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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
Travel
Milo Boyd

Spanish city to fine drunk and reckless tourists who need to be saved from the sea

Tourists who have to be pulled from the sea after drunkenly going for a swim will soon have to pay for the pleasure of being rescued.

Emergency workers in the northern Spanish city of San Sebastián are fed up with having to heave sloshed paddlers out of the drink.

Recently a Spanish and Brazilian man raced into the waters off the Playa de La Concha beach after a night out on the tiles.

Minutes later they found themselves being pulled deeper and deeper into the chilly waters and began to struggle, the Guardian reports.

A police officer onshore saw them struggling and triggered a rescue plan, which included 20 first responders rushing to the scene.

People who get into trouble through no fault of their own won't face any fines (Javier Etxezarreta/EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock)

The total cost of the response - which happily saw the men brought safely back to shore - was more than £5,000.

Now officials in the Spanish city want to stop footing the bill in the case of such emergencies if they come about through negligence or recklessness.

“I would love to never charge a single euro, pound or dollar,” Martín Ibabe, the city councillor responsible for citizen safety, said, the Guardian reports.

“The objective here is to prevent these types of incidents from happening. The confrontational nature of this law is aimed at making people think twice.”

Mr ibabe said that the city will be "blazing a new path" if the legislation gets passed, and that it'd be the first of its kind in Spain.

The bill has been pushed forward by a recent rise in cases of reckless swimming, including lots of drunk partygoers hitting the beach after dark.

Others have been pulled into the sea after dozing off on a stone jetty and having scrambled on secluded beach with notoriously ferocious waves.

Officials in the town are fed up having to shoulder the hefty bills (Getty Images/Lonely Planet Images)

San Sebastián officials want to cut down on the number of call-outs, to save the city money and to stop rescuers having to put their lives at risk so frequently.

Some critics have voiced concerns that it could make people more hesitant to call for help, while others argue that it could unjustly penalise those who have an accident.

Mr Ibabe hopes to have the legislation in place by the end of the summer.

Similar laws have been put introduced in eight US states such as New Hampshire, where 12 people are charged for rescues a year.

Most of these are involving hikers who've recklessly got themselves into trouble.

Do you think fining drunk tourists is right? Let us know in the comment below

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