
Free beach is not just a portal open to people, it is a natural right that must be accompanied by a minimum of service, organization and respect for the citizen.
It is unreasonable that the idea of free beaches should be transformed into a permanent occasion for the skin of people and accuse the entire community of non-integration or lack of responsibility.
Yeah, keeping clean is a duty for everyone, but duty is not separated from the existence of a genuine public service that helps people commit.
A citizen cannot be required not to dump the residue while he does not find one garbage box along the beach, or has to return his remains to his home because the responsible entity did not provide the most basic cleaning materials.
The problem is that some deal with the citizen as the origin of the only crisis, while the lack of administration, service and organization is ignored.
Talking quickly turns into: "People are irresponsible," "Citizen doesn't deserve free," and "people don't know to keep the place."
It's always like denying the citizen, not reforming the service.
This kind of self-skin is dangerous, because it grows into people a sense of inferiority, makes a citizen progressively convinced that he does not deserve good public service, or that any free space must be closed or specialized because people don't work with her free.
It is more dangerous that this speech is frequently publicized, so that it becomes a psychological prelude to the idea that the only solution to the system and hygiene is to eliminate free of charge.
A citizen is convinced, over time, that he is naturally entitled to be deprived of a free beach, not to demand better service and decent management.
Although the truth is much simpler.
Even if 90% of people commit to cleanliness, there will still be a few who act wrong, and that happens in all States of the world without exception.
This is precisely why there are garbage boxes, cleaner workers and continuous follow-up and maintenance systems.
The management of public places is not built on the assumption that all human beings are angels, but rather on a service capable of dealing with human errors.
In States that respect their citizens, the beach is not left to chaos and blames people completely.
There are cleaners, rescue teams, warning flags, services that work all the time until the citizen enjoys his day safely and decently.
Some States allocate full operating rooms to follow beaches, save drownings and deal with emergencies, all as a normal public service for the citizen.
We do not ask for all this huge potential.
We don't order operating rooms or complex techniques.
All we need is very simple things:
A garbage box, a cleaner, a black flag, time of danger, and an individual with a whistle-blower and alerts people.
A citizen doesn't go to the beach to act as a cleaning company, nor do he feel guilty all the time not to attend.
He goes to enjoy the sea and spends a normal day with dignity, and he has the right to a decent basic service instead of always turning it into a candle of administrative failure and weak services.
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