© 2025. The Trustees of Indiana University
Copyright Complaints
1229 East Seventh Street, Bloomington, Indiana 47405
News, Arts and Culture from WFIU Public Radio and WTIU Public Television
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations
Some web content from Indiana Public Media is unavailable during our transition to a new web publishing platform. We apologize for the inconvenience.

US Supreme Court won't hear Lake Michigan shoreline dispute

The shoreline in Long Beach. (Nicholas P. Janzen / IPB News)
The shoreline in Long Beach. (Nicholas P. Janzen / IPB News)

The U.S. Supreme Court said it won’t hear a case over access to Lake Michigan’s shoreline. The announcement on Monday, once again, upholds the public’s right to use the beach in front of private property in Indiana.

It’s safe to say we’ve been here before. In 2018, the Indiana Supreme Court ruled the public can use the shoreline up to where the high-water mark usually hits the beach. Property owners in the case took their appeal all the way up to the U.S. Supreme Court in 2019, but the Supreme Court wouldn’t hear it.

It also turned away this latest case, where a different group of property owners — Randall and Kimberley Pavlock and Raymond Cahnman — said the state “took” part of their property when it made the 2018 ruling and changed their experience of the beach.

A federal appeals court ruled in May that the plaintiffs couldn’t have something taken away from them that wasn’t theirs in the first place — upholding the Indiana Supreme Court decision. The U.S. Supreme Court’s records didn’t say why it wouldn’t hear the case.

Contact reporter Rebecca at  rthiele@iu.edu or follow her on Twitter at @beckythiele.

Rebecca Thiele covers statewide environment and energy issues. Before coming to Bloomington, she worked for WMUK Radio in Kalamazoo, Michigan on the arts and environment beats. Thiele was born in St. Louis and is a proud graduate of the University of Missouri School of Journalism.