The Mexican Senate has voted to impose fines of up to MXN 1,042,560 against hotels , restaurants , or other property owners who restrict access to the country’s beaches .
The bill was approved unanimously on Tuesday. Moreover, it also requires property owners to allow public access through their lots to beaches that do not have access roads.
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The bill now goes to President López Obrador for his approval. Mexicans have long been angered by private restaurants, clubs, and hotels that erect barriers or employ guards to keep locals off “their” stretch of beach.
Mexico’s federal law already states the public cannot be denied access to a space 20 meters inland from the high tide line, but some businesses mark off exclusive areas almost up to the water’s edge. Businesses that repeatedly break the law could lose their permits to operate on any part of the beach.
Senator Antonio García Conejo, the head of the Tourism Commission at the Senate, said these reforms would be beneficial for the tourism industry, which has been seriously affected by the COVID-19 pandemic. He added over 10,000 small-sized enterprises have closed during the public health crisis.
Senator Alejandra del Carmen León praised the new law and said the practice of granting beach “concessions” to private businesses in the past constituted “an act of classism and discrimination ” against local Mexican families.
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In February, two Mexican tourists were briefly arrested in the Caribbean resort of Playa del Carmen after refusing to leave a stretch of sand that had been taken over by a local restaurant to set up tables for paying customers. The arrests sparked protests, and the local government later apologized.
The private “beach club” had been charging to use lounge chairs placed almost up to the water’s edge, and it called municipal police when the couple refused to leave what the club called “a service aisle” on the sand. Video posted on social media showed the couple being handcuffed and wrestled off the beach by police as other people objected, noting beach access is protected by law.
The issue has also gained prominence during the pandemic, as public beaches were officially closed along much of Mexico’s Caribbean coast as a health measure, but tourists, often foreigners, could still enjoy the sands through resorts or hotels that have direct beach access.
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