EAC Agenda 03/06/2002 ENVIRONMENTAL ADVISORY COUNCIL
AGENDA
March 6,2002
9:00 A.M.
Commission Boardroom
W.Harmon Turner Building(Building"F")—Third Floor
I. Roll Call
II. Approval of Agenda
III. Approval of February 6,2002 Meeting Minutes
IV. Approval of January 23,2002 Special Meeting Minutes
V. Land Use Petitions
VI. Old Business
VII. New Business
A. Carol Lis, Sr.Environmental Planner,Bonita Springs
who will be speaking about the Bonita Springs and Ft.Myers Beach Sea Turtle and Vehicle
on the Beach Ordinance
B. Review LDC Amendments
(Attachment to be mailed next week)
VIII. Growth Management Update
IX. Council Member Comments
X. Public Comments
XI. Adjournment
*********************************************************************************
Council Members: Please notify the Current Planning Secretary no later than 5:00 p.m. on February 27, 2002
if you cannot attend this meeting or if you have a conflict and will abstain from voting on a petition (659-
5741).
General Public: Any person who decides to appeal a decision of this Board will need a record of the
proceedings pertaining thereto; and therefore may need to ensure that a verbatim record of proceedings is
made,which record includes the testimony and evidence upon which the appeal is to be based.
Page 1 of 1
phillips_s
From: burgeson_b
Sent: Monday, February 04, 2002 3:57 PM
To: Alfred Gal;Allie Santoro; Bill Hill (E-mail); Ed Carlson; Erica Lynne; Larry Stone; Mickey Coe; Tom
Sansbury; arnold_m; boldtj; burgeson_b; chrzanowski_s;filson_s; hadleykim;johnson_c; kuck_t;
lenberger_s; lorenz_w; mason_s; Maureen; merrittj; minorj; murray_s; phillips_s; seal s;
sulecki_a; thurston_k;whiteway_c
Subject: Chet Soling
Chet Soling has resigned from the EAC, effective Jan. 30, 2002. He is moving out of state.
A copy of his resignation letter will be distributed at the February EAC and the original will be sent to Sue
Filson.
2/4/2002
February 6, 2002
TRANSCRIPT OF THE MEETING OF THE
ENVIRONMENTAL ADVISORY COUNCIL
Naples, Florida, February 6, 2002
LET IT BE REMEMBERED, that the Environmental Advisory
Council, in and for the County of Collier, having conducted business
herein, met on this date at 9:00 a.m. in REGULAR SESSION in
Building "F" of the Government Complex, East Naples, Florida, with
the following members present:
CHAIRMAN: Michael G. Coe
Ed Carlson
Alfred F. Gal, Jr.
William W. Hill
Erica Lynne
Alexandra "Allie" Santoro
Larry Stone
NOT PRESENT: Thomas W. Sansbury
ALSO PRESENT: Barbara Burgeson, Env. Specialist, Dev. Serv.
Stan Chrzanowski, Senior Engineer
Patrick White, Assistant County Attorney
Page 1
February 6, 2002
CHAIRMAN COE: The meeting will come to order. The roll
call, please.
MS. BURGESON: Hill?
MR. HILL: Here.
MS. BURGESON: Lynne?
MS. LYNNE: Here.
MS. BURGESON: Carlson?
MR. CARLSON: Here.
MS. BURGESON: Sansbury has an excused absence. Coe?
CHAIRMAN COE: Here.
MS. BURGESON: Santoro?
MS. SANTORO: Here.
MS. BURGESON: Gal?
MR. GAL: Here.
MS. BURGESON: Stone?
MR. STONE: Here.
MS. BURGESON: And Soling has resigned from the EAC.
CHAIRMAN COE: Any changes to the agenda at all?
MS. BURGESON: I'd like to add an item to be heard
prior to the growth management plan issues. And that is,
we need this EAC to recommend appointment of an EAC member
to the hearing examiner advisory committee.
BCC created a resolution. Joseph Schmitt, who is our
administrator of Community Development, Environmental
Services, who I'm not sure has actually been officially
introduced to this EAC yet --Were you not here for the January
meeting.
MR. SCHMITT: I was not here during the last meeting.
MS. BURGESON: This is Joseph K. Schmitt, Collier
County Community Development, Environmental Services' new
administrator. And the executive summary was to appoint a
Page 2
February 6, 2002
team -- I believe it was a five- or seven-member team to
work on the hearing examiner, creating that job-title
description and going through the applicants as they come
in.
MR. HILL: Didn't we appoint Tom Sansbury last year?
MS. BURGESON: No. That was -- that was for a
different committee. That was for the -- for the -- might
even have been for the administrator position.
CHAIRMAN COE: Where do you want to put that on
the -- right now?
MS. BURGESON: We could do that now, if you want, if
there's anybody interested in -- in --
CHAIRMAN COE: Yeah. I'd like to volunteer for it.
Do we have anybody else?
MR. STONE: No.
MR. CARLSON: I make a motion that Mickey Coe be our
representative on that committee.
MS. LYNNE: I second the motion.
CHAIRMAN COE: All in favor?
(Unanimous response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: All opposed?
(No response.)
MR. WHITE: Mr. Chairman? Mr. Chairman?
CHAIRMAN COE: Yes.
MR. WHITE: While you're still on approval of agenda,
I believe that there's a request from one of the
applicants.
MR. NADEAU: Yes. For the record, my name is
Dwight Nadeau. I'm planning manager for RWA. We are
first on the agenda. Unfortunately, my environmental
consultants have not arrived yet from coming down from
Page 3
February 6, 2002
Fort Myers. I'd simply request that you take the PSP
first, if possible, or I could start my presentation from
a planning perspective as well as water management, and
then we would hope that they would show up.
CHAIRMAN COE: I don't have any problems with that.
Is PSP prepared? You are prepared at this time to go
ahead of--
MR. LENBERGER: Who, us? Yeah.
MS. BURGESON: Mickey --
CHAIRMAN COE: You are prepared? All right. I have
no problems with that.
MS. BURGESON: They're scheduled second.
CHAIRMAN COE: I realize that, but he's asking to
change the agenda at this particular point, and we need to
change it -- approve it before we continue on.
MS. BURGESON: I'm sorry, Dwight. As I was talking,
I wasn't sure what you were requesting.
MR. NADEAU: Passarella isn't here yet.
MS. BURGESON: Okay. So you were asking to be placed
at the very end of the agenda?
MR. NADEAU: No. Just after the PSP. I'm hoping
that they're going to get here.
MR. WHITE: They'd like to switch 4-A and 4-B.
CHAIRMAN COE: He's proposing that the PSP goes first
and the PUD goes second.
MS. BURGESON: Okay. It'll probably take us a full
half an hour to get through the continued
growth-management issues. And then --
CHAIRMAN COE: We'll just see where we are at that
point.
MR. NADEAU: So you are doing GMP first?
Page 4
February 6, 2002
MS. BURGESON: Yes.
MR. NADEAU: Oh, okay.
MR. WHITE: Okay. My understanding from looking at
the agenda was that that was Item No. 6.
MS. BURGESON: The latest petitions, yes.
MR. WHITE: My apologies. Seven. Growth-management
update.
MS. BURGESON: We -- I'm sorry. There was a new
agenda that was e-mailed out, Patrick. I --
MR. WHITE: I apologize.
MR. HILL: Did we not receive January 2nd minutes?
December 5th, we're in --
CHAIRMAN COE: Yeah. The only minutes we've received
have been December's.
MS. BURGESON: We'll make sure that the minutes --
you're saying you didn't get the January EAC minutes?
Okay. We'll make sure that they get placed in the --
CHAIRMAN COE: Well, we're going to have to change
Number 3 from January 2nd to December minutes.
MS. BURGESON: Okay. Were -- were the December
minutes -- they were probably already approved, so you
would just want -- want to delete that item, and we'll --
we'll make sure that they get mailed with the next
package.
I have extra copies of the items to be discussed
under the Growth Management Plan Amendment. Review of the
EAC motions. I'd like to take first. Is there any -- any
EAC members that need a copy of that?
Has everyone had an opportunity to take a look at
those motions to review them and if there are any
questions? I think that's probably the easiest -- easiest
Page 5
February 6, 2002
way to handle that. These are the 17 motions that the EAC
made at their special January 23rd meeting. Oh, I'm
sorry. There's 18 motions. There's a duplicate number,
Motion 11. Those are actually two different -- two
separate motions.
CHAIRMAN COE: Do any -- do any of the members of the
board have any comments about any of the motions that we
set forth?
MR. CARLSON: I think I remember -- somehow I don't
have that with me. But --
CHAIRMAN COE: Here you go.
MR. CARLSON: Motion 10 was something we discussed,
but I don't think we ever voted on Motion 10. We waited
until we got -- we wanted to wait until we got this legal
opinion that we have.
MS. BURGESON: Okay. We had three staff members that
had that written down as a motion --
MR. CARLSON: Okay. Yeah.
MS. BURGESON: -- so I'm not --
CHAIRMAN COE: We -- we had made that a motion --
MS. BURGESON: There was --
MR. CARLSON: Fine.
CHAIRMAN COE: -- and directed that there be a legal
opinion brought forth. And a legal opinion was brought
forth and says -- I thought it was pretty ambiguous.
Basically it said you can't do it, but in an emergency
situation, you might be able to do it, and then they said
that the new act has not yet been tested.
I'm -- quite frankly, I'm surprised we haven't made
it a motion to go ahead and test it since we know we're
going to probably get sued anyhow. Get our attorneys
Page 6
February 6, 2002
ready. Any other discussion?
MS. SANTORO: Audubon had a note in here, and I
didn't know if they -- it said something about that they
felt that there was a right to limit ag uses and they were
going to share the research with us shortly, but I don't
know if there's any additional information they wish to
share at this point.
CHAIRMAN COE: Can we have Fred make a comment at
this point? If you're prepared. I don't know if
you're --
MR. CORNELL: Well, yeah. I can say a word.
Brad Cornell with the Collier County Audubon Society, for
the record.
We have requested a formal opinion from our legal
counsel. We have an informal opinion that dates --
actually, this was also the subject of an administrative
hearing over the interim boundaries of natural resource
protection areas, and so there already is some information
that's on record in front of Judge Stevenson that was
argued a year ago. And we have filed -- I don't know what
the legal term is, but it's a statement in anticipation of
hearing on the -- on the appeal that documents more of
this evidence.
So what I'm asking for from our attorney is that we
have a formal letter that -- that will address these
issues more directly outside of the context of this appeal
of the natural resource protection area boundaries.
So it still stands that we -- we contend that it is
legal. We have some strong legal arguments to -- to base
that contention on, and I will share those with you as
soon as we get this -- this letter from our attorney,
Page 7
February 6, 2002
because that's what would be more effective rather than me
telling you what he says. So --
CHAIRMAN COE: Well, Brad, have you seen the
opinion --
MR. CORNELL: Sony.
CHAIRMAN COE: Have you seen the opinion that we
received from --
MR. CORNELL: Yes, I have.
CHAIRMAN COE: -- Martha --
MR. CORNELL: From -- yes. I've -- I've read that,
and I could -- I'm not a lawyer, so, I mean, I could make
an argument against a whole bunch of that based on what I
have already read in our previous legal proceedings that
we have made statements and assertions on, including
agricultural land uses and protecting natural resource
policies.
So if you want me to, I mean, I could talk about
that, but I'm not a lawyer. What you really want is a
legal opinion to counter what Ms. Chumbler says.
CHAIRMAN COE: Any other questions for Brad? Yes?
MS. STUDENT: For the record, Marjorie Student,
assistant county attorney.
CHAIRMAN COE: Do you have any questions of Brad?
MS. STUDENT: No, I do not.
CHAIRMAN COE: Okay. Thank you, Brad.
MS. STUDENT: And I just want to state for the
record, our outside counsel principally has been involved
in this issue, Martha Chumbler and Nancy Lannon of the
firm of Carlton Fields in Tallahassee and also here in
Florida, and I've looked generally over the opinion, and
they talk about a newer provision that deals with this
Page 8
February 6, 2002
issue and the fact that the prohibition is still very
broad.
And the new provision is rather new. I think you all
read that in the opinion, and that there may be -- there's
no, you know, appellate decisions to assist in construing
the act.
Ms. Lannon is going to be here tomorrow at the
planning commission meeting when it takes up these items
and I'm sure will be prepared to discuss this more fully,
as she will be at the Board of County Commissioners.
So I would suggest that the board make its
recommendation to, you know, be carried forward based on,
you know, the information that you have from our outside
counsel, Ms. Chumbler.
CHAIRMAN COE: Okay. Thank you.
Any other comments? Okay.
MR. MULHERE: Just -- for the record, Bob Mulhere
with RWA, Inc. A couple of comments. I did speak to
Marty Chumbler personally just before she sent this out.
She indicated that she had spoken with Tom Reese, who I'm
not sure if that is the attorney that Brad was referring
to -- yes. He's noting that it is -- that she had spoken
to him and that, based on her conversation with him, she
did not agree with his interpretation of the case that's
being cited that will allow regulation of ag under the
provisions of the Right To Farm Act.
She indicated her opinion of that was that -- what
the judge said was that not all agricultural is bonafide
agriculture. And really, no one's arguing that point.
But if it is bonafide agricultural under the Right to Farm
Act on page 5, second paragraph on that page, she
Page 9
February 6, 2002
indicates, "For the purpose of this analysis, it is
assumed that the exceptions identified above have little
or no applicability to Collier County."
The reason for that is because there have been
best-management practices adopted for most of the types of
agriculture that we find in Collier County, citrus and row
crops. If there are best-management practices adopted,
then the Right to Farm Act would preclude the county from
adopting more stringent regulations.
In fact, the sentence -- the next sentence
says, "Thus, for example, while Collier County might enact
general provisions limiting the amount of natural
vegetation that must be preserved on a site, those
provisions could not be applied to bonafide agricultural
operations unless those operations were a type not covered
by an approved BMP," best-management practice.
The next paragraph, however, says, "It may be
possible to exercise some control over agricultural
operations through the use of voluntary incentive
programs."
She's referring to attaching those to the TDR
process. And we had indicated to you that one of the
growth-management policies that we had included was to
prohibit agricultural clearing after transfer development
rights have been enacted. If you transfer all or a
portion of your -- of your development rights, then you no
longer have the right for -- to -- for intensive
agriculture on the property.
Subsequent to the meeting -- I'm not sure that we
discussed it at your meeting, but subsequent to the
meeting, to the EAC meeting in the last few -- last week,
Page 10
February 6, 2002
the staff and myself have been discussing -- there is a
provision in the Land Development Code that prohibits the
rezoning of a piece of property for ten years after an
agricultural clearing permit has been issued on that
property. And that should be pretty obvious that it's in
order -- it's -- it's a disincentive for somebody to go
out and clear ostensibly for agriculture purposes, but
then really the purpose is to clear for development. So
that ten-year restriction exists in the Land Development
Code right now. And what we would also propose to do is
extend that 10-year restriction to disallow any use of
TDRs should there be any clearing.
So I recognize that may not go as far as you want,
but I did want to share with you that that is something
that we are proposing, which would be to amend that
language to also disallow any transfer of development
rights if an individual cleared property for agricultural
purposes under the provisions of the Right to Farm Act in
a sending land. So it's another -- I guess a
disincentive, really.
Barbara, did you want to add anything to that?
MS. BURGESON: Well, the -- the only item, item C,
the outside counsel's recommended changes -- we had a
three-hour conference call last Friday with Nancy Lannon
and her staff, and I was going to discuss this after, but
it really fits in well together.
The only major issue that they found in this book
that they felt was inconsistent or needed change was an
item dealing with transferring the TDRs in the -- in the
primary or secondary sending lands, and she felt that
where we were currently right now, allowing agricultural
Page 11
February 6, 2002
operations in existence at the time of the TDRs to
continue, she felt that we should not be doing that; that
if there's any agricultural uses in existence at the time
that they opt to use the transfer of development rights,
then those agricultural operations need to cease as a
result of that agreement.
She also said that there were three items listed that
would be allowed. The third item or second item would be
cattle grazing on unimproved pasture where no clearing is
required, and the third is other agricultural uses that do
not require clearing of existing vegetation. She said you
could also take out two and three, but that's something
that would be -- she would leave up to us. But she felt
very strongly that the first one needed to be removed.
MR. MULHERE: Which would allow an opportunity for
restoration in those fields.
CHAIRMAN COE: Anybody have any questions on -- on
that? We probably ought to make a motion to that effect
if that's what our desires are. Yes?
MS. LYNNE: I was appointed to the EAC, I assume,
based on the fact that I've got a doctorate in biology.
I'm not a lawyer. I do know enough that I know that
attorneys can argue legal points from either side and it
depends on which one you want to throw your weight behind.
As a biologist, I have to say that allowing
unrestricted use of agriculture is not going to be good
for the rural fringe lands because it's going to drain --
potentially drain adjacent areas.
I mean, I -- I would hope that this board would
consider a motion something to the effect of that -- that
we need to look at that more closely and we need to try to
Page 12
February 6, 2002
get the best possible protection for this area -- for
wetlands in Collier County instead of just the very basic
minimum.
I've spent a -- some time working with the county,
and I keep coming up to, Oh, we'll get sued; Oh, we'll get
sued; Oh, we'll get sued. And I don't think that's a good
enough reason not to protect our resources.
CHAIRMAN COE: Barb, will you make it -- will you
clarify what you just said so the board members -- looking
to get a motion to cover what you're talking about.
Basically what you're saying is if they're going to
use the TDR program, then they give up their right to
ranch, farm or whatever to that land; is that correct?
MS. BURGESON: Well, there's -- there's two -- two
ways that we could do it. The recommendation was to
clearly take the first one out, which allowed them to
continue with their current agricultural use because she
was concerned about the intensity of agricultural uses.
CHAIRMAN COE: Okay.
MS. BURGESON: That was -- that was number one under
that -- under that section of the GMP.
The second and third dealt with postural or passive
use, and the third dealt with any agricultural use that
didn't -- didn't include additional clearing or didn't --
didn't require clearing. She felt that all three could be
taken out, but she felt very strongly that the first one
should be taken out. And -- and all three of those would
be voluntary for anyone -- excuse me -- anyone choosing to
become a part of the TDR program.
Again, that does not prohibit agricultural uses on
land if someone chooses not to participate.
Page 13
February 6, 2002
CHAIRMAN COE: Does everyone understand that?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Is there anybody that has any
questions about it?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Is there anyone that would like to
form a motion?
MS. SANTORO: I can't form a motion. I'm still
confused about what -- what Barbara's saying.
MS. BURGESON: Let me --
MS. SANTORO: My -- my understanding is that there is
some agricultural activities that are more compatible with
natural areas, such as unimproved pasture land, some
grazing.
The one that's least compatible is citrus groves.
•� And it seems to me that there's some way that we should be
able to modify the type of agricultural uses with
reference to our natural resources. I don't know how to
get to that, but that's -- that should be our intent.
CHAIRMAN COE: If we made a motion such as this, that
anyone that's currently farming, ranching, any ag uses,
who desires to enter a TDR program and exercises that
right, then any current ag being conducted on that land
would cease except for agricultural activities such as
ranching or other farming that does not clear the land --
does not further clear the land.
Does that pretty well cover it?
MS. BURGESON: What -- what that would support would
be removing the first agricultural use in the --
CHAIRMAN COE: That's correct.
MS. BURGESON: -- code and keeping the second and
Page 14
February 6, 2002
third in. If you want, I can read that language out so
that it becomes a part of the record.
CHAIRMAN COE: That's correct. And -- and then we
can make that a motion.
MS. BURGESON: Okay. "Where residential density is
transferred from primary or secondary sending lands,
permitted uses shall be limited to the following" -- the
following agricultural uses are listed one, two and three,
and you're recommending one be deleted. And that language
is, "Agricultural operations in existence at the time of
transfer of the residential density including
water-management facilities." That language could be
deleted.
And then second and third are, "Cattle grazing on
unimproved pasture where no clearing is required; and
three, other agricultural uses that do not require
clearing of existing vegetation."
And you're recommending that two and three stay in?
CHAIRMAN COE: Okay. Does anyone have a question
about that?
MS. BURGESON: Actually, I should bring something
up. Staff was discussing this yesterday. I was talking
with Bill Lorenz about this. Right now there are -- there
are sites out there that have been cleared for one reason
or another. That could fall under the third item where
agricultural uses don't require clearing of existing
vegetation because it's already cleared, but they might be
able to put in any --
MR. CARLSON: Yeah.
MS. BURGESON: -- agricultural use on already cleared
lands. So maybe --
Page 15
February 6, 2002
MR. CARLSON: I think there's a huge loophole in
those last two points. You may not clear the land but
you -- you may put in an ornamental-plant nursery that --
MS. BURGESON: That's already clear.
MR. CARLSON: -- requires no clearing but is some
sort of exotic plant that neutralizes the habitat value of
that land that wasn't cleared. I mean, I can foresee this
being a real can of worms, and I think we should go the
more restrictive route, and if that was recommended by the
attorney to remove all three --
MS. BURGESON: That -- that was something that she
said that we could do.
MR. CARLSON: Then I would make that motion, that --
I'm not quite sure how to word it, but that -- what's the
section there?
MS. BURGESON: That would be --
CHAIRMAN COE: Well, basically what we would -- the
motion would be --
MR. CARLSON: You transfer your development rights.
CHAIRMAN COE: Then you give up all -- all rights for
ranching, farming, any type of ag on that land.
MS. BURGESON: Within the sending lands.
MR. CARLSON: Well, I can -- I can tell you, I'm not
so excited -- I'm not so -- as concerned about low
stocking rates and native-range grazing, because there's a
long history of that in Collier County. It's very
compatible. Kind of the old-fashioned unimproved pasture
native-range grazing. I'm not so worried about that. But
just blanket any agricultural practices that doesn't
require clearing, I mean, you could move in any kind of--
I mean, you could -- you could have these -- these
Page 16
February 6, 2002
fighting chickens and just fence off an area and not clear
it, but turn a thousand of those loose and you pretty well
neutralize that land.
MS. BURGESON: We -- we could recommend, then,
Number 1 and 3 be deleted and that 2, which is cattle
grazing on unimproved pasture where no clearing is
required, remain in.
CHAIRMAN COE: Would someone like to make a motion to
that effect, please.
MS. LYNNE: I have just one more question.
Mr. Carlson, you said low-level grazing. Does that
need to be addressed in this Number 2 here? It just says
any kind of grazing that doesn't require clearing.
MS. BURGESON: Cattle grazing.
MR. CARLSON: I -- I just don't know. I mean,
it's -- I can tell you that, you know, in the old days,
there were very low stocking rates on these ranges. They
had very little nutritional value, and -- and the stocking
rate was as low as a cow per 20 acres or a cow per
50 acres, or something like that.
Now, if somebody has a feeding program, like has a
feed lot, they don't clear the land, but they bring in
feed, then -- then again, you'd have something that's
incompatible with good resource management. So there's --
you know, there's just a lot of loopholes in this. Maybe
we ought to just go for all three.
Would you like to make a motion to go for all three?
MS. LYNNE: Sure. I'll move that we strike all three
of those -- do you want to give me some numbers, Barb?
MS. BURGESON: Yes. It would be under the sending
lands section on page 48 of the FLUE, F-L-U-E, and it
Page 17
February 6, 2002
would be Number 6-A-1, 2 and 3.
MS. LYNNE: Okay. Let the record show that we
want -- that I move that we strike those items from the
plan. Is that right?
MR. CARLSON: I'll second.
CHAIRMAN COE: Does everyone understand the motion?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Okay. Do I have a second?
MR. CARLSON: I'll second it.
CHAIRMAN COE: All for?
(Unanimous response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: All opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Carries. What's next?
MR. GAL: I -- I have a question for Barbara.
CHAIRMAN COE: Yes.
MR. GAL: Does the county regulate pesticide use in
any manner?
MS. BURGESON: I -- I know that that's handled
through a separate division.
MR. GAL: Okay.
MS. BURGESON: And I'm not -- and I also know that
they have to go through state regulations and -- and
Department of Environmental Protection regulations in
terms of the -- the amount, but I'm not sure who's in
control of regulating the areas that are sprayed.
MR. LORENZ: For the record, Bill Lorenz. I know of
no regulations in the county for pesticide restrictions
with regard to agricultural activities. The groundwater
protection ordinance does regulate concentrated materials
of-- hazardous materials within certain protection zones,
Page 18
February 6, 2002
but that's not specific to agricultural.
MR. GAL: My -- my thought was to ban use of
pesticides in sending -- or -- or in receiving areas, I
guess.
MS. SANTORO: Sending areas.
MR. GAL: Or in sending areas. But you might not
want to do that.
MS. LYNNE: Sorry. I can't hear you, Mr. Gal.
MR. GAL: My thought was that you ban the use of
pesticides in sending and receiving areas. We have less
farming.
CHAIRMAN COE: I believe we're getting into an area
where I -- I have no expertise at all.
MR. CARLSON: I can guarantee that when the new towns
begin to appear in the receiving areas, that mosquito
planes will fly.
CHAIRMAN COE: Anyone have -- anyone else have any
comments?
MS. LYNNE: Can we restrict the amount of pesticide
use in the sending areas?
CHAIRMAN COE: I don't have the expertise to say one
way or another. I really don't. If we want to get some
experts in here to talk about it, that's one thing --
MR. CARLSON: Yeah. Let's not talk --
CHAIRMAN COE: I sure don't -- I don't think that
it's a subject of discussion today in that we don't have
the expertise. Yes?
MR. LORENZ: Bill Lorenz, for the record. Remember
that just about everything that's going on out there has
some type of pesticide usage. I mean, the county --
when -- when we do exotics control, we're using
Page 19
February 6, 2002
pesticides. When we're doing --
MS. LYNNE: Herbicides.
MR. LORENZ: -- aquatic weed control, we're using
pesticides. When there's mosquito control, there's a use
of pesticides. I mean, this is -- it's a pervasive --
it's a pervasive activity that has -- has a lot of
benefits. Obviously it has some -- some negatives too,
but the county staff is in the position in the -- in the
past of making recommendations, given the fact that USDA
and EPA requires the application of pesticides through the
labeling conditions that has been determined to be the
safe level of pesticide use.
So if you -- you're getting into an area that's --
that is very, very pervasive, you know, of what -- what is
being done out there.
CHAIRMAN COE: That's also highly regulated, so, you
know, it's not an area where we really need to go.
MR. CARLSON: I -- I think we could probably make the
assumption, though, that if there's nobody living in a
sending area, nobody's going to spend the money to spray
for mosquitos in an area that doesn't have the
population. I would assume that.
CHAIRMAN COE: All right. What do we got next,
Barb?
MS. BURGESON: Item C is the outside counsel's
recommended changes, and the one that we just discussed
was really the only one here that was substantive in terms
of making major changes.
In the errata sheet, you'll notice under 6-1-1 and
6-1-2 under the Conservation Coastal Management Element,
that there are a lot of changes, strike-throughs and
Page 20
February 6, 2002
underlines. The main purpose to those changes was to make
consistent the standards in the rural and the urban
lands. We have nine standards in both of those areas that
are identical and just one or two in each that are
specific to the rural or the urban lands.
The way the language had been written in the Growth
Management Plan, they didn't match exactly. Those nine
that we've made consistent and identical were in both but
written slightly differently in both. So we want to make
sure that they were --
CHAIRMAN COE: Should we go through this item by
item?
MS. BURGESON: I would suggest only if you have
questions. Staff is comfortable with the changes that
we've made. If you want me to address any of them, I'd be
happy to.
CHAIRMAN COE: Because I know that several of us have
gone through this. Let's just go down the list here.
Start with rural fringe, mixed-use district. Any
comments?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Primary receiving land -- lands?
MR. CARLSON: Wait a minute. Yeah. The -- the first
sentence.
MS. BURGESON: On which page?
MR. CARLSON: First page. "Primary receiving lands."
The very -- Number 1. If you're -- if you own land in a
primary receiving area and you have more -- let's say you
have 5, 10 acres and you're there now, what does this do
if it says the maximum lot size allowable for sing --
single-family attached dwelling unit is 1 acre?
Page 21
February 6, 2002
MR. MULHERE: Unfortunately what you don't see there
is that applies to those new projects that are 40 acres or
greater in size. It's -- it didn't reference the whole
document, but that one applies to new projects 40 acres or
greater.
CHAIRMAN COE: Okay. All right. Number 2?
(Unanimous response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Number 3?
(Unanimous response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Next page. Number 4?
MR. CARLSON: Just that -- my only -- my only note
on 3 is rural commercial and rural industrial. Those
terms don't seem to go together to me. It's kind of like
an oxymoron. This is the rural industrial area.
MS. LYNNE: I worked with the Dover Cove Community
Character Plan, and the idea of rural villages was merely
to have residential and small amount of commercial to
serve those residences and the outlying area so that they
did not have to clog up the streets and drive into Naples
for everything. It was not ever intended to mean that
there should be any industrial or major commercial
development in the rural fringe.
MR. MULHERE: And these revisions don't intend or
suggest that necessarily either. When you're looking at
the terminology, rural commercial subdistrict and rural
industrial district, those do have restrictions to
minimize the size. Further restrictions can be written as
part of the LDC amendments, but the -- the intent is
clearly for those to be mixed use and to provide for some
employment.
I do have your motion, however, which you made at
Page 22
February 6, 2002
your last meeting, to prohibit any commercial or
industrial, and that already exists and is standing. So
notwithstanding your motion, this language just is
intended to provide further clarification.
CHAIRMAN COE: So where is our language put?
MR. MULHERE: It'll be brought to the board in a --
the whole list of your motions. Eighteen motions.
CHAIRMAN COE: Thank you.
Okay. See, we've done 3. Four?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Five?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Six?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Seven?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Okay. We're now on page 3, Number 1.
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Okay. Down to 8. Any comments on 8?
I'd like to make a comment here. It says that, "The
density calculation for a rural village may include the
base residential density permitted for the greenbelt area
if such density is shifted to the rural village area."
That's going to be a higher density in the rural
village area. Correct?
MR. MULHERE: Yes. But no higher than the maximums
that are already established in there. You have a base
density of 1 per 5 that exist today. And you're required
to put this greenbelt around the rural village. But you
can take that 1-per-5 density from the greenbelt and bring
it into the rural village, but you can't exceed the
Page 23
February 6, 2002
maximum densities. And we're recommending 3.5 as a
maximum density. I don't know what it'll end up being
through the process.
CHAIRMAN COE: But not more than --
MR. MULHERE: Correct.
CHAIRMAN COE: -- 3.5?
MR. MULHERE: Correct.
CHAIRMAN COE: Okay. I understand. Nine?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Ten?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Eleven?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: And the next one is Conservation
Coastal Management Element. One?
(Unanimous response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Two?
(Unanimous response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Now, on page 6, I got one question on
page 6, Number 9. "Parcels that were legally cleared of
na -- native vegetation prior to January of'89 shall be
exempt from this requirement."
How do we know what was cleared in 1989, and how do
we police that?
MS. BURGESON: When we ask that somebody prove that
they were legally cleared, that means that they have to
show us that they received an agricultural clearing permit
or a vegetation-removal clearing permit.
CHAIRMAN COE: I understand. Next page, which is
Number 7. Page 8? On Number 4, page 8, it says
specifically that, "Ag shall be exempt from the above
Page 24
February 6, 2002
preservation requirements contained in the policies,"
da, da, da, da, da.
