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Appended is an newspaper article from New Jersey titled "Beach tags to give way to wireless wristbands." The article is not merely fascinating, it is extraordinarily predictive of issues that are about to impact YOU! This obscure, local, article is damned important!!!
Ostensibly, the article is about using high-tech to ensure that everyone who sets foot upon the Jersey shore has paid his or her beach access fees and that no one is on the beach who shouldn't be there. It is technology gone haywire in the pursuit of private profits and the privatization of public access.
Most importantly, it is about the future of access to our parks, forests, lakes, rivers, beaches and other places where we, as citizens and taxpayers, formerly enjoyed free access to what once were OUR public lands. Whether high tech will be involved, remains an unknown. That access will be controlled and priced, is all but certain.
That's all I'm going to offer by way of introduction, but I'd like to also share with you the comments NJ readers have already posted in response to the appended article.
Listen to the PEOPLE. Lord knows, the politicians and the land mangers aren't doing so.
Scott
Here are those reader comments:
Only in New Jersey! Geez, you can't do anything for free in this state. Only elected officials would think this is a good idea. A vendor must've sold them on this technology.
Technology is an awesome thing - but this is OVER THE TOP! Whatever happened to the beach being right up there with baseball and apple pie - one of American's favorite pastimes. We need to return to the day when the beaches were free and the cotton candy was spinning...wake up and speak up NJ - our voices are powerful!
To this day, I don't understand why you have pay to get on the beaches in New Jersey. Growing up, there was more to do on the boardwalk, more of a kid friendly place and never do I recall having to pay. Next New Jersey will want you to pay for the air you breathe.
SHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH Jersey dont give them any ideas!!
Yes I remember as a kid going to the beach with my family. And yes it was free. ANd after a day on the sand going on the boardwalk, going on rides, playing the arcade games. I remember my dad spending a nickel and winning a bear bigger then I was.
What was that song? Those were the days my friend.
Nothings certain in life but death, taxes, and corruption in New Jersey
Appalled, I'm sorry, didn't mean to throw out new ideas to put in their little heads. Dag nabbit, I feel a new bill coming on. Hurry, everyone get oxygen tanks ready. --
We'll be getting microchipped before long ....
GEEEEEEEEEEEEZ will you guys stop giving them ideas?? Or if you have to make suggestions, make them ones that would go in our favor! Like no one who makes under 100k per year has to pay no taxes on anything. --
I don't like this at all, I don't even go to the beach anymore because I don't have the spare cash for it.
Every morning now, I get up and read about this total global control grid and massive surveillance / police state. I'm tired of it. The person who said "we'll be getting chipped before long" was right. It's all planned. The iPods, the headphones, they're all getting all the young conditioned for it right now.
When are people going to wake up and speak out against this stuff?! I am going crazy about it!! STOP THE NEW WORLD ORDER! 9/11 WAS AN INSIDE JOB!!
How New Jersey residents ever gave into having to pay to get on their own beaches is insane. Have they never visited other states where you just... uhm... walk on the beach? I don't know. I used to sneak on between OG and Asbury, but now they have a sign up there basically saying not to. Those word deleted. I just want to put my feet in the water for 10 minutes. Jesus Christ. I have to pay 7 bucks to put my feet in the water? I don't swim, nor expose my skinny t-shirt tanned body to anyone in a public situation. I have to pay for lifeguards to save me from the maximum of 3 feet of water? As far as paying for the trash cleanup on the beach, I do that myself, voluntarily because I live here and it makes me sick!
The article follows...
--- begin quoted ---
Beach tags to give way to wireless wristbands
Posted by the Asbury Park Press on 07/23/07
BY WAYNE PARRY - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
OCEAN CITY — Welcome to the Beach of the Future, where high tide meets high-tech.
If this southern New Jersey city's plans come to fruition next summer,
Ocean City would be a place where an electronic wristband can pay for
access to the beach, food, drinks and parking, and can even send a text
message to a mother's cell phone if a child strays too far away from
her beach chair.
