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The Honolulu Advertiser
Updated at 3:54 p.m., Thursday, July 3, 2008

Beach weddings to require permit as of Aug. 1

Advertiser Staff

Effective Aug. 1, the Department of Land and Natural Resources will require permits for all commercial beach weddings taking place on state beaches and unencumbered lands.

Current application forms for right-of-entry permits are available at all DLNR district offices and on the Land Division Web site at hawaii.gov/dlnr/land/forms-1/forms.

According to a DLNR news release, an applicant for a right-of-entry permit must identify the location and size of the area being requested for the event, the county tax map key number for the site, provide proof of liability insurance coverage, and pay a fee. A map showing the requested location must also be attached to the application.

DLNR has been holding meetings, coordinated by the island visitor bureaus on O'ahu, Kaua'i and the Big Island of Hawai'i and the Maui Hotel and Lodging Association on Maui in cooperation with the State Tourism Liaison, with commercial wedding industry representatives, according to the news release. Meetings were held last week on Maui and Kaua'i, Tuesday in Kona and yesterday on O'ahu.

The meetings are intended to explain state procedures already in place for commercial activity on state beaches, the right of entry permit system DLNR will use, and improve the department's understanding of the scope and nature of the commercial beach wedding industry for better management purposes.

DLNR, which manages state marine and freshwater resources, parks, forests, beaches, harbors, leases, conservation and unimproved lands in the state, has been pursuing greater compliance with its permitting requirement for commercial activities on state unencumbered lands for several years.

"DLNR has been addressing the growing impacts of unpermitted use of the unencumbered public lands by commercial operators statewide," said Laura H. Thielen, DLNR chairwoman.

"Our department has the public trust responsibility to manage the state's public lands and natural resources. We are guided by a hierarchy of resource management priorities, which is first, to protect our natural and cultural resources; second to provide for public resident recreational access that does not damage those resources; and third, to allow commercial activity only if it does not impact the natural and cultural resources, or the public's recreational use," Thielen said in the news release.

During the first several months this year, DLNR received a large volume of requests for right-of-entry permits for commercial beach weddings on Maui and Kaua'i. At the same time, the department realized that many commercial wedding businesses have been operating on state unencumbered lands without permits.

Consequently, the department decided to reassess its existing permitting process to consider improvements that could promote greater compliance.

DLNR is working with the industry to establish a streamlined right-of-entry permitting process for all commercial wedding operations on state beaches. In considering these improvements, the department is seeking to address the industry need for speed and certainty and still respect the capacity limits of popular beaches.

DLNR is currently considering an online permitting system, similar to the existing DLNR reservation system for commercial operators using the state's Na Ala Hele hiking trails.

"An online system incorporates a lot of the features, such as timely processing and flexibility, that may eventually provide near-instantaneous permit processing over the Internet, a feature that members of the wedding industry previously expressed would be desirable," said Morris Atta, the DLNR Land Division Administrator.

Adapting that system to suit the respective needs of the resources, recreational users and the wedding industry requires the gathering of data that identifies the times and locations where commercial weddings may be permitted, as well as the capacity limitations of each site.

DLNR will seek to obtain that type of data to help it determine the parameters of use for the existing right-of-entry procedures and any future commercial use permit system.