We don't want any wetland impact by agriculture, and
we've stated that I don't know how many times. I guess
our motions will be brought forth and someone above us
will decide, but I'm pretty sure I speak for the EAC that
we don't want any wetland impact by ag.
MS. BURGESON: I don't believe that that was a part
of any of the motions from the previous meeting.
CHAIRMAN COE: Well, I'd like to make a motion at
this time that there would be no impact to our wetlands by
agricultural activities. Comments?
MR. CARLSON: That's part of this language? I mean,
you're proposing to --
CHAIRMAN COE: I'm proposing to change this -- to
make a motion that ag makes no impact to our wetlands.
And what I'm trying to do there is to preclude backing up
an orange grove to Corkscrew or any of our other sensitive
lands and them pumping water out of that area, which, in
effect, they're pumping it out of where you're located.
MR. CARLSON: I'm all for it. I'll make that motion.
CHAIRMAN COE: Do I have a second for that motion?
MS. LYNNE: Second.
CHAIRMAN COE: I have a second. All for?
(Unanimous response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: All opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Carries.
MS. BURGESON: Can you repeat the exact language on
that, please.
CHAIRMAN COE: Any agriculture activities that affect
Page 25
February 6, 2002
wetlands are prohibited.
MS. BURGESON: You might need to define what the
worked "affect" means, whether that means direct clearing
or secondary impacts.
CHAIRMAN COE: Well, we're talking about the
wetlands.
MS. BURGESON: Right.
CHAIRMAN COE: If it's going to drain the wetlands,
if it's going to affect it with pollution to the wetlands
from pesticides, what have you, anything.
MS. BURGESON: Okay. So saying "new or existing"
because you may -- you're talking about maybe -- I'm not
sure on the existing agricultural uses that already have
state permits how much we can do --
CHAIRMAN COE: No. We can't affect those that are
just --
MS. BURGESON: -- on any expansions to existing
wetland --
CHAIRMAN COE: Any expansion --
MS. BURGESON: -- agricultural or new --
CHAIRMAN COE: -- any new agricultural activities.
MS. BURGESON: Okay.
CHAIRMAN COE: Does that clar --
MS. BURGESON: That negatively affect wetlands --
CHAIRMAN COE: That's correct.
MS. BURGESON: -- be prohibited. Thank you.
MR. CARLSON: I don't -- I don't understand 8. Can
somebody explain to me -- I don't understand how the
10 percent --
CHAIRMAN COE: What page are you talking about?
MR. CARLSON: I'm on page 8, and I'm at the top of
Page 26
February 6, 2002
the page at Item No. 8 about the density bonus incentive.
MR. LORENZ: Just for the record, Bill Lorenz. That
deals with the bonus for encouraging greater preservation
amounts, that you would get additional density bonus if
you preserve vegetation greater than the minimum
requirements. The ten --
MR. CARLSON: With -- within the --
MR. LORENZ: Within the receiving --
MR. CARLSON: A given project.
MR. LORENZ: Correct. Correct. Correct.
MR. CARLSON: So it really doesn't have anything to
do with the sending areas.
MR. LORENZ: No. No.
MS. LYNNE: But it does mean an overall increase in
the density numbers of units that can be built in the
county.
MR. LORENZ: That -- that would be an additional --
that would -- that's correct. And I believe you took a
motion -- one of your motions from last week recommended
that there be no -- no bonuses be given -- density bonuses
be given other than TDRs.
MR. CARLSON: Now, would -- would this density bonus
incentive -- I've heard that -- that the highest density
now is 3.5 in receiving area units per acre. Could
this -- could this conceivably take that density higher
than that?
MR. MULHERE: Every time I touch that I get shocked.
Is there somebody trying to tell me something?
No. You cannot exceed the maximum, the 3.5, but
that's only for rural villages. And the rest -- the
balance of the receiving areas, the base density is 1.0,
Page 27
February 6, 2002
and you could exceed that by a maximum of 10 percent or
1.1 through these incentives. But in a rural village, the
maximum density is 3.5, and you can't exceed that.
CHAIRMAN COE: Does that answer your question?
MR. CARLSON: Yeah. Can I ask just a general
question while you're up there about this whole concept,
is that these bonuses are granted based on -- on some past
history that this doesn't -- this transferred development
rights doesn't work unless you grant bonuses; is that
correct?
MR. MULHERE: No. The -- the intent here is to
really limit any amount of mech -- or any mechanisms that
could provide for increased density beyond the TDR
process. In other words, the primary method to be able to
increase your density is intended to be through TDRs,
because otherwise you really do take away from the TDR
program. I think, as I spoke at your last meeting, if you
can simply come in and ask for a rezone and go from 1 per
5 to 1 per 1, you're certainly not going to then go out
and buy the TDRs to achieve that. Why would you spend
that money.
MR. CARLSON: Right.
MR. MULHERE: So what we want to do is structure a
plan that primarily only allows an increase in density
from 1.5 to some higher amount -- in the case of
receiving, it's one per acre, or in rural villages it's
higher than that -- that -- that primarily limits that to
the TDR process. That makes the TDR process viable.
But there are some exceptions, and this is one
exception that we thought was appropriate. Where a
developer coming into a receiving area has a requirement
Page 28
February 6, 2002
to preserve 40 percent of the native vegetation an on
site, if they choose to develop a plan that protects
70 percent of the native vegetation on site, they would
get a -- a fairly small density bonus, not to exceed
10 percent.
So it's just another incentive. We don't think it's
sufficient enough to compete or negate the TDR process,
but it would allow for increased amounts of native
vegetation preservation in receiving areas.
MR. CARLSON: If these rural lands have a history of
projects working on them --- projects working on them at
the density of 1 unit per 5 acres, I mean, I think --
would think we're here going through this process and
dealing with the governor's order because two conservation
organizations sued the county because they didn't think a
golf course community should go in beyond the urban
boundary and get water and sewer, but it -- but it worked
at 1 unit per 5 acres.
MR. MULHERE: Yeah. That's an -- that's an excellent
question.
MR. CARLSON: So then you -- then you go to the TDR
incentive which takes -- which multiplies the density,
5 times that to 1 unit per acre. Why isn't that enough?
MR. MULHERE: Well, it -- it may be enough. And --
and as I indicated, the only reason that that proposal is
in there is to provide an incentive for some greater
preservation amount beyond -- beyond what the data shows
us that we would need to preserve -- to achieve our target
of 90 percent preservation.
MR. CARLSON: But if you keep the density low, you're
achieving more preservation.
Page 29
February 6, 2002
MR. MULHERE: Not necessarily. Not through a
clustered development. I -- I would disagree with that.
MS. LYNNE: But what we don't know and what there
aren't any studies, if I remember correctly, is whether or
not the benefit of extra native veg -- vegetation in a PUD
is worth the extra density. In other words --
MR. MULHERE: I guess -- I mean, I guess that's just
a philosophical question. And --
MS. LYNNE: Oh, no. That's not philosophical.
That's quantifiable.
MR. MULHERE: It's quantifiable? In -- in what way
will it be quantifiable?
MS. LYNNE: The way you do any kind of environmental
study. I'm --
MR. MULHERE: I -- I'm not following you.
MS. LYNNE: And basically -- well, there's going to
be a certain amount of damage due to the -- done to the
environment based on the increased density. There's going
to be increased cars, increased sewer, increased water
use, et cetera. So that's going to be a negative.
MR. MULHERE: Uh-huh.
MS. LYNNE: Okay. Does the extra land being
preserved provide enough --
MR. MULHERE: Okay. I see what you're saying.
MS. LYNNE: -- benefit to offset that?
MR. MULHERE: Well --
MS. LYNNE: And -- and the thing that -- that bothers
me even -- even more is that when we have discussions with
planning staff and we're told we can't do this because we
have no scientific evidence to preserve, for example, a
greater buffer, and yet you're perfectly comfortable
Page 30
February 6, 2002
coming up with an increase in density program without any
proof that it's going to either work or be -- be safe for
the environment or have a benefit.
MR. MULHERE: Well, I think it -- it -- I mean, maybe
I should defer to Bill as the natural resource director
for the county, but I think the premise was that if we
preserve native vegetation beyond the minimum
requirements, there's a benefit to that. Maybe we're
wrong. Maybe there is no benefit to that.
MS. LYNNE: There's a benefit to --
MR. MULHERE: There is.
MS. LYNNE: -- provide -- to preserve --
MR. MULHERE: But it may not be offset by the
increased density.
MS. LYNNE: It could be -- it could be offset --
MR. MULHERE: Right.
MS. LYNNE: -- by increasing the density.
MR. MULHERE: I understand that.
MS. LYNNE: And we don't know that.
MR. MULHERE: You -- you made a motion at your last
meeting to prohibit any additional increases other than
through TDRs. That -- I mean, I think that was very
clear. This recommendation already existed and continues
to exist in the plan. Now we'll go forward to the
planning commission tomorrow. They'll review it. They'll
review your motion, and ultimately it'll go to the board
of county commissioners. They'll review it. They'll
review your motions, and go -- ultimately a policy will be
developed based on that.
MR. CARLSON: I think it's worth asking, though, with
the maximum allowable density with the rural village
Page 31
February 6, 2002
concept, the density goes up 17 1/2 times over what it is
now. They go into 3 1/2 -- I've done the math. I think I
got it right -- 3 1/2 units per acre versus 1 unit per
5 acres. That's a -- 17 1/2 --
MR. MULHERE: Well --
MR. CARLSON: -- times the density.
MR. MULHERE: -- that's not exactly accurate, because
you're achieving a -- a portion of that through TDRs,
taking density that already exists. So it's not exactly
accurate.
MR. CARLSON: Okay. But the majority of those units
are bonus.
MR. MULHERE: Well, you -- you have to acquire .8
dwelling units per acre --
MR. CARLSON: Yes.
MR. MULHERE: -- and for that, you get two bonuses.
So, I mean --
MR. CARLSON: You buy one, you get --
MR. MULHERE: -- I think we can quantify it --
MR. CARLSON: -- two and three.
MR. MULHERE: That's about right.
MR. CARLSON: You buy one, you get two and three.
MR. MULHERE: That's about right. That's about
right. Yeah.
MR. CARLSON: Okay. Have we done an analysis of how
we're going to provide water and other essential services
for this increased population? Do we know where the well
fields are going to be and how those well fields are going
to affect the groundwater? And -- and do you really think
that having a rural village out in the rural fringe, that
it's not going to increase traffic because those people
Page 32
February 6, 2002
are not going to want to go to the beach or to the movie
theater in the urban area or to restaurants in the urban
area?
I just -- I just don't think this has been thought
through well enough to really appreciate the impact it's
going to have on the county.
MR. MULHERE: Well, I -- I know. That was made
abundantly clear at the last meeting. I professionally
would disagree with you. I think it will have a very
beneficial impact on the already deleterious and very poor
traffic conditions in The Estates as a result of a very
large existing platted subdivision that's one of the
fastest growing in the county and over which we have
little control unless we provide some additional services
in this area.
When you couple that with the requirement that we
have to protect the natural resources and balance that
with private property rights, I think the rural villages
provide a very viable solution to all of those three
issues.
In addition, they're highly recommended in a number
of national and statewide professional planning studies
that have been done, and they have been implemented in
some locations. And they have worked quite successfully
to balance private property rights and natural resource
protection and to reduce the number of trips.
When people are traveling 10 and 15 miles from
Golden Gate Estates into the -- no. Will that completely
eliminate it? Absolutely not. It will not completely
eliminate the number of trips. But it will offset some of
those trips by providing services for those residents and
Page 33
February 6, 2002
for those residents in the surrounding lands.
MR. CARLSON: Is -- is --
MR. MULHERE: Your -- your question about the water
and sewer, the utilities department has looked at and been
involved in this entire process and recently made a
presentation to the board during a workshop that included
the extension of central water and sewer and the cost of
extending central water and sewer to those receiving
lands.
I cannot answer to you whether or not they quantified
the impacts upon the quantity of water that will be
available other than to say that, based on their
calculations, they will be able to meet those demands.
MR. CARLSON: Well, you can always add wells and pump
more water, but I'm -- I'm extremely worried about the
future of the aquifers and the wetlands in the -- in those
regions where that water's coming from.
MR. MULHERE: Well -- and --
MR. CARLSON: I just don't -- I just don't see how
it's going to work. We're already stressed.
MS. LYNNE: I'd have to say, too, the difference
between South Florida with its extensive wetlands and
other areas of the country -- I mean, I can see the rural
village concept working very well in Illinois and Ohio and
so forth, but Mr. Carlson is correct; there's going to be
much greater impacts in South Florida because of the large
amount of our wetlands.
CHAIRMAN COE: Any other questions?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Page 9. Number 5?
(No response.)
Page 34
February 6, 2002
CHAIRMAN COE: Number 6?
MR. HILL: Let me back up. I'm sorry, Mr. Chairman.
Back on page 8, Item No. 4, in the middle of the second
sentence in that paragraph, "Or any such conversions in
less than 10 years," that restriction for conversion prior
to 10 years has been ruled out, hasn't it?
MS. BURGESON: No. This -- this is language that
already exists in both the Growth Management Plan and the
Land Development Code, and this applies to any time anyone
obtains an agricultural clearing permit, there is an
obligation through that permit to commit to not rezoning
or not changing the use of that land for ten years unless
you restore what would have been required if you had gone
through that process in the first place.
MR. HILL: So the two sections referred to are the
requirements that they would have to restore?
MS. BURGESON: Right. And -- and this does not apply
to the ten years for the TDR program. This is all just
what's already existing in the code. We will, as Bob
said, be adding that language for the TDR program.
MR. HILL: Thank you.
CHAIRMAN COE: All right. Page 9?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Five?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Six?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Page 10?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Seven?
(No response.)
Page 35
February 6, 2002
CHAIRMAN COE: Eight?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Nine? I've got a comment on 9-1-A; A,
B -- all of them. How is South Florida Water Management
District going to police mitigation and those sorts of
things when a lot of times their standards appear to be
less than ours?
For example, sometimes they'll look at wetlands that
have been affected, like with Melaleuca or something
drained it or what have you, and yet really there's
nothing wrong with it; it just needs to be restored to its
wetland originality. So how are we going to police that?
MS. BURGESON: What staff will need to do is look at
all of the environmental resource permits and wetland
permits prior to -- for instance, we'll have to do that
prior to coming to this board or coming to the hearing
examiner with the environmental-impact statement.
We'll need to review their permits and their proposed
mitigation to make sure that there is no mitigation that
is less than the -- the functional value of the wetlands
impacted on site.
So, for instance, if they're -- if they're proposing
mitigation with uplands, then we will have to require
additional mitigation, which is the new language that we
put in on page 11, the very top of page 11, Number -- or
letter D, which says, "Prior to issuance of any final
development order that authorizes site alteration, the
applicant shall demonstrate compliance with A through C of
this policy. If agency permits have not provided
mitigation consistent with this policy, Collier County
will require mitigation exceeding that of the
Page 36
February 6, 2002
jurisdictional agencies."
CHAIRMAN COE: But when you're saying, Collier County
will require greater restrictions, are we requiring South
Florida Water Management District to do that for us?
MS. BURGESON: No. We can't require them to do that,
and I've sat down with their staff on a couple different
occasions to talk about this. Their expec -- expectations
are that more and more permits over time will become
compliant with this, but at times they will still require,
for instance, the rare upland mitigation on the site or
on-site mitigation that'll be less than what we require.
And when they do that, they expect -- what they've told me
is that they can tell the petitioner that they understand
that they will go -- have to go back to Collier County and
do additional mitigation, but they will not -- they will
not be using our policies specifically for review to make
sure that it happens at that time. The developer can try
to do that through the process to make it simpler for
them.
CHAIRMAN COE: Does your office have the staff to
sufficiently police this, or are you going to need
additional staff?
MS. BURGESON: For us to be able to use the proposed
language, we'll need to take courses and go to the
training for the South Florida -- the New Wetland
Assessment Program. And I think that Bob had talked about
understanding that we would need probably two more staff
in order to facilitate the use of the new language for
wetland protection.
MR. MULHERE: I don't know how many staff. You're
going to have to evaluate it. I don't have any clue.
Page 37
February 6, 2002
CHAIRMAN COE: Okay. Any other comments?
MR. HILL: Another question on 9-1-A, we've had
discussions in the past concerning the WRAP procedure and
an improved WRAP procedure that's coming down from the
state. Is there a set functional rating procedure in
place now or being recommended?
MS. BURGESON: There is the old WRAP analysis that
people are still using right now, and they are in the
process of accepting and training people for the new
program, which is statewide.
I'm not sure if there's anyone in the audience that
might speak to that and have more current information on
it, but as -- I understand that there -- there have been
seminars and workshops throughout the state. We
participated in one about a year and a half ago when this
process started, and we expect that they will probably
start up again hopefully in this area within the next
month or two.
MR. HILL: I remember during some of our subcommittee
deliberations -- Bill, you may correct me on this -- we
took a look at part of that new proposal. Is that being
firmed up at all? And if-- if so or if not, does
language in the county documents automatically embrace the
new statewide WRAP?
MR. LORENZ: Yes. That's -- that's correct. On
Policy 6-2-4, as we have already proposed it, indicates
that we would be using existing South Florida Water
Management District WRAP until the Uniform Wetland
Mitigation Assessment Method is adopted by the state and
we will be using that. So we've got the language in there
to cover -- cover both of those conditions.
Page 38
February 6, 2002
Let me -- let me make a -- one point, however. We
have had some discussion with some biological consultants
concerning the WRAP score itself of 0.5, which was listed
in that document, and there is some concern that that
number is perhaps too low.
Certainly from a staff perspective, myself,
Mac Hatcher -- and we'll be talking with Barbara -- may
want to take a look at that number as the appropriate --
the appropriate value at the moment, but we would still be
recommending that that procedure being -- be in effect.
We may make an evaluation of the actual number itself.
CHAIRMAN COE: Any other comments? Anything else on
Page 11?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: On Page 12?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Twelve?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Thirteen?
CHAIRMAN COE: Fourteen? Page 13 -- 15?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Sixteen?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Page 14? Anything on page 14? I have
one motion I'd like to make for page 14, which is
paragraph 16-2-C that no beach raking will be permitted
during the turtle season.
MS. LYNNE: Was that a discussion or a motion?
CHAIRMAN COE: I'm making a motion.
MS. LYNNE: I second it.
CHAIRMAN COE: I have a second. All for?
Page 39
February 6, 2002
MR. STONE: Aye.
MR. GAL: Aye.
MS. SANTORO: Aye.
MS. LYNNE: Aye.
MR. HILL: Aye.
CHAIRMAN COE: All opposed? It carries.
MR. CARLSON: I got one.
CHAIRMAN COE: We got one opposed.
MR. CARLSON: I just don't see that if the inspection
works -- if we already approved the system where the beach
is inspected in the morning prior to raking. And nest
sites -- I mean, we've already been through this ad
nauseam.
CHAIRMAN COE: That's correct.
MS. LYNNE: Right. And the -- the code enforcement
says they don't have the staff to carry out the
inspections necessary to prevent the damage.
CHAIRMAN COE: Motion's carried 6 to 1.
MS. BURGESON: If I could add something, Kim spoke
with Carol -- I'm not sure on the pronunciation -- Lyste,
who was a senior environmental planner for Bonita Springs,
and she said that she would be able to come down to the
EAC during the March meeting and give a presentation on
the language that they adopted last year.
CHAIRMAN COE: Well, that's something for the Land
Development Code. I just want to throw this in.
MS. BURGESON: Right. Just -- just so that you know,
we're -- we're expecting to have someone make a
presentation. And I guess the City of Fort Myers or
Fort Myers Beach was also recently involved in the
language.
Page 40
February 6, 2002
CHAIRMAN COE: Okay.
MR. CARLSON: Do they allow beach raking during sea
turtle nesting season?
MS. BURGESON: The only time they do is in the event
of a storm or an emergency.
CHAIRMAN COE: Page 15?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Number 17?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Number 18?
MS. SANTORO: I'm --
CHAIRMAN COE: Yes?
MS. SANTORO: I'm -- I had a comment or a question on
page 15, policy 7.3.2. I don't know why you changed it
from nightly to regular inspections. One of the problems
would be furniture and things that are still left out
interfering with turtles that are coming out to nest?
MS. BURGESON: That's only as a matter of staffing.
CHAIRMAN COE: Why not get more staff?
MS. SANTORO: Yeah.
MR. LORENZ: The one concern we had before was that
when we used the term "nightly," it implied each and every
night. And we don't intend on making compliance lighting
inspections each and every night. We can't do it. You
can only do it when you don't have the moon conditions so
that you can see the lights on the beach. EAC did
recommend, however, to look at regular inspections with
regard to prohibitions of the storage of furniture.
Again, it can't be every night. I mean, we would not have
,.� the staff to be able to do that.
I would suggest -- and this would be for the code
Page 41
February 6, 2002
enforcement department to evaluate, but you could evaluate
some kind of random-type of inspections to -- to get
different places on the beach at different -- different
times. That would provide you the appropriate kind of
inspection program that would work well.
MS. SANTORO: I don't like the word "regular." I
think it's too ambiguous. I think it should be a time
frame.
MR. CARLSON: Have you ever tried to recruit
volunteers with the public to help with this?
MR. LORENZ: We do have volunteers when our staff,
our natural resources staff goes out for some
inspections. It's so -- so we do recruit volunteers. We
can't always get volunteers.
You have to realize also that when we're talking
about an enforcement program, that you're going to have to
have a certain degree of certification. They can be our
eyes for us, but we have to still provide the appropriate
staff to do the actual -- write up the notice of violation
and the, if you will -- I want to use the term "duly
certified" as a code enforcement inspector.
CHAIRMAN COE: Any questions or comments?
MS. LYNNE: Just another comment. What about a
neighborhood watch-type organization? Those people go
through certification and get approved and all that kind
of stuff, and they make regular -- very regular tours
around the neighborhood.
MR. LORENZ: Certainly. I mean, we've -- we will --
we will always try to use volunteers and extend -- to a
volunteer program extend our -- our efforts. I can't -- I
can't make a commitment that we will actually have a
Page 42
February 6, 2002
volunteer program. If you don't get volunteers, then you
don't have a volunteer program. But certainly from an
operational standpoint, we'll -- we're always trying to
look for that.
CHAIRMAN COE: Any other comments?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Any other comments on page 15?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Page 16?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Page 17?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Okay. We're done.
MS. LYNNE: That's -- excuse me. I've got just a --
a couple of more questions. I'm -- on Motion No. 5, where
we say, "Recommendation to remove asphalt and concrete
batch-making plans and facilities for collection,
transfer, processing and reduction of solid wastes from
the list of permitted uses in receiving lands," did that
cover all the light industrial, rural industrial
categories that Mr. Carlson wanted eliminated?
MR. MULHERE: No, it doesn't. It doesn't -- those
are specific uses. Those are not comprehensive-plan
designations. The other language you referred to earlier
that you talked about the rural commercial and rural
industrial, those are comprehensive plan designations that
would allow uses underneath them in the L -- for the LDC.
So, no, it doesn't.
I think I -- I don't have a copy of your motions. I
thought you had made a motion to prohibit any commercial
or industrial, but maybe it was more specific than that.
Page 43
February 6, 2002
If that was your intent, you probably need to take -- take
a motion that would prohibit any commercial or industrial,
or if you want to say, "other than small scale," I mean, I
don't know.
MS. LYNNE: My understanding of the rural villages is
that there does need to be some small-scale commercial.
That's kind of the point of it.
MR. MULHERE: Yeah.
MS. LYNNE: But I don't see any reason to have any
industrial purposes move out into the rural fringe.
MR. MULHERE: Okay.
MS. LYNNE: Okay. I move that on page 45 -- what is,
6.J? -- that there be no industrial uses allowed in a
rural village and that commercial be limited to small
businesses designed to serve the area residents.
MR. GAL: Before we go on, I have a question to ask.
Are -- dry cleaners, storage areas, are those commercial
or industrial?
MR. MULHERE: Commercial. Commercial. I -- I want
to be completely clear. What -- your motion would
prohibit industrial and rural villages, but it still
wouldn't prohibit industrial outside of a rural village in
a receiving area. I think that's your intent, isn't it?
MS. LYNNE: My specific intent here was to keep it
out of the rural villages, because that's not the point of
a rural village.
MR. MULHERE: Okay. No problem.
MS. LYNNE: But other people may have some other
opinions to express.
CHAIRMAN COE: I've got a comment on that. You know,
I can see taking out asphalt plants, garbage transfer
Page 44
February 6, 2002
w••• stations and things like that, but if you just broad brush
and take out all industry, where are the people going to
work?
I mean, we could get them to drive on Immokalee Road,
we could get them to drive on 951 to come into work, but
if they got a rural village between here and Immokalee,
then, you know, why -- why have them drive 15 or 20 miles
to work when they could have -- you know, by not being
very specific on the industry, you know, what's -- what's
a good industrial industry? Are we arbitrarily just
wiping out all industry?
MR. CARLSON: Well, I -- I think that that sort of
brings up another broader question that I've always had,
is while we have a target population for a rural village
of 7- to 10,000 people or 5- to 7,000 people or something
like that, I mean, do we actually know how many jobs are
going to be available in --
MR. MULHERE: No.
MR. CARLSON: -- a rural village to these people?
MR. MULHERE: No. No, we don't know. We're not
going to know until they come in with their plan and it
goes through a full-blown rezone process and they provide
all the elements that are required for rezone, including
an analysis that -- the implications or impacts on public
facilities and on infrastructure and on economic, which is
called for in this plan.
So they have to provide all that information for
consideration before one is even approved. And it's --
it's a little premature. I can't -- I don't have a
crystal ball. I certainly can't tell you how many jobs
there are going to be.
Page 45
February 6, 2002
MR. CARLSON: That's why I think this is a incredibly
dangerous plan for this county. If you wind up with a --
with a big DRI urban/residential kind of area with a gas
station and a grocery store and that qualifies, then I
just -- I think it's just a horribly dangerous plan for
this county.
MR. MULHERE: Well, I mean, we're -- we're --
obviously we're in disagreement on that because it's our
intent to direct those kinds of developments to those
receiving lands through this process. It's exactly what
we want to see from our perspective in those receiving
lands. So we're -- we're completely in disagreement.
MR. CARLSON: And we have no idea how many commuters
will be coming out of a rural village to the urban area or
to anywhere else?
MR. MULHERE: Well, I mean, at this point you don't
have any idea. How could you possibly have any idea? The
only way you could do it would be to know what the density
that's being requested would be in -- in one and,
coincidently, what the expected amount of-- of commercial
or industrial employment would be.
But without even knowing that, we know one thing: If
they're a mixed use and they provide for the -- some
employment opportunities, some recreational opportunities
and some institutional opportunities, there is less of a
need for people to travel from where they are into the
urban area to use those types of facilities.
If there's a school, for example, which is required,
the school board asks it. I mean, there are a lot -- you
know, I don't have the empirical data to ask every
question that you're asking. I think it would be not
Page 46
February 6, 2002
possible to give you that empirical data. We -- we must
know what we're talking about before we can achieve the
empirical data. That burden is being placed through this
on the applicant. They have to go through the same
process. They'll be coming to see you; they'll be coming
to see, you know, the -- the hearing examiner, the Board
of County Commissioners. And they'll be showing us what
components are included in their rural village concept.
There are parameters to defining a rural village in
this plan, and those will be further defined through
LDRSs. For example -- I think it's a great question.
What type of industry is appropriate in a rural village,
if any?
Well, certainly we don't want to see, you know, some
of the more intensive types of industry out there, but a
research and technology park, from my perspective, makes
all the sense in the world.
Now, how big will that be? It certainly depends on
what the market and the population of that rural village
could support in terms of employment. We don't know that
until someone comes in and asks for it. It's the same as
any other rezoning.
CHAIRMAN COE: Is there any other questions?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Comments?
MR. CARLSON: Except this is spilling out onto
29,000 acres of rural land.
MR. MULHERE: That's true. And in exchange for
putting protections on 60,000 acres of rural land. I
mean, there's no -- no one ever said that there weren't
going to be -- there wasn't going to be a trade-off here.
Page 47
February 6, 2002
You want to protect the most valuable natural resources.
We're also required legally to balance those protection
measures with private property rights, and no one ever
said that there wouldn't be some impacts as a result of
that.
MR. CARLSON: Those wetlands already have some
protective status, don't they?
MR. MULHERE: Yeah. They -- they have some
protective status, yeah.
CHAIRMAN COE: Any other questions or comments?
MR. HILL: Two relatively minor ones, Mr. Chairman.
In Motion No. 1 and 2 that we made last week -- in
Motion No. 2, I don't remember that it was that
extensive. I would not like to see Motion 1 passed on
about taking the Big Corkscrew Island Community, making it
neutral and then have the Motion No. 2 seemingly imply
gY py
that it is related to Number 1. I think it's a totally
separate decision.
We're not compensating for the loss of Big Corkscrew
Island Community by making Motion No. 2. That's, as I
remember, the ideas we had. If anybody on the council --
CHAIRMAN COE: I think the reason that Motion No. 2
was made was to make it clear to the PAB and the Board of
County Commissioners and others that see our motions, they
will understand that we're taking one -- Corkscrew
community, for example -- off the table, but we're giving
something else to replace it, so they don't think we're
just not giving a recommendation as to where other lands
could be available for this.
If we don't do that, just personally, I don't see any
way that the PAB would be able to even know about that
Page 48
February 6, 2002
recommendation.
MR. HILL: No. I'm -- I agree that we should take
the Corkscrew Island Community out and make it neutral,
but I don't think Motion No. 2 should be a compensation.
It's a separate decision. We should add that land.
CHAIRMAN COE: I don't understand what you're saying.
MR. MULHERE: My -- my recollection of the motion was
that it came immediately after and was tied to the
discussion of removing the Big Corkscrew Island.
CHAIRMAN COE: Right.
MR. MULHERE: I have no objection if you want to
clarify that and you want to strike through that last part
of-- right after "lands." Where it says, "to compensate
the removal of receiving designation of Corkscrew" --
that's up to the --
MR. HILL: But my point is that the people in Big
Corkscrew Island Community really requested that they
remain a neutral area, and I'd hate to see the Board of
County Commissioners negate that by -- on the basis that
they can't compensate for it. That ought to be a separate
issue --
MR. MULHERE: Right.
MR. HILL: -- and not be a decision made on the fact
that you're going to compensate for that loss.
MR. MULHERE: Yeah. I -- I tend to agree. In
fact --
MR. HILL: And -- and 1 and 2 do that.
CHAIRMAN COE: Well, do I have a motion to -- on
Motion No. 2 to take out that -- all after --
MR. HILL: Golden Gate Estates.
CHAIRMAN COE: -- Golden Gate Estates?
Page 49
February 6, 2002
MR. HILL: I move that we eliminate the word in
Motion No. 2, starting with "as receiving lands
compensated."
CHAIRMAN COE: Do I have a second for that motion?
MR. MULHERE: Wait. You want that "as receiving
lands" in there. You want it somewhere in there.
CHAIRMAN COE: Right.
MR. MULHERE: It starts --
MR. HILL: Strike out "to compensate the removal."
MR. MULHERE: Right.
CHAIRMAN COE: Do I have a second to the motion?
MR. CARLSON: I'll second it.
CHAIRMAN COE: All for?
MR. STONE: Aye.
MR. GAL: Aye.
MR. CARLSON: Aye.
MS. LYNNE: Aye.
MR. HILL: Aye.
CHAIRMAN COE: All opposed?
MS. SANTORO: Aye.