It would be a place where the garbage cans could e-mail the Public
Works Department to come empty them, and lifeboats that float away
could send signals to help the city track them down.
And people wouldn't even think about trying to sneak onto the beach
without paying: Beach checkers would be able to scan the sands with
hand-held devices and instantly know who among that group of 15 people
sprawled out on towels and under umbrellas didn't pay to get onto the
beach.
These are among the features of a citywide wireless network Ocean City
is planning for next summer that would offer residents free Internet
access. Tourists would pay about $6 a day, helping pay for the network.
Beach badges, those plastic or cloth scourges of the Jersey Shore could become a thing of the past if this catches on.
"This is the future," said Karen Kinloch, a summer resident. "It's
where we're at right now. It's probably overdue. It's kind of
antiquated to take a piece of plastic and pin it to your swimsuit."
Will McKinley, a badge checker stationed on boardwalk at the 19th Street beach, said the new system would make his job easier.
"It will take the hassle out of going up to people and asking to see
their badges," he said. "They're more OK with it up here. On the beach,
they don't like to be hassled."
He estimates 5 to 10 percent of people at his post either try to sneak
on without paying, or lie to him, offering excuses including that their
badge is on a T-shirt on a beach chair near the water.
City Business Administrator Jim Rutala said Ocean City rarely issues
summonses to those caught without badges, which cost $5 per day, $10
for a week, or $20 for the entire summer.
"When someone doesn't have a tag, they're asked to buy one then and
there, and they usually do, either for the day or the week," Rutala
said. "But certainly it would save the effort of having to go up and
bother someone."
But the new system also could eliminate McKinley's job. Last year,
Ocean City spent more than $282,000 to pay 170 badge checkers. Jonathan
Baltuch, whose Atlanta-based Marketing Resources Inc. is helping the
city plan the system, estimated the new gear could cut that cost in
half.
Nationwide, nearly 20 coastal municipalities have wireless Internet
systems, mostly in California and Florida, according to the Web site
MuniWireless.com. But few, if any, boast the kind of wireless wonders
Ocean City is planning.
There have been problems with municipal wireless networks across the
country, including difficulty getting a signal in certain spots, or
accessing some Web sites, said Esme Vos, MuniWireless' founder.
"I have experienced that myself in London," she said. "But those problems are being tweaked."
She said the system Ocean City is envisioning should be relatively easy
to build and operate. And Baltuch said the wide, unobstructed beach,
combined with relatively few trees and almost no tall buildings to
interfere with wireless signals, all work in Ocean City's favor.
Ocean City would use a combination of Wi-Fi to provide Internet access,
and RFID, which is the type of tracking technology that libraries and
department stores use to make sure no one sneaks books or merchandise
out the door.
A planned feature that's proving popular with parents in the city that
calls itself "America's Greatest Family Resort" is the ability to link
one wristband electronically to others. For instance, a mother going to
the beach with three small children could have her bracelet linked to
those of her children. If one of them passes an electronic sensor at
the entrance or exit to the boardwalk without the right adult, a text
message would instantly be sent to her cell phone to alert her.
"I've helped lost children try to find their parents on the beach, and
that would be a great thing," Kinloch said. "It's easy for them to
stray off. You only turn your head for a second, and they can be gone.
It does happen."
Even the trash cans on this beach would be high-tech. Special
solar-powered units would have sensors that, when the container is
three-quarters full, would automatically send an e-mail to the Public
Works Department asking a worker to come empty them.
And parking lots near the beach would have signs that would tell
drivers how many open spots there are, and where they're located.
The $3 million network would be owned by the city but paid for by a
vendor. The city has requested proposals from interested firms, which
are due by the end of the month, and hopes to award a contract by early
September.
The network would enable city officials to know exactly how many people are on the beach at a particular time.
"They can see that at 1:30, there are 60,000 people on the beach, and
say "Hey, we need to get some more police into that area,' " said
Baltuch, the consultant.
He estimated the network could generate $14 million in revenue for the
city over the first five years, and $12 million for the company that
operates it, through user fees and advertisements to be sold on the
network.
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