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Home > News > India News > Article > Goa planning Shack policy

Goa planning 'Shack policy'

Updated on: 09 June,2012 07:53 AM IST  | 
Agencies |

State government to bring some order to the frenzy that descends on Goa's beaches during the peak season; to offer practical facilities for tourists, which will include freshwater showers and toilets

Goa planning 'Shack policy'

Soon, no ducking behind a sand dune or a palm tree to change in or out of your swimwear. The Goa beach experience is about to undergo a dramatic change with the state government formulating a shack policy, complete with freshwater showers and toilets. Much to the delight of tourists and frequent visitors to Goa, the state government is in the process of finalising a policy for shacks as well as water sports, apart from creating “practical” facilities on infrastructure-starved beaches.



You’ll be watched! The tourism ministry is also contemplating building a 50-metre watchtower on the popular and populous Baga beach in north Goa. File Pic


Chief Minister Manohar Parrikar said the beach shack policy should be ready in a couple of months. The policy would help bring some order to the frenzy that descends on Goa’s beaches during the peak season from October to March. The tourism ministry is also in readiness. “The most important requirement is creating very practical facilities for tourists on the beaches. They come there, they need to change clothes when they go for a swim. We are trying to bring in changing rooms for them on the beaches,” said Tourism Minister Dilip Parulekar.


Giving details, he said the plan was to install “freshwater showers where those who have been for a swim can have a bath and get refreshed”.
“There will also be other facilities like designated parking areas, toilets and high mast lights at night,” the minister added. According to Parulekar, the idea was to eliminate the element of chaos that typically greets the hundreds of thousands of tourists on Goa’s beaches every year. At present no beach in Goa has even basic facilities, forcing tourists to scamper for cover behind dunes, shacks, trees and any and every bit of cover on offer on the miles of sand.

The tourism ministry, he added, was also contemplating building a 50-metre watchtower on the popular and populous Baga beach in north Goa, so that security personnel can help ward off trouble. The comprehensive policy, which would cover the 300-plus licensed shacks, would also include water sports operations that have mushroomed along the beach belt.

Water sports operators offer activities like jet-ski rides, dolphin spotting, para-sailing, banana boat capers, with boats often encroaching into shallow areas and causing accidents by running into unaware swimmers bobbing in the waters.“The policy will also demarcate specific areas for watersports operators, beyond which they will not be allowed to go. The areas will be marked by buoys,” the chief minister said.u00a0

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