Beach Access Coalition

Beach Access Coalition The Texas Beach Access Coalition serves to protect and defend the right of public access to the publ

Celebration of Life for Hal Suter will be this Saturday, August 17th, 10 am, Seaside Memorial Chapel in Corpus Christi. ...
08/15/2019

Celebration of Life for Hal Suter will be this Saturday, August 17th, 10 am, Seaside Memorial Chapel in Corpus Christi. Reception to follow hosted by BAC at the usual meeting place.

08/05/2019

We are forever grateful for the time we’ve had with our fearless leader, Hal Suter. Thanks for your inspiration, dedication and friendship. May you Rest In Peace good friend.

03/03/2019

The BAC will forever be grateful to Carolyn Moon for her contribution to our cause and so many others. We will be hosting a celebration of life very soon. Will keep you posted as we coordinate with her family.

10/12/2018

Roland Gaona passed away suddenly this weekend after complications of kidney illness. This was sudden, and unexpected. Due to ongoing health issues, he was not able to prepare for this happening. Roland advocated, supported, and stood beside many people that he knew, and didn't know through thi...

10/12/2018

Funeral arrangements for Roland Gaona:
Viewing will begin at 5pm Sunday October 14th, with a Rosary at 7pm. Funeral and burial services will be on Monday October 15th, at 10am. Both services will be at
Memory Gardens, 8200 Old Brownsville Road, Corpus Christi, Tx 78415.

The family has set up a GoFundMe account to help pay for funeral expenses.
For donations outside of GoFundMe... you can do so directly to the funeral home, referencing services for Roland Gaona. His family thanks you all for your continued love and support.

08/11/2018

Get a detailed report showing market trends in your neighborhood, including recent listings, sales prices and average time on market.

05/22/2017

The commercial from Channel 6 news about how they investigated the Padre Island land grab is off by 180 degrees.

The memories of some are long
03/02/2017

The memories of some are long

There seems to be a lot of talk, pro and con, about Mark Scott.

This is very encouraging although an uphill battle.  Let the conversation begin at a national level.
09/22/2016

This is very encouraging although an uphill battle. Let the conversation begin at a national level.

Banning plastic bags is a major step to reduce the usage of plastic but does not affect much the big problem of colossal disposal of plastic on the oceans

07/22/2016

We are being pretty quiet right now, but after the tragedy of the car getting hit and running over its sleeping owners, the City might rise up and try to restrict access again. Keep an eye out

02/18/2016

From Galveston:
By MICHAEL A. SMITH | Posted 10 hours ago
It’s hard to imagine a more fitting tribute to A.R. “Babe” Schwartz than naming a beach in his honor, as Galveston’s Park Board of Trustees recommended Tuesday.
We urge the city council to follow the park board’s lead and vote to create a “Babe’s Beach.”
Schwartz, 90, is near-legendary in Galveston and elsewhere in the county and probably everywhere among people who care about the public’s right to unfettered access to the public’s own beaches.
The park board voted to name 15 blocks of new beach west of 61st Street after Schwartz, who represented Galveston in the Texas House of Representatives and Senate from 1955 to 1981.
Schwartz told a Daily News reporter Monday that he was “greatly honored” the board was even considering naming something after him; he was grateful.
Anybody who has ever enjoyed a long, unimpeded walk along any Texas beach between Brownsville and Port Arthur should take a minute to be grateful for the work Schwartz did during his long career in the legislature on behalf of ordinary Texans.
His legislative career was marked by bills supporting coastal protection and the public’s right to access beaches.
He was among the main drivers behind the Texas Open Beaches Act and the law making it illegal to post signs declaring a “private beach” on public land, and he sponsored a constitutional amendment giving counties the right to regulate traffic on beaches.
In 1962, Schwartz wrote the state legislation that created the Park Board of Trustees. In 1971, he wrote the laws that created the Texas Windstorm Insurance Association, which to a large extent made it possible for people of ordinary means to afford to live along the coast.
The idea to name the beach after Schwartz came from the park board’s Beach Maintenance Advisory Committee.
“Babe has been a senator and an advocate in Austin for Galveston beaches,” said Clyde Steddum, the chairman of the advisory committee and a park board trustee. “He’s such a symbol of things in Galveston, we thought, ‘What a way to honor him.’”
The section of beach that could bear Schwartz’s name has existed only since November. Through a partnership with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the Texas General Land Office, the park board created 15 blocks of beach, starting at 61st Street, using sand dredged from the Galveston Ship Channel.
Schwartz built a great legacy through his work to keep Texas beaches open to all Texans; but, like the beach that will carry his name, his legacy is susceptible to erosion.
Especially in recent years, people hostile to the notion of public beaches have had success in rolling back concepts in the Open Beaches Act that many of us had thought were safe, beyond even much argument.
If we have a Babe Schwartz in the Legislature on open-beach issues today, he has not stepped up yet, which means rank-and-file Texans will have to carry the fight or, conceivably, in 10 years or so our beaches will be as restricted as those in California, where the beaches belong to the highest bidder.
• Michael A. Smith

07/07/2015

Friday, I noticed the parking lot for Magee Beach was packed. As I drove along, because there is no place for me to stop and look, I waited until I was going up in front of Emerald Beach. I looked in the mirror and saw all those who parked crowded at the north end, far from the hotel people.There was a large span of no one there. Good planning?

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Corpus Christi, TX

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