Beach Markers Going Up, And Coming Down, Throughout Southampton Town

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Beach markers are being placed along the shoreline to help identify the locations of swimmers in trouble.

Beach markers are being placed along the shoreline to help identify the locations of swimmers in trouble.

Beach markers are being placed along the shoreline to help identify the location of swimmers in trouble.

Beach markers are being placed along the shoreline to help identify the location of swimmers in trouble.

BY MICHAEL WRIGHT on Oct 17, 2012

Southampton Town is installing a new system of location markers along its Atlantic Ocean beachfront this month to aid emergency responses at the ocean.

The long-awaited program, which was an initiative of former Councilwoman Nancy Graboski, has apparently already rankled some, however, as a few of the brightly colored plastic markers have been yanked out of the ground or stolen.

“They put them in about two weeks ago, and we’ve been checking on them, because … it takes time for the sand around them to settle, and more than 10 have already been removed in some way,” said Ross Baldwin, the town’s geographic information systems manager. “A couple were pulled up and left lying on the beach, and a few others were taken.”

The markers are little more than thin rubber-plastic composite planks, resembling vinyl siding, in a variety of colors—a different color for each of the nine hamlets that has oceanfront in the town. Each is 10 feet long—about 5 feet buried into the sand near the dunes, and 5 feet visible above it. The planks are flexible so they will bend but not break when buffeted by winds or even run over by a vehicle being driven on the beach.

The markers will be spaced between 500 and 1,000 feet apart, and each will be adorned with a three-digit reflective number, starting with the number 001 at Moriches Inlet and ascending eastward to number 287 at the East Hampton Town line in Sagaponack.

The beach marker system was conceived to help people calling 911, especially tourists at beaches that bear no official designations, to more easily identify their exact location to public safety coordinators. East Hampton Town has discussed their own system of beach markers, possibly coordinated with Southampton Town’s system but plans have not been finalized.

Mr. Baldwin said that Southampton conducted a pilot program with the markers in 2010 and asked permission of any homeowners on whose sand one of the markers was to be placed. The positioning was chosen to avoid them being in close proximity to private access paths to the nearest home.

Those who look to the beaches for sanctuary from the man-made world, however, may be finding the sudden appearance of neon posts in their landscape a bit garish.

“They look like someone just picked up a piece of trash and stood it up in the sand,” said a man who gave his name only as Walter while walking past one of the markers on a beach in Bridgehampton Tuesday morning. “They’re not very attractive are they? Not very Hamptonsy.”

The installation of the markers will cost the town about $12,000. The surveying and installation of the markers was done by the Westhampton firm Chesterfield & Associates.

As for complaints about the aesthetics of having brightly colored plastic sticks protruding from the sand, Mr. Baldwin said that whatever dislike people might have for them should be outweighed by the concern for the well-being of others.

“It’s for emergency response purposes,” he said. “They’re very thin, they don’t stand out and they could save somebody’s life.”

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