For 5 years, we’ve been tracking the tribulations of billionaire Silicon Valley VC Vinod Khosla, a co-founder of Sun Microsystems who, in 2010, bought land adjacent to a public beach in Half-Moon Bay, south of San Francisco, and then fenced off the beach and hired private security guards to chase swimmers and sunbathers off the public land.
Khosla did everything in his considerable power to steal the beach from Californians, but has ultimately failed (or so it seems). A California court has ordered Khosla to allow access to the beach, and rejected his demand for $30m from the taxpayers of California as a condition of doing so.
The decision this week, affirming a lower court ruling, stems from a lawsuit filed by the Surfrider Foundation, a not-for-profit group that says the case could have broader implications for beach access across the US.“Vinod Khosla, with his billions of dollars, bought this piece of property and said, ‘No, no, the public isn’t going to use this anymore. End of story,’” the Surfrider attorney Joe Cotchett said by phone on Thursday. “He got away with it for many years … This is probably one of the most important public right-of-access cases in the country.”
Khosla’s refusal to restore access has made him something of a symbol of the immense wealth in the tech industry and rising income inequality in the region.
Silicon Valley billionaire loses bid to prevent access to public beach
[Sam Levin/The Guardian]
(Image: Lars Rosengreen, CC-BY)
(via Late Stage Capitalism)