the three-judge panel upheld a trial judge's ruling in Khosla's favor, finding there was substantial evidence that the previous owners didn't intend to dedicate the road for public use because they charged fees.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Billionaire Khosla Wins Ruling Threatening Public Beach Access

Comments Filter:
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Billionaire Khosla Wins Ruling Threatening Public Beach Access

    Ahhh, America where all citizens are equal, the rich ones are just more equal than the others because they walk with god (why else would they be so rich?).

    • by kurkosdr ( 2378710 ) on Tuesday November 26, 2019 @12:30PM (#59458020)
      A more level-headed read is to just see the case for what it is: Whether someone has to let people go through their property to reach a public space, which depends on local regulations. Nobody prevents boat access to the beach btw.
      • by sycodon ( 149926 )

        One wonders why the County/City/whoever just uses imminent domain to acquire that road and open it up to all.

        Look for the government employees driving expensive cars.

        • One wonders why the County/City/whoever just uses imminent domain to acquire that road and open it up to all.

          Look for the government employees driving expensive cars.

          Lest you forget, imminent domain is used on the poor and middle class that doesn't have the deep pockets to afford legal representation.

          When your opponent has more financial firepower than you, the municipalities tend to step more lightly and play by the 1%er' rules.

          • One wonders why the County/City/whoever just uses imminent domain

            Lest you forget, imminent domain

            Eminent domain. [wikipedia.org] I can only handle one "imminent domain" or "mute point" per thread, when you start reinforcing the error I have to speak up.

        • Kholsa wants the state to take an easement across his property, which means the state would have to pay reasonable compensation for taking that part of his property. The plaintiffs want to just drive across his street property at all hours of the night without a public easement.

          • Oh no someone might drive on a bit of an 86 acre property when the billionaire isn't away on a private jet. Boo boo.

            • Except that by allowing others to access your property you may be opening yourself up for lawsuits if they hurt themselves, etc.

              "I tripped, owners should've provided lighting"

              or god forbid "I was raped, owner should've provided lighting and security".

              Sure, owner (or his/her insurance co) could probably beat it in court or at least get it down to "pocket change" levels of payouts (these are near billionaires....) but if you owned the property would you really want to go through that hassle all the time?

        • Eminent Domain also means the Government must compensate for the takings (you know, that pesky Constitutional thing). Perhaps the local authority doesn't want to pay the going rate for the property they wish to take...
        • Eminent domain can only be used to open up property for public use where there are no other remedies and requires just compensation.

          There is no public need for anyone to be at that particular beach given the city has more beach fronts and there is no obvious benefit society would get. If the beach is public property, you can always surf to it, there's plenty of places you can only get to by boat or by surfing.

      • "Nobody prevents boat access to the beach btw." ... for now. Seems a bunch of rich folk over in Florida are trying to keep boats from anchoring off their yards and ruining their views: https://www.soundingsonline.co... [soundingsonline.com]

  • for the last three decades with pro-corporate, pro-elites. The strategy was pretty simple, when the GOP was out of power they could usually stonewall judicial nominees. When they got in power they rammed them through. This worked because the Blues are almost completely ineffective, made of up a much loser coalition that includes the "Third Way" that sides with the Reds on everything except a handful of social issues (Abortion, Gay Rights, gun control mostly).

    Expect to see more of this as the effect of a
    • Yup, let's blame the GOP. This particular guy gave $1,000,000 into politics, a group called "Priorities USA"...

      https://www.opensecrets.org/ou... [opensecrets.org]

      Well, that "Priorities USA" must be super-conservative, right? Whoops, they spent 64 millions dollars AGAINST a GOP candidate.

      https://www.opensecrets.org/ou... [opensecrets.org]

      So, even when the evil dick is a democrat, the republicans are still to blame.

      • > So, even when the evil dick is a democrat, the republicans are still to blame.

        Remember, the median Republican thinks that Democrats are misinformed and erroneous in judgment while the median Democrat believes that Republicans are evil. Yes, Google it.

        The relative stridency of each camp is understandable from this perspective.

        • Median Republicans think Democrat leadership is evil. And the same for Republican leadership.

          • by currently_awake ( 1248758 ) on Tuesday November 26, 2019 @01:08PM (#59458304)
            Since the 1950's the Rich have been systematically working to buy control of both American political parties. Republicans are known for this but those in charge of the Democrat party are controlled by money too. You can either start a new party (and watch while it gets purchased) or work to purge the party of your choice. Political power=Money * Number of supporters * Work. You can work around a low factor by having another really high.
            • Since the 1950's the Rich have been systematically working to buy control of both American political parties.