CHAIRMAN COE: One opposed. Carries 6 to 1.
MR. HILL: One other one, Mr. Chairman, and -- on
Motion No. 13, is it totally clear what the area being
referred to south of Immokalee Road --
MR. MULHERE: It's the only secondary receiving area
south of Immokalee Road.
MR. HILL: There's only one?
MR. MULHERE: Correct. There can't be any
confusion. This is the only secondary receiving area
.•••`Nsouth of Immokalee Road.
CHAIRMAN COE: Any other questions or comments?
Page 50
February 6, 2002
MR. HILL: Should that be further defined somehow?
MR. MULHERE: Well, I didn't really -- I mean,
it's -- everyone's pretty much in agreement with the
recommendation. I would suspect that it's going to
happen. There's only one south of Immokalee Road. I
think it's clear.
CHAIRMAN COE: Any other questions or comments?
MS. LYNNE: I wanted to go over some of the
recommendations from Brad Cornell. If your
conversation --
MR. CARLSON: Yes. Yes.
MS. LYNNE: -- conversation, Mr. Carlson, pertains to
here, go ahead.
MR. CARLSON: I wasgoing to -- I was going to take
another crack at a -- at a recommendation even though it
may be too late to make this list. I -- I'd like to take
a -- make another attempt to address the -- the idea of
having some sort of buffering between preserved land and
NRPAs and the receiving areas at this point. The
receiving areas interface with NRPAs and conservation
lands, and I think that's just poor planning. I think the
300-foot buffer that's proposed, which could be golf
course, is not going to be adequate to protect the
hydrology of these wetland -- wetland areas adjacent to
these receiving areas.
And also, yesterday I did a prescribed burn, and it
was a very lively prescribed burn. And I can't imagine
being a natural area manager and doing a burn with a golf
course immediately next door and a residential subdivision
within 300 feet.
There's terrible conflict there. You cannot always
Page 51
February 6, 2002
predict exactly what the wind's going to do. I think
there needs to be a buffer of rural lands between a
receiving area and conservation NRPA land.
I'm going to try again. Last time I proposed a
mile. I'm not going to do that. I'd like to make a
motion that at the interface of the receiving lands and
the NRPAs and conservation lands in areas A and D only --
A and D only -- that there be a 1/2-mile buffer in the
land that is now designated receiving adjacent to those
conservation and NRPA lands, 1/2 mile.
CHAIRMAN COE: Well, what do we do -- I mean, how are
those landowners compensated for creating a buffer?
MR. CARLSON: Their -- their land stays neutral.
It's rural land. It's 1 unit per 5 acres rural land
neutral or ag or whatever it is now.
CHAIRMAN COE: Any other comments?
MS. BURGESON: Ed, can I just ask why you chose A and
D only?
MR. CARLSON: Because those areas are the most intact
hydrologically. The the NRPA and conservation lands
around A and D are the most intact, and those will be
managed by private state entities which will do a lot of
prescribed burning. And I think B and C, it's not --
there's just not as much conflict there.
I think B already, because of its relation to
The Estates -- you know, there's already hydrologic
impacts, and -- and those units are just smaller.
MS. LYNNE: I second the motion.
CHAIRMAN COE: All for?
MR. STONE: Aye.
MS. SANTORO: Aye
Page 52
February 6, 2002
MR. CARLSON: Aye
MS. LYNNE: Aye.
MR. HILL: Aye.
CHAIRMAN COE: All opposed?
MR. GAL: Aye.
CHAIRMAN COE: One opposed. Carries 6 to 1.
MR. HILL: Would -- would you care to share your
objection?
MR. GAL: I -- I just think that there was -- there
was a -- and I really don't recall why this wasn't -- why
we didn't make this motion last time at the last meeting,
but there was some, I guess, good reasons why we decided
to not make it a mile buffer, and I'm not sure if there
was a difference with a 1/2-mile buffer. And I think it
related to hydrologic conditions that -- that differ for
different areas in the receiving areas.
MR. HILL: The NRPA and conservation lands need
protection. And at one time -- in fact, I put a motion on
the table last week that we quantify it by stating the
minimum draw down at the boundary of the conservation area
that would preclude specifying a particular distance.
That died, I think, for lack of a second, or was
defeated. I'm not sure.
So there are two ways to look at it: You can fix the
separation or you can try to quantify the impact you want
to restrict on the conservation.
You know, this motion does it one way. There are
other ways to do it. But in the absence of data, specific
data that will allow us to determine what the impact would
/-4be, in changing the hydrological character of the NRPA
area, we -- Ed -- Ed's experience is better than mine, and
Page 53
February 6, 2002
he wants a half a mile and feels that that might be
satisfactory. We need to make one attempt at least to
increase the buffering to these areas over and above the
300 feet.
CHAIRMAN COE: Any other comments?
MS. BURGESON: Can I just read that motion back to
make sure that I've got that correct? At the interface of
receiving lands and the NRPAs or sending lands in Areas A
and D only, there be a 1/2-mile buffer in the land now
designated receiving, and that buffer remain neutral.
MR. CARLSON: Yes. It's NRPA and conservation
lands.
MS. BURGESON: That's right.
CHAIRMAN COE: We're going to take a five-minute
break at this point.
(A brief recess was had.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Okay. Erica, we left off-- you had
some comments about the -- the Audubon Society sheet that
got submitted as a recommendation.
MS. LYNNE: Yes. I just wanted to go over them
briefly. "A, adjust the sending and receiving numbers
based on conservation easements, extinguishing density
that may be in sending areas but won't send."
I think we already did that; is that correct?
CHAIRMAN COE: That's correct.
MS. LYNNE: Okay. "Rural villages need modification.
Limit to three, make them smaller, increase the density
for efficiency, increase the distance to -- distance
between villages to more than 3 miles and explicitly
follow smart-growth principles."
Any comments or interest in that one?
Page 54
February 6, 2002
CHAIRMAN COE: No.
MS. LYNNE: "Golf courses need to be considered
development with some equation to density. It's an
intensive use which strongly impacts the natural habitats
and rural character and qualities of the areas. We should
require TDRs to be used to build these no rural projects
as part of receiving area residential development."
I will make a comment on that. Brad Cornell brought
up that a development like Twin Eagles can be done without
any TDRs at all because of the large golf courses. And he
foresees that if golf courses aren't counted somehow in
density, that we're not going to have rural villages or
rural lands; we're just going to have duplicates of Twin
Eagles throughout the rural fringe.
CHAIRMAN COE: We have already made that
recommendation -- Motion 8. We recommended to prohibit
golf courses except on approved natural and nonirrigated
rough areas from being located in greenbelts around rural
villages or any other preservation areas. Motion carried
6 to 1, with Mr. Sansbury descending.
MS. LYNNE: Right. And -- and the difference here is
that Mr. Cornell's saying that golf courses in the re --
in the -- yeah -- in the receiving areas should have to --
that there should be some kind of-- he suggests using
TDRs, that you need one unit per acre in TDRs to build a
golf course.
MR. MULHERE: If I could add, this is a -- an issue
that's been discussed quite a bit through the last, I'd
say, six or eight months. This issue was also raised when
the staff went up and had a preliminary discussion with
the DCA.
Page 55
February 6, 2002
The concern is a very valid one. We've -- I've
stated and we've stated that the importance of the TDR
program or the viability is directly related to a market
to utilize those TDRs. The question here is whether or
not there would be an insufficient market if you can go in
and purchase 3- or 400 acres of land in a receiving area,
put in a golf course and develop, say, upscale housing at
the current base density of 1 per 5 and have no need to
purchase TDRs under that market. So it's a very valid
question.
We will be raising this issue to the board as to
whether or not, as a policy consideration, they would like
to establish a minimum density for golf courses. And that
minimum density in the example that we have utilized has
been .5 dwelling units per acre. So with a base density
of 1 per 5, in order to achieve the golf course, they
would have to acquire through TDRs enough density to get
to at least .5 in a receiving area in a residential golf
course community. That would create a necessity to
utilize TDRs in conjunction with golf courses.
It's an issue that we think is very valid. I have a
policy discussion, and we will be bringing it up as part
of the course of deliberation and the planning too.
MR. CARLSON: I like that idea.
CHAIRMAN COE: Let's make a motion. Let's get it up
there on a piece of paper. Do you have a motion?
MR. CARLSON: Huh?
CHAIRMAN COE: You've raised your finger. You're
volunteering.
MR. CARLSON: I -- I make a motion that we support
the concept of using -- establishing a minimum density for
Page 56
February 6, 2002
a golf course community and having them participate in the
TDR program. Does that do it?
CHAIRMAN COE: Is that clear enough for you --
MR. MULHERE: Yes.
CHAIRMAN COE: -- Tom?
Do I have a second to that motion?
MS. LYNNE: Can I just ask -- it's not TDRs for the
golf course community; it's TDRs for the golf course
itself.
MR. MULHERE: Well, there's -- there's two ways you
could do it. This is -- this achieves the same result.
There's two ways you can do it: You could try to
establish some sort of a formula, whether it's on a
per-acre basis -- you say for, you know, every acre of
golf course, you have to purchase .1 TDRs or something.
I think that's a lot more complicated than what I'm
recommending. What I'm recommending is establishing a
minimum density associated with golf courses, residential
golf course communities. And, of course, the only way you
can achieve that from the base is through the TDR program.
CHAIRMAN COE: Can I have a second for the motion?
MR. MULHERE: I mean, it -- it just --
MS. LYNNE: I'll second it.
CHAIRMAN COE: Okay. All for?
(Unanimous response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: All opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Let the record show that Mr. Stone was
not in attendance for the vote. Pass 6-0.
Any other comments?
MR. CARLSON: Well, just -- I think this whole
Page 57
February 6, 2002
discussion about creating a market for TDRs is very
interesting. And do -- do you have other potential
incentives?
MR. MULHERE: Well, one of the things that I should
have mentioned that I didn't is that we asked this very
question to our consultant, Dr. Jim Nicholas, who's the
economist with the University of Florida who evaluated the
proposed TDR proposal and evaluated it based on a number
of conditions. One was, tell us how we can best structure
this so that it will work. And number two was, tell us,
you know, what is the economic viability of this.
And he prepared a report. And then subsequent to
that report, we asked some additional questions, one of
which was, what about this example of someone being able
to -- of there being a strong market for the base density,
say, in conjunction with the golf course community where
there -- there wouldn't be a market incentive to acquire
additional units.
His finding was that, you know, developers are
rational economic purchasers and that if there is an
economic benefit to them purchasing some additional units
and constructing them in conjunction with this golf course
that they're going to build anyway, that they will go in
and purchase more than the base -- based on really the
economic viability of it. But that doesn't mean that it's
not a legitimate policy discussion to enhance that market
viability by requiring in some cases -- in the case of
golf courses, for example, some minimum density. It -- it
still, I think, is worthy of discussion as a policy.
I mean, that's going to guarantee it versus --
Dr. Nicholas's point was from all the data that he
Page 58
February 6, 2002
reviewed, he feel strongly that it will happen anyway, but
it may not happen to that degree.
So we do have an expert evaluation that would tell us
that there is an economic viability to the whole TDR
program. I don't think that came really as any surprise
to us when we look at the market values of land out there
and dwelling units.
Another way that you enhance that is by allowing, as
we discussed at the previous meeting, perhaps under some
conditions, a transfer into the urban area for, say,
infill -- qualified infill development. Those have a
value too, and then you increase the viability. There are
only about 5,000 units to send. So when you look at rural
villages, you look at market -- other market incentives to
increase your base density, and then you look at these
options of, one, a minimum density for golf course; and
two, an urban transfer. In Dr. Nicholas's opinion, our
challenge would be to find additional sending lands once
these were exhausted, and -- and they felt that that would
probably be the -- you know, the outcome.
MR. CARLSON: Well, I'm -- I'm going to say something
that's going to get me in a lot of trouble, but, you know,
I'm so worried about the future of this county. And I've
been thinking about this a lot, and I -- I have a really
half-baked idea. So anybody gets mad at me, I'm just
thinking out loud, but I think this is the time to do it.
This is the discussion to do it.
I live in The Estates, and in The Estates, you're
allowed to build a guest home. And, you know, it's -- I
"•-••• mean, it's -- everybody rents these guest -- you're not
supposed to rent them. They're not rental units. They're
Page 59
February 6, 2002
for your family, for your mother-in-law, whatever, but
people build them and people rent them, and there's a big
wink and a nod going on.
And even the county commissioners -- you know, code
enforcement has better things to do; the county
commissioners have better things to do, so this is going
on.
You know, my fear is that over time there's going to
be so many guest homes that are rental units in
Collier County, it's going to be like the docks at
Coconut Creek. You know, there you have a lot of nice
people who built illegal docks and nobody wanted them to
be criminals, so they changed the rules for the docks and
made them legal. That's --
So I -- I could see this happening in The Estates in
,-. the future, that there are just so many people renting
their guest homes, that the commissioners will say, okay,
it's all right; go ahead and do it. But instead of giving
that away -- I mean, if somebody with a lot of 2 1/2 acres
or 5 acres wanted to build a second dwelling and be able
to legally rent it, could they be required to buy it
development?
MR. MULHERE: Well, it's a great question, and -- and
you -- you have a great mind. We've -- we've also
considered that --
MR. CARLSON: Great minds think alike.
MR. MULHERE: -- so we must have great minds as
well. We had a lot of discussion over this. And in fact,
we talked to Dr. Nicholas about this as well, and he
brought up some examples where -- and a specific example
was the Hamptons in -- in New York where they have a TDR
Page 60
February 6, 2002
program, and it's for two reasons: One, to protect
natural resources; and two, to protect agricultural in
that area. And the -- they had the same situation. Guest
houses were allowed, but they were illegally being rented
out.
And in that case they did make a provision that in
order to legitimize the guest house for rental purposes,
you could acquire a TDR. The values of the TDRs are very,
very high in that area, as you can imagine, because of
real estate values, but it worked very well. A
significant amount of people did exercise their right to
purchase a TDR at a pretty high price to legitimize their
guest house.
We did not propose that here. There are some growth
management -- I'd defer you to Marjorie. There are some
growth-management issues relative to, you know,
calculating density and doing other things. Right now a
guest house, since it's legally only for -- it can't be
rented out. It's only for a mother-in-law or, you know,
perhaps a -- you know, a child or a sick relative or
something along those lines, or visitors or guests. It
does go towards the overall density in the county.
Again, if you were requiring a unit through a
transfer process, this would not increase the overall
density in the county either. So -- and -- and it may not
necessarily have to be a whole unit; it could be a half a
unit that you would have to acquire, you know. And still
you would fall under the -- some of the regulations
because guest houses, for example, can only be 40 percent
of the size of the principal structure. So you have some
restrictions on you. Perhaps that would be justification
Page 61
February 6, 2002
for not a full unit but a half unit.
We didn't include that in this recommendation because
we felt that there was sufficient market out there to be
able to exhaust supply of sending units without including
that, but we agreed -- we thought it was a good idea to --
MR. CARLSON: Well, I -- I think if you're trying to
create a market, especially if you could -- if people who
weren't even ready to build a guest house yet but they
wanted to in the future, they could buy a development
unit, and it would be a -- an attachment to their deed,
and they could -- they could build ten years from now, or
they could sell it with their property and say, this
property is -- you're entitled to build another unit here,
or they could pass it on to their children. I just think
it would create a tremendous market.
MR. MULHERE: I -- I can't argue with you.
MS. STUDENT: You said you'd defer to me, and right
now, the way the program's set up, that wouldn't be
permissible. But we're looking at a new program and --
here for the rural fringe. And that -- so I'm not -- I
think it's an excellent idea, and it's something that's
worthy of looking at.
It would have to be accomplished through comp plan
amendment and then subsequent LDR amendments.
MR. MULHERE: If you'd like to make a motion to that
effect, we would carry that forward as well.
CHAIRMAN COE: Anybody want to make a motion on
that?
MS. LYNNE: I'll move to that effect.
MR. MULHERE: Barbara just mentioned, you know, what
about the Golden Gate Master Plan Restudy Committee, and I
Page 62
February 6, 2002
guess I'd be careful not to step on toes. Most likely
what we would do is make that a recommendation for their
consideration because I think the board would probably
want to defer this because it would impact that area
potentially to them for consideration, just the same as
we've indicated our choice relative to Orange Tree, which
we also concur makes a pretty good receiving location
because it already has a lot of impacts.
And -- and so, because that's not part -- technically
part of the assessment area but it is a countywide policy,
we could certainly make a recommendation, and we'll carry
any motion that you make forward, but that that be
deferred for consideration or moved -- directed for
consideration to the Golden Gate Estates Master Plan
Restudy Committee.
.�. I think the timing on that is somewhere in the
neighborhood of probably a year for them to finish
their -- their evaluation assessment and still would be
sufficient enough to -- to achieve some good, some
benefit.
CHAIRMAN COE: Do I have a motion?
MR. CARLSON: So your recommendation is to make a
motion to carry this to the Golden Gate Estates?
MR. MULHERE: Well, I don't think you have to do
that. I think the board -- you could just make a
recommendation to the board to consider this as a policy,
you know. But I just wanted you to be aware that that --
again, that committee is out there, and the board may wish
to redirect it to that committee for consideration.
MR. CARLSON: Okay. Then I'll move that we recommend
to the Board of County Commissioners to explore with the
Page 63
February 6, 2002
Golden Gate Estates -- what do you call it?
MR. MULHERE: Master Plan Restudy.
MR. CARLSON: -- Master Plan Restudy Committee the
desirability of requiring transfer of development right
into The Estates zoning for lots 2 1/2 acres or larger for
secondary structures. Whoops.
MS. BURGESON: Should maybe that be 2 1/4 acres?
MR. CARLSON: Two and a quarter acres or larger.
Okay.
MR. MULHERE: I'm going to complicate it. There are
legal nonconforming lots in Golden Gate Estates that are
generally -- generally in the -- the average size of about
an acre and a quarter. There are quite a few. There are
several thousand.
The guest house regulations as they're currently
written are not -- don't only apply a 1 in Golden Gate
Estates. They apply anywhere in Collier County where you
have over 1 acre of land and have over a hundred foot of
frontage. You may then come in and -- and build a guest
house not to exceed 40 percent of your -- that doesn't
mean that this couldn't be limited. I just wanted to let
you know that. And then when you put that size
restriction, you would be precluding those that have an
acre and a quarter but also have a guest house in
The Estates from enjoying this -- this process.
If you want to just limit it to Golden Gate Estates,
I'd just say for all legal -- legal lots that meet the
provisions of guest houses.
MS. STUDENT: I -- I have a comment about that, that
I'm concerned that if we treat similarly situated
properties, that being where you meet criteria to have a
Page 64
February 6, 2002
guest house differently and maybe allow it in The Estates
but not elsewhere, I just have some equal-protection
issues with that, and we may want to look at --
MR. MULHERE: Generally.
MS. STUDENT: -- for any -- you know, generally in
any area where the ability to build a guest house is
permitted.
MR. MULHERE: You can leave it general.
MR. CARLSON: Now you're getting me in a lot of
trouble.
CHAIRMAN COE: Do I have a rewording motion, or would
you rather --
MR. CARLSON: How about if I just go to the next
Golden Gate Estates Planning Committee and talk to them?
CHAIRMAN COE: That sounds like a better thing. I'd
like to remind the EAC that we still have two projects
that we have to go through. And I note that Brad brought
this to us during the meeting,which is pretty extensive,
so I don't know how you all want to handle -- handle it.
Does anybody have any comments? Because Brad's given us
some extensive things here that we haven't had a chance
really to go over.
MS. BURGESON: We also have a presentation by
Jim Beever after the land-use petitions.
CHAIRMAN COE: That's correct. So I would suggest
that we table the Audubon sheet until the next meeting.
That will give us a chance to look over it and make
further comments.
MR. CARLSON: I agree.
CHAIRMAN COE: Is there anybody that disagrees with
that?
Page 65
February 6, 2002
Very well. Let's -- Barb, if you -- and I don't know
if you did this or not. It looks like Brad's gone. But
in the future if Brad or anyone else has these extensive
written comments, I'd appreciate if you'd just tell them
to put it in the package, you know, and --
MS. BURGESON: We just received those this morning by
e-mail.
CHAIRMAN COE: I -- I figured that.
MS. BURGESON: And the second package, I don't even
believe staff has yet.
CHAIRMAN COE: Yeah. I figured that. But maybe we
can just remind some of these so we can take a look at
it.
What is this that we just received?
MS. BURGESON: That's the e-mail that I got this
morning from Brad Cornell with his concerns. And if
there's additional information that was handed out to you
from Brad today, I -- I'm not aware of it.
CHAIRMAN COE: Okay. I'm going to also table that
until our next meeting.
MS. BURGESON: The next portion of the agenda is the
two land-use petitions.
MR. BELLOWS: Good morning. For the record, I'm
Ray Bellows, chief planner with the current planning
section. Today I'll be presenting petition
PUDZ-2001-AR1842, East Gateway PUD.
I'll be presenting a general overview of planning
issues, and Steve Lenberger will do the environmental
review for this project.
,.� As you can see on the visualizer, the subject site is
located on the north side of Davis Boulevard, south side
Page 66
February 6, 2002
of I-75, and about a quarter of a mile west of
Collier Boulevard.
The subject site is currently zoned C-4, RMF-12,
RMF-6 and Residential Single-Family-4, along with an
agricultural strip. It's located adjacent to the existing
PUD, a residential one, Saddlebrook Village and the
I-75/Alligator Alley commercial PUD to the east.
Petitioner proposes to rezone the subject site to a
planned unit development, allowing approximately 200,000
square feet of commercial retail uses and about 250,000
square feet of industrial park uses.
The master plan indicates the -- it'll have a
development tract for industrial uses that have -- are
near and adjacent to I-75. Then north of Davis Boulevard
is Tract C, which is the commercial development tract.
There's also a preserve area along the western and
northern property boundary.
The subject site is within an -- an activity center,
and it's designated on the future land-use map. The site
is located within the red square area. That's designated
as Activity Center No. 9 on the future land-use map. This
activity center encourages commercial development and
industrial uses where those impacts can be addressed for
traffic-circulation improvements and access-management
plans.
There's an existing commercial development on the
east side and then on the south side. There's also
industrial zoning to the south on the -- designated on the
future land-use map.
The proposed uses in the PUD are consistent with the
growth-management plan and the comprehensive plan. There
Page 67
February 6, 2002
is no problems with consistency from a planning standpoint
with the future land-use element.
Steve Lenberger's here to present the environmental,
and I'd be happy to answer any questions you might have.
MR. LENBERGER: Good morning. For the record,
Stephen Lenberger, Planning Services. Please excuse me.
I'm getting over a head cold. Still a little congested.
The subject property is located in the northwest
quadrant of Davis Boulevard and 951. It's located between
I-75 and Davis boulevard, this being the subject property,
this right here.
The property is about 37.4 acres. Quite a bit of
it's jurisdictional wetland, about 23.7 acres. The
uplands on the parcel are located mainly in this portion
of the property and up in this area. The balance of the
property is mostly wetlands.
The petitioner is proposing to retain uplands and
wetlands in a preserve area approximately 5.7 acres in
size. This will be located on the western side of the
property and along the southern part of I-75.
To give you an idea of how this lies with adjacent
parcels, the petitioner has put together this exhibit
showing the I-75 Alligator Alley PUD to the east and the
adjoining PUD to the west. And the preserve area, there's
a recreated marsh area on this section of the I-75
Alligator Alley PUD, and the -- the preserve area does
connect onto that preserve area.
The preserve -- the PUD to the west also has preserve
located on the northern portion, western side of the site
and roughly in the center portion, which connect to the
preserve area, which is proposed for east Gateway.
Page 68
February 6, 2002
The subject property is all wooded. It's primarily
pine flatwoods and pine, cypress mix. There's quite a bit
of exotics on portions of the site, particularly this
area. And in -- the north end has quite a bit of
Melaleuca in it.
The petitioner is proposing to impact -- it's about
20 acres of wetlands, be about 86 percent of the wetlands
on site. They are not proposing any off-site mitigation
yet, have not approached the district yet as far as
off-site mitigation, so that has to be evaluated later.
They are proposing to preserve the 5.7 acres on
site. They are required to retain 25 percent of the
existing native vegetation on site, so there is a -- a
shortfall of 3.64 acres which will have to be retained
elsewhere in the PUD or plan it on site. And that's what
the petitioner's proposing at this time.
The area in general is known to have red-cockaded
woodpeckers and has had numerous activity in the past with
RCWs. And the petitioner did do a survey. It's in the
environmental impact statement. No birds were observed on
site. And when they go in for agency permits, they'll
have to answer to comments from Florida Fish and Wildlife,
the Conservation Commission and U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service regarding RCWs.
I'm here to answer any questions. The petitioner is
here also with their environmental consultant to answer
any questions you may have.
CHAIRMAN COE: I've got one question: Is there any
net loss of wetlands?
MR. LENBERGER: As proposed right now, yes. There'll
be about 20 acres of wetlands lost because there's no
Page 69
February 6, 2002
off-site mitigation proposed at this time.
MR. CARLSON: And I have a question while you're up
there. Now, the water-management system takes the runoff
and sends it west, into the development to the west, and
then into the Golden Gate canal system?
MR. CHRZANOWSKI: Stan Chrzanowski with the
Development Services. If you'll remember, Saddlebrook was
the project that came in and Bill Mckinley stood up and
said that John Boldt wants him to run it south and the
Water Management District wanted him to run it north. And
he said, I don't care, whichever. And the Water
Management District won. It runs north to the canal. It
dumps into Saddlebrook. Saddlebrook dumps into the
ditch. The ditch heads north to the canal.
CHAIRMAN COE: Any other comments, questions?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Well, petitioner?
MR. NADEAU: Mr. Chairman, members of the council,
it's a pleasure to be before you this morning. I'm going
to start on this side in the room here so I can show you
where the property's actually located. There we go.
The subject property lies within a -- Activity Center
No. 9. Over the past three years, there has been an
extensive study in Activity Center 9. It was called the
Interchange Master Plan. Some of you may have remembered
the -- the process for identifying intensive commercial
uses, industrial uses that came out of the plan, and then
the promulgation of the land development regulations that
were imported into the Land Development Code were just
recently adopted on January 9 pursuant to
Ordinance 2002.3.
Page 70
February 6, 2002
The -- as was stated by Mr. Lenberger and
Mr. Bellows, there is industrial uses that adjoin the
property. Access to the property will be in alignment
with those industrial land uses in Westport Commerce
Center. There will be interconnection for vehicular
purposes with the 951 commerce center to the east, and as
was also stated, that the water management will be
directed from the east Gateway property through the
wetland preserve in the Saddlebrook Village project, and
that has been constructed. Phase II is under review right
now. And then it would discharge into a drainage swale.
It runs along the easterly boundary of Palm Springs
subdivision, which lies just to the west of the
Saddlebrook Village project.
The property is 39.37 acres, and we are proposing to
�-. have 200,000 square feet of commercial on approximately
20 acres, which is consistent with the policies of
Collier County as well as industrial business park uses to
the extent of 250,000 square feet, which is also
consistent with the business park and the industrial
land-use designations of the Growth Management Plan. It
was found to be consistent with the Growth Management
Plan.
As one can imagine with the impoundment of major
roadways, that being I-75 to the north, the
Davis Boulevard/Radio Road right-of-ways to the south, and
the Collier Boulevard right-of-ways to the east, as well
as the drawdown effect of hydrology for the Golden Gate
canal, that these may have been wetlands at one time;
however, the environmental consultants that will speak
after me will identify that the hydrology has been
Page 71
February 6, 2002
diminished significantly. The site is flat, generally
ranging from 9.8 feet to 11.6 feet to NGVD, and as we had
stated, the drainage through Saddlebrook will occur.
And then, finally, in recognition of Mr. Lenberger's
comments, yes, we are required to retain 25 percent or
replant vegetation, naturally occurring, viably existing
native vegetation on site to the extent of 9.34 acres.
The 5.7-acre conservation easement proposed along the west
as well as the northerly portion of the property were
designed specifically so that there can be the
interconnection with the Saddlebrook wetland as well as
the upland conservation easement that lies on the north
and the west side of Saddlebrook Village. Those -- the
Saddlebrook Village has an existing Corps South Florida
permit, and it was those areas that were considered to be
most viable for RCW habitat. The current site -- I'm not
going to step on the toes of our fine environmental
consultants, but the habitat on this site, I've been told,
is not conducive to the foraging habits of the RCW because
the canopy's so dense and the extent of the Melaleuca on
site.
So, yes, we're showing a 9 -- a 5.7-acre preserve.
We haven't ventured into the South Florida or Corps
permitting process as yet, but I fully anticipate that our
conservation area is going to expand and that there will
be mitigation required off site to offset the proposed
impacts to the degradated wetlands. And I can hold myself
up for questions or you can hear from our environmental
consultants.
CHAIRMAN COE: Questions?
MR. NADEAU: Thank you.
Page 72
February 6, 2002
MR. WOODRUFF: Good morning. I'm Andy Woodruff with
Passarella & Associates. I also have Julie Erickson here
from Passarella as well. We're the environmental
consultants for the project site.
As Dwight has explained, the location situation for
the project site is found by I-75 and Davis, and
commercial and industrial on the east and residential and
commercial on the west.
The habitats on the project site, mostly pine,
pine-cypress areas. And we have had the Water Management
District out to do a wetland jurisdictional; however, that
jurisdictional has not been finalized with the district
yet this morning, and there might be some changes to that
jurisdiction.
The jurisdiction on the west side of the project
site, on the Saddlebrook side, what the Water Management
District did there was significantly less than what they
had claimed or proposed to have claimed on this particular
site, so there's some contention there as to why that
happened.
Habitats on the site have been hydrologically
disturbed. I'm speaking about the wetland habitats on the
site. There is a great deal of Melaleuca on the site.
The majority of the wetlands are greater than 75 percent
Melaleuca.
We have not entered into the permit process with the
district and Corps. We address the no-net loss district
and Corps for that permit process. We will have to
address the no-net loss functional wetlands on the project
site.
We have done wildlife surveys on the project site,
Page 73
February 6, 2002
listed species surveys, including surveys for RCW cavity
trees, and we've -- nonnesting season -- I'm sorry --
nesting season for these cavities for the red-cockaded
woodpeckers in the project site, and there's been no
red-cockaded woodpeckers seen or observed on the project
site. There are not red-cockaded woodpecker cavity trees
located on the project site.
If there's any other questions --
CHAIRMAN COE: Any questions? I got a couple. This
project is 37.39 acres, correct?
MR. WOODRUFF: 37.4.
CHAIRMAN COE: Of that, 23.7 are wetlands, and you're
going to affect 20.3.
MR. WOODRUFF: The majority of the wetlands on the
project site will be impacted by the project.
CHAIRMAN COE: So is there any net loss to the
wetlands?
MR. WOODRUFF: When we go through the permit process
with the district and Corps, as part of that process, they
have to ensure that we have no net functional loss of
wetland habitat on our project site. But we will do a
functional assessment of those wetlands on this project.
Whatever that functional assessment comes out to be, we
will have to replace that elsewhere, either preservation
or restoration off site. I fully anticipate off-site
mitigation for the project, not only off-site mitigation
for the primary impacts that we're talking about, but
they're also going to require us to mitigate for the
preservation of habitat that we're proposing to do for the
,..� county.
So we're going to fully mitigate for all of the
Page 74
February 6, 2002
wetlands on this project site, and that will be in the
form of off-site mitigation.
