miamigirlrider
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Finally! ATVFlorida.com is here!
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« on: July 27, 2006, 11:00:50 AM » |
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Wednesday, July 26, 2006
The South Florida Water Management District and the state DEP vowed in 2003 to give the county at least 640 acres of land for ATV riding, but the agencies didn’t meet the Oct. 1, 2005, deadline
Collier County commissioners threatened Tuesday to sue two state agencies unless they find at least 640 acres of land where off-road vehicles can frolic.
The South Florida Water Management District and the state Department of Environmental Protection vowed in 2003 to give the land to the county. Nearly 10 months have passed since the agencies failed to meet the contract’s Oct. 1, 2005, deadline.
The delay raised the commission’s ire Tuesday. Commissioners voted 5-0 to force a meeting between themselves and the water management district’s governor-appointed board to resolve the matter. If that fails, the dispute will head to a courtroom.
“It’s not out of anger, it’s out of frustration,” Commissioner Fred Coyle said, explaining his support for legal action. “It’s been three years and we still don’t have a deal.”
The commission rejected the water management district’s plea for a 30-day extension, saying the additional time likely wouldn’t help the situation. It was the third delay the agency had sought since April.
The commission officially declared that the agencies have breached their contract.
In June, the water management district offered a 750-acre property in Belle Meade to make good on the land swap. The commitment was part of the deal in 2003 in which the county transferred authority over Southern Golden Gate Estates’ weed-ridden roads to the water management district. A $362 million environmental restoration project, a component of the larger Everglades restoration effort, is under way in the failed subdivision.
The Belle Meade site is in the southwestern corner of the Picayune Strand State Forest just south of Sabal Palm Road. Known as Wiggins Field from its days of churning out tomatoes, the property is far from pristine.
But U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service officials have raised concerns about the presence of Florida panthers and red-cockaded woodpeckers on the sprawling property, which is owned by the DEP. Both species are considered endangered.
“Everywhere we find to offer land, we’re going to run into the same problems,” said Ernie Barnett, the water management district’s director of policy and legislation. “Litigation is only going to divide us.”
In its quest to find an off-road vehicle site, the water management district evaluated 16 properties across Southwest Florida. Be it wetlands, wildlife habitat or another factor, all of them have some degree of environmental issues that will cause permitting headaches, Barnett added.
One commissioner threatened to file an injunction to halt the Southern Golden Gate Estates project until a suitable riding spot can be found.
“That may help you to get federal Fish and Wildlife, the Army Corps and all the other agencies out there that are supposed to be working with us to bring this to a resolution,” Jim Coletta said.
Barnett immediately shot down the idea.
“Stopping the restoration of Picayune Strand is a disservice to your citizens of this county and the state,” he said.
Initial soil testing has revealed arsenic contamination above the limit that’s acceptable for residential areas, likely owing to chemicals used during the site’s farming days.
High arsenic readings prompted the county to reject the water management district’s first land offer last year. The proposal called for developing a 628-acre spoil area north of Lake Trafford into a play area for dirt bikes, all-terrain vehicles and other off-road vehicles. The pollution came from the muck that is being sucked from the bottom of Lake Trafford and dumped onto the property.
A meeting between commissioners and the water management district’s likely will happen in mid-September or beyond. The commission is on its summer break until then.
By Jeremy Cox
© 2006 Naples Daily News and NDN Productions. Published in Naples, Florida, USA by the E.W. Scripps Co.
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