              Read more history. That's been going on since the founding of the nation. It's gotten a bit more intense the last half century as the Federal Budget got bigger and bigger, and thus worth more to people donating to the right causes (for which read: bribing the right pols)....

              And it will continue to be a problem, because $5T+ is worth buying a few dozen pols to get a piece of the pie....

          • Have you considered that both groups might actually be correct though?

            It's hardly a case where the beliefs are mutually exclusive.
      • What matter is pro-corporate, right wing politics. The ideology that drives them is the problem (winner take all capitalism). The GOP is all in on winner take all capitalism. The Dems have Bernie, Warren and the "Justice Democrats" trying to shift the Overton window back to the left after Bill Clinton and his wife moved the whole country hard right in exchange for the fat sacks of cash needed to win the presidency and line their own pockets.
        • by harrkev ( 623093 )

          Yeah, in capitalism, there are winners and losers. We would be much better under socialism, where everybody is a loser (except for the guys running the government, they are still winners.

          America is one of the richest nations in the world. Our average standard of living is a source of envy to many countries. We got that way from capitalism. Every single person to have ever set foot on the moon is an American. The transistor was invented here. The microprocessor, the cell phone, and the internet were in

          • by qeveren ( 318805 )
            You've got that kind of backwards.

            A liberal sees a mansion and says, "everybody should live like that."

            A conservative sees a mansion and says, "I should live like that."
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by jobslave ( 6255040 )
      They would have created the same ruling for a $200,000 property. The prior owners are the ones who did the dis-service by collecting fees. If they had created an easement or dedicated the road to the public, the argument would be null and void and Khosla wouldn't have a leg to stand one regardless of the amount of money he has.

      If the beach lovers in that area want to be pissed off at anyone, it's the prior owners. Sure Khosla could create a lot of community goodwill by honoring the stupid decision of
      • Except, that a person who can only afford a $200k house does not have the financial means to afford a lawyer to spend years litigating their complaints

        You take the title jobslave, but suck up to the rich... you really take your job seriously

        • What makes you think they can afford to spend only $200k for a house?

          Some people buy only as much house as they need rather than the most they can afford.
        • I mean, you're not wrong about the courts having a systematic bias toward the rich, I just don't think it's relevant here. The old property owner charged people for access to the road. The new owner wants to make the road private. There was never a point at which the road was public.

          It's kind of stupid that there's a plot of public land that can only be accessed through private property, though. Maybe the state could exercise eminent domain and make a legitimately public road to it.
          • by Ichijo ( 607641 )

            The old property owner charged people for access to the road.

            The article doesn't say that, it only says they charged for parking.

      • I can't find it now, but I recall that there was a case about coastal access where the final outcome was that allowing access to hotel guests constituted allowing access to the public. This would imply that charging a parking fee constitutes allowing public access.

        Also, they charged for parking, not access. If you walked down the road, or someone drove down, dropped you, then drove back, you would not have to pay. Surely that is open access?

    • It's a ruling from an appeals court in San Francisco according to TFA:

      “Payment of a fee to access or use property implies that such use is not a matter of right but instead is a permitted use,” the San Francisco-based appeals court said. “A party who pays for a privilege and is granted the privilege in exchange for the payment is not acting as though he or she had an unfettered right to exercise the privilege.”

      Are you really going to try to argue that San Francisco court system has been overrun with pro-corporate judges or unduly influenced by the GOP? I mean don't let the facts get in the way of a good screed, but if you're going to make claims like this that beggar all belief at least post some evidence.

    • How is recognizing individual rights, and supporting the 5th Amendment, a "pro-corporate, pro-elite" position? It's a Constitutional position. Sounds like your problem is with the Constitution (in particular, the 5th), rather than any perceived "ruling class vs. proletariat" nonsense...
  • This is less of a big deal than people are making it out to be. Just switch to a pro global warming (not as in you believe it's occurring, but are actively trying to encourage it to happen) stance and in a few decades the beach will have moved and his property (and likely any mortgage on it) will be underwater.

    Now let's move on to everyone's favorite game of figuring out his political affiliation and using that to smear everyone even remotely close to him. Bonus points if you can drag any ethnic or relig
  • Simple Solution (Score:3, Interesting)

    by jwhyche ( 6192 ) on Tuesday November 26, 2019 @12:05PM (#59457852) Homepage

    Simple solution, remove the gate. Just take gate down and toss it beside the post and access the beach as you always have. Sure the police will show up but if enough people just simply ignore them and the judge, then they will take the hint.

    Public disobedience has been a tool of the public since time begin.

    • > Just take gate down and toss it beside the post and access the beach as you always have.

      Are you going to keep pay the entrance fee to the previous owners as you always did?