CHAIRMAN COE: And that would be -- that mitigation
would be -- 100 percent includes only wetlands or would
uplands also be included in the mitigation?
MR. WOODRUFF: It can be a combination of--
CHAIRMAN COE: I realize that -- what their
regulations are, but we generally like to keep it with
wetlands. Wetlands for wetlands.
MR. WOODRUFF: Well, generally, if we go to, say, a
mitigation bank, we will purchase mitigation credit that
is to be used strictly for wetland mitigation, credit --
functional credit for functional credit. We can
compensate for that -- that wetland loss.
CHAIRMAN COE: Any other comments? Yes, sir?
MR. CARLSON: Yeah. I wish Bill Lorenz was here.
But you haven't -- you haven't gone through the Water
Management -- you haven't even done a preliminary plan
with the Water Management.
MR. WOODRUFF: We haven't made application to the
Water Management District or Corps. We haven't had
our --
MR. CARLSON: Because I would ask Bill, you know,
this is the typical kind of 80 per -- 80-plus wetland
impact that we see in projects; whereas, his presentation
on his analysis said it was about 16 percent overall. So
I wish Bill was here to explain this.
It -- it almost seems to me like you're not ready to
be here. I mean, this is the Environmental Advisory
Council, and we're trying to look at your Environmental
Protection Plan. I see a little preservation around the
Page 75
February 6, 2002
edge, which basically serves as a buffer.
I -- I don't understand how you've gone through the
sequencing of avoiding impacts to wetlands in this project
or minimizing impacts of wetlands. I think you're just
retaining the minimum preserve land that you have to
retain by county standards and just eliminating the rest
of it. So this to me is unacceptable wetlands loss, and I
just don't see any other way to look at it.
CHAIRMAN COE: Any other comments? Any other members
of the EAC?
MR. WHITE: Before we proceed any further,
Mr. Chairman, my apologies. Assistant County Attorney
Patrick White. I believe I was having a discussion with
our other attorney when we started with this case, and we
might have neglected to swear in the witnesses and have ex
parte disclosures. If I'm wrong about that, please
forgive me. But at this time, I'd like to suggest that we
take care of those two.
CHAIRMAN COE: Okay.
(The oath was administered.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Thanks for reminding us, Patrick.
MR. WHITE: I'm sorry, Mr. Nadeau. Any ex parte
disclosures?
(No response.)
MR. WHITE: Thank you.
CHAIRMAN COE: There are none?
MR. NADEAU: If I may, Mr. Chairman, respond to
Mr. Carlson's comment about he doesn't believe that --
it's premature for us to be here. This is a zoning
process, and with the amount of cost involved with doing a
commercial project and trying to forward a -- what would
Page 76
February 6, 2002
have to be a A Flodge plan to the district to identify the
wetland impacts prior to having the zoning entitlement in
place, it -- it's just not done for commercial
properties. There are currently no tenants for the
property, but the trust whom I present -- whom I represent
is actively pursuing tenants for that property, and we
will be -- we were mandated to pursue permitting with both
the Corps, the Water Management District, and the Game and
Fish Commission will be involved also based on the RCW
issues. So I fully understand that there is going to be a
no-net loss of the wetlands on the property.
What we'd like this council to understand is that
this is the process that we're required to follow. The
Land Development Code does not require us to have a
district permit before we apply for zoning. In fact, the
Water Management District will not actually really review
the -- any proposed individual permit or general permit
for dredging and filling in the waters in the United
States or in the waters of the state without having proper
zoning.
So just for clarity purposes, I want to put that on
the record.
MS. BURGESON: Also, it might be helpful to
understand that with the proposed changes to the Growth
Management Plan, that in the future if they do get through
and approved, that they will be required to at this point
have gotten probably two-thirds or three-quarters of the
way through their South Florida permit prior to even
coming to your board, because they'll have to be able to
provide that agreed-upon score for the wetland function
prior to staff reviewing them.
Page 77
February 6, 2002
CHAIRMAN COE: Any other questions or comments?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Do I have a motion?
MS. LYNNE: I have a comment. I don't see how I can
possibly make recommendation based on the information
that's here. There's -- there's nothing here to show me
how you're going to address it. You're just telling me
that you have to by law, but that doesn't tell me how.
I've got nothing to base this decision on. If I'd have to
vote today, I'd have to vote against it.
CHAIRMAN COE: Do I have a motion?
MR. HILL: A question. It seems to me in the past
the same scenario has occurred, and I think we were told
that we cannot have it come back to us after South
Water -- Water Management acts; is that correct?
MS. BURGESON: You can continue any item before the
EAC for any reason that you can substantiate, whether it
be for information that's not available at this time or to
recommend changes to what's presented.
If you do make a motion, even if it's to deny the
petition, then it's simply moved forward. And if you
wanted it to come back, you could make a motion that it
come back at that time. However, if it's already gone
through the process to the board and -- and become a PUD,
it -- it would just be for information at the time when it
came back as opposed to being able to make a decision.
MR. HILL: My question is, if we would move to
require this to come back to us following Water
Management's input, that may or may not get back to us
before it goes to the board.
MS. BURGESON: No, no. If you put the petition on
Page 78
February 6, 2002
hold and continue it for that information, then it does
not go forward. The only time it goes forward to the
planning commission is when there's a formal motion,
whether it be to approve or to deny. And you --
MR. HILL: I move that we continue this until a South
Water -- South Florida Water Management District permit
has been requested and their action be --
MR. CARLSON: I have to agree with that because
the -- the problem is, if we vote on this for approval,
we're voting on an incomplete plan, and you can't help but
think that's a seal of approval from the Environmental
Advisory Council and it's an incomplete plan, so how can
we -- how can we do that?
MS. BURGESON: All right. Are you looking for at
least the first response for South Florida Water
Management District on a submitted permit or are you
looking for a final outcome?
MR. CARLSON: No. We'd -- we'd like to know the
final outcome of the amount of wetlands preserved and what
the jurisdictional wetlands are, how much is preserved,
what the arrangement of that preserved is and how off-site
mitigation is --
MS. BURGESON: Does that typically occur -- I mean,
for instance, when you're submitting to the South Florida
Water Management District your permit application, their
first response back to you typically includes those
questions that you would need to address to respond to
that; is that correct?
MR. WOODRUFF: When we first submit, I mean, we've
,0"'•Ngot to go through the avoidance alternatives analysis. We
don't get to the mitigation until nine months down the
Page 79
February 6, 2002
road. That's -- that's the final process, is doing
mitigation --
MS. BURGESON: Right. Which is about the time that
you would agree upon the WRAP scores or the functional
scores?
MR. WOODRUFF: (Nodding of head.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Does that mean it's too late in the
process for them or what?
MS. BURGESON: That is how we will be requiring it in
the future.
CHAIRMAN COE: It's required now, right? And I'll --
I'll just make my own comment here. My real concern is
the high percentage of wetlands and the fact we -- you
know, we haven't done a WRAP score on it yet.
You know, if it was like 20 percent, I might be able
to be a little bit more understanding, but you're talking
about 37.4 acres of which 23.7 is wetlands -- I mean,
that's like the whole project's wetlands. Just bulldoze
it down and put in commercial property. So I'd like to
see what -- you know if we can do a little bit better.
So do I have a motion?
MR. CARLSON: Well, I also think --
MR. HILL: There is a motion on the floor, Mr. Chair.
MR. CARLSON: I also think this particular kind of
development, which is not residential or not golf course,
you're taking an area that's wetland and stores water and
attenuates flooding and things like that, and this
commercial kind of development will have a very high
percentage, I assume, of impervious surface, either
pavement or roofs, and so you're going to get a heck of a
lot of runoff from this development, which is going to
Page 80
February 6, 2002
affect the groundwater recharge. So I -- I think this is,
you know, unsustainable for the county to keep doing
this.
CHAIRMAN COE: Any other comments?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: May we have a motion?
MR. CARLSON: I would think you would have some sort
of on-site retention.
MR. NADEAU: Oh, we will. There is going to be
on-site retention. It is going to be pretreating and any
runoff from the impervious areas prior to discharge into
the Saddlebrook Village wetland, so the water quality
will -- will be addressed, and we won't get our Corps
permit without qual -- water-quality certification from
the district. And to be continued and not be allowed to
go on to the board without EAC seeing some sort of a
definitive mitigation plan, it would result, after the
expenditure of many, many thousands of dollars, and right
now the permit process with the district for an individual
permit, it's 18 months.
Now, I -- the petitioner, as well as our consultants,
have followed the rules up to this point, and I believe
that -- that the petition should not be continued, that if
you choose to -- to move for approval or move for denial,
but the -- a 9- to 18-month delay to get in front of the
Board of County Commissioners, I think that would be
unreasonable and unwarranted, particularly with the fact
that there is the potential that the hearing officer is
going to obviate the need for EAC to review zoning
applications, and that installation could be as soon as
June.
Page 81
February 6, 2002
So I'm not really sure -- I would have to defer to
Mr. White, Attorney White, to give this council
direction.
CHAIRMAN COE: Well, see, our problem is this, is
that we haven't been presented with a plan that shows
what's going to happen with runoff. We haven't been
presented anything, other than we're going -- just going
to knock it out and we're just going to put around the
edges here a little preserve.
You know this as well as I do. You don't need to be
an environmentalist to figure it out. When you put that
little strip of preserve there, the wetland preserve, as
we call it, is going to be dead. When those cedars dry
out or when those cypress dry out, that's it. It's done.
There is no more wetland preserve. You know it and your
environmentalist knows it. So, you know, we know how this
thing works.
MR. WOODRUFF: I mean, these preserves, they will be
incorporated into the surface water management design
system. There will be established control elevations that
we would have to put in.
CHAIRMAN COE: Well, why can't we be presented with
that plan of retention holding area for water and all that
sort of thing? Is there a particular reason?
MR. NADEAU: The reason is because we don't have a --
a land-use plan. Now, we could throw on a target and we
can throw on some sort of a land use that isn't an actual
tenant and create something for you to look at. But to be
honest with you, that would not be fair to you.
Zoning is a entitlement process that allows for
development to move forward subject to the rules of the
Page 82
February 6, 2002
permitting agencies as well as the rules of
Collier County. So our conceptual water management plan
shows that the -- the property will drain into two weir
control structures in the preserve area, which will
provide for an attenuation of water quality prior to
discharge in the 6-acre wetland preserve here, and then as
the water makes its way through, it will discharge under
the road and up through to the main Golden Gate Canal.
CHAIRMAN COE: Any other comments?
MR. HILL: This is where the system is totally
flawed. If this in fact is a zoning request, it shouldn't
have to have any environmental --
MR. NADEAU: Well, it's not, though.
MR. HILL: -- action taken, if it's a zoning
request. And as far as my being a member of the
Environmental Advisory Council, I can see no reason for
objecting to this to be industrial commercial area. But
then you go ahead and you come back to us and say, now,
this is what we're going to do. Then we make a judgment
from the environmental standpoint.
There's absolutely no reason for this council to try
to make a decision environmentally when there's nothing
there.
Now, my motion, which is still on the floor -- I
don't know whether it died for lack of a second or not --
is to continue this because I can't make a decision
environmentally until you tell me what's going to happen
on that property. And saying it's commercial/industrial
is not sufficient for this group to make a meaningful
statement. Okay?
MR. NADEAU: And excuse me --
Page 83
February 6, 2002
MR. HILL: And I think that has to be recognized.
MR. NADEAU: And excuse me, Mr. Hill. Would you be
saying that I can't go to the board or the planning
commission until this council reviews a plan and in a
mitigation regime that has been looked at and -- I don't
know if you're asking us to get the staff report or --
MR. HILL: Will you go to the Board of County
Commissioners without those things?
MR. NADEAU: Yes, I will.
MR. HILL: Then, again, the system is flawed totally,
as far as --
CHAIRMAN COE: See, what we're saying is we want to
see the plan where we can look at it and say, yeah,
environmental that's pretty sound. We're not being
presented with a plan; we're being presented with a zoning
request.
MR. HILL: Mr. Chairman, was there a second to my
motion?
MS. LYNNE: I so second.
MR. GAL: I'd just like to ask -- Barbara, I just
want to be clear that if we continue this hearing -- this
project to a later date, then they cannot go before any
other planning -- the planning board or the Board of
County Commissioners?
MS. BURGESON: It -- it's been a couple years since
this board has opted to continue an item, but previous to
that, whenever any item has been continued, it has not
been allowed to move through the system forward to the
planning commission until this board has taken a formal
,.� action either to support or to deny it.
CHAIRMAN COE: They can go to South Florida Water
Page 84
February 6, 2002
Management District and get this ironed out and do that.
MS. BURGESON: Ray Bellows has just stated that he
believes that that's still the way the same process
works.
MR. HILL: With the consent -- if that's the case,
with the consent of the seconder, I'll withdraw the motion
and place a new one on the table if we deny this -- deny
approval with this project based on the lack of any
environmental evidence.
CHAIRMAN COE: I'll second that.
MR. HILL: Erica?
MS. LYNNE: I -- I'd like to have a vote on the --
CHAIRMAN COE: Fine.
MS. LYNNE: -- continuance.
CHAIRMAN COE: Okay. Vote is still on the table for
a continuance. All for?
MS. LYNNE: Aye. There's another one.
MR. STONE: (Raised hand.)
CHAIRMAN COE: All opposed?
MR. GAL: Nay.
MS. SANTORO: Nay.
MR. CARLSON: Nay.
MR. HILL: Nay.
MR. WHITE: Is that 5 to -- 2 to 5, Mr. Chairman?
CHAIRMAN COE: 2 to 5, that's correct.
MR. HILL: Then I move that we recommend denial of
PUDZ-2001-AR-1842 based on the fact that there's
insufficient evidence to make an environmental decision.
CHAIRMAN COE: Do I have a second?
,.� MR. CARLSON: I'll second.
CHAIRMAN COE: Second? All -- all for?
Page 85
February 6, 2002
(Unanimous response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: All opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Carries 7 to O.
MR. NADEAU: Thank you very much.
CHAIRMAN COE: Next.
MR.. HILL: This has -- that has been a problem in the
past, and I think we need to somehow streamline the
procedure to get this question resolved. No reason we
should be sitting here making an environmental advisory
decision with -- with totally incomplete plans.
CHAIRMAN COE: Then what happens, Barb, even beyond
that, is now they're permitted to go forward. It never
comes back to us, so the EAC never looked at the
environmental considerations in any sort of the plan.
MS. BURGESON: This -- this has come up in
discussion, though, over the past ten years many different
times, and there have been motions at times to require
that at least the initial submittal to South Florida Water
Management District be provided with our packages, and
that's even been discussed with some of the Board of
County Commissioners. I'm not sure about previous boards,
but currently there's -- there are members of the current
board that have thought that that might be the appropriate
way to bring things forward.
So there -- there has been some support for
additional information or at least a -- at least getting
into that South Florida process to at least --
CHAIRMAN COE: Well, the thing is, is it's as bad for
the developers as it is for us. All right.
MR. HILL: Mr. Chairman --
Page 86
February 6, 2002
MS. SANTORO: Could we look at some kind of-- could
the EAC bring up some kind of offering or wordings to make
recommendation? I mean, why do we continue the same --
CHAIRMAN COE: I think this is a staff problem, and
the staff needs to solve it. So maybe, Barb, you can
bring it up with the staff to see how they can coordinate
these boards in the hearings so we've got something
presented to us. I mean, that's embarrassing for a
developer to come up, several thousand dollars I'm sure
that he's invested, and you know, we -- we look at him and
thumb our nose. But we got nothing to look at.
Patrick, you -- you want to say something?
MR. WHITE: I'd just like to put into the record that
there is one point of entry -- I'm not sure what the
subsequent petition might be that would require your
approval, but in a circumstance such as this, the LDC in
5.13.6, which talks about the scope of land development
project reviews, the last sentence of the first paragraph
talks about the fact the EAC shall review any petition
which requires approval of either the planning commission
or the board where the staff receives a request from the
EAC chairman.
I don't know that this provides any vehicle to get a
subsequent petition before you. I just wanted to make you
aware that there was at least the potential for that point
of entry. It does exist in the current code.
CHAIRMAN COE: All right. Thank you very much.
MS. BURGESON: And also, this board does have the
ability to direct staff to consider in terms of the review
of the Environmental Impact Statement that's submitted, if
you want to make a formal motion, that when we are
Page 87
February 6, 2002
reviewing that EIS, that we require additional
information. We can certainly bring that back to --
CHAIRMAN COE: Does anyone --
MS. BURGESON: -- Planning Service.
CHAIRMAN COE: Anyone desire to make a motion to that
effect?
MR. WHITE: Just as a reminder, that same section I
cited requires that EISs do come before you.
MR. HILL: Would you care to make a guess as to,
Mr. White, as far as the impact that the hearing officer
appointment might have in this whole proceeding?
MR. WHITE: The approved -- the approved but not yet
effective Land Development Code modifications relative to
the hearing examiner that considered this particular
section, 5.13.6, that overall was a balancing between the
various boards and councils with what the duties of the
hearing examiner would be essentially mimic the same
process. The same things would be going before the
hearing examiner and with the same degree of consideration
with respect to specific petitions, land-use petitions.
They would all be considered.
For example, I believe EISs would be considered. And
an area of critical stated concern and special treatments
and overlays would be considered. Those recommendations
would all be required through the hearing examiner. It's
not set that way for the initial first steps that the
hearing examiner's been approved but, again, not yet
effective.
So the board's view, Board of County Commissioner's
view as we see it, is that these types of matters would
still remain with you until such time as the hearing
Page 88
February 6, 2002
examiner was given authority with respect to rezoning.
The current vision is that there would be a limited scope
that the hearing examiner would have, so there would be an
interim period, if you will. Once the hearing examiner
came on board, you'd still be reviewing the
environmental-related land-use petitions until such time
as the board expanded the hearing examiner's scope of
jurisdiction.
I know that's a -- a long way around, but I want to
make sure you had a full understanding of what's
envisioned. If there's any questions, I'll be happy to
address them.
CHAIRMAN COE: Barb?
MS. BURGESON: I have one recommendation, and that
might be that through the environmental-impact statement,
the petitioner's required to address Growth Management
Plan issues that they have not -- that they have complied
with all the growth-management issues of no-net loss or
no-net loss of functioning wetlands.
What -- what we've done in some petitions is when
they've come to us and we've not got that concrete
evidence, we've stipulated that they provide that to us
prior to final development order approval.
One thing that this board, if you chose to do, could
be that we not stipulate that past this board anymore,
that we require that that evidence either be provided to
us for review or that they commit to specific mitigation
at this time.
CHAIRMAN COE: What impact does that have on the
developers financially?
MS. BURGESON: I couldn't answer that question. I
Page 89
February 6, 2002
would just have to say that that is how we are proposing
for the new GMPs to function, requiring more information
up front with the approved WRAP scores and with the
evidence that their mitigation will be in accordance.
CHAIRMAN COE: Can't you just do that
administratively, or do we have to make a motion to have
the staff do it?
MS. BURGESON: As long as you've discussed it and --
and basically given us direction to do that, we'd be happy
to -- to look at future EISs that way.
CHAIRMAN COE: Does anybody have anything against
that, to have the staff go ahead and go through that?
MR. CARLSON: Go for it.
CHAIRMAN COE: Okay. We got another petition. Staff
ready for presentation on that?
MR. WHITE: Mr. Chairman, I'd ask that we have the
swearing of witnesses and disclosures of ex parte.
(The oath was administered.)
MS. DESELEM: Yes. Good morning. For the record, my
name is Kay Deselem, and I am a principal planner with the
Planning Services Department, and I'm here to explain to
you about the description of the surrounding properties
and the consistencies for the project that is known as
Hemmingway Place PSP.
And you have an aerial photograph on the board that
shows the site. Project location is right there. Also,
on the visualizer you can see the subject property as
shown in blue. There is Goodlette-Frank Road along the
boundary to the east, and to the north is RSF-4 and RMF-6
zoning. Most of that is developed with the Cypress Wood
Estates subdivision.
Page 90
February 6, 2002
To the south is RSF-4 and RMF-6. The RSF-4 is
developed with the North Naples Highlands subdivision.
The west area is developed with Oak Knoll, Unit 1
subdivision, and it is also zoned RSF-4.
The subject petition is a request for approval of a
25-unit single-family subdivision on 9.63 acres. For
informational purposes, there had been a conditional use
that was granted to allow an ALF. That has since
expired. It was good for three years, and it expired on
December 8 of 2001.
This project, if you look at the site plan, you can
see -- are we on? Okay. Now you can see that the site
will be served by Hemmingway Place, which is a
cul-de-sac-ending road, the 25 lots beginning here, going
around the cul-de-sac, coming around to here for the
25th. There is no direct access onto Goodlette-Frank
Road. The access will be through Cypress Woods Drive to
the north.
This particular parcel is located in the urban
mixed-use residential land-use classification. Youcan
see the arrow. It points generally to the site of the
parcel. This particular land-use category is designed to
accommodate a variety of residential units which would
include the single-family uses that are proposed.
The projected density of 2.59 dwelling units per acre
is consistent with the density rating system contained in
the FLUE.
I don't have anything further. At this point Steve
can come forward and present the environmental issues for
you.
MR. LENBERGER: For the record, Stephen Lenberger,
Page 91
February 6, 2002
Planning Services. As Kay had mentioned, the subject
property is an infill parcel located about a mile and a
half north of Golden Gate Parkway on the west side of
Goodlette-Frank Road. You can see from the aerial, that
parcel is primarily wooded. There are some areas of
disturbance. This northern portion here has an area of
disturbed, and there is an existing road bed that runs
roughly about a third into the property from the western
side and straight in the center.
Habitats on site, native habitats are cypress
strands. This parcel, as indicated up here -- these are
the cypress heads here and here. And there's also a pine
flatwoods; this portion, this portion. There's also a
fair amount of pine along Goodlette-Frank Road.
The subject property, being right next to an
established neighborhood which has been there quite a long
time, has a fair amount of exotics in it. The Brazilian
pepper is pretty thick in the cypress areas, although some
of the pine flatwoods are in pretty good shape.
There's also a lot of other ornamental exotics: Air
potato, surinam cherry, Java plumb, that sort of stuff.
So it's -- it's fairly heavily impacted with exotics in
the cypress areas.
With the cypress area, the trees are quite large, so
we had the petitioner do a survey of the larger trees on
site with the cypress a foot or more DBH just to get an
idea where they lie on the property. And that survey is
up on this map here by these little symbols inside the
cypress area.
With that in hand, the petitioner devised a site
plan, and the preserve areas were established pretty much
Page 92
February 6, 2002
along Goodlette-Frank Road and in this portion of the
property where there are a fair number of cypress and
there are also quite a bit of large pines on this portion
of the property as well.
Also, the elevation on this site was a -- a little
bit lower than the -- the balance of the property,
hopefully allowing more water to enter into the cypress
head.
Wetlands on site, there are about 4 1/2 acres of
wetlands. The petitioner is going to impact 3.25 acres of
those wetlands. The project has gone through permitting
because it was previously approved as an ALF, and we have
just heard from the petitioner that they have their
revised South Florida permit to allow for the
subdivision.
They have purchased 2.6 credits in the Panther Island
Allegation Bank. That's a typo in your EAC staff report.
It says "2.6 acres." It's 2.6 credits. I apologize for
that.
On-site preserves are about 1.21 acres of wetlands
and .13 acres of uplands. Protected species, there are
some Tillandsia on site, which would be expected in a
cypress head like that. There was a gopher tortoise
burrow historically active. I believe it was on the old
roadbed, but that has since been abandoned. The site --
the disturbed areas are heavily encroached with Brazilian
pepper, so it's understandable to see why the gopher
tortoise left.
I'm here to answer any questions. The petitioner is
here as well as their environmental consultant.
MR. ESPINAR: Good morning, everybody. For the
Page 93
February 6, 2002
record, Marco Espinar, Collier Environmental Consultants.
I'm here. If you have any specific questions, I'll be
more than glad to answer them.
CHAIRMAN COE: Anybody have any questions?
MR. CARLSON: It seems like you're a lot further
along than previous.
MR. ESPINAR: Yes, Ed, we are.
MR. CARLSON: You -- you've got a permit from the
Water Management District?
MR. ESPINAR: This project, as -- as staff has
mentioned, was previously permitted as a assisted-living
facility. We have since come in for a modification. And
yes, we have received our modification from South Florida
Water Management District. For the Corps, we're out on
public notice, and we don't anticipate any problems with
respect to the Corps.
All the wetlands -- the Water Management District
required us because of the -- the wet -- the wetlands on
site are so impacted with the exotics, that the agency's
decided that we should mitigate for the entire wetland --
all 4 point -- it's actually 4.46 acres off site at
Panther Island. Once we use the WRAP analysis, it comes
out to 2.6 credits at Panther Island.
So we -- not only, in addition, have we mitigated for
the entire 4.46 acres off site, in addition, we have
preserved what you see on site. And we are going to
remove the exotics on site and route our water through
those wetlands.
MR. CARLSON: Just out of curiosity, the -- the plan
for the assisted-living facility, did it preserve more of
this jurisdictional wetlands or --
Page 94
February 6, 2002
MR. ESPINAR: Yes. The original plan did have -- the
original one proposed 1.96 acres of preserved? We're
proposing at this point 1.34. Okay. But the petitioner,
like Mr. Lenberger stated, went ahead and did a tree
survey, okay, so -- so we could capture the most -- the
biggest, the most majestic cypress trees and make an
attempt, and in fact, we did, by moving our road and
snaking it around to try to capture as many of those big
majestic cypresses as we could.
So even -- you know, we might be slightly less than
the acreage of original proposal, but I think it's a lot
better plan.
CHAIRMAN COE: Do I have motion to move to approve?
MR. CARLSON: I would just like to go on record as --
remind Mr. Lorenz that we have another project here with a
70 percent wetland impact, and this has been through the
South Florida Water Management District but isn't anywhere
near the 16 percent that his data analysis indicated.
MR. ESPINAR: With that, though, I'd like to point
out that in this case we are -- you are ahead on wetlands,
okay? Because we -- I mean, so we're on the plus side and
not on the negative side. We've mitigated for the entire
4.46 acres, and then we're preserving what we've got.
MR. CARLSON: Well, when I -- when I was reading
through this project, I was wondering, you know, at -- at
what point does, you know, a beautiful feature like a
cypress head like this -- and I think I've been down that
road and actually seen them. There are some impressive
cypress. At what point does that become such an amenity
that you preserve more of it and then you charge more for
your lots? I mean --
Page 95
February 6, 2002
CHAIRMAN COE: We have a motion on the floor.
MR. CARLSON: That wasn't a joke.
CHAIRMAN COE: We have a motion on the floor for
approval. Do I have a second?
MS. SANTORO: I'll second.
CHAIRMAN COE: We have a second. All for?
(Unanimous response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: All opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Motion carries 7 to 0.
MR. ESPINAR: Thank you very much.
CHAIRMAN COE: Thank you, Mark.
Barb, I'd like to make a comment at this point. I'm
supposed to sign these, aren't I?
MS. BURGESON: Yes.
CHAIRMAN COE: Do you want your original back?
MS. BURGESON: The -- the originals should -- should
be signed, and then we take those back to the office.
CHAIRMAN COE: Well, usually we sign a copy.
MS. BURGESON: No. The original gets signed.
CHAIRMAN COE: And the originals stay here?
MS. BURGESON: No, no. The originals get signed and
returned.
CHAIRMAN COE: Okay.
MS. BURGESON: They're -- they're brought down
usually in a folder for -- for signature.
CHAIRMAN COE: I've got the original right here.
MS. BURGESON: Okay. I'll have to check and see what
the folder is that we've got.
If we could take just a five-minute break to set up
for Jim Beever's presentation.
Page 96
February 6, 2002
CHAIRMAN COE: Yeah. That's fine. How long is Jim
going to speak? Jim?
MR. BEEVER: I'll be short.
CHAIRMAN COE: We know you're not tall.
MR. BEEVER: I -- I planned for about 15 minutes and
then any questions you might have.
CHAIRMAN COE: Great. Take a five --
MR. ESPINAR: Excuse me. Would the Environmental
Advisory Council --
CHAIRMAN COE: Oh, is that the sheet?
MR. ESPINAR: Thank you. I just wanted to give you
some comments of mine for the record. Make sure.
CHAIRMAN COE: Yeah. Let's break. Barb, how do you
want to handle this?
MS. BURGESON: I'll make copies.
(A brief recess was had.)
CHAIRMAN COE: The meeting will come to order. Do we
have any old business? New business? Mr. Beever.
MR. BEEVER: Thank you. My name is James William
Beever, III. For the record, that's B-e-e-v-e-r, but you
can call me Jim Beever.
I'm a Biological Scientist, Roman Numeral IV, with
the Florida Division of Wildlife Conservation Commission,
Office of Environmental Services. I supervise the
Southwest Florida office for the Office of Environmental
Services. It consists of myself and other biologists and
our office manager. We cover a 15-county area, which
ranges from Pasco County in the north and sometimes
projects in Hernando, down to Collier and Monroe County in
the south, up through the Peace River Valley into areas of
the phosphate district.
Page 97
February 6, 2002
We have the opportunity to review all the planning
permits, activities that are occurring within this whole
region. We also are involved with land acquisition,
conservation research and public presentations like the
one I'm doing today.
I'm here because I was invited to do a short
presentation for you on the use of the northern
Belle Meade area by Florida panthers and to provide you
some information background.
This presentation would not have been possible
without the assistance of Daryl Land in our Division of
Wildlife office here in Naples. Many of the slides and
data that I'm showing you come from their research work.
I intersect with panthers in northern Belle Meade in
several different ways. I've been involved with the
original team, along with Kim Dryden, who did the wildlife
assessment of the Belle Meade area, both southern and
northern for its proposal to be to the Carl acquisition
list. And I continue to work with Collier County in
review of various comp plan amendments like the ones you
were looking at earlier this morning, and I can let you
know that we have a very long letter in process making
comments with regard to that document.
First I'd like to point out that, you know, the
Florida panther is a species very much tied to forested
habitat, as you can see in this -- this first slide.
Panthers use the forested areas for cover; they use it for
denning; they use it for escape; and they also depend upon
it for their form of hunting.
'0-, The prey that they take, they normally take from a --
a wait-and-attack mode. They will wait along game trails
Page 98
February 6, 00Feb ru 2 2
or watering holes. They're -- they're not a cheetah.
They don't run fast after things and chase things down, so
the cover is very important to their life-style.
The original distribution of the subspecies of the
Florida panther covered many southeastern states. This
is -- be a view of where the panthers were, say, at the
time that Audubon visited Flo -- visited Florida.
You can see that their nearest cousins were in
Texas. That's why Texas cougars were used in the
outbreeding procedure with the Florida panther.
They're -- they're kissing cousins, quite literally.
Today the panthers' range has been extremely
limited -- next slide, please -- to southern Florida.
There have been some reports of cats as far north as Waldo
in North Florida, but generally the breeding population is
found in southwest Florida, concentrated around
Collier County, Lee County and Hendry County.
Panthers have been spotted this year and confirmed up
in Sarasota County. They have moved across the
Caloosahatchee River into areas as far north as Highland
Hammock State Park. We do have panthers on a regular
basis each year in eastern Charlotte, eastern Glades, so
they do have a very wide territory, about 135,000 acres
for a male, about 73,000 acres for a female. They're a
very mobile animal.
But the area of main breeding concentration is -- is
here in Southwest Florida, including the area of Northern
Belle Meade. Next slide, please.
