The little group of “forgotten people” had meetings at Guana dam and at members’ houses. They invited local authorities as special guests. They sent petitions and delegations to county commission hearings. Their presence at a county budget meeting allowed the sheriff to provide an ATV and deputy to patrol the road and beach. SPVA kept pestering their neighbors to join. President Larry said South Ponte Vedra residents rose in one year from “the unknown to the well-known”.
Local supporter

Ponte Vedra
South Ponte Vedra Association was founded
Rick and Larry were not alone. Over the next few months, twenty-three people formed the South Ponte Vedra Association. They said their first priorities were (1) law enforcement, (2) beach traffic, and (3) environmental protection. President Larry Picus said, “We do not want to be the forgotten people anymore.” The members got busy confronting the crime problem.
Burglars Blvd. to Scenic Byway
When Steve and I [Chris Rich] first moved here in 1997, I took my dog for a walk on South Ponte Vedra Beach. Shortly afterward, a local woman warned me that was a no-no. She said this particular beach was a dangerous place for a woman by herself, even with a dog. Why would she say that?