      I think I'd actually prefer to go to the beach for free, as this guy wants to do. I don't need to party on the beach late at night, so I'm cool with not driving in his property at night.

      > Sure the police will show up but if enough people just simply ignore them and the judge, then they will take the hint.

      Actually if you I the judg

      • by jwhyche ( 6192 )

        Actually if you I the judge, you go to jail. Until YOU take the hint. Well this California, so maybe you can just ignore the law.

        Sure he can and probably will. But how important is access to this beach to people? The Civil Rights protesters used Civil disobedience to end decades of racist laws and practices, that where legal a the time. Some went to jail for it, multiple times.

        This guy is a billionaire, you are not going to beat him in a court of law. You have to beat him in the court of public option. It's all up to how much are they willing to fight for what they believe is right.

    • Don't toss the gate! Take it home to carve some boards out of.
      • by jwhyche ( 6192 )

        I like the way you think. Environmentally thinking. Good way to recycle someone else's garbage.

  • by Comboman ( 895500 ) on Tuesday November 26, 2019 @12:06PM (#59457856)
    National parks charge fees, so I guess they are not dedicated to public use either.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by tsqr ( 808554 )

      Right, because there's no distinction between a private individual charging fees and the Federal government charging fees.

    • National parks charge fees, so I guess they are not dedicated to public use either.

      National parks aren't privately owned.

      If you want to abolish private ownership, well, that's a position. But take responsibility for holding it.

      • You just don't get it. People have a right to keep doing whatever they want. When I bought my house, I thought I had property rights, but nope. My neighbor Sam was allowed to come in without knocking and raid the fridge from the previous home owner, so of course I can't lock my doors or expect Sam to stop. I was going to put a fence up to protect my lawn, but it turns out kids are in the habit of cutting across it, so I'll just have to leave it unfenced. I think the thing that most shocked me was that the p

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by OldMugwump ( 4760237 )

      National parks charge fees, so I guess they are not dedicated to public use either.

      Don't kid yourself - they're not. National parks in the US are the most rule-bound, restricted-access places outside of military bases. They let people in only when they feel like, on the prices they choose to charge, close them arbitrarily, and impose all kinds of rules on what you can and can't do there.

      Reminds me of the old story about the delegation of Soviet workers who visited a US car factory. "Who does the factory belong to?", they ask. "Mr. Ford" the guide replies. "And whose automobiles are thes

  • Hey msmash (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Trailer Trash ( 60756 ) on Tuesday November 26, 2019 @12:12PM (#59457898) Homepage

    This isn't "news for nerds" in any way, shape, or form. The SJW crap around here is tired enough as it is, at least there's usually some angle that makes it news for nerds. This? Nope, nothing.

    Please return slashdot to "news for nerds", which probably means you find a job elsewhere. Which, I understand, probably won't be easy.

    • I get my "news for nerds" on hackaday now. Slashdot has been dead for a long time.

    • We have this shit article while I still have yet to see anything on /. about yesterday's Threadripper launch. Its huge news given Intel now has no segment they lead in anymore. But instead of that we have articles about entitled surfer bros in Socal.

    • This isn't "news for nerds" in any way, shape, or form.

      "Nerds don't surf!" -- Colonel Kilgore

    • This isn't "news for nerds" in any way, shape, or form. The SJW crap around here is tired enough as it is, at least there's usually some angle that makes it news for nerds. This? Nope, nothing.

      Vinod was a co-founder of Sun Microsystems, and we've been discussing this issue on here since he first closed down the road. If you don't like it, why don't you just participate in a discussion you do care about?

      On topic, it's been illegal to close down publicly used beach access roads in California for decades. This ruling is a travesty. Fuck Vinod Khosla twice. I hope this lawsuit wrangling gives him a heart attack. People like him represent everything wrong with billionaires.

    • This isn't "news for nerds" in any way, shape, or form.

      Huh? Are you joking? There's few things Slashdot nerds love more than making their own legal interpretations of the law and then arguing about it. There's a reason this is one of the most active posts on the front page.

  • by Impy the Impiuos Imp ( 442658 ) on Tuesday November 26, 2019 @12:21PM (#59457962) Journal

    Previous owner let them cross his land for a fee, had a gate. Current owner wants to restrict access to certain hours. Surfers claim a right of way across the land. Judge disagrees.

    Nothing to see here, folks. Just someone fishing for an outrage button. Note the huge ads that pop up when you click the link.

  • by Alwin Barni ( 5107629 ) on Tuesday November 26, 2019 @12:45PM (#59458168)
    Just to give some perspective on this issue, I read a SF story when an alien landed on Earth and after being welcomed he said that it's quite unfortunate, but he acquired this planet some time ago and all humans must move out.
  • And many states with beaches on their coasts solve this by guaranteeing access based on public v private distinctions.