MR. HILL: Mr. Beever?
MR. BEEVER: Yes?
MR. HILL: Would you comment on the coloring scheme
Page 99
February 6, 2002
you had on the last slide and the large blackout lines.
MR. BEEVER: Basically the -- the shading on the
bottom, as you can see, is public lands. There's the
Everglades National Park in red. The big cypress in the
bluish color. The dark blue outline was a general outline
at the time that this slide was made of the range of
panthers in, I believe, the late '80s, early '90s.
But there were actually some cats, some male cats
that were actually outside of that blue range -- range in
a couple selected areas.
This is a slide prepared by our Division of Wildlife
which basically shows you concentrations of panther
activity. And this was done through the radio-collaring
program in which cats are basically chased down by dogs,
darted, put -- put into sedation, data is taken from them
and a radio collar is put upon the cats. And what this
does is, it shades the concentration for those
radio-collared cats, which you need to understand is a
subset of the population, not the total population.
And this slide here, you can see that the brightest
colors that are colored are the highest intensity use
areas. And then the blue are -- are lesser use, but these
are all panther habitat. So don't think of the blue as
not being panther habitat. It's an area that's used.
It's just used less by the radio-collared cats.
And you can see there's a strong area of
concentration associated with Collier County in the
vicinity of the Fakahatchee Strand, the Florida panther
preserve areas of-- immediately adjacent to and in
association with Belle Meade. Next slide, please.
Now, why do panthers travel around? In part, it's to
Page 100
February 6, 2002
get their dinner. They have to find sufficient prey in
order to support themselves, and then they need even
better nutrition in order to breed successfully.
This slide shows the breakdown of panther feeding,
and you can see that in this study of panthers whose diets
were able to be assessed -- and again, this is a subset of
panthers, but this data comes from the Collier County
area.
Wild hog was the principal food eaten, followed by
deer, then raccoons, armadillos, rabbits and then other
species. Panthers can feed upon whatever happens to fall
prey to them, but these are the things that they -- they
concentrate upon, and lands which are able to produce hog
and deer are very important for panther success and for
panther breeding. And to a large extent, that's -- that's
'-., important in the type of landscape that panthers use.
Next slide, please.
So here's examples of panther in northern Belle
Meade. It's a hydric pine flatwood area where we have an
overstory of southern slash pine, understory of wetland
vegetation, which during the wet season has maybe a few
inches of water over it; during the dry season, is dry.
This type of landscape with an open mid-story will
provide a lot of opportunity for plants in the understory,
a wide variety of plants, which are good forage for wild
hog and deer and the other animals that panther feed. So
this is important habitat to provide forage. Next slide,
please.
Here's an example of-- of some more of that -- you
know, from that same general area. In the back, you can
see a -- a bit of more heavily forested area, and this
Page 101
February 6, 2002
would be a place where panther might rest during the day
and where the radio-collared track signal would come from
as a fixed-wing airplane would fly over.
During the nighttime, they would move over into these
more open areas as well. Next slide, please.
Some prey items in the area, some -- family of wild
hogs. You can see that we have probably a male and a
female and -- or maybe two big females and some young.
The less young we often see -- obviously, this group has
had some predation on it. Next slide, please.
And deer in -- in that landscape setting. In this
case, he didn't want to stand still, but basically this is
the sort of habitat. And here you see the deer moving
through some hydric flatland and in the back some more
forest areas as well. And it's these ecotones where
different habitats meet -- meet each other between cypress
and hydric pine, between oak hammock and cypress. These
boundaries are good places for panthers to successfully
feed. So panthers use a wide variety of upland and
wetland habitats across the Belle Meade area.
And just a little bit better view of a deer standing
still. So very -- very important prey for panthers. And
as I understand from our panther biologist, it's important
for them to have a good diet of white-tailed deer in the
places where they most successfully reproduce. Next
slide, please.
And then, of course, no hog or deer, there's always
these guys around, and they -- they can form a staple
basis, particularly in wetland systems. Next slide,
please.
Here's a night shot of a radio-collared panther, and
Page 102
February 6, 2002
I just want to show you what -- what that looks like.
This is a cat with a collar on it, and the collar emits a
signal, and our biologists will use fixed-wing airplanes,
occasionally helicopters, to locate where the panther is
at the time that they're flying.
So these are points of space and time. And it's
important to understand that that point doesn't
necessarily mean that's the only place the panther is
going to be, and if you have a point taken one day and a
point taken the next day, there's certainly no guarantee
it wasn't a straight lane between those two points. It
could have gone quite a few different places in that
regard. But it does give us some estimate of where
panthers are and the areas that they're using.
And what I'm going to do now is go to one of the
handouts that I provided you. And this is the black and
white one. And here you see a view that includes Collier
and part of Lee County with radio telemetry points from
1994 to 1999. And if we look in the area, here is
northern Golden Gate Estates, southern Golden Gate
Estates, Florida Panther Preserve, Fakahatchee Strand.
Here's Northern Belle Meade in this area, and you can see
an area of panther utilization in the area of northern
Belle Meade, which is what we generally call the eastern
half of northern Belle Meade.
Okay. Going to the color handout that I've provided
you, this is a very recent handout that just came off of
our computers. And what this is, is it's an infrared of
an aerial as -- to properly orient it, look at -- look for
those blue burrow pits, and that should be on the
left-hand side. So the handout is actually a -- a
Page 103
February 6, 2002
vertical view.
And these yellow dots indicate panther telemetry
locations. And you can see in the middle of the page is
the Golden Gate Estates area. To the right-hand side of
your view would be the Ford test track indicated by these
landscape features, and then the panther preserve lands
off towards your right. And then on the left, this is the
northern Belle Meade area that's utilized by panthers.
Then we'll go back to the slides.
MR. HILL: Do you have an estimate of the number of
population and also the collared population?
MR. BEEVER: The estimate of the total population,
which I actually heard this morning, is approximately
80 -- 80 adult cats. This is up. Actually, when I first
started working for the commission, the estimate -- and
this is about 12 years ago -- the estimate was
approximately 30 adult cats. That's an estimate from the
area that I showed you with the blue outline.
The number of collared cats varies, and I -- I really
would ask you to talk to Darryl Land. I know they -- they
number each cat successfully as -- successively as they
collar it, but there is mortality. So the top number of
the cats doesn't mean that all the cats that were
previously captured and collared are still alive. But
it's -- it's not the full population that's collared.
This is a panther. This one's 66, who's actually
been in northern Belle Meade. So this is -- people always
say, you know, show me a picture of it. Here it is. This
is a cat that spent time in northern Belle Meade and
actually travels around quite a bit, so we can -- we can
see northern Belle Meade as part of their territory -- of
Page 104
February 6, 2002
this cat's territory but not all of it.
We've had females in northern Belle Meade. And --
next slide, please. This is one of the difficulties of
having to do it this way.
MS. BURGESON: I'm sorry.
MR. BEEVER: It's not your fault. It's -- just --
just -- and -- and we have had one female two years ago
raise kittens in the northern Belle Meade area. Next
slide, please.
This is a view actually sitting in a helicopter about
the midpoint of Belle Meade looking to the east along
Alligator Alley before they did the work to four-lane it.
This is a slide that I took while I was working -- and the
design of and the installation of the panther
under-crossings.
And what you can see is that landscaped setting from
the view. So in the foreground -- and I hope my thumb
isn't too super big here -- this here is -- is the eastern
part of northern Belle Meade. Then we go over into the
northern part of northern Golden Gate Estates, which
connects over to the panther lands.
This is southern Golden Gate Estates up here, and
then on the other side right there, Southern Belle Meade.
And you can see just the -- the large expanses of habitat
available for panther in this particular location. And
generally, with the exception of having the extra lane of
I-75 -- extra two lanes of I-75 in. And the exception of
some panther under-crossings between the panther preserve
and the Fakahatchee area and also an extra canal on the
south side, it's pretty much the same view today, and so
that is why it's very important for this area to be
Page 105
February 6, 2002
considered for preservation and why it certainly qualifies
as a natural resource protection area, the northern
portion of Belle Meade. Next slide, please.
And just a view off the -- the side of the road;
situation like that, the roads themselves can constitute
to very significant barriers. And before we did the
rebuild work back in the '80s on Alligator Alley, which
was not yet done, to be designated I-75, was the major
source of mortality for Florida panther in this region of
Collier County, was that particular roadway.
So I worked at that time with a lot of other great
biologists and a lot of other good people in the public
and in the government, and I have to say that public
support was very instrumental in having the support from
legislators to be able to fund this.
We put together a design for panther under --
wildlife under-crossings for Florida panther under the
rebuilt Interstate I-75. And I want to point out some
design features just so people -- there's been some things
said about these which aren't accurate, just to point that
out to you.
Note that there is dry ground on both sides of the
underpass, and it's designed to provide a crossing of
those canal features. And it was important to us, too,
because we wanted to segment the canals into successive
pools to promote sheet flow across the landscape instead
of linear through -- through the canals to adjacent canals
and downstream. This helped rehydrate areas which had
been cut off from flows south of the Alligator Alley. So
,.� this is a panther under-crossing. This is the westernmost
one, the -- the very first one that -- that starts out in
Page 106
February 6, 2002
Fakahatchee. Next slide, please.
Here's one in the Fakahatchee Strand proper. And you
know you're there because you don't see the southern canal
in the Fakahatchee Strand. We made an arrangement with
the people building the roadway not to dig a canal through
the Fakahatchee Strand and alter its hydrology, but
instead to build -- to buy the 4 square miles around the
intersection of State Road 29 and I-75 so that those would
not be developed as secondary fume of impacts and to take
the fill for the road out of that large lake excavation in
the southwest corner of that intersection.
At the same time, we made sure that that lake was dug
in a way to enhance fishery habitat values so it would be
a better bass fishery in that particular location, provide
more habitat for wading birds.
So we worked very well with the Federal Highway
Administration in putting in these features.
Next slide, please.
CHAIRMAN COE: Excuse me. How good is the bass
fishing there?
MR. BEEVER: I've heard var -- variable reports,
depending on the time and weather. I've heard some
very -- very good bass fish if you stay in the northern
perimeter where it's more -- more shallow, more rough
features. Not good when you first pull off where
people -- everybody parks. You have to go in a little
way.
Just to point out, this is the first time in -- in
that -- Florida in the southeast we've done a wildlife
,.� underpass of this scale. And there was significant
resistance to this, and we had to really persevere to make
Page 107
February 6, 2002
sure these design features were put in. Interest -- and
there was a lot of resistance from the people building the
highway. Interestingly enough, now they go around to
international conferences very proud of their
accomplishment.
One of the big questions was, well, if you build
these, will the animals use them? Now, one thing is, you
don't just put these in and expect -- you know, put signs
and say, "Panthers, use the underpasses here." You locate
where the panthers are currently moving through that area
and locate the undercrossings along the areas that they're
utilizing. So it took quite a bit of study to determine
where these underpasses would be located. Next slide,
please.
And then here's your eyeview as -- as you approach
one of these. They're funnel fences. There's fencing
along the interstate, 12 foot with a barbed wire return to
discourage the animals from climbing over the fences.
There's funnel fences that lead you towards these
underpasses.
But even so, these are areas they had always been
crossing under. And I -- what I wanted to point out here
is how relatively open it is. You can see to the other
side of where you're going. And that's important in
wildlife underpass design.
Also important is a natural flooring. You don't want
to have them going over grates, rock, other foreign
materials. Next slide, please.
And this is in the middle of an -- of one of these
underpasses. You know, I'm standing up here just giving
you a view. The base design was supposed to be a 12-foot
Page 108
February 6, 2002
to the lowest number. It came out to, I think about 10 --
10 foot 8 inches by the time they got done.
But nonetheless, people were saying, okay, you put
them in the place you want them to be and so forth. Prove
it to us they're being used.
Well, a study was done by researchers at the
University of Florida, Dr. Steve Humphrey and his graduate
student. And his graduate student actually did her
master's degree on this project. Cameras were put into
the underpasses with an invisible beam, so as animals
moved through them, they triggered the camera and
photographed themselves. So here's one of our collared
cats moving through the underpass. Next slide, please.
MR. CARLSON: Does anybody know what the panther does
after that flash goes off?
MR. BEEVER: It keeps walking from what -- from what
the -- the tracks indicate.
And -- and another -- this is a -- a different
individual. Not just panthers have used these. A wide
variety of wildlife have taken advantage of the
underpasses, including young deer.
And just to show you, again, another criticism, even
when underpasses are under high water, wildlife will
utilize the relatively shallower water to get past and
underneath the highway. And even species you wouldn't
necessarily have predicted have used the underpasses.
Here are wild turkey.
And we have alligators, wading birds, all sorts of
things that have moved through there. The oddest creature
we -- we had was an individual dressed up in a gorilla
suit with a sign that said, "Waste of taxpayers' dollars."
Page 109
February 6, 2002
For a moment we thought we had a skunk ape siting.
There was a -- some concern about the relative cost
of these large undercrossings on I-75. The people were
claiming it would be costing about a million dollars.
Once you do the real cost accounting, it's about
three-quarters of a million dollars for one of the
overpass features, including the fill and everything
leading up to it.
So designs were put together for a somewhat smaller
undercrossing still with good height clearance, and this
is one -- well, let's leave that up for a little bit.
This is one that has been installed on State Road 29 in
Collier County, the north-south road that intersects with
Interstate 75. And this has proven also to be successful
for the panthers in that area as long as the fencing is
in.
And basically it's -- it's very critical if you're
going to do underpasses, you've got to have the wildlife
fencing at the same time. And in some cases -- there have
occasionally been cases where underpasses have been
installed, the fences haven't been put in yet, and there's
still road mortality until the fences are put in.
Now, in the case of northern Belle Meade, between
southern and northern Belle Meade today, we do not have
any of these features. We do not have I-75-sized
undercrossing or even the somewhat smaller State Road
29-sized undercrossings.
Currently there are -- and that's what we're going to
look at -- some drainage features, essentially equilizer
culverts that have -- that are in place to allow water to
flow through, and it's possible that wildlife is use --
Page 110
February 6, 2002
utilizing this to get between northern and southern
Belle Meade.
Now I'm going to go back to the color handout.
But there's good evidence that right now most of the
panther movement to get into northern Belle Meade is
actually coming through -- is coming from cats moving from
the east to the west through the area of the southern end
of northern Golden Gate Estates and then into the northern
Belle Meade. See, it's -- it's possible, utilizing
existing wildlife underpasses for panther to come from the.
south up through here very easily between the panther
preserve in Fakahatchee, and then any animals that are in
this area or animals that come from the south there can
move across the landscape from the east going back to the
west.
MR. CARLSON: Is the test track fence to prevent
their movement? They got to go around?
MR. BEEVER: I've heard various discussions with
that, and you might want to ask Darryl Land for more
details. My understanding is that they move both around
the fence and they've actually come inside the fence into
the test track area, across the test track and gone over
the fence on the other side.
So basically, you can see that panther do get into
northern Belle Meade today, and I anticipate during the
periods in which they're talking about the rebuild of I-75
and restructuring of I-75 and reviewing, that with the
commission right now from an area in Sarasota County all
the way back down into Collier, we will request that
wildlife underpasses be included in the plan between
northern and southern Belle Meade.
Page 111
February 6, 2002
Now, panther can act as an umbrella species.
Thanks. And quite a -- other -- list of other listed
species are found in the same habitats as the Florida
panther in Belle Meade. And Florida black bear is
definitely present in the northern Belle Meade area. And
actually somewhat more prevalent. If I'd go out with you
today -- let's say we took -- say we wanted to go on a
field trip, I'd be much more likely to be able to show you
a sign of black bear in northern Belle Meade than
panther. Next slide, please.
So basically I wanted to share this information with
you. I'll be glad to answer any questions you might have
that I can answer, and I'll direct you to our experts if I
don't have the direct answer for you.
CHAIRMAN COE: Do you have any questions?
MR. HILL: You said there are 80 adults
approximately?
MR. BEEVER: Uh-huh.
MR. HILL: And less than that collared, obviously.
MR. BEEVER: Yes.
MR. HILL: There's a tremendous number or telemetries
points on here for just that number of panthers.
MR. BEEVER: Well --
MR. HILL: You must be running a lot of flights to
pick up that many data points.
MR. BEEVER: Understand that each data point is one
sighting of each cat on one particular day. So -- and
it's covering '94 to '99, so it's over a five-year period.
CHAIRMAN COE: Any other questions?
MR. HILL: The 80 adults is in -- in Collier County
or --
Page 112
February 6, 2002
MR. BEEVER: Within that -- within the range of
Collier, Lee, Hendry, a few in Glades.
MR. HILL: Right.
MR. STONE: Have any of the cats ever been snagged
with their collars?
MR. BEEVER: From what people have determined, no.
The -- the collar design doesn't seem to interfere with
their life-style, so we've never found any -- where
somebody came and found a cat that had been caught in
something or any evidence on the collars that they had
been caught on something.
CHAIRMAN COE: Any other questions?
MS. BURGESON: I have a quick question. Are there
any areas that you suspect, for whatever reason, don't
work well with the -- the collaring program that you think
the panthers may be inhabiting but we have no
accountability for?
MR. BEEVER: Well, there -- in order to do the
collaring program, you have to undertake the work with the
people who are expert with the dogs and -- and the
tracking of panthers. So you have to have that step in
order to start collaring.
So that's been concentrated in areas where we've had
the breeding population. And in other locations where we
know there are young males, there hasn't been that same
level of effort in -- in other areas.
MS. BURGESON: Do you know what particular areas that
you're interested in --
MR. BEEVER: I know that the Division of Wildlife was
,.� looking at areas north of Collier County, north of
southwest Florida, but they've just done preliminary
Page 113
February 6, 2002
investigations and really hadn't implemented a collaring
program.
There have been black bear collaring programs here in
Collier County. Darryl Land, again, has all the
information on that. And there's also been collaring
programs on black bear up in Pasco and Hernando County
which I participated in. They're -- they're rather
prevalent in areas of Chassahowitzka Loxahatchee State
Forest.
CHAIRMAN COE: Okay. Any other questions?
Thank you very much.
MR. BEEVER: You're welcome.
MR. HILL: Thank you.
CHAIRMAN COE: Okay. Next is the Growth Management
update. Nothing there.
Subcommittee Report? Nothing there.
Any comments by any other members of the EAC?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Public comments?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COE: Nope.
Meeting's adjourned. Thank you very much.
Page 114
February 6, 2002
* * * *
There being no further business for the good of the County, the
meeting was adjourned by order of the Chair at 12:30 p.m.
ENVIRONMENTAL ADVISORY COUNCIL
�
./(
1 t‘'Y
ICHAEL . COE, CHAIRMAN
TRANSCRIPT PREPARED ON BEHALF OF DONOVAN COURT
REPORTING, INC., BY LINDA J. SULLIVAN, RPR.
Page 115
ENVIRONMENTAL ADVISORY COUNCIL
SPECIAL MEETING AGENDA
January 23, 2002
9:00 A.M.—3:00 PM
Commission Boardroom
W. Harmon Turner Building(Building"F")—Third Floor
I. Roll Call
II. Presentation on Proposed Growth Management Plan Amendments Prepared in
Response to the Governor and Cabinet's Final Order. Presented by speakers Bill
Lorenz,Natural Resources Director and Bob Mulhere,RWA,Inc.
III. Council Member Comments
IV. Adjournment
*********************************************************************************
Council Members: Please notify the Current Planning Secretary no later than 5:00 p.m. on January 16,2002 if
you cannot attend this meeting or if you have a conflict and will abstain from voting on a particular petition
(659-5741).
January 23, 2002
TRANSCRIPT OF THE SPECIAL MEETING OF THE
ENVIRONMENTAL ADVISORY COUNCIL
Naples, Florida, January 23, 2002
LET IT BE REMEMBERED, that the Environmental Advisory
Council, in and for the County of Collier, having conducted business
herein, met on this date at 9 a.m. in SPECIAL SESSION in Building
"F" of the Government Complex, East Naples, Florida, with the
following members present:
CHAIRMAN: Thomas Sansbury
Ed Carlson
Michael G. Coe
William W. Hill
Alfred F. Gal
Larry Stone
Erica Lynne
NOT PRESENT: Alexandra Santoro
Chester Soling
ALSO PRESENT:
Marjorie Student, Assistant County Attorney
Barbara Burgeson, Senior Environmental Specialist
William Lorenz, Natural Resources Director
Stan Litsinger, Comprehensive Planning Manager
Mac Hatcher, Natural Resources
Page 1
January 23, 2002
(The proceedings commenced, Mr. Gal not present:)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Let's call the January 23rd special
meeting of the Environmental Advisory Council to order. Roll call,
would you like me to do that? All right. Mr. Carlson.
MR. CARLSON: Here.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Coe.
MR. COE: Here.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Stone.
MR. STONE: Here.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Ms. Lynne.
MS. LYNNE: Here.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Mr. Gal and Mr. Soling are not
here. Ms. Santoro is not here. Mr. Sansbury is here, and Mr. Hill.
MR. HILL: Here.
MR. LORENZ: Mr. Chairman --
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: We do have a quorum with one, ^
two, three, four, five, six members present.
MR. LORENZ: Mr. Chairman, we did get word that Mr. Gal
will be -- will be here, but he's running a little late.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Very good. Okay. Where would
you like to start, sir?
MR. LORENZ: Okay. For the record, Bill Lorenz, natural
resources director. The purpose of today's meeting for the EAC is to
begin your formal review ultimately leading to a set of
recommendations to the Board of County Commissioners for the
Growth Management Plan amendments that will deal with the rural
and agricultural assessment. Todate's -- today's amendments are
dealing with what we'll call the rural fringe, and I'll define that for
you as we get into our present -- presentation.
We have -- I'm going to be beginning the lead of the
presentation. Bob Mulhere is also here. He's been our contractor that
Page 2
January 23, 2002
we've contracted with with this process. He was the former planning
director and was involved in the very beginnings of this whole effort.
Stan Litsinger is also here. He's the comprehensive planning
manager. Other staff members here that will be key that will be able
to answer questions and any discussion would be Barbara Burgeson
and Mac Hatcher.
With that, what I'd like to do is I'd like to go through this
presentation and then have the opportunity, however the chair would
like it, for questions as we go through the presentation. This will
give you an -- an overview of what we consider is the conceptual
outline of how we put together some details for the rural fringe.
Then I know that the -- this is an advertised meeting. There are
a number of public here that I know that we have at least one speaker
slip. I'm not sure if-- if there's a requirement for the EAC to have a
speaker -- speaker slip, but however the chair would like to handle
speakers, and then it's at the discretion of the EAC as how -- how you
want to proceed. There are a number of topics in this that's quite a
lengthy set of amendments. If you want to get into the detail, staff is
he'll -- here to be able to explain some of the detail and the wording
as well.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: How many people do we have
here that -- that would like to address the EAC on these various items
today? Would you raise your hand?
(Those wishing to speak raised their hands to indicate.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Miss Student, do you think we
ought to do the speaker slips just order-wise so we have a record, or
what do you --
MS. STUDENT: I beg -- I beg your pardon?
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Do you think we ought to have
these folks fill out a speaker slip? We don't usually do that at EAC.
What's the best --
Page 3
January 23, 2002
MS. STUDENT: I -- I think that's -- given the magnitude of
this, I think that's a good idea, even though it's not usually done. I --
there's apparently one here. I'll see if there are some.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. All right.
MS. STUDENT: Staff will take care of making those available.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: The person -- some folk --if you
could fill those out and bring those up to -- Miss Student, will you be
the keeper of the slips for me?
MS. STUDENT: Yes, I will.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Thank you very much. All right.
MR. LORENZ: The starting point, if you will, for the
presentation, of course, the -- pretty much the whole effort is the final
order requirements, and what -- I'm going to just briefly summarize
the final order. This is the order by the governor and cabinet that
directed Collier County to pursue a series of amendments to ensure
that we have a proper natural resource protection within our Growth
Management Plan. Very specifically the order has -- I'm going to
basically list three types of-- of requirements.
The first requirement is to deal with measures to protect prime
agricultural areas. The definition of prime -- technical definition of
prime agriculture is such that we do not have any prime agricultural
lands in Collier County. We have unique lands, agricultural lands
by -- by formal definition. But suffice it to say that the agricultural
issues, quite frankly, are not in the rural fringe, but in the eastern
lands, which is the -- the other part of the rural assessment.
A very important component that's related to the rural fringe
area is a second requirement, which is to direct incompatible uses
away from wetlands and habitats to protect listed species, water
quality, quantity concerns, etc. This is, if you will, almost the mantra
that -- that -- that we have with regard to establishing what our
requirements are, and our amendments will be to protect natural
Page 4
January 23, 2002
resources along these lines.
The final order, however, also recognizes that as we assess the
potential of the area to -- to grow and to convert the rural lands, that
not only do we want to discourage -- discourage urban sprawl and
protect our natural resources, but the order also encourages the
county to develop techniques that will be fairly creative in terms of
land-use planning. And so as we have crafted the total program, we
have been sensitive to trying to develop some -- some fairly creative
land-use techniques, and we'll outline those as -- as we go through the
presentation.
The -- the assessment area -- and I'm not sure whether maybe,
perhaps, some staff could, perhaps, do some more work with the
lighting there, but all of Collier County -- the rural fringe is basically
this area that we're looking at right here. That's the area that -- that
our -- our amendments will -- will focus on, except for some
amendments that, if you will, are what we're calling county-wide, but
they will not include what we're calling the eastern lands study area,
which is this area here (indicating). This -- this area has gone
through a separate tract with a separate advisory committee. They're
still in the formulative stages of their conceptual strategies and
protection mechanisms. So for -- for all of our effort today, we will
basically be excluding this eastern lands area that you see here.
The rural fringe area is roughly 93,000 acres. It includes a
number of-- of-- of different areas. And for the purposes of getting
you oriented and you getting some terminology here because -- I'm
not sure some -- to some degree some of the EAC members have
been involved in this but from -- from some of the preliminary work,
and some others may not. And, of course, the public -- use some
terminology here. N-R-P-A is the acronym for Natural Resource
Protection Area. These -- these are areas that the -- part of the final
order required Collier County to adopt a set of interim NRPAs to be
Page 5
January 23, 2002
refined and revise -- possibly revised through the rural assessment.
So we have natural resource protection areas in the rural fringe.
Basically the -- they're the CREW natural resource protection area
and the Belle Meade CARL natural resource protection area.
(Mr. Gal entered the room.)
MR. LORENZ: Initially when we developed the set -- set of
planning for the -- for the fringe, we also broke the area up into Areas
A, B, C, and D. And also we broke out what's called the study area.
The study area is roughly this area right here (indicating). This was
not proposed as a natural resource protection area but as part of the
remedial amendments the county has to consider as to whether it
should be a natural resource protection area.
The other areas that we identified -- initially we just simply said
Area -- Area A is up in here (indicating). This is basically the
Corkscrew community. Area B is along Immokalee Road. Area C is
everything north of 75, between 75 and the estates, and then Area D
is down here along 41. So these were our initial planning units in the
rural fringe area.
We use this slide for a couple of things. One is -- of course, it
depicts the kinds of general land cover that we have in the rural
fringe. I want to make a couple of points about data -- data sources.
We've used the South Florida Water Management District's land
cover database in our analysis. This data -- this database is areas that
were identified in 1994, 1995 to the degree that we have additional
data that was presented to staff. Staff has modified this database,
along with other resource-type database giving current information.
And so whereas we're use -- using the '94, '95 land cover database, it
has been updated to the degree that we have information to update it.
The second thing to note is also we worked with the GIS in our
analysis, geographic information system, based upon databases that
we have gotten from the state and a variety of different agencies.
Page 6
January 23, 2002
And these -- these -- these analyses as we start -- and I use the term
"slicing and dicing" the area up and try to calculate the numbers, you
automatically establish -- work about a 2 or 3 percent kind of error
into some of the figures.
From a planning standpoint, we feel -- feel that this is
acceptable. The South Florida Water Management District's
database, they say that their accuracy at what's called a Level 1
accuracy is plus or minus 10 percent. So as we go through the -- the
numbers when we start trying to assess significance of how different
the numbers are, I just want to make sure that everybody is aware a
little bit of the -- the accuracy requirements and -- and the databases
that we're dealing with.
The other point I want to make about this slide is you can see
right here that wetlands consist of 61 percent of the -- of the rural
fringe area. Not surprisingly, Collier County as in historical Collier
County was, you know, certainly above 80 percent wetland systems.
With development, variety of different kinds of development, and
land alterations, of course, our current wetlands are substantially less
than the historical wetlands.
But this is the wetland -- when we talk about wetlands, we're
also talking about the wetland cover that's listed by the South Florida
Water Management District. It -- it does not completely equate to
jurisdictional wetlands that you would go out in the field and identify
through the state statutes, whether it's a state jurisdictional wetland or
forest jurisdictional wetland. But this is an indication of wetland
systems in the county.
We'll talk a little bit more about the distribution of wetlands in
the rural fringe. A major point here is that the natural resource
protection areas consist -- cap -- capture, you know, three-fourths --
more than three-fourths of-- of the wetland land cover in the rural
fringe area.
Page 7
January 23, 2002
I think another important piece of information here is that -- is
that the study area that I identified earlier also -- it has a fair amount
of wetlands captured within it. That's 9 percent within the study area.
We have looked at a variety and -- and a number of parameters
to help us gauge what the natural resource characteristics are of the
rural fringe area. Working with the Rural Fringe Advisory
Committee, we identified a number of evaluation factors. I didn't put
that slide in -- in the presentation, but we looked at -- at wetlands, we
looked at listed species. We looked at upland habitats, we looked at
conservation areas and degree of fragmentation, and pulled together a
fair amount of information to start the process.
And what I'm going to do at this point is to just list a couple of
the key pieces of information that we pulled out that I think give you
a good sense of-- of how the error -- area is characterized. This is
priority wetlands for listed species. Not only -- this information
comes out of the -- the old, what's called the GAP report. This is the
Florida Game and Freshwater Fish Commission report that was
established in the early '90s. A little bit about this -- information
about this, the underlying map data for this database was satellite
imagery from the mid-'80s, and so when the -- when this report is --
has been -- was published in the early '90s, this was the database that
it had.
Now, again, although we couldn't change the listed species
information within the database, what staff has done is every place
where in the South Florida Water Management District database that
we have updated the land cover, when the land cover goes from some
type of native habitat or -- or -- or vegetative land cover to a
disturbed area, we have taken that out, also, of this database. So we
have updated these databases to the degree that we have updated
information.
But I think -- I think, again, is although we've calculated the
Page 8
January 23, 2002
numbers, what -- what I'm really trying to get get across here is
some general patterns so that you can -- so that we'll make some
certain conclusions in terms of when we're looking at the information
and we're looking at the spatial relationships.
MR. CARLSON: Bill, may I make a comment?
MR. LORENZ: Sure.
MR. CARLSON: This is a perfect opportunity to make a point I
was going to make somewhere in this discussion. But while this slide
is up, I think this is the perfect opportunity in that I think that Area"A
is -- is highly undervalued in this whole process. It -- if you look at
the proportion of the priority wetlands for listed species that basically
surround that area and then realize that that area has no canal system
and no real drainage and is rural and is basically open space, the
wildlife that are using the NRPA roam freely back and forth through
that area. I mean, if you want to see bears and panthers and deer,
•-� going into Area A is one of the best places in the county to do that.
