Do the piscine residents of Grand Cayman’s Stingray
City really need a bar and restaurant floating in their midst?
On December 10, Cayman’s Liquor Licensing Board granted
a retail liquor license and a music and dancing license to
Bernie Bush, a local businessman, for the proposed floating
bar. But Cayman local Peter Van der Bol told the Cayman
Net News that Bush’s application was deceptively done
because he said the license would be applied at a nearby
yacht club, but it then turned into a floating bar.
Undercurrent reader and Cayman local Jack Augsbury
wrote a protest letter to radio show Cayman Crosstalk. “What
does this say to the children who will visit Stingray City in
the future? Here is a beautiful natural setting to safely interact
with nature and, oh yes, there is the bar. I have heard the
argument that because boaters go there and drink alcohol,
then why not a permanent floating bar. There is a huge difference
between temporary boaters with personal freedom
and a permanent alcohol-dispensing structure.”
More than 100 locals and tourists gathered in George
Town last month to protest the license.“Even if a clean operation
is done, trash will still end up in the water, and you can’t
swim with stingrays in the wild,” protest organizer Natasha
Kozaily said. “Putting a bar there is encouraging people to
drink beer while they are swimming and they can drown.
They can step on stingrays and harm them or get harmed.”
Bush says the place will be more restaurant than bar,
serving Caymanian dishes to let tourists sample the local
cuisine and served with biodegradable cutlery, while drinks
will be served in souvenir cups as incentive for customers to
hold onto them. He says he won’t be anchored in Stingray
City and won’t be the first to change the family atmosphere.
“Half the people have beer or liquor in their hands drinking.
So this is nothing new. The fact is it is high time that a local
person started to make something out of this so–called piece
of pie here in Cayman Islands.”
So while it’s business pure and simple for Bush and
Cayman officials, looks like the underwater residents - - and
the area’s main attraction - - are the ones who will benefit
the least.