T O P I C R E V I E W |
Curious in CT |
Posted - 09/08/2004 : 12:37:28 PM I was wondering if anyone had any suggestions as to how to get nude beaches made legal in Connecticut. Thanks.
Curious in CT |
5 L A T E S T R E P L I E S (Newest First) |
Cheri |
Posted - 05/23/2008 : 10:12:09 AM Make appointments to meet your local legislators at the state level). Try starting a clean-up effort at a specific stretch of beach. Attend the next Cape Cod beach cleanup. Get together financial information as to the increase of tourist dollars spent at beaches such as Haulover.
Cheri
Doing what I can to positively promote nudism - http://pages.prodigy/cheridonna
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go n nude |
Posted - 05/23/2008 : 05:10:50 AM Good advice and ideas always found here,The AANR does support free beaches,they have an info booklet on that topic and will help get one started or best of all steer one on the how to start clothes optional(nude) beach.
go n nude |
agde |
Posted - 05/23/2008 : 02:06:26 AM Suggestion: Get one of the Connecticut AANR clubs to agree to help manage a part of a beach. Talk to the beach authority about allowing nudity on a specific part of the beach only if and when the AANR club sets up a banner or flag, thus alerting other beach goers and indicating an official naturist presence guaranteeing that official AANR rules of behavior and etiquette are enforced. |
viper7 |
Posted - 05/22/2008 : 6:25:07 PM always focus on the tourism dollars, nude beaches and parks are a big attraction, these people need food, lodging, gas, and will like do shopping as well.
state parks that charge an entry fee rarely make money, but a nudist park if well laid out and known can be profitable as well |
old hippie |
Posted - 08/23/2005 : 12:06:15 AM quote: Originally posted by Curious in CT
I was wondering if anyone had any suggestions as to how to get nude beaches made legal in Connecticut. Thanks.
Curious in CT
I'd suppose the first step would be to get to know your local legislators. Find out who is the most accessible, and suggest an opportunity for them to get out in front of a growing trend. Some states have legislation about nudity in general, but beaches might be outside that domain. Really, I'd like to see standard legislation in all the states which simply states that skinny-dipping is not illegal.
Don't get your hopes up, though; look elsewhere in this forum to see what silliness the MD legislators engaged in when discussing a related bill. They sound like ten-year-olds. Makes me wonder why we pay politicians.
Dum vivimus, vivamus! |