Also, when wood storks fledge out of that NRPA area, they use
that neighborhood extensively, and it's easy to see fifty to a hundred
in a -- in a flock in that region. And, you know, while that area is not
dominated by high-quality wetlands, it does have some high-quality
wetlands, but it has this habitat value and this range value that is not
addressed in this study, and I think it's highly undervalued and not an
appropriate target for what's going to hap -- what is proposed to have
it as a receiving area.
MR. LORENZ: Yes. I think that -- that's a good comment.
One of the points that we'll be making in the slide presentation as we
go through it is that we've listed somewhat of hot-button issues, and
that is going to be a hot-button issue that is definitely worthwhile
for -- for further discussion.
,.� The -- the key of this -- this slide, again, is the natural resource
protection areas, you know, capture almost 80 percent of the
Page 9
January 23, 2002
important wetlands for listed species within the rural fringe.
Again, sim -- similar patterns here, and I won't belabor it too
much. Biodiversity hot spots are those areas that the game
commission, state game commission, has determined are very
important for listed species based upon the habitat concerns.
You see, let's say, in Area D here a lack of those hot spots
because of the land cover. Given -- given even -- given the
conditions that Ed had mentioned earlier, this is where -- where,
again, when you start plotting this kind of information, begin -- and
using this information solely, it leads you to look at that Area A does
not have this kind of-- of cover. And then -- but when you start
looking at some of the other areas such as north of 75, you see a -- a
lot of the area has this kind of cover. And even to some deg -- a large
degree below I-75 -- excuse me, Immokalee Road, within Area B you
see that that cover comes up quite a bit there.
Strategic habitat conservation areas is what the game
commission has defined as being the areas that are important for
acquisition based upon listed species and land-cover concerns. One
thing you have to realize is by definition a strat -- a -- strategic habitat
conservation areas do not include areas that have already been under
purchase for conservation so that the Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary
up here is not listed as a strategic -- strategic habitat conservation
area because by definition it's already been acquired. However, if
you start looking at the -- the -- the areas, again, where it's capturing
that kind of information, area north of-- north of 75 is quite
extensive. Of course, our -- our natural resource protection areas also
capture those areas fairly well.
A little bit more of the same, just to put it in -- in a -- in,
perhaps, a different perspective, we talked about land cover, listed
species. Some other information that we -- that we pulled out and
tabulated at one particular point in the process of slough wetlands and
Page 10
January 23, 2002
isolated wetlands down here.
Again, the point of this slide is the natural resource protection
areas, the study area, all have fairly extensive composition, you
know, up -- above 70 percent. Seventy to ninety percent of these
types of parameters, again, effectively identifying where those areas
are important for habitat and listed species types of concerns. Area C
also ranks out and, if you will, fairly high as well.
Similar infor -- similar display we talked to you before about
strategic habitat, biodiversity hot spots. To these bars we also have
gathered data, so we do have this data in our database of panther
priority habitat, bear and panther habitat, and bear strategic habitat
that's come out of game commission GAPs report.
Same -- same pattern, same type of conclusion. NRPAs study
area, very high, Area C up here, and as you've seen before, even Area
,.� D. But then when you get down to Area D, Area A, again, given --
given Ed's qualification, they rank -- have been ranking fairly low
with that tabulated data.
Now, we talked about the study area, part of our requirement of
the final order is to -- in our remedial amendments is to determine
whether the north Belle Meade study area should or should not be a
natural resource protection area. When we look at the data and the
in -- and the information that we have available to us, again, we have
recommended that the study area be a natural resource protection
area. So in the maps you will see in further -- in further analysis that
we have done, we have -- we have assumed the -- the north Belle
Meade study area as a NRPA, and the data would be -- is being
proposed and being tabulated to that effect.
Well, again, the summary slide. Much of the land -- wetland
land cover listed species habitats are in our natural resource
protection areas.
Study area has similar characteristics as the other NRPAs, and
Page 11
January 23, 2002
so when we begin thinking about how are we going to identify these ^
protection mechanisms within the rural fringe area, it's -- it's very
important that the NRPAs and the study area be -- be front and center
with regard to our protection mechanisms.
Well, when we talk about protection mechanisms or protection
strategies, again, our -- our mantra, if you will, is direct incompatible
uses away from wetlands, upland habitats, listed species, etc. So we
needed to craft a -- an integrated strategy as to how to do that. And
we kind of broken it up into strategies that make sense on what we
call the landscape scale and then the project or site scale.
The landscape scale is very large areas. We're talking about
square miles of trying to identify boundaries, protection mechanisms,
etc.
Project site scale is -- is individual projects. As projects, of
course, will come through the county planning process, they need to
be properly planned. But they're -- they're happening at that -- at that
site scale.
The landscape scale is -- deals really with trying to prevent
fragmentation of these large, interconnected systems and having
appropriate tools that will work in that broad scale.
The project site scale, again, is -- you're not talking about these
broad areas, but we can -- we can identify and fashion a number of
different standards that would apply as projects come through that
help to minimize the effect of any human activity on that particular
property on -- on wetland land cover, listed species, etc., etc.
Now, on the -- at the landscape scale, again, we're looking for
the -- for these large systems, large -- identifications of large
ecosystems. The information that I provided you earlier to -- to a
large degree is the identification of those large systems. So we have
to identify the exact boundaries, and those would be our areas that we
would tailor our landscape strategies on.
Page 12
January 23, 2002
One -- one strategy, and it is not as specific strategy in our -- in
our policies that we have developed for the fringe yet, but would be
purchased in acquisition of these areas to some degree. The state
does have a number of our areas targeted for acquisition, the CREW
NRPA, areas are still targeted for acquisition, the Belle Meade
NRPA. And I'm talking about the south -- south of the Alley is
targeted for acquisition. And -- and those are within acquisition
programs.
A key element of our landscape scale strategy is, quite frankly,
of the whole strategy for the rural fringe with the transfer of
development rights program or TDR. At some future point, Bob
Mulhere will be able to jump in as we have questions to answer
specifically with the TDR program, but I'll just --just cover it very
briefly here now.
TDR program is, basically, taking -- everybody who owns
property has a certain amount of development rights. And when we
talk about development rights, we're talking about a residential unit.
So if your density of the property that you own is zoned at one unit
per five acres, you have the right to build one residential unit for
every five acres that you own.
If you choose to not develop that and participate in the county's
proposed TDR program, you're able to sell that development right in
the open market to whoever wants to buy it. When you sell that
development right, you then give up the right to develop your
property for that residential unit. You may have some residual uses
left on the property which we have -- have identified, but the whole
point there is to put that property now into a status that -- that ismuch
more conservation and preservation oriented.
Whoever buys that development right from that -- that person
now has the ability to use that development right to increase density
within a particular area. So the areas that we're talking about are
Page 13
January 23, 2002
sending areas. Those are the areas where we want to send the
development rights from. Those are our conservation -- our
protection areas. And we want to be able to utilize those
development rights in what we will call receiving areas, and I'll -- I'll
go over this in a little bit more detail later. But this is a key program,
a key element with regard to our program.
Another important tool at the landscape scale is overlay districts.
A natural resource protection area is technically an overlay district.
This is -- this is a district that you identify on the future land use map
that will have limitations placed upon it. And in natural resource
protection areas, one of the key limitations will be preservation
standards, vegetation preservation standards. And the allowable land
uses will be much less in -- in these special overlay districts than they
will in areas where we want to funnel development, if you will.
Another landscape scale tool is -- is buffer zones. What we're
talking about here is not buffering an individual wetland in a project
that -- that will come through for the planning process. But what
we're trying to do is buffering the important environmental areas, the
natural resource protection areas, and in areas that are designated as
conservation in our future land use maps. So these types of
mechanisms will operate, say, at the landscape scale.
So let's talk about a little bit these areas that we -- we are
speaking of. These -- we are proposing three basic natural resource
protection areas in the -- the fringe. This is the CREW NRPA. This
is the Belle -- south Belle Meade NRPA (indicating), and this is the
north Belle Meade NRPA (indicating). We've made a few changes,
and I'll -- I'll have a slide later on -- a few changes to the CREW
NRPA in drawing this boundary line. The big change, of course, is
converting the north Belle Meade study area into a -- a NRPA.
Just, also, to give you some sense of-- of-- of area here, 951 is
here (indicating), and this boundary is -- is base -- starts at one mile
Page 14
January 23, 2002
east of 951. Sometimes 951 doesn't show up on the map as well.
So these are our natural resource protection areas that we
consider. If-- if you recall the data that we provided before, we feel
that these match up fairly good with the -- the type of information
that we -- we have been assessing.
The other landscape feature here from the -- from a TDR,
transfer of development rights, program perspective is, again,
identification of sending and receiving lands. Sending lands are the
environmentally sensitive areas. And what we. have -- what we
have -- I'll give you an example. Right down in here in this sending
area (indicating). You can see it not only incorporates the natural
resource protection area, but it also increase -- increases this -- it's --
the sending area also includes this -- this (indicating) area up here and
also includes all of this area to the (indicating) west of the NRPA.
Remember, when we started looking at our databases, and we
would see that these areas mapped out as very high and significant
from the land cover and listed species concerns. So although they --
we're saying that they don't raise to the level as a natural resource
protection area, they are certainly areas that we want to direct
development away from.
So where do we direct the development to? Well, that's our
receiving areas. And these areas are mapped out as black on this map
here (indicating). Again, area -- if you will, Area A was mapped out
as a receiving area. This area within D is mapped out as a
(indicating) -- let me make a distinction. These are primary receiving
areas that I'm mapping out.
When we look at the data, however, we start seeing that -- that
some of these areas kind of fall in between, and we created a
secondary status, which is a secondary receiving area, and that's this
,.� area here (indicating), and that's this area here.
MR. CARLSON: Let me -- while we're there, let me ask you
Page 15
January 23, 2002
about that first secondary receiving area. Isn't that the Mirasol
project?
MR. LORENZ: That's correct.
MR. CARLSON: Well, hasn't that been approved, and isn't that
a preserve area?
MR. LORENZ: That has gone through the county's process. It
was within -- it was within the time frame of when we were going
through this effort. I may want to have Bob talk about the concerns
whether -- as to how that status may affect its -- its future functioning
as a receiving area.
MR. MULHERE: I'm not sure if all of that first secondary
receiving area is identified as preserve in Mirasol. We can certainly
check that. I think your point is if it is already spoken for as a
preserve area in an approved PUD -- and this came up in discussion
at the committee as well -- then there would -- there would be really
no reason to identify it as a secondary receiving area. So we'll go
ahead and take a look at that. I don't think all of it is. I know that
one section was identified as a preserve area, but we can check on
that and -- and address that -- that issue.
MR. CARLSON: There are also some sending areas where I
have the same -- same questions where, for instance, in the
proposed -- in the -- in the map on the left -- go up to the top -- those
are the sending areas. In the -- and go over to the left. Yeah, right in
there. Okay. Now, that area is under conservation easement to the
CREW trust for activities that happened on the Florida Rock Mule
Pin Quarry area, so that is in perpetuity a conservation easement. So
would that -- would something that's in a permanent conservation
easement already qualify as a sending area? Would you want to send
units out of there if the area is already protected in perpetuity?
MR. MULHERE: If it's dedicated to a public entity, the answer
is no. If it's private -- if it's private, the answer is largely yes.
Page 16
January 23, 2002
MR. CARLSON: Just to the right of that, that little lobe that
dips down into the south is -- is a -- is a cypress forest in the Bonita
Bay Cypress golf club, which they have also established as a preserve
area. That's -- that's my question. I mean, if it's already preserved,
it's a done deal, is it, then, a sending area?
MR. MULHERE: Yes, it would be. In that example, regardless
of whether that private property owner has dedicated a portion of
their property as a conservation or preserve area, they retain the right
to develop the gross density on their property elsewhere. And if we
choose to not have that -- that density developed elsewhere on the
property, which we do since we're identifying it as a sending area,
then they would have the right to send those units on a gross basis
and not -- not to determine, well, we won't send them from this area,
but we will send them from this area. You know, you're permitted to
develop your gross density in a project.
MR. CARLSON: But they're happy with their project, and
they're not lobbying for sending anything anywhere.
MR. MULHERE: Right.
MR. CARLSON: They're done.
MR. MULHERE: Well, the way we develop these policies, they
apply to all private property owners and --
MR. CARLSON: This is like a bonus to anybody that's in a
project here. If you have a wetland on your site that's preserved,
we're going to come in now after it's all done and you've agreed to
preserve it and we're going to grant you a bonus to transfer units out
of there and get paid for them?
MR. MULHERE: That's correct. It's an incentive bonus.
MR. CARLSON: Why -- why the incentive now? It's done.
MR. MULHERE: Well, I -- I --
MR. CARLSON: They approved it. They agreed to it.
MR. MULHERE: Well -- and I would -- I would say that they
Page 17
January 23, 2002
could still develop that property elsewhere outside of that
conservation easement at their underlying density potentially, and
now this would take away that opportunity from occurring under the
sending designation. I don't know if the entire area that's designated
sending on the Bonita Bay golf course is in a conservation easement
or not. We did not look at the site specific scale. We really looked
based on the natural resource data, and the determinations were made
as a result of that. We do only allow TDRs for private lands and not
for public lands and only within areas designated or proposed to be
designated as the rural fringe mixed-use district, not on conservation
lands, regardless of whether they're public or private.
MR. CARLSON: Well, this is very important because you're --
you're -- you're scaling the size of your receiving areas based on the
amount of your sending areas; correct?
MR. MULHERE: No, that -- that -- it happens that the sizes fit
within the recommended scales. We did not change the sizes of those
in order to accomplish something based on those recommended
scales. We did not -- we did not scale sending and receiving to meet
some formula, no. It's based on the natural resource data, period.
MR. CARLSON: There's no relationship and scale between
your sending area.
MR. MULHERE: There is a relationship to scale, but that
wasn't the basis for prescribing those boundaries. We didn't look at
that and say, "You know what? We need a little more receiving area.
Let's take this area and make it receiving," or "You know, what? We
need a little less sending, so let's take this and make it less sending."
We didn't do that. Those boundaries are based on the natural
resource data. Correct me if I'm wrong, Bill.
MR. LORENZ: That -- that -- that's correct. I think what --
what -- Dr. Nicholas, who is our economist who is looking at the
TDR program, has a rule of thumb that the receiving area should be
Page 18
January 23, 2002
twice as large as -- as the sending area. So that's a ratio of 2 to 1.
After we went through the process and identified these proposals
for sending and receiving areas, that ratio at the moment is about 1.3.
MR. MULHERE: I'd like --
MR. LORENZ: That -- that -- that is -- that's, if you will, a ratio
that we have to be, I think, sensitive to that as we were to -- if we
were to make any modifications to the sending and receiving areas
that, of course, the primary reason for doing it is for natural resource
protection for the sending areas and then, also, to make sure that we
have a valid -- valid TDR program such that -- that we are insuring
compensation to owners who are going to have high preservation
standards on their property that they will be able to recoup their value
through a successful TDR program.
So I wouldn't want to say that it's -- you have to do it all in a
vacuum so there is -- there is -- there will be considerations, sending,
receiving natural resources, but I think -- I know myself and my staff,
as we begin to develop the proposals for sending and receiving, we
were looking at -- at the natural resource data.
MR. MULHERE: But having said that, I think it's -- your --
your point is a very good point. And -- and the question, then,
becomes a policy question of whether or not -- and we've already said
that we're only going to allow transfers from privately owned lands
within the lands designated rural fringe mixed-use district sending.
And so your question is, should we further restrict that, I think, and
correct me if I'm wrong, should we further restrict that to exclude
lands on which there is already a conservation easement existing.
And I think it's a very good point, and it would -- I think the second
point that you make is, yes, it would enhance the relationship
between sending and receiving if additional sending lands were
removed under a policy such as the one that you just described,
which would prohibit a transfer from lands on which a conservation
Page 19
January 23, 2002
easement already exists.
And although we don't have that in there today, I think it's an
excellent point and excellent recommendation.
MR. CARLSON: I'm just -- you know, these maps are
important planning documents. People go to the maps, and they look
at the maps, and then they get an idea of what the plan is. I think --
I'm just trying to make the map accurate. If there are sending areas
that are really nonfunctional, like areas that are already under
conservation by the CREW, there's -- you know, there's -- we -- if we
can get into the detail of the map, I'll show you a lot of sending areas
in that northern fringe area that are not really sending areas, because
either Audubon owns it or the district owns it or it's already under
conservation. And it just doesn't seem to represent the real-life
situation that's out there. And I also just heard that the target is to
have twice as many re -- twice as much receiving area as sending
area, so there is that relationship.
MR. MULHERE: Well, the -- the target may be that, but that
was not the basis for mapping those areas, which is what I indicated.
That was not the basis for mapping those areas.
Now, I hear what you're saying. I don't disagree with what
you're saying. I'm not sure about the sending areas in the north, and
that's something that, perhaps, Bill and Mac can get to look at.
MR. CARLSON: Well, I'm sure about them. I could correct the
map today if you want to correct it.
MR. MULHERE: Kady, could you put on the visualizer?
Thank you.
In any case, I don't think that I would recommend that we
correct the map. As I indicated, I hear what you're saying, and my
recommendation would be that we include a policy that we consider
the inclusion of a policy that would preclude a transfer from lands on
which there is already a conservation easement. That still achieves
Page 20
January 23, 2002
your objective, but it doesn't necessarily mean that we have to have a
map that you may not even be able to see that spot on this map
because of the scale that we're talking about.
MR. CARLSON: I was talking about lands that are very visible
on the map.
MR. MULHERE: Okay.
MR. CARLSON: I'm just trying to make the map accurate.
MR. LORENZ: Right. And I -- and we can work -- work with
you on that, Ed. One of the things -- and it doesn't show up in
looking at my -- my screen here --
MR. MULHERE: I'm trying to just enlarge this because we're
talking about the northern area; right? And if you look in this -- that
is the northern area. If you look at those areas that are orange -- it
doesn't show very well, but those little -- little areas that are orange
just north of the green and the little box that's cut out of the green
along Immokalee Road, those are the sending areas in the northern
portion. And so those would be the areas that you're talking about.
Some of those are inaccurate is what you're suggesting.
MR. CARLSON: I can -- I can show you very quickly. Can
you still hear me, Miss Court Reporter?
THE COURT REPORTER: Yes.
MR. CARLSON: Starting at the top, this area was donated to
the National Audubon Society through a bequest from the Paul Frank
family, 90 acres at the end of this parcel. All of this end (indicating)
of the parcel came to the South Florida Water Management District
and the CREW project as mitigation. There's a tiny segment -- there's
a tiny bit of land in the center here that's still in private ownership,
which is improved pasture, which is really no different than the rest
of the neighborhood.
This (indicating) is the land that's under a conservation
easement, almost 600 acres, transferred to the CREW trust in
Page 21
January 23, 2002
perpetuity to stay as a wetland conservation area.
This is the land (indicating) in the Bonita Bay Cypress course
which is under preservation status. It's on here because on an aerial
photo it's a cypress swamp, so you just include it on there.
This is the Livingston Road mitigation area. I believe it's in
Collier County or some kind of a trust mode so that environmental
impacts of the construction of Livingston Road will be mitigated
here, and there will be wetlands creation and uplands creation on this
site.
This is a privately owned cypress swamp, and this.is -- this is
really one section of land that the Barron Collier Company owns that
they have elected never -- or not to sell to the Water Management
District for the CREW area, even though there have been repeated
offers. So this one I think you got.
MR. MULHERE: And the -- and the other one that you just
pointed to?
MR. CARLSON: This one?
MR. MULHERE: Correct.
MR. CARLSON: Sure, it's private property, and it's a beach
swamp.
MR. MULHERE: My suggestion would be -- I think those are
very good points. Mac is really the key person to try to verify the
conservation easements. And it -- I think, for those -- again, the
portion that's owned by the county would not be permit -- if it is, in
fact, owned by the county, there could be no transfer in that area
because we don't -- we don't allow a transfer from -- on publicly
owned lands or from publicly owned lands.
So the other ones that you pointed out -- I mean, Bill, do you
want to suggest that Mac take a look at that and then we revise the
map accordingly? I don't have any objection to that.
MR. LORENZ: Absolutely.
Page 22
January 23, 2002
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Yes, ma'am.
MS. LYNNE: I don't understand why land that's either already
in a conservation desig -- designation or is already in an approved
PUD where they've already cleared everything through the county -- I
don't understand why either of those need to be considered sending
areas. Why do it?
MR. MULHERE: Well, I think in the case of an approved PUD,
the question -- you have to ask another question. You know, is that
land protected within that PUD? If it's not protected within the PUD,
then the option of being able to send the land will result in a
protection of that. So to me that's fairly obvious.
MS. LYNNE: But it's not obvious to me. We've seen all kinds
of projects come through here where they have specifically set
aside --
MR. MULHERE: No, I understand.
MS. LYNNE: They have gotten their project because they have
set aside this --
MR. MULHERE: Right.
MS. LYNNE: -- land, okay? So I don't understand Why --
MR. MULHERE: Well, perhaps I wasn't clear. I understand
that. What if there are lands that are designated as sending that meet
those attributes based on their natural resource values and they're not
designated as conservation with an approved project but could be as a
result of a transfer of some of those units off?
MS. LYNNE: Okay. So you're saying we have an approved
PUD. It's -- it's up and running or is in the process of being built --
MR. MULHERE: Uh-huh. By the way, there are only a few.
There's only a couple out there.
MS. LYNNE: Well, some of them were pretty big --
,� MR. MULHERE: Yeah, true.
MS. LYNNE: -- like Mirasol.
Page 23
January 23, 2002
MR. MULHERE: True.
MS. LYNNE: And that was a -- they got a lot for -- in exchange
for setting up a conservation area.
MR. MULHERE: Absolutely.
MS. LYNNE: Now, they can't use that conservation area for
sending; right?
MR. MULHERE: Well, under the pol -- the way policies are
written today they could. However, we -- we have already said, we
understand what you're saying, we think it's a good recommendation,
and we would go ahead and -- and carry that recommendation
forward. So, you know, we're -- what I suggest --
MS. LYNNE: Okay.
MR. MULHERE: What I suggested was a policy that would
prohibit a transfer on lands that already have a conservation
designation on it. We haven't included that in the policies yet. It's a
great recommendation. That's why we're here, and we'll be happy to
bring that one forward.
MS. LYNNE: Got it. Thank you.
MR. CARLSON: So continuing down to the south end of the
rural fringe into the Belle Meade NRPA, that project is going along
very -- very well, from what I understand. And there have been
substantial purchases through the CARL program, the Florida
Forever program in south Belle Meade, yet that area is basically all
designated as sending. And based on what you just said, there's
probably the -- the minority of the area is eligible for sending.
MR. MULHERE: That's correct. No one would be able to send
a unit -- the government can't send units because we have precluded
sending from publicly owned parcel. So for every parcel that's in the
Belle Meade that the government owns today, you would not be able
to send a unit.
For those that are -- currently remain in private ownership or for
Page 24
January 23, 2002
which there are unwilling sellers, those folks would be able to
transfer those units. And it is an incentive to transfer those, which
would then reduce the cost --
MR. CARLSON: I'm not arguing with that. I'm just arguing
that maybe we need another color or some other kind of designation
on the map to show that that huge sending area in Belle Meade is not
really a huge sending area.
MR. MULHERE: Bill, do you want to --
MR. LORENZ: Yes. Let me cover that. To some degree the
discussion is we -- we couldn't map accurately. We didn't have the
database to show exactly which parcels are in privately owned lands.
And, quite frankly, that -- I mean, in publicly owned lands. And that
changes, of course, as the state acquires properties.
In our calculations we made a -- we -- we took some information
from the state, and that's why you see the 80 percent conservation
lands is that -- is that of that whole area that we've mapped out
roughly, we're -- we're making an estimate of eight -- is 80 percent is
in conservation land. So when we calculate our areas and we
calculate the number of units that are in sending lands, we -- we
have -- we have factored that, if you will, deduction into the -- into --
to the number crunching.
Now, what you're really saying is that -- is that the map itself,
we've -- we've mapped this whole area and called it sending area.
But, as Bob says, as a matter of policy, it's not going to be sending
from publicly owned conservation land. So we just have to try to --
try to work with, perhaps, a different series of maps or overlays to
help -- help explain or -- or see -- visualize that a little bit better. But
I can -- I guess what I can tell you is that our job, then; to take some
of the information that you've given us and where we have not
factored in publicly -- public ownership, we need to factor that in
and -- and -- and then recrunch our numbers and then, also, try to
Page 25
January 23, 2002
work on -- on a little bit better display of the map.
But I think, as Bob indicated too, we can handle this through
policy language that for whatever you don't get on the map you still
have to go to the policies, and the policies are going to -- going to
govern it for -- for that particular situation.
MR. MULHERE: Well, I think when you look at the scale, it's
very difficult -- at least traditionally it has been very difficult for the
county to map within the Belle Meade what parcels still remain in
private ownership, and -- and it wouldn't show up very well anyway.
There are some alternatives. You could do a series of maps, as
Bill indicated, and try to show that on an additional map and adopt
that, specific to the Belle Meade, perhaps.
Another option might be just to -- to provide a note on the future
land use map that indicates that currently approximately 80 percent of
the Belle Meade has been acquired and that the -- that although the
entire area is designated as sending, sending may only occur on those
lands that are -- remain in private ownership. So that might be one
way to clarify that on the map. It's just been very hard. The county
has never really been able to map where the state is in the acquisition
process accurately at that scale. This is -- you know, there's a lot on
this map.
So I think the next step, then, if that's -- if you wanted to do that,
I think the next step would be to create a series of maps that would
focus on a smaller area so you would have some scale to it.
MR. LORENZ: And, as I said, analytically we need to make
sure that we're not going to be violating any key criteria when we
start recrunching the numbers, because we can certainly change the
numbers, and it's not going to -- going to -- going to -- going to make
any difference in the findings themselves, but we'll try to work with
as accurate of numbers -- a set of numbers as possible.
Mr. Chairman, if I could make one -- one other point, I know
Page 26
January 23, 2002
that as we go through the presentation there are going to be a number
of issues that come about. I don't know whether it would be good
for -- for the -- for the council to consider someone having a running
list of what the issues that you want to get back to to frame some
motions later on in the meeting. We still have obviously, are going to
have opportunity for public -- for public comment. But ultimately
from staffs perspective, we would like to be able to have the council
take very specific motions so that we can carry your -- your actions to
the county commission appropriately.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: What I'm hearing is you would
like to go ahead through the presentation, have us make notes as we
go through the presentation, and come back after that, hear the public
comment on individual areas and our comment on the individual
areas after you complete the presentation?
MR. LORENZ: Yeah. I think that would be good. I think
everybody --
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. Is that all right? Sounds
good. Let's do it.
MR. LORENZ: The -- these series of slides, again -- and, Ed, if
you will, when we're talking about this whole area, this is the CREW
NRPA, you can see here we've designated just these portions of
sending. And what we've done is we've calculated the amount of--
amount of acreage within the sending lands so as we -- as we
recrunch the numbers with -- with additional data, we'll have to
revise these figures.
But based upon the information that we currently have, these
series of slides, again, to say that we're trying to, again, direct
incompatible land uses away from the natural resource features
within the rural fringe. And we're going to direct them to what we've
identified as -- as the receiving areas.
So when we look at wetland land cover, for instance, the
Page 27
January 23, 2002
primary receiving areas -- primary and secondary receiving areas
combine, total, only 12 percent of the land cover within the rural
fringe area. So the boundaries that we've currently designated lead us
to believe that as we develop direct land uses to these areas, we're
directing land uses to areas that will minimize the impacts on wetland
systems from a landscape perspective.
The other -- the other panel here on this slide shows the wetland
composition within each planning unit, and that is the amount that
wetlands -- let's say that if we take the NRPA sending lands, for
instance, on average the NRPA sending lands are 87 percent wetland
land cover, whereas the primary receiving areas is 18 percent wetland
land cover.
So, again, we feel that this -- the way we've sliced and diced
these -- these figures and -- and these boundaries, that we're -- we're,
again, accomplishing the objective of the landscape scale to direct
incompatible land uses away from the higher and more important
wetland systems.
Similar slides, again, I don't need to go through each -- each and
every one, but the similar pattern. If we look at total vegetation, total
vegetation includes upland and wetland. Again, the conservation and
sending lands have the vast, vast majority of-- of this parameter.
Primary receiving lands, one-third -- in some type of native
habitat. The other two-thirds have basically been disturbed areas,
farm fields, or what have you.
Again, strategic habitats, similar -- similar information, similar
conclusions. Conservation is low because it does not include the true
NRPA by -- I mean, the Corkscrew area by definition. But if it did, it
would -- it would be way up here.
MR. HILL: Bill, would you -- excuse me -- back up just one
side previous to this? Thank you.
MR. LORENZ: Just to frame it in a -- in a different visual,
Page 28
January 23, 2002
wetland -- conservation, NRPA, non-NRPA sending, these are the
areas that we want to direct the land use away from. These are the
areas that we want to direct the land -- the land uses to.
These arrows basically show that wet -- with regard to wetlands,
almost 90 percent of the wetland land cover is in the areas that we are
designating either under a conservation status or some type of
sending status or higher restrictions with regard to land uses and
preservation standards.
Uplands, not surprisingly, it's lower than the other ones, but still
a majority of your veg -- upland vegetation is still within these, if you
will, conservation-type designations. A similar pattern with total
vegetation and strategic habitat. Again, these are large systems at the
landscape scale that we're trying to -- trying to craft this -- this set of
strategies.
Shifting gears to the project site scale, when we're talking now
�-. about, okay, what will we allow -- once we -- once we allow a type of
land use to go into a particular area, what kind of standards can we
establish, again, that will help minimize the impact at that level on
habitats and listed species? And these tools that we arrived at for the
project site scale include clustering. That's the ability to direct your
intensive land use into a very smaller-area portion of your site. That
gives you opportunities to preserve higher degrees of habitat and to
work around your -- your -- your natural resource-type features.
Site preservation and retention standards, again, we begin to talk
about what's the percentage of the area of the site that needs to be in
some type of preserve status or how much vegetation you need to
retain.
And, also, wildlife management standards, again, if you have
certain listed species on site, to deal with them appropriately or if we
have just general wildlife protection, what are some appropriate types
of-- of standards to -- to work better with the wildlife that's on site
Page 29
January 23, 2002
and to minimize it -- that -- that interaction, negative interaction, with ^
the human activity.
Key item within the rural fringe standards is the -- or the rural
fringe area are our vegetation site preservation standards. Now,
remember, as we go from primary receiving lands to -- to the NRPA
sending lands, this is, you know, more environmentally sensitive. So
it makes sense that the NRPA sending lands have the highest degree
of presser -- preservation. Primary receiving lands is where we want
to direct land uses, especially, again, in the TDR program. With the
transfer of development rights, we don't want to have the receiving
areas to -- to preclude the ability of somebody developing in those
areas, because then, if that's the case, we will not have a successful
TDR program.
But, again, we still recognize that we have to have some degree
of preservation standards within the receiving areas as well. These
numbers were based upon the characteristics and composition of
vegetation, signatures within these areas that I previously showed,
and, also, the relationship with strategic habitat. And we've
developed a little bit of a procedure to help us estimate these -- these
numbers. Again, you can see the -- the general trend in how these
numbers are, given the sensitivity of the lands.
I know there's a lot of numbers on this table, but we also wanted
to take a look at when we made a -- our preservation standards, which
is right here (indicating) -- these are the same numbers you had seen
before -- we are assuming that conservation lands will be preserved a
hundred percent preservation standard on this table. And we wanted
to be able to see what the effect of how much vegetation could we
expect to preserve within the rural fringe for a variety of different
TDR utilization rates.
