Location. With that in mind, let’s turn to a discussion of the Cape
Cod National Seashore in Massachusetts.
The Cape Cod National Seashore spans a number of towns along the
Cape. If you haven’t spent much time in
Massachusetts, we’re talking about that arm that hooks out into the ocean,
almost as if the state were flexing a muscle.
Follow the “arm” to the very end and you’re in the Provincetown – Truro area,
home to much of CCNS.
Legal Changes. Skinny dipping and nude sunbathing enjoyed a long tradition
on many of the beaches now managed as the CCNS. Problem was, in the early 1970’s
the fame of the nude beaches spread and it was not all a good thing. Many visitors sojourned down to the CCNS in
hopes of gawking at nudists much the way you’d view animals at the zoo. There were even tour bus companies operating
from as far away as Boston who organized “see the nudists” tours. These gawkers brought their own set of
problems with the law, as well as trampling through environmentally sensitive
dunes. By the mid 1970’s, seashore
officials had had enough.
They secured passage of a federal regulation prohibiting
nudity on the CCNS. The regulatory
process included notices in the Federal Register, an official comment period,
etc. Once completed that
regulation---targeted only at CCNS---went into effect and remains in place to
this day. The regulation is one of only
a handful of such federal nudity bans specifically targeted to parts of the
National Park System. (There is one prohibition at Honokohau park in HI).
Volunteer Spirit. For decades, local nudists, including Bill Falconer’s Sunchasers
Travel Club and the Pilgrim Naturists of
New England, have been working to have the regulation rescinded. They organize an annual CCNS Cleanup, which
cleans miles of the beach every year and holds an impressive 15+ year track
record. Such service projects have
helped cultivate a positive working relationship between nudists and seashore
staff to the point that some staffers would rather find other things to do than
cite nudists if they don’t receive any complaints. Yet the law remains.
Every seven years or so, National Parks on federal seashores
take a status check and revise their Seashore Management Plans. On these occasions, nudists have followed the
process and put formal requests into the record (usually accompanied by hundreds
of petitions in support). Nudists have
also traveled to congressional offices in Washington DC with a Massachusetts
constituency to present officials with pictures of each year’s CCNS Cleanup volunteers
and reports of the actual mileage cleaned and pounds of trash collected. With
each year more friends get made and more people educated. Yet the regulation persists.
Lessons. Many reading the Bare Platypus were not even born when the
federal government banned nudity on the Cape and there are few left championing
FOR the ban, but it remains. Today’s
lessons: (1) Thank those who are trying to change things; and (2) REMEMBER that
it takes only a short time to lose a nude beach venue, but decades to get it
back.
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