    Some consider beach below the high water mark (tide mark for ocean beaches) to be public and accessible. Above that a private owner can assert their rights based on frontage. This usually dictates that some form of easement or access be provided through, often, the private owner's property, as an easement, so you can actually get to that public beach space.

    And then it becomes ugly. People wa

    • California law is that the beach itself is open to the public.
      California law does NOT say you're allowed to drive through this guy's yard to get to the beach at midnight.

      That's the dispute - he wants to limit the hours that people can drive through his property to get it the beach.

      • The state takes an easement to provide public access to the public beach. The public is no longer driving on his property. Solved.

        • And pay for the taking, ie by eminent domain.

          And then we will know what it's really worth.

          • Yep. The other solution would be for CA to offer to sell the beach for a fair price, maybe a cool half billion or something.

            • Sell what, the beach between high and low water? What's that worth? To the frontage owner, not much. To anyone else, you've sold a 'landlocked' (in the real estate sense) asset.

              And of course the lawsuits...

            • Yep, that's his position - the state should do an easement under eminent domain.

              The state has decided instead to force him to keep the company open, and require him to have the same prices and hours that the previous owners had in 1979.

              Why the state is fighting that I don't know. If you want public access, make a public easement. Simple.

              • Yep, that's his position - the state should do an easement under eminent domain.

                The state has decided instead to force him to keep the company open, and require him to have the same prices and hours that the previous owners had in 1979.

                Why the state is fighting that I don't know. If you want public access, make a public easement. Simple.

                I couldn't agree more. California .....

  • Not sure what the relevant laws are in CA, but if the beach is in fact not a private beach, then the state should have a responsibility to ensure there is a legal way for the public to access it. If the beach is a private beach then the public should respect this. From what I could gather in a quick read, this guy bought a large property that envelopes a public beach, and now wants to effectively make it a private beach.

    If that's the case, he's in the wrong, and so were the previous owners if they were real

    • The previous owners used the property as a business, maintaining restrooms and a small convenience store.

      From TFA and he is not looking to close the road or parking just restrict the hours it's open. That way he doesn't have to worry about what people are doing on his property at 3AM.

      • Solution still holds: eminent domain, then it's not his property to worry about.

        • But that takes money - you have to pay for the takings. And the State doesn't want to do it. So better to agitate an "eat the rich/kill the rich" standpoint and hope to force the situation by publicity and - potentially - violence (as has been advocated for right here on Slashdot).
      • From TFA and he is not looking to close the road or parking just restrict the hours it's open.

        Except he locked a gate across the road, I've seen it myself while driving by.

    • by jabuzz ( 182671 )

      At this juncture I would point out that there is always free public access to a public beech and there is no about of land ownership can deny one access to it. Sure it is a bit harder but there is nothing to stop you getting a boat of some description and sail it up to the beach and get out.

    • by jezwel ( 2451108 )

      Not sure what the relevant laws are in CA, but if the beach is in fact not a private beach, then the state should have a responsibility to ensure there is a legal way for the public to access it. If the beach is a private beach then the public should respect this. From what I could gather in a quick read, this guy bought a large property that envelopes a public beach, and now wants to effectively make it a private beach.

      No, he wants the government to buy the road that leads to the beach from him, using eminent domain. Solves every single problem, but costs $$$.

  • Thank you Captain Obvious.

  • Start a boat taxi service from a public access beach and drop anyone who pays fare on to "his" beach. His property line does not extend all the way to the water. He can put up a fence for his property. But the public land can be accessed from the sea.

    Make the service available to ALL the beaches abutting ALL the billionaire owned properties. The other bigger fish will be annoyed by this little fish and squat him down.

    Uber boat tax service. Lyft too. Ola too. Depending on the traffic they can even drag a

    • California coast and a lawsuit brought by surfers. Don't think the water will be nice and calm and smooth to allow a party barge (or really any barge with a sane captain) to anchor up and park.

      At least, that is what I remember about my one trip to the beach in Malibu compared to what I see around my home here in N Florida near the gulf coast. Heck thinking about it I've seen larger waves on the Great Lakes on a average nice summer day than what I see on Florida's Gulf Coast (NW part, near Crystal River/Ce

    • Depending on the traffic they can even drag a large floating warf right in for larger parties!

      Let's bring in a large Worf with a bat'leth instead.

  • What does this have to do with news for nerds?

"Facts are stupid things." -- President Ronald Reagan (a blooper from his speeach at the '88 GOP convention)

Working...