The question is, is if we have a wildly successful TDR program,
how much more vegetation can we expect to preserve in the rural
Page 30
January 23, 2002
fringe? And so we made some -- some calculations based upon this
information, and you can see -- if the TDR program is not successful,
we're looking at 87 percent vegetation retention and the total of all
the fringe, all those 93,300 acres of-- that we were looking at in the
fringe planning area.
We'll gain another 3,000 or close to 4,000 acres or -- or bring
that level up to 90 -- 90 percent, above 90 percent, you know, with a
-- with the TDR program. So that's the -- that's the increment that we
can gain with the -- with the TDR program.
Initially staff was trying to target a total preservation standard
within the fringe of around 90 percent. It's tough to get at 90 percent
without the TDR program unless we were -- be willing to increase
these numbers much higher than what they are current -- currently set
there.
So we feel that this is a -- a fairly good balance is to try to
propose these standards with the TDR program, and this gives us
the -- the general range that we expect to preserve total vegetation in
that close to hundred thousand acres in the rural fringe.
Well, I covered the items in somewhat of a conceptual fashion.
The tough part of it is, you know, you -- you have this huge book. I
don't know how many pages it is. But those ideas have gotten
embodied into proposed amendments to the Growth Management
Plan. And what I tried to do here with this slide, just for your
convenience, is to try to cross-reference some of our -- the more
important features in here so that as you go through it you should be
able, with your handout, be able to -- to get to it.
But in the natural resource protection areas, you know, we have
information in the future land use element -- that's the FLUE -- and
information in the conservation and coastal management element as
well.
TDR program is outlined in the -- in the FLUE on pages 42
Page 31
January 23, 2002
and 48.
Sending and receiving areas, we've just been looking at that in
the future land use map. To the degree that these may need to be
modified, that's, of course, why we're having these -- these public
hearings and getting information, and we'll make the appropriate
changes as -- as we go through the total transmittal on the top of the
process.
Allowable land uses, what land uses are we going to allow
within NRPAs? We certainly don't want to have as many -- a whole
list of land uses that we're allowing in the receiving areas. So in the
future land use element, in pages 43 to 48 and then also page 53
we've identified what -- what the allowable land uses will be within
these various designations, land designations.
Also, the buffering of NRPAs and conservation areas in the
conservation coastal management element, that's Objective 6.5.
The site scale elements, we have clustering provisionS in the
FLUE.
Our on-site preservation standards are in the conservation and
coastal management element, and basically they're in Objective 6.1.
We've broken 6.1 up into Policy 6.1.1 whichidentifies vegetation
requirements within the urban areas and 6.1.2 which is the rural
fringe area, so just to give you some structure to the -- to that
document. And you can find all that on pages 21 to 25 in the CCME.
Wetland standards in the CCME in the Objective 6.3, wetland
standards basically apply not only to the fringe but also to the -- to
the urban designated areas as well.
And then we have a number of standards in the CCME for
wildlife standards.
So we've tried to take our landscape elements, our site scale
elements that we've talked about and what the rationale for them is,
and the details now is on these pages that I've tried to cross-reference
Page 32
January 23, 2002
for you.
Well, we've kind of covered a couple hot-button issues already.
But what I wanted to be able to do is, for the purpose of the EAC, is
to identify some other issues that I know that I've been involved with
and also with some of-- of members of your council have been
involved with. Remember, you have a growth management
subcommittee. Allie Santoro chairs that subcommittee.
Unfortunately, Allie couldn't be here today. But that subcommittee
met last Thursday on the 17th, and I handed out to you a report of the
minutes of that subcommittee, and also Allie had some comments
individually as well. I know that subcommittee was -- Ed was -- Ed
was present, and Bill Hill was present also. So there are a number
of-- of issues that -- that came up in the -- in that subcommittee that I
think are important issues to certainly initially touch on.
One is agricultural regulation. And what I'm speaking about
here is our policies do not -- our proposed policies do not regulate
agricultural activities. We've been informed, through our legal
counsel, Carlton Fields, our growth management counsel, that the
county is precluded from state statute from regulating agricultural
activities.
You will hear from -- from the public that -- that, their opinion,
that that's not the case. But from the staffs perspective, right now,
unless our attorney tells us differently, we are not proposing any reg
-- agricultural clearing regulations in our Growth Management Plan.
But let me make one distinction. In the TDR program, when
you have -- in the sending lands, when you send one of your or all of
your residential units, you will have a series -- you will have a set of
residual rights that -- certain land uses that you can still do. We are
limiting your residual right with regard to agricultural to basically
nonimpacting agriculture that does not require any additional
clearing. So, for instance, you could have -- you could have range or
Page 33
January 23, 2002
pasture. You could put cattle out on your existing area but you can't
clear it.
So in the TDR program, which is -- which is -- is a voluntary
program, if you -- if you voluntarily send -- sell your development
right, you will not be able to do any further clearing for agricultural
purposes. So to that degree we've addressed agriculture,but not as a
matter of a regulated activity.
Another issue that has come up, come forward, is the locations
for golf courses. And I know -- know that this council also had a
speaker and talked about golf courses a couple of months ago in
terms of their proximity and location to conservation areas.
Staff is recommending that golf courses be allowed within
receiving areas, but we are prohibiting them within the sending areas.
So the natural resource protection areas and any non-NRPA sending
area, golf courses are prohibited.
We do have particular standards for golf courses. You'll find
them -- I don't have the site right now. But it would be in the future
land use element under the -- the allowable uses for the receiving
lands. So there are specific standards we are proposing to regulate
golf courses and receiving -- receiving areas, but they are being
proposed to be prohibited in sending lands.
MS. LYNNE: Just a quick question. Is this just -- this is just
covered by the TDR people, though; right? This is only if you
voluntarily choose to participate in TDR, or it applies to all the
sending lands?
MR. LORENZ: The golf course prohibition applies to all
sending lands. It is allowed in all receiving lands subject to the
standards.
Buffering of the natural reservations, and that's in quoteS. And
what we mean by natural reservations would be natural resource
protection areas and land uses that are designated as conservation on
Page 34
January 23, 2002
the future land use map. I think it's Objective 6.5 has a set of
standards with regard to buffering of-- of the natural reservations.
Again, that issue has come up. I know that there is some concern
from certain council members as to the buffering standards that staff
has proposed, but this is -- this is an issue that I think the EAC
would -- or certainly would need to weigh in on and provide a very
specific recommendation to the Board of County Commissioners as
you deliberate on your recommendations.
Sending/receiving area boundaries, to some degree, we -- we've
discussed that earlier, but I can -- but also there is a -- in that Area A
in the Corkscrew community, staff has been working with
representatives from that community to look at whether or not the
whole area should be a receiving area or not, and there are some
alternatives -- we're still working up some alternatives. I think that
,.� that is -- is an issue that still has -- if you will, has life certainly from
a staff perspective in terms of we're interested in looking at possibly
some alternatives, looking at some additional analysis that we
perhaps could do.
And I think Ed Carlson's comment earlier about the -- the
relationship of that area with the Corkscrew Swamp and the CREW
lands, even though it does not map out with the land cover, I think is
an important information for us to consider as we're considering these
other alternatives.
And I think that another issue is wetland protection, and I
know -- and I've got some information here I just want to cover with
the -- with regard to wetland protection. Again, we have proposed
standards. To a large degree they're wetland protection standards.
We're dealing with that -- that site area -- excuse me -- at the
landscaping scale.
The proposed natural resource protection areas, as I said earlier,
is an issue. And the issue is certainly going to be the Belle Meade
Page 35
January 23, 2002
area that we're proposing. And I also have to -- last week's Rural
Fringe Advisory Committee meeting, the rural fringe also voted to
take this section-wide strip out of the Belle Meade CARL and NRPA.
And so there -- that -- they have taken this as a vote, so they have
voted to take this area out as a natural resource protection area.
MR. CARLSON: Whydid they do .that?
MR. LORENZ: They -- the present -- the consultant gave a
presentation and in the information -- the presentation indicated that
this area is -- is still retained in a large degree of private ownership.
Okay. One of the consultants is here. It would probably be better for
him to speak for -- and give his presentation. But this is the area that
the fringe committee did elect to remove.
MR. CARLSON: Have lands in there already been purchased
for preservation?
MR. LORENZ: No, I don't believe so. The information that I
remember seeing is that to a large degree this -- these areas have not
been purchased by the -- by the state. Again, the consultant is here.
He can answer some more details for you if he chooses to speak. So I
know that that is -- that is an issue.
Let me -- let me talk about wetland protection, because this is a
-- a key policy decision that's going to come before the county
commission. And I've pulled out -- I've excerpted certain areas from
certain statements from the 9-J-5 criteria. That's the state regulation
that governs growth management plans. And these are -- these are
the requirements that deal with wetland protection from -- from --
from the -- for the Growth Management Plan.
And what I want to key on a couple of things is, first of all,
we're looking at protection of the natural function of wetlands
through a comprehensive planning process. Staff is viewing that
comprehensive planning process as the landscape elements working
along with the project site element.
Page 36
January 23, 2002
It also requires that our future land uses that are incompatible
shall be directed away from wetlands. Again, to a large -- look --
remember, the landscape elements that we looked at, the landscape
areas, where our wetland features are in the rural fringe, and these are
in our NRPA areas and our sending areas.
Again, the land uses shall be distributed in a manner that
minimizes the effect and impact on wetlands.
And it does recognize that mitigation is allowed to occur and is
one -- and it's considered as one means to compensate for loss of
wetland functions. So 9-J-5 requirements do not direct the -- if you
will, do not direct county comprehensive plans to say there's zero
mitigation, or it does allow for impacts, but the functions have -- can
be mitigated for. So these are the requirements that we have in the 9-
J-5 criteria that very specifically govern wetland protection.
As we -- as we've sen -- seen already, when we look at wetlands
within land-use categories in the whole county -- now this is the
whole county, 96 percent of our wetlands are in conservation status.
Within the urban area, there's 2.3 percent of our wetlands in the
urban area. You can see the other statistics. South Golden Gate
Estates, of course, is going to be purchased.
The rural fringe area which is a portion of this 12.6 percent is
what we have been talking about in terms of detailed data. So, again,
this is the distribution of the land use -- of the wetlands within the
county's current land-use categories.
The other thing I -- we -- we need to take into account is what
other regulatory mechanisms are in place for wetland protection.
And this is the information from the South Florida Water
Management District for all of the year 1999, all of year 2000, and I
think this takes it through July of 2001. And the bottom line total is
if we look at wetland acreage that have direct impacts, 16 percent of
the wetlands that have gone through the South Florida Water
Page 37
January 23, 2002
Management District have a direct impact, and this is what the
district is reporting.
So, again, their -- the Water Management District is looking at
the site -- they're -- at the site scale, the permitting step. County is --
is looking at it from a comprehensive planning process from the
higher the landscaped areas within the rural fringe, and also we do
have some degree of-- of protection through the -- the project review
and -- and Objective 6.2.
But when we start look -- making -- trying to determine how
much more can we improve upon with the Water Management
District certainly as a percentage number you recall that -- we took --
staff has work -- worked with the EAC, and our initial proposal to the
community at large -- and we took the EAC back in November of
2000 for wetlands protection was we had a system by which we were
categorizing wetlands based upon size, amount of exotics present,
location, and degree of hydrologic alteration, and we classified the
wetlands.
We received input from the EAC and from the community that -
- that that was somewhat of a contrived system, that there is already
a -- a system in place that the South Florida Water Management
District had to try to identify functionality of wetlands, which was the
WRAP scores, the WRAP analysis, the acronym for wetland rapid
assessment district.
And the EAC at one point determined that -- that you would
have liked to see an allowable impact based upon what the WRAP
scores would be. So if you had the highest functionality of wetland,
we would still allow a 5 percent direct impact. Of course, all impact
would still require mitigation, and that is if it had zero functionality,
that would still require a 50 percent preservation on site for the
wetlands.
And what I'm trying to do here is try to -- try to -- although it's
Page 38
January 23, 2002
not exactly comparable, but the question I had asked myself was,
how much more, with our -- our proposal could we do better than
having total Water Management District's average 16 percent direct
impact. So the question -- the question's -- and I couldn't answer that
question because we don't have the -- the information. But the Water
Management District, as -- as their data shows, is allowing a 16
percent direct impact on wetlands. And, of course, they still require
mitigation for that -- for that impact.
So as we go through the details and the staffs wetland
proposals, the one question I would always have to ask myself as
we -- as we review it is to understand what is going to be -- whatever
proposal we come up with, how much more -- how much better can
we have for wetland protection than what the Water Management
District is already doing in the permitting process? Now, it could be
different -- different -- different things to look at. But, again, it
comes back to the fact that the Water Management District is still --
is at a 16 percent direct impact. So the question -- the finding that we
have to go to the county commission, if we want to have something
greater than that, is how much more can we expect to get through a --
our -- our own set of standards.
MR. CARLSON: I'd like to make a comment on that.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Go ahead, sir.
MR. CARLSON: Just real quickly -- they're huddled --
MR. LORENZ: Bob just wanted me to go back here. One
thing, in this slide here, the district does talk about or does have data
about upland comp -- compensation for -- for wetlands. We have
structured the -- we have structured our standard such that the
known -- there is a no net loss of wetland function, so we've created it
such that there would not be an allowance for uplands to totally
satisfy a wetland -- a loss of wetland functions. So, again, you have
-- as we go through the details and our standards, our wetland
Page 39
January 23, 2002
standards, recognize that that -- that's the case. But this is the data
that has been provided by by the South Florida Water Management
District.
MR. CARLSON: Bill, I'm amazed by this, because our efforts
were the result of having project after project come before us over the
last few years where it was common to have wetland impacts over 50
percent of the project was, you know, degraded wetlands, exotics,
poor hydrology. And we were looking at, some cases, 80 or 90
percent of the wetlands on the site were allowed to be developed in
project after project. So we were trying to put an upper limit on -- on
how many -- how -- what percentage the wetlands could be affected.
I guess my answer to your question about how this can be is maybe,
you know, statistics are dangerous, and I'm -- I'm just baffled by this
data that I wouldn't have give -- I wouldn't -- I wouldn't have
dreamed that the average impact was only 16 percent, based on the
projects that's come before us.
MR. LORENZ: Now, that's The -- now, that's -- this is the
database that we got from -- from the district for those two years.
MR. CARLSON: For -- for just the county?
MR. LORENZ: For 2 1/2 years for just Collier County.
MR. CARLSON: That's pretty amazing. There's something in
there I don't understand.
MR. LORENZ: The other -- the other thing I want to -- whoops.
Well, I thought I had loaded another slide. I'm going to have to work
from memory. Let's go back to -- let me look at this slide. I don't
have a -- I thought I loaded the slide. I must have gotten off of my
file.
There's, basically, 70,000 acres of total vegetation. This is
percentage, but let me -- let me just -- let me just make a point here.
There's total -- total of 70,000 acres total vegetation in the fringe.
This is -- this is -- this is what's there. When we go -- when we take a
Page 40
January 23, 2002
look at some of those -- the slides -- and I've got to work back -- the
one slide that shows the preservation standards for the TDR
utilization rights, and you're looking at around sixty -- sixty to sixty-
thousand of vege -- sixty to six -- sixty to sixty-thousand is going to
be preserved through our preservation standards.
So let's say sixty -- sixty-three-thousand is being preserved.
That's what we would apply to our wetland preservation
requirements -- I mean, for our native -- for our total vegetation
requirements. So we're going to be -- we're going to be preserving
this much vegetation in the fringe by applying the 40 percent, 60
percent, 80, 90 percent figures.
There's 57,000 acres of wetlands land cover in the rural fringe.
Now, the point -- the point here is, is that we're expected to preserve
a greater amount of wet -- total vegetation that there is in -- in
wetland land cover within the total fringe area another -- another
reason why, I think, that our -- our -- our proposal for wetland
protection is -- is on the mark with regard to the landscape scale and
the preservation -- the total -- the vegetation preservation standards
for the total rural fringe area.
If-- if, on the other hand, we -- we set our vegetation retention
standards and we lower those numbers to the point where now they're
less than, if you will, the -- the wetland land cover, then I wouldn't
have as much confidence that we're setting aside enough vegetation
that's going to be significant enough for wetland -- wetland protection
in the whole fringe area.
So, again, when we start looking at -- at how these preservation
standards at the site level work together at the landscape scale, we're
expecting to preserve sixty to sixty-three-thousand acres of-- of total
vegetation in the rural fringe area.
And the inventory that we've been able to identify for wetland
land cover is around 57,000 acres.
Page 41
January 23, 2002
Coincidentally it's around -- it's pretty close to the same number,
50,000 acres, also, for strategic habitat for listed species concerned.
So I think -- I think that we -- we've done a pretty good job of trying
to match up our preservation standards looking at wetland land cover
and looking at strategic habitat for listed species in the rural fringe.
And the reason -- one of the reasons I indicate this as well is that
if-- if there is movement to lower those preservation standards, and
every time we lower those preservation standards, I'm not going to
have as much confidence to be able to -- to -- to make that kind of
general conclusion.
So I think it's real important that as we -- as we work through
the process in terms of review and make recommendations, we have
to understand that our natural resource protection areas and the rest of
the sending lands are very important as landscape features to the total
protection of our -- of-- of the resources.
So, with that, that's -- that ends, if you will, my presentation.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. Why don't we do this if you
concur with me, why don't we take a five-minute break.
MR. COE: Can I make one comment before we --
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: One comment. Go ahead. Only
one.
MR. COE: Bill, if you'll go back to the slide that shows the
wetland permitting summary --
MR. LORENZ: Yeah.
MR. COE: -- just for a second, because that might be able to
answer Ed's question about the 16 percent. You said that 2001
figures were for only about a half a year.
MR. LORENZ: Yeah.
MR. COE: If you take out those figures, isn't it a little bit higher
than that? See, I think the figures in '99 appear skewed. I could be
wrong. But I show -- let me see, just taking 2000 alone, we impacted
Page 42
January 23, 2002
right at 30 percent. Is -- is -- was there a big project in '99 that was --
didn't have any wetlands at all on it?
MR. MULHERE: It's -- I mean, there's some -- I can't answer
that empirically, but I can tell you that there -- there -- there may be
some legitimacy to that comment, because obviously as there was
more land available, larger tracts of land, you may be able to avoid
impacting wetlands on those larger tracts. And certainly that was the
case two years ago more so than it was a year ago or three years ago
more so than it was two years ago.
So in designing a project I think it is legitimate to state that as
there's larger tracts of land, more land available, you can go to those
where the -- where the need to impact wetlands is less and, therefore,
the mitigation would be less and, therefore, the cost would be less.
MR. COE: I guess what I'm saying is 2 1/2 years worth of
statistics, particularly when you look for a couple of the most recent
years are averaging close to 30 percent, 25 to 30 percent, maybe that
one year of 1999 skews the statistics considerably.
MR. MULHERE: That could be. I think it's just -- it's just
another piece of information that came from the district.
MR. LORENZ: Yeah, I guess -- I guess, you know, we went
back and through the data. I certainly would want to update -- try to
get the updated version for 2001, whatever updated information
we've had we'd present. But this -- this -- this is what they are.
MR. MULHERE: I -- I certainly would concur with
Mr. Carlson's statement that over at least the last couple of years the
efforts of this committee have resulted in lower impacts to wetlands
as a result of not necessarily what would happen to the district or
Corps permitting process, but as a result of your desires and as a
result of the applicants wanting to get a favorable recommendation or
a recommendation that at least was more supportable going through
this process.
Page 43
January 23, 2002
So I think, you know, maybe your question is one of looking
beyond 1999 earlier, and it could be much worse before that. I don't
know, but, you know, perhaps '98, '97, '96, you know, those years the
impacts were higher. I don't know.
I did want to comment on one of the hot-button issues that Bill
raised, because I would like to get some feedback from you on this. I
know you probably have a lot of questions generally and a lot of
comments, and we have the public to speak, and I'll be very brief.
But it relates to the issue that Mr. Carlson brought up relative to the
receiving designation in Area A close to the Corkscrew Swamp
Sanctuary. In that area is generally -- or a good portion of that area --
you can bring up a map, Bill -- is generally referred to as Big Island
-- Big Corkscrew Island community. We're looking for a map, if you
could bring one up.
I don't know now, perhaps two months ago or six weeks ago,
first of all, there were concerns expressed by residents in this area
throughout the process relating to the TDR process and relating to
designating that area as a receiving. And then ultimately six weeks,
two months ago, I'm not sure when -- somebody out here could tell
you the exact date -- we did meet with residents in that area to -- to
hear their concerns.
We -- we met out at the middle school. And Bill and I were
there. And I can report to you that of those folks that were there --
and I would say there was probably 30, maybe 40 people in
attendance -- and, by the way, this area is -- is developed -- this -- this
community is developed largely with 5-acre tracts, res -- with maybe
a mobile home or a single-family home on. Some are probably a
little bit bigger than that. Some are maybe a little bit smaller. They
would be legal nonconforming, 3 -acre, 2-acre tracts. Pretty much
that's the way it's developed -- I'm sure you're very familiar with the
development pattern out there.
Page 44
January 23, 2002
Anyway, these folks, I have to tell you, in unison -- I don't think
I heard any one of those 30 or 40 people that were there stand up and
support the designation of-- of a receiving area in that area. They
expressed concerns related to that -- having the effect of potentially
changing that community, because someone could come in and
acquire some land and then increase the density, and it would be
different than what it is today.
And, I mean, we heard those comments, and we promised that
we would work with our consultant, Dr. Jim Nicholas, related to the
impacts of taking that area out of a receiving designation on, again,
that ratio of receiving to sending. And -- and based on his comments
we would then further evaluate it.
And we did get comments back from Dr. Nicholas, which I'll
paraphrase here, and hope I do a good job. Basically he expressed
some concern -- because, remember, optimally he was talking about a
'h• relationship of 2 to 1 of receiving to sending as being optimal. We
actually enjoy about a 1.33 ratio of receiving to sending, which is a
little less than what he would optimally like. But he still felt that
based on the market and the nature of this area, the TDR process
would work very well,even with that ratio.
And so he -- he concluded that although it was -- would not be a
critical flaw in the TDR process, he would recommend leaving the
receiving designation on these lands. But I had expressed a -- an
observation that because of the nature of this area already being
subdivided largely into five-acre parcels and developed with mobile
homes and single-family homes, it would be unlikely that anyone
who wanted to go out and develop a project in the receiving
designated lands would go there for acquisition first. They would
certainly look at larger pieces of land that would require less effort on
their part, perhaps one or two owners aggregate it and put your
development out there. And he -- and Nicholas also concurred with
Page 45
January 23, 2002
that -- that observation.
However, we still want to raise this as an issue. We know you're
going to hear that this is an issue. And so we do have some
alternatives because, frankly, ultimately the Board of County
Commissioners is going to be faced with making a policy decision
related to this area as to whether or not it should remain a receiving
area or perhaps be designated as neutral, developed exactly how it is,
remain as one per five, and not be receiving or sending.
A couple of options that we've begun to look at ultimately for
presentation to the board related to this issue would -- would be --
one option would be leave it as a receiving area, preclude the creation
of a rural village within that area, and also increase the minimum
acreage which a interested entity would have to aggregate to be able
to transfer units in currently. The minimum acreage in receiving
areas is 40 acres. If we raise that to, say, 200, we would -- and took
out the -- the ability for someone to create a rural village, we would
certainly reduce the impacts on there or the potential impacts on there
or the likelihood that that would be purchased for aggregation in
some other development. That will not in -- I think, in any way
satisfy or address the concerns of the residents out there. That's one
option, though.
The second option would be to take that area out of or no longer
designate as receiving. Simply call it neutral, allow all of the uses
that are there today and at the density that's permitted today. But if
we were to do that, it seems that we would want to try to make up for
the impact, the potential impact of taking that receiving designation
out and the impacts on that ratio, that optimal ratio. And are there
some things that we could do that would further enhance the TDR
process once that area had been taken out of a receiving designation.
And one option would be to consider allowing a transfer from
the fringe sending lands into the urban area under very specific
Page 46
January 23, 2002
criteria, and we are looking at that as being in association with
qualified in-fill development. As you probably know, when you have
in-fill development, which is relatively small and the land costs are
relatively high, and you can't ammenitize a 20 -- 10- or 20-acre in-fill
parcel, it becomes more difficult to develop that, especially at those
lower densities.
And as an incentive to allow by right the transfer from the rural
fringe sending lands into the urban area of, say, one or two dwelling
units per acre, that would increase the market for TDRs and would
allow us to -- to remove that Big Corkscrew Island area -- community
area from the receiving designation without really having an impact
on that sending and receiving ratio. It's just an option.
Second option would be to -- and -- and this came up, really, as
a result of discussions generally relating to TDRs as to whether or not
there is really a legitimate market in the rural fringe for folks who go
and purchase a piece of land, do they really -- are they really gointo
have a market incentive for acquiring units, or will they simply build
the golf course and develop it one per five and not acquire any units,
for example, Twin Eagles, a couple of golf courses developed at the
density of one per five. And is there really any incentive for
somebody to go out into those receiving lands and instead of
developing it at one per five, actually go out and acquire TDRs from
sending lands.
And, again, we asked Nicholas to look at that. He felt very
strongly that there was an incentive, that, you know, developers or
business people -- or if there's an opportunity for them to increase
their profit through the -- following these regulations, that there was a
very strong likelihood that they would go and acquire units from
sending lands and bring them into those receiving lands.
However, one way to further support or strengthen the TDR
market and still reduce any impact from removing Big Corkscrew
Page 47
January 23, 2002
community as a receiving area would be to require a minimum
density for golf course -- residential golf course communities, and we
haven't explored this to the point where we're ready to recommend
as -- if that was one of the options, what that density might be. But,
for example, if you -- since the base density is one per five, if you
required.5 dwelling units per acre for residential golf courses built in
receiving lands, that would force a property owner to go out and
acquire some TDRs from sending lands if he wanted to build a
residential golf course. And, again, that would enhance that market
for TDRs and reduce any impact from taking Big Corkscrew Island
community out of the receiving designation.
So those are the three -- basically, the three options that we are
looking at. And I would be interested at some point, whenever you-
all would feel comfortable, perhaps, with what your feelings are,
because ultimately we will have to bring this issue to the board, and I
think you're going to hear from some of the folks out there today too. '~
Thank you.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Thank you. Do we have any
comments from the -- why don't we take a --
MR. CARLSON: You -- you called for a break, Mr. Chairman.
And Mr. Mulhere just opened, you know, a whole world of
opportunity for me, but maybe we should take the break first.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. Let me just run something
past everyone.
We've gone through the presentation. We have a good group of
people from the public that would like to talk. The thought being is
hear the comments from the public so we can make notes on those
comments and then go into the discussion of the various items with
the council comments. What is the -- what's the pleasure?
MR. COE: I recommend five minutes per speaker just like they
do at the county commission.
Page 48
January 23, 2002
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Five minutes per speaker? Okay.
MR. COE: No more than five minutes.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Is that a good -- is that a good way
to do it?
MR. COE: Yeah.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. Let's take a five-minute
break, and then we're going to hear from the public.
(A break was held from 10:44 a.m. to 10:57 a.m.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. We need to come back to
order, but also if anyone is from the public who is going to address
the council, please fill out one of the slips over here, if you haven't
done that already and bring it over to the county attorney, please.
Marjorie, we don't need to swear people today, do we?
MS. STUDENT: No. This would be legislative anyway; it's
not --
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Excuse me. Okay. Let's come
back to order. If we could -- do we need to swear people testifying
today?
MS. STUDENT: No, you do not. This is a legislative matter
and not quasi judicial, so that's not necessary.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. We're going to hear now, if
the pleasure of the council, from -- from the public. We do have the
slips, and we would like to -- we've got to move forward. We know
this is very important, but we would like to limit discussion to 5
minutes for each speaker. And I will give you a sign when there's
about 30 seconds left, and we would appreciate it if we could get as
much across during that period of time as possible.
So with that, Miss Student, do you want to tell us who's first?
MS. STUDENT: Yes. Marco Espinar, and he will be followed
by Mike Bauer.
MR. ESPINAR: Good morning, everybody. For the record,
Page 49
January 23, 2002
Marco Espinar, Collier Environmental Consultants. I'm here before ^
you as both a private individual and also as a consultant. I've got five
minutes, and I've got a lot to cover, and I want to run through this so
-- real -- pretty fast.
A few bullet points I want to, you know, point out to you,
everybody here. On page 39 under the agricultural rural assessment
area, it says except the following uses are prohibited and shall not be
allowed. This is an agricultural rural assessment area. And they give
you a whole bunch of stuff that are not allowed in the agricultural
rural assessment area, including asphalt concrete plants.
You go to the next page, interim NRPAs. And what does it say?
It says the following uses are permitted. And you go through there
and, like, asphalt plants are permitted in NRPAs. I don't know if
that's, you know, technically correct or -- running through here I want
to show that.
Page 54, areas of critical state concern overlay, okay, site
alteration. Number D, no mangrove trees or saltwater grasses shall
be destroyed or otherwise altered. Plants specifically protected by
this regulation include all wetland plants listed by the Florida
Department of Environmental Regulation, Chapter 17-301 Florida
Administrative Code. First of all, that has been amended numerous
times. That's a very old, old statute and actually should be
Department of Environmental Protection. And, like I said, that has
been amended numerous times.
One of my concerns is the statement, "All wetland plants listed
by the -- by that chapter are to be protected." Now, I point to you --
back to the Section A. It lists some of the areas of critical state
concern. And in those areas are Port of the Isles, Plantation, and
Copeland. The way I read this is, if I have something like blue
maidencane -- and these areas I pointed out, Port of the Isles,
Plantation, and Copeland, are single-family areas. So is that -- the
Page 50
January 23, 2002
way I take that is if I have blue maidencane -- that's a plant that's
listed on this list -- I can't remove it. And these are single-family
areas. I -- I -- I find that quite, quite restrictive, especially when they
say all wetland plants. I mean, that list is quite extensive. There's
several hundreds of plants on that list.
Moving right along, page 21, I find a little -- something here to
be slightly con -- conflicting here. And page 21 on the bottom of the
page, vegetation communities having 75 percent or less canopy
coverage of melaleucas and other invasive plant species shall be
defined as naturally functioning native vegetation. So anything -- 75
percent of exotic infestation or less, okay.
Now, if we go further back a little bit here and go into the --
page 27, Policy 6.2.5, Section 1-A, wetlands having a functional
assessment of scores of at least.5 shall be preserved on site. Wait a
minute. It just said on the one area 75 percent of melaleuca
infestation is, like, the cutoff point. A.5 WRAP score is quite a low
WRAP score. That's almost a monoculture. Okay. When looking at
the WRAP scores, theoretically it's from 0 to 1, but when you're
applying this, the cutoff is around a point 41, 42, 45, even a 5 -- a.5,
51, those are melaleuca monocultures. Once you start dropping
below those, you even start questioning the definition of whether or
not you have a wetland because, remember, you have several
parameters you have to meet: Vegetation canopy, ground cover,
hydrology, and you score those items, and you come up with a score.
That.5 is, like, almost a pure monoculture of melaleuca. And my
recommendation is that that would be upped, you know, something of
-- you know, that everybody can discuss.
