Florida Is Trying to Ram Development of State Parks, “Skirting the Legal Process” By Jason Cochran « Arthur Morris/BIRDS AS ART

Florida Is Trying to Ram Development of State Parks, "Skirting the Legal Process" By Jason Cochran

What are They Thinking?

After reading the article below, please take a moment to sign and share the petition below. I did, and it only took a minute as most of the work has been done for you.

https://floridawildlifefederation.org/action-state-parks…/

In addition, call the Governor’s office at 1-850-717-9337. Press option 1 and voice your dispaproval of all plans to develop Florida State Parks.

It is hard to comprehend that these plans were announced by the Department of Environmental Protection. What’s in a name anyway? Governor Ron DeSantis wholeheartedly backs the plans.

I first learned of this important issue on William Steele’s Facebook page. The first round of scheduled meetings has been postponed. You can find lots more important information here.

Florida Is Trying to Ram Development of State Parks, “Skirting the Legal Process”

Posted August 21 2024

By Jason Cochran (from the Frommer’s Website here.)

Floridians are sounding a red alert after the state unexpectedly revealed its intent to allow rapid development at nine of Florida’s nature reserves, sidestepping the usual process that allows for public participation.

“This appears to be something that has been planned in secret, and it doesn’t appear to have involved the hundreds, if not thousands, of people who are volunteers in the parks, the citizen support organizations, or the many people who have been involved in helping to create and develop Florida’s award-winning park system,” said Eric Draper, who served as the director of Florida’s state parks between 2017 and 2021, in the Tampa Bay Times.

On Aug. 19, Florida’s current Department of Environmental Protection announced plans to carve out major sections of nine state parks for several construction projects. Many of the areas are on pristine land that has never before been built upon.

One proposal obtained by citizen watchdogs called for the bulldozing of a section of John Dickinson State Park, north of Jupiter, to be replaced by two 18-hole golf courses, another 9-hole golf course, and a clubhouse. The development would destroy protected Atlantic coastal scrub habitat and a heritage observation tower at Hobe Mountain, pictured above.

“I’m not sure who is feeling a desperate lack of golf courses in southeast Florida, but what I can tell you is we are feeling a desperate lack of native scrub habitat,” Julie Brashears Wraithmell, executive director of Audubon Florida, told the Palm Beach Post. “Putting in a golf course on top of habitat is not what state parks are meant to be.”

Plans for construction at all nine state parks were announced simultaneously, and, contrary to the legal protocol, the state gave members of the public just 8 days to research the impact to the natural habitat, study potential conflicts, and catch corruption in government contracting before public comment is solicited.

According to the Tampa Bay Times, other projects suddenly threatening Florida’s nature reserves include a new 350-room lodge at Anastasia State Park near St. Augustine and another 350-room lodge at Topsail Hill Preserve State Park near Panama City Beach.

Sections of Hillsborough River State Park near Tampa are slated to be cleared for a “disc golf course” and paved over for pickleball courts. New space for “glamping” was announced for Oleta River State Park, a rare green space in the urban Miami Beach area.

Most of the state parks already have amenities for recreation and overnight visitors. The Hillsborough River State Park Preservation Society, for instance, says that location already has a 106-site family campground, picnic areas, pavilions, and a canoe launch.

In interviews, the Tampa Bay Times found that even officials who run the state parks had not been informed of the construction plans. Meanwhile, the state’s newly filed land planning documents claim the changes have been in the works, including through “field meetings,” since 2022.

The public comment process is happening in a manner that will severely limit citizen input. The Florida government is scheduling eight different public comment meetings to be held on a single day—Tuesday, Aug. 27—spread across various locations spanning a whopping 620 miles across the state.

That far-flung simultaneous scheduling, which comes just 6 work days after the plans were announced, will make it impossible for citizens to attend more than one hearing or to comment on the scheme as a whole.

“This seems like a process that is deliberately intended to avoid public participation. The whole spirit of the law is to encourage public participation,” Draper told the Tampa Bay Times.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis—famous for loving golf (he even owns a $28,000 golf simulator, courtesy of a political donor) and his administration have named the state park destruction plans the “Great Outdoors Initiative.”

The Tampa Bay Times has spent this week pressing Gov. DeSantis’ office and the state’s environmental agency to answer questions about the surprise development scheme, but so far, DeSantis and company have stonewalled journalists.

This isn’t the first time the DeSantis government has gone around state residents to force its commercial will upon vacation-related destinations. In 2021, after a majority of Key West voters approved a legal referendum to limit the number of cruise passengers permitted to disembark in the town, the DeSantis administration and the Republican-dominated state legislature simply passed a new law to reverse the result of the public vote.

This also isn’t the first time Florida’s ruling elites have tried to convert the state’s nature reserves into cash cows catering to personal leisure interests. In 2011, the Florida legislature attempted to pass a law to allow celebrity golfer Jack Nicklaus to build golf courses in state parks. That plot was withdrawn after public outcry.

It should go without saying that nature reserves have a deep value to our society and our heritage (not to mention the Earth), and citizens should always have an extensive opportunity to examine and approve any construction plans that affect public lands.

The DeSantis government, hiding behind closed doors and trying to splinter any opposition by scheduling distant in-person public hearings swiftly and simultaneously, is trying to force irreversible destruction and commercial exploitation on Florida’s dwindling and threatened ecosystem, and the public deserves better.

Nature reserves are not a partisan issue, and any changes to them must be conducted in the sunshine. The so-called Sunshine State is now depriving Americans of both political parties of the right to appropriately scrutinize and evaluate any changes to our public lands.

Typos

With all blog posts, feel free to e-mail or to leave a comment regarding any typos or errors.

9 comments to Florida Is Trying to Ram Development of State Parks, “Skirting the Legal Process” By Jason Cochran

  • David Policansky

    Hi, Artie. I got Something similar to this from votewater.org. I don’t know if you know the group. It used to be Bullsugar and then changed its name to votewater.org and broadened its focus some. Might be worth your looking at. It’s political but non ideological, i.e., it doesn’t automatically support any political party.

    Apparently DeSantis has backed off this.

    Thanks for sharing.

  • Sandy Rathborne

    Signed!!!! My blood boils over this. The state’s land has been raped by developers for too many years. They have leveled the natural habitat and squeezed way too many developments in. I saw it happen in St. Augustine in the 6 years my family lived there, and now they want to further destroy it? Outrageous. Thank you for bringing this to our attention Artie!

  • MinhTan Thai

    Hi, Artie. I just signed the petition and shared with all my friends.

  • I will sign too. This sort of thing happened here in Rockford, IL. Our airport board destroyed the 8,000 year old Bell Bowl Prairie to pave a road for expanding cargo operations. Look that one up. Thanks.

  • Joel Eade

    This is a nation wide problem. Big money pushing development of every piece of land and water. They seldom acknowledge that such resources are limited and should be preserved. Very difficult to fight. I will sign and hope for the best but don’t have much confidence they will stop.

    • Arthur Morris/BIRDS AS ART

      Thanks, Joel. Do note that there has been some progress already — the meeting have been postponed and I saw one post that stated that the 27 hole golf course proposal has been withdrawn. In addition, there have been community protests at several of the state parks in question.

      with love, artie

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