The other item is wetlands having a functional assessment --
back to this one again -- of.5 shall be preserved on site. Now, when
we go to the Water Management District and we have something of
a.5 and it's a monoculture of melaleuca or something like that, the
Page 51
January 23, 2002
tendency of the agencies is, it's not worth restoring, all right. So
mitigate the whole entire thing off site.
So in this case we have sort of a double jeopardy. Not only do
we have to mitigate the whole entire wetland off site, but then I have
to restore this melaleuca monoculture which is going to be costly and
astronomical.
And I asked everybody what is the ecological benefit of-- we're
looking at the big picture of trying to restore a melaleuca
monoculture, and I can understand, like, Panther Island where it's
contig -- contiguous and --
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Twenty seconds, twenty seconds.
MR. ESPINAR: Can I beg the panel to please give me a few
more minutes to --
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: We're going to -- we're going to
get across the time. We've got a lot of people that are going to talk.
MR. ESPINAR: Please? No.
The other thing is time frame, page -- page 29, just not practical.
6.2.9, wetland function assessment as described in Policy 6.2.4, shall
be part of the county EIS requirement. So what it's saying -- what
they want is for us to do the WRAP analysis, go to the Water
Management District, once we do the water -- the WRAP analysis,
we submit it in, it's reviewed, it's kicked back to us, and -- and this
process is not settled until, like, three-quarters into the way of the
permitting process.
What they're asking us is, is that information needs to be
resubmitted at the time of the rezone. I don't know too many people
that are going to risk thousands of-- of dollars of going through the
ERP permitting process of putting a shopper center, doing all of this
stuff prior to having the rezone in place, okay?
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Thank you. ,..�
MR. COE: I'd like to make a recommendation, Marco. You've
Page 52
January 23, 2002
got a ton of stuff. This -- this -- I mean, you have so much. Write it
up and submit it to them.
MR. ESPINAR: Could I -- could I beg for one, two minutes,
please? One minute. One minute for one more item?
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Marco -- Marco, we're done.
MR. ESPINAR: As a consultant representing --
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Thank you, sir.
MR. MULHERE: Mr. -- Mr. chairman, I -- I know you don't
want comments back and forth on every issue --
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Yeah.
MR. MULHERE: -- but I think I can clarify, really, just the first
issue that Marco raised relative --
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. Good.
MR. MULHERE: I think he suggested to page 20 -- page 39
where your interim development provisions for the agricultural rural
assessment area, wherein asphalt and concrete batch-making plants
are prohibited. And then you turn the page, and it says interim
natural resource protection areas, and it talks about the permitted
uses, now, and when you flip the page there they're permitted. You
have to keep in mind this language was inserted in the
Comprehensive Plan directly pursuant to the final order and is 100
percent fully consistent with the final order.
This language has to remain in here because we're still
conducting assessment on the eastern lands portion. This language
will not apply to the rural fringe that we're talking about because we
are proposing amendments to address the rural fringe area. But it
will -- these interim provisions will still apply to the eastern lands
until November when they come back in with a set of amendments
for that area. So these -- these are already in the plan. We're not
amending them. We cannot amend them. They must stay in there,
because they implement the final order on an interim basis until the
Page 53
January 23, 2002
assessment is completed, though, they will not apply to the rural
fringe when the board adopts comprehensive plan amendments for
the rural fringe.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Mr. Carlson.
MR. CARLSON: While you're up there and on this subject, are
asphalt plants and waste handling facilities permitted on the receiving
lands?
MR. MULHERE: In receiving lands?
MR. CARLSON: Yes.
MR. MULHERE: I believe they are. I believe they are, yes.
MR. CARLSON: So they're not just residential; they have an
industrial aspect to them?
MR. MULHERE: They're currently permitted uses in the
agricultural rural district. We have prohibited them on sending lands
and in NRPAs, but we have not prohibited them on receiving lands.
MR. CARLSON: That's a bad thing.
MR. ESPINAR: Mr. Chairman, one second. I'd like to just
voice my concern and protest that this is a public forum. I've got
important information, and I'm being denied this in a public forum.
All I was asking was for two more minutes, and I would have an
oppor --
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Your point -- your point is heard. I
think -- I think Mr. Coe's suggestion that you itemize these things
out, present them to staff-- you can present them to us also --
MR. ESPINAR: That's fine. But it's not being presented in the
public forum unless I --
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Thank you, sir.
MR. ESPINAR: Thank you.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Miss Student, who is the next
one?
MS. STUDENT: Mike Bauer is the next speaker, and he will be
Page 54
January 23, 2002
followed by Nancy Payton.
MR. BAUER: Thank you. I thank whoever signed me up. I
didn't know I was even going to speak.
There were a couple of things I want to point out in this. First
among these is the rural village concept. And I think as laid out
before you the -- the boundaries and the measurements set out for a
rural village do not encapsulate the concept of what I think many of
us had in mind when it comes to terms of a rural village. We're
thinking of something that perhaps you would see in New England
with a central -- a small central business area surrounded by some
residences that is immediately followed by open space in terms of
farmland and maybe protected land.
And the terms here, when we're looking at something that could
be as large as 3,000 acres with many, many houses that allows
clustering and other things, I think what this tends to turn out to be is
just another planned unit development. So I think we need to look
very carefully at this concept of a rural village and realize that what is
occurring here may, in fact, be another planned unit development.
Another issue is that golf courses should not be considered as
open space. Golf courses fit into some kind of other separate
character. They're -- they're private upscale recreational facilities that
are largely devoid of natural vegetation and native vegetation, and
they're -- structurally they're different. They don't have the shrubs
and trees that are common to Southwest Florida. They're completely
different from those other -- other designated examples of open space
and -- talking about parks, playgrounds, waterways, lakes, and nature
trails.
A golf course is fundamentally different from all these other
concepts concerning open space. They're not available to the public.
And, you know, they're -- they're really quite elitist. Under no
.-. circumstances should golf courses be considered as provision of open
Page 55
January 23, 2002
space by developers. There's not to say there can't be golf courses,
but they shouldn't be considered open space.
And the third thing I'd like to bring out is that the county has
eliminated a proposal for a wetlands permitting process in favor of
reliance on the South Water -- South Florida Water Management
District's rating of functionality of wetlands. The South Florida
Water Management District is currently undergoing a change in how
they're going to be -- or there's the potential that it's going to change
on how it rates water -- watershed and wetland functions, rather,
wetland functions.
There's a new law being proposed in the state, the uniform
wetlands mitigation assessment method, that will subject ratings to
much, much higher discretion, very, very much more suggestive on
how wetlands are rated. And at the same time the Corps of
Engineers, through a recent Supreme Court decision, has also -- is
also in the process of lessening its requirements for permitting.
So we have the federal and state permitting process declining.
At the same time, Collier County could have stepped up to the plate
and increased protection but has decided to drop this process that
they were working on. And I think we need to talk more about that.
Thank you.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Thank you, sir.
MS. STUDENT: The next speaker is Nancy Payton who will be
followed by Robert Duane.
MS. PAYTON: Good morning. My name is Nancy Payton, and
I'm representing the Florida Wildlife Federation.
I wanted to talk briefly about Mirasol, who has two sections of
land that are in the secondary receiving area, and we feel that those
should be neutral areas. And I wanted to bring to your attention an
ad that appeared in the newspaper in the last couple of days that
shows that Mirasol, which is -- you approved a PUD that went way
Page 56
January 23, 2002
'-` up in here (indicating), but that part is not being included in their
application to be a community development district. So it makes me
wonder what is going to happen to that land. And, again, it's our
position that that land should not be a secondary receiving area or a
primary receiving area, that that should be neutralized.
The other secondary receiving area is the parcel of land, the
Kaufman (phonetic) property, which the county and the school board
recently purchased for two schools and a regional park. That also
ought to be a neutral area. It shouldn't be a secondary receiving area
where earth mining and other activities can take place.
I wanted to comment briefly about ag. It's our position that the
county can regulate ag. They're doing it in Hillsborough County. I
don't have all the documentation, because we're developing our
position statement now. But I do find it curious that they can regulate
ag in the sending area after density is transferred, but they can't do it
before, and I wonder if that strikes anybody else as curious.
The wetland impact chart, we have to remember that a high
percentage of our county is under a moratorium, so there's certain
areas of the county that aren't going in for wetland permits, so those
percentages are a bit skewed. And if we didn't have the final order
moratorium, it might be a hot -- quite a higher percentage of
wetlands. And I also bring to your attention is, what are we calling
wetlands? And what South Florida Water Management District has
identified by wetlands may be a far more restrictive definition than
we would like to have in this county.
And, lastly -- and this is a very important point, and I hope I'm
not running too close to my time -- and that deals with the allowable
loose -- uses that remain on conservation lands or sending lands or
NRPAs. And those include public facilities. They include essent --
essential services, jails, cemeteries. And I don't think that we should
be looking at those lands as surplus lands for potential government
Page 57
January 23, 2002
facilities, such as police stations, such as satellite government centers,
for any other facilities, pumping stations, water and sewer facilities;
that those are lands that we've identified for conservation purposes
for their natural values and, therefore, the allowable uses should be
extremely restrictive.
So I ask you to -- please, to go back and look closely before the
day is over at those allowable uses on sending areas and conservation
lands and NRPAs. And it's kind of a little confusing to me when
something is a sending area or NRPA or conservation land, and that
needs to be clarified. And I think I made my 5 minutes with a little
time to spare.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: You have 30 seconds to spare.
MS. PAYTON: I think that Mirasol and the Kaufman property
ought to be put into a neutral zone.
You're also going to hear comments about putting a one-mile
section of Belle Meade into a receiving area. We're opposed to that.
That should remain a sending area, and a buffering for the CARL
conservation lands. That one-mile buffer is a landowner-request
zone, and it doesn't have the same status as a willing-seller program,
so it's a way that we can protect that.
MR. CARLSON: But as long as it remains sending, are you
proposing that it's okay to actually move the Belle Meade boundary
east?
MS. PAYTON: No. The entire Belle Meade boundary is a
sending area. And we think it should stay that sending area, and
there should be no movement to those boundaries.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Thank you very much.
MS. STUDENT: The next speaker is Robert Duane, and he will
be followed by Maureen Bonness.
MR. DUANE: Good morning. For the record, my name is
Robert Duane. I'm a planner, planning director with Hole, Montes &
Page 58
January 23, 2002
Associates.
My comments will only take a minute or two, and I would be
willing to relinquish the balance of my time to Marco, if you're so
inclined.
I had the -- a couple privileges in my career. One was being
chairman of EBTAB ten years ago when the concept of NRPAs first
came about. I supported those then, and I support them now. I've
had a -- experience, also, with the Southwest Florida Regional
Planning Council. I was fortunate to have been appointed twice by
Governor Lawton Chiles and, also, once to his commission for
sustainable Florida.
And by way of background, I would just like to note for the
record that I have reviewed all of the documents that are here before
you today. I've attended a majority of the meetings before the rural
fringe committee. And I'm also very familiar with the final order, the
growth, the assessment process.
And my opinion on balance, that this is a good plan for our
community. We'll all find the little things to try to pick and choose
from, but it's my opinion that it meets the intent of the final order.
And I would hope that you would adopt this document largely as it's
before you this morning.
But, also, I'd like to thank Bill Lorenz but Mac Hatcher who's
been grinding this plan out for the past couple of years, and I'd like to
thank them for their contribution. You have some very good work in
front of you, and I wish to commend them and thank you for the
opportunity to speak. Thank you.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Thank you.
MS. STUDENT: Next speaker is Maureen Bonness followed by
Kathy Prosser.
MS. BONNESS: My name is Maureen Bonness. And I am,
first, going to speak to you as a resident and property owner of the
Page 59
January 23, 2002
Big Corkscrew Island community. I am the one that organized the
petition that was sent out to all of the property owners. And there are
about 375 envelopes that I sent out to various property owners and
received back 188 signed petitions. And I've got a copy of the
petition for you so you can see exactly what it said.
And this petition addressed mostly quality of life. For the
people that live out there, we have chosen to live in an area that has a
rural character. We're willing to drive down deadly Immokalee Road
anytime we have to go anywhere, whether it's to Immokalee or to
Naples. We're willing to live out there beyond cable service. This
telecast is not being presented out in Big Corkscrew Island because it
doesn't exist there. And we're willing to live out there because we
want to live in an area that has a rural character.
And so I did receive back 188 signed petitions from residents
and property owners in the area, and I will present those and any
additional I can garner to Commissioner Coletta before the -- the
transmittal of the fringe to the commissioners later next month.
I would also like to emphasize that the TDR process will not --
will probably not have any benefit for the people who live --
currently live in Big Corkscrew Island. The only way that we would
get any kind of value from it is through the increased property value
-- supposedly the property values will go up if you are in a receiving
area. The only way that we can get any value from that is if we sell
our land. And for most of us that live there, that's not why we live
there, because we want to sell our land to get more value. We live
there because we like the area a lot.
I also have a copy of the -- what is Big Corkscrew Island
community because sometimes that has -- it's about three -- 3,300
acres, which is five sections of land, and it's not the entire part of
District A. It's only part of District A. And so I've got a map for you
to show you exactly what that is. District A includes, also, a number
Page 60
January 23, 2002
of parcels that are below it that are whole sections owned by a single
owner.
Okay. Now, I'd also like to speak to you as -- outside of my
being a resident of Corkscrew. I'd like to speak to you as
Dr. Bonness. I'm a faculty -- an adjunct faculty at FGCU. I teach
environmental biology there. I'm also a private environmental
consultant, and I'm a very active volunteer at Corkscrew Swamp
Sanctuary.
And in that context I would like to say that the environmental
value that is given to the property that's now in the receiving area
near Big Cork -- near Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary is undervalued in
the assessment that the county has done. I know they've done their
statistics according to the information they're given. I don't think it's
been -- I think it's underrepresented in the statistics. That area is wet
in a lot of-- when it gets to the wet season, there's sitting water in
almost everybody's front yard there for weeks on end. And it doesn't
show up in the wetlands soil map as being that.
If you take that area and start to make it into an area where you
now have one dwelling per acre, you will have to fill a lot of the area.
When you fill that area, where does the water go? You still have just
as much water in the area. The area is going to then get flooded more
with deeper water in the areas that are not filled. The only way you
are going to be able to develop that area at the current ratio of one
dwelling per acre, which is suggested for the receiving areas, is if you
dig canals. You will have to drain that area. And that area right now
is in the watershed of Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary. If you develop
that area at the ratio of 1 to 1, you will have environmental impact on
the sanctuary. There's no doubt about that.
Now, speaking through Mike Duever who cannot be here
today -- he wanted to relay this information -- that he is the -- the -- I
don't know if you know Dr. Mike Duever he's one of the chief
Page 61
January 23, 2002
scientists for the South Florida Water Management District. His data ^
supports a 1-mile buffer around a preserve area in order to preserve
the hydrology.
And if you know anything about the environment to the area, the
basic line is hydrology, hydrology, hydrology. If you have -- impact
the hydrology of Corkscrew, you're going to impact its environmental
quality. And we have a gem out there that you can't replace
anywhere with a virgin cypress swamp, and I'd like to see that area
protected.
Now, I'm going to step out of those roles.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: You have 30 seconds.
MS. BONNESS: Okay. And I'm going to now speak --
actually, it's connected to that. I would like to propose an alternative
receiving area that has not been proposed so that we can take Big
Corkscrew Island community off the map as a receiving area and
present another one.
And I'm going to propose an area that's now in the rural lands.
If you look at the map, there's one little section of land that kind of
sticks out from all the rest. It's within 2 miles of Orangetree, so it's
near utilities, and it is -- right now it's an active fill pit. It can be
easily developed more likely than will these little 5-acre parcels up in
Big Corkscrew Island. And I've got several other reasons listed there
as to why I think that would be a more appropriate receiving area
than would Big Corkscrew Island.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Thank you.
MS. STUDENT: And the next speaker is Kathy Prosser, and
she will be followed by Tom Williams.
MS. PROSSER: Good morning, members of the committee.
I'm Kathy Prosser, president of The Conservancy of Southwest
Florida, also a member of the Rural Fringe Committee, the Rural --�
Lands Committee, and the Community Character Smart Growth
Page 62
January 23, 2002
Committee.
I would like to -- first, to be brief and succinct, echo the
comments that have been made by my environmental colleagues here
today and highlight a couple of issues that I think are of critical
importance.
The first is that the TDR program overall, we believe, is
necessary for us to be able to protect the lands that we feel are
important. There is, as of last Wednesday's night meeting, significant
controversy over whether or not a TDR program will be
recommended to you by the committee. And so I would like you to
know that on behalf of The Conservancy we do support this program.
We do not support the 1-mile strip that is recommended as a
transition zone on the western border of what is the rural fringe. We
believe that the transition zone is the rural fringe, that that was the
idea behind the rural fringe area. So we would not support moving
the -- essentially what I would consider an urban boundary one mile
further to the east.
MR. CARLSON: You're talking about the Belle Meade,
southern Belle Meade?
MS. PROSSER: Yes. In terms of wetlands, I agree with what
Dr. Bower (sic) has said to you. At the federal and state level, we see
a lessening of-- of protection of wetlands, and that is exactly the
wrong way to be headed, particularly here in Collier County. I
believe that we need our own wetlands staff who are committed to
assessment, permitting, and mitigation. And while I realize that that
would be a cost to the county to bring those new staff on board, I
believe the cost to the county of not protecting our wetlands is
significantly more.
Golf courses, I believe, should not be considered open space.
They have even been suggested as being proper to be put in sending
areas. We are strongly opposed to that.
Page 63
January 23, 2002
Finally, I would like to thank the county staff because they've ^
done great work and I think at times have been near pulling out what
hair is left on their heads in dealing with the committee overall and
the many contentious issues with which we have dealt. So I would
say thanks to them, and that's all. Thank you.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Thank you.
MS. STUDENT: And the next speaker is Tom Williams
followed by Tim Hancock.
MR. WILLIAMS: Thank you very much, committee members.
My name is Tom Williams. I'm currently a watermelon breeder for
Syngenta Seeds and used to be the branch manager of the Syngenta
Seeds -- what is currently the Syngenta Seeds Research Center,
vegetable seed research. And we own property just east of what I
understand is the boundary line of the rural fringe, the western
boundary line.
And, quite honestly, I came sort of unprepared today because I
really have more questions than I have comments, but as I understand
the map -- and the only one I have privy to, because they are out of
the colored ones, is the map that appeared in the paper, which I
assume these bold lines mean that that's what the proposed extension
for the receiving areas will be. Is this -- is this a correct
understanding? From Greenway Road to the -- and I'm talking about
this lower southern portion of the Belle Meade area.
MR. MULHERE: You're talking about the Area D?
MR. WILLIAMS: Area -- sorry. I don't -- yes, Area D.
MR. MULHERE: Area D is proposed to be a receiving area.
MR. WILLIAMS: Which means development eventually.
MR. MULHERE: Correct. Well, potentially, yeah.
MR. WILLIAMS: Okay. That's what I thought. So, I guess,
I'm just going to make my comments really brief because I've heard a
lot of discussion relative to preserving bears and melaleucas. I think
Page 64
January 23, 2002
they were preserving melaleucas. Maybe they weren't. But in any
event I haven't heard a lot of discussion about preserving what I feel
is a very valuable resource, and that is agricultural land. And over
the years -- and I've had a 32-year career in this business. I've seen a
lot of valuable agricultural land disappear. And I think we're all
going to have lunch and dinner today, so please appreciate where that
food is coming from.
Now, this particular area, as I understand it, is -- is -- occupies a
great amount of farmland; correct?
MR. MULHERE: Well, I think that probably all depends on
your perspective. There is -- there is and has been farming operations
in that area. But Bill had alluded to, during his presentation, the fact
that the final order does require us to look at developing
methodologies for preserving and protecting unique agricultural
lands. And largely those measures have been deferred to the eastern
lands portion of the study, which is about 200,000 acres, of which
there is a significant percentage in active agricultural operation.
The active agricultural operations within the fringe -- we're
talking about intensive, intensive agricultural. We're not talking
about unimproved pasture -- are actually -- the percentage is actually
quite low when you look at it as part of the whole study area. It's
about -- I think it's less than 6 percent. I'm not suggesting that -- it all
depends on what your perspective is. That could be an awful lot if
you're looking at your property.
There are some measures within these standards to protect and
con -- and allow for continued agricultural uses. As we said, we --
we're precluded, at least according to the advice from our legal
counsel, from prohibiting agricultural operations on sending lands.
On receiving lands things like clustering, rural villages which
require a green belt around them within which agriculture could
continue to use -- to be utilized. There's nothing that would preclude
Page 65
January 23, 2002
agricultural operations from continuing within those receiving lands.
It's purely voluntary. It will be a question of whether or not a
property owner chooses to develop that land or sell that land for
development.
And in -- in -- frankly, in Area D immediately adjacent to the
urban area, cleared -- much of it formerly active agricultural; some of
it is still active agriculture -- it is still clearly, in our opinion, an area
that is appropriate to identify as a receiving land so...
MR. WILLIAMS: Well, we have a difference of opinion,
because that is a unique agricultural area. And it's unique from one
standpoint, and that's temperature. Do you realize that the second-
most frost-free growing area in the continental United States is in that
particular area? The first is Homestead. The second -- and that's
actually why we located a research center there, to take advantage of
that temperature situation. That's as much as I have to say. Thank
you.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Thank you very much.
MS. LYNNE: Can I ask a question of Bob Mulhere?
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Yes, ma'am.
MS. LYNNE: When -- the attorneys up in Tallahassee, do they
say that it is absolutely unquestionably against the law to do
agriculture? Have they said something like, "Well, there's this case
law, and there's that case law, and we don't know how it will be
interpreted. And to protect ourselves, you just better not do it "?
MR. MULHERE: No. What they said to us was under the
Right to Farm Act, the county cannot preclude a landowner from
farming under the Right to Farm Act. And, as I understand it, that
includes -- that Right to Farm Act includes or specifies best
management practices for farming. So -- and that's exactly the
language that we have used in here is that we -- is that agriculture is
-- continues to be permitted in sending lands under the provisions of
Page 66
January 23, 2002
the Right to Farm Act.
MS. LYNNE: And there -- is earth mining and stuff still
included in --
MR. MULHERE: No. Earth mining is not permitted in sending
lands under our proposal.
MS. LYNNE: But fish ponds are?
MR. MULHERE: Aquaculture would be, yes.
MR. HILL: Bob, doesn't the Right to Farm Act also allow the
local authorities to limit, place limits, on the agriculture allowed in
those areas?
MR. MULHERE: I am -- I am -- I really can't answer that
question specifically. What I think I can tell you is that to the degree
that the Right to Farm Act allows agriculture under those best
management practices, I believe we could not prohibit a property
owner who is consistent with the provisions of that act from farming.
If-- we certainly could -- and, you know, I'm not an attorney.
So, I mean, I'd be happy to try to get a written opinion, if that would
help, from either Martha Chumler (phonetic) or Nancy Lenanne, who
are the two primary attorneys who have worked with the county.
Perhaps, Marjorie, you could -- you could ask for such, and we could
get that to you.
I mean, just so you understand, originally the way this draft was
written agriculture was recommended to be prohibited by the staff.
And we were told, "You will be in violation of state law if you do
that." So -- I mean, maybe it is a pretty black and white answer and
we can get that in writing, and maybe that would -- that would help.
MS. STUDENT: And I have to talk to Miss Lenanne about a
number of issues, and I will also advise her.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay.
MS. STUDENT: And I might add that I have had some
familiarity quite a number of years ago on the Right to Farm Act,
Page 67
January 23, 2002
probably going back 10, 11 years, and I would not want to speculate, ^
since it has been that long ago since I had perused it.
MS. LYNNE: Excuse me. Can we make that -- can your
question be framed such as if the county wanted to put some limits on
agricultural land, is there any way to effect that rather than just can
we do it or not?
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. Very good. Mr. Hancock.
MR. HANCOCK: Good morning. Mr. Chairman, members of
the EAC, my name is Tim Hancock, vice president with Vanasse,
Daylor here today representing Mr. Mike Taylor, a private property
owner in the south Belle Meade area.
I will quickly try and provide the basis for you on which I
believe the committee used for a 6-1 recommendation to remove a
section -- five sections -- excuse me, six sections of land -- the
bottom six, well, it would not apply to. So it would be five sections
of land between zero and one-mile range immediately east of the
urban residential fringe. Why the recommendation stood 6-1 -- Miss
Prosser dissenting to remove it from the sending natural resource
protection area designation.
The data we presented to the committee to date included the
difference in private versus public ownership within the south Belle
Meade NRPA. All the land you see lying east of the 0-to-l-mile
corridor, approximately 22,000 acres, of that 19,960 are in public
ownership, roughly 91 percent of that total area, leaving only 9
percent mostly small tracts and private ownership.
In the 0- to 1-mile corridor alone, you have only 17 percent of
those lands in public ownership, 73 percent in private ownership;
roughly the same acreage in private ownership in the 0- to 1-mile
corridor as there is in the balance of the entire south Belle Meade
area. There have to be reasons for that.
One reason simply is that most of these property owners have
Page 68
January 23, 2002
already responded to the State of Florida indicating that they have no
desire or interest in selling their land to the state. There is a map --
and I'm sorry we gave our copy to staff, and I don't have it with me
today -- that indicates which parcels have responded in the negative,
that they have no interest in selling to the state. And that does cover
the majority of parcels in the 0- to 1-mile corridor.
In looking at that, why would they say, "We don't want to sell to
the state" when the state has been so successful in the balance of the
south Belle Meade? Primary reason, property valuation. We went in
and did a property valuation analysis of a roughly similar area of land
in the middle of the south Belle Meade which I'm calling the 3- to 4-
mile corridor. The average valuation of those lands, arm's-length
sales, some to the state, a few in private hands, was approximately
$2,000 an acre, roughly the going rate for what the state is offering.
Those folks are -- are being paid market value for their land. In the
area, 0- to 1-mile corridor here, the average valuation per acre is over
$8500 an acre; not what the state's willing to pay to date.
Because of those property valuation differences, the proposed
transfer of development rights program which offers you $17,000 for
your one unit on 5 acres doesn't even come close to making property
owners whole in any way, shape, or form in the 0- to 1-mile corridor.
In addition to that, we were able to obtain from at least two separate
biologists opinions that we have a higher degree of exotic infestation,
therefore, a habitation reduction in the 0- to 1-mile corridor basically
because of the 951 or Henderson Canal. It has had the effect of
reducing the hydroperiod in the area.
While the property valuation data we provided has been fairly
exhaustive, the environmental data is still forthcoming. I have a
sample of that on the wall behind me. Most of the information that
established the NRPAs on a landscape scale was based on the 1994-
'95 flux data that the South Florida Water Management District
Page 69
January 23, 2002
provided. An example of that would be -- you see Section 24 on the
upper print there. According to the 1994-'95 designation, that's
uplands hardwood forest, all of Section 24, bar none. That thing's
homogeneous.
The 2001 aerial is right beneath it showing at least 30 percent of
the lands disturbed, showing also -- and we haven't mapped these out
specifically -- yet a higher degree of exotic infestation.
Using the same basis that the South Florida Water Management
District used in establishing the '94-'95 flux data, we will be and are
in the process of flux mapping that entire corridor. That data will be
provided to staff as soon as it is ready. We're hoping maybe Monday
or Tuesday of next week -- and that summary, we hope -- and if it
doesn't, so be it, but it's our belief that it will support that this area
should be viewed differently than the balance of the south Belle
Meade NRPA. That is the basis by which we provided to the
committee that I believe was a major reason for their -- their 6-1 vote
to support removing this.
Now, in removing it, it is not a receiving area. What is being
proposed is called a neutral designation where it has a minimum
preservation requirement of 50 percent, a maximum of 60 percent.
This does not obviate the need for state and federal permitting for
anything, whether it be species, whether it be wetlands. It also does
not keep the state from continuing its purchase or attempted purchase
of these lands. What it does do is it restores some, but not all, of the
ability for these property owners --
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: You have 30 seconds.
MR. HANCOCK: -- to receive the value of their property. We
feel that that is not only important as a part of this study but, in fact,
required by the final order. Thank you.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Thank you. Yes, sir.
MR. CARLSON: So, first of all, did you say this is one mile
Page 70
January 23, 2002
from the 951 canal and has been negatively influenced by the
drainage of the 951 canal, thereby totally supporting the
recommendation to have at least a 1-mile-wide buffer?
MR. HANCOCK: No, sir. I said that was one of the factors that
may be consistent.
MR. CARLSON: Did you say that hydrology has been affected
by the 951 canal which is a mile away?
MR. HANCOCK: That's the information we have from the
biologist, yes, sir.
MR. CARLSON: The problem with -- what's the problem with
having it as a sending area? It's -- they're just --
MR. HANCOCK: As a sending area?
MR. CARLSON: Explain that to me, yes.
MR. HANCOCK: Okay. Assuming I have 20 acres of land in
that corridor, based on the recommendations that are contained in
what you have before you today, my legal rights of use on that
property are either agriculture or one house on 20 acres.
MR. CARLSON: Okay. Hmm. So it's not subdivided.
MR. HANCOCK: No, sir. You don't need to subdivide land in
order to put homes on it.
MR. CARLSON: But, I mean, to get a competitive value out of
sending, it's not subdivided enough. Am I not -- am I missing
something?
MR. HANCOCK: I believe so, yes.
MR. CARLSON: Okay.
MS. LYNNE: I don't understand it either.
MR. HANCOCK: If I had a 20-acre parcel prior to the
governor's final order --
MR. CARLSON: You've got one unit.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: One unit.
MR. HANCOCK: Based on these recommendations, you can
Page 71
January 23, 2002
build one unit. Prior to the governor's final order, you could build
four units, one unit per five acres. So you have the ability to transfer
off three units. Well, assuming you build one, you can transfer three.
So if I maintain my minimum use that this allows me and build my
one home, I can transfer three units off at roughly $17,000 per unit.
That gives me a net of 3 times 17, $51,000.
However, the valuation of those 15 acres adjusted to June of
1999 at $8,000 an acre doesn't wash. And the final order does require
that you consider the regulations and how they affect private property
rights and values. I do not believe in the 0- to 1-mile corridor that
consideration has been duly given.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay.
MR. CARLSON: I'm hum -- hung up on the hydrology because,
you know, we're only halfway to buildout in this county, I think,
basically. And -- and the water resources are already stretched to the
max. I mean, we have all kinds of crises and water restrictions. If
this boundary is moved back and this land is developed, it can't be
developed without further hydrologic deterioration which will then
move the effect of that further into the Belle Meade and -- and the
water supply --
MR. HANCOCK: Is it your contention then that there is no
development pattern that would actually increase storage in the area?
MR. CARLSON: Is there? You got an example?
MR. HANCOCK: I'm going to basically defer environmental
response to an environmentalist. And I'm not going to pretend to
play that role today. I have the data that I have that we've presented
to the committee. We have the committee recommendation. What
we do know is that this area has a higher level of infestation of
exotics than do lands to the east.
As you move to the east, the exotic infestation tapers off to less
than 25 percent. These lands have pockets and areas of melaleuca
Page 72
January 23, 2002
monoculture. I've stood in some portions of this land after recent
fires where you're standing waste deep in a melaleuca monoculture.
It is the contention, based on the letters that we have from the
biologists, that a reduced hydroperiod contributes to a higher
infestation level of exotics. That higher level of infestation reduces
the habitat value and the vegetative value of the area. I think we all
understand and appreciate that. So the area --
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: We got -- we got it, thanks.
MR. HANCOCK: Thank you.
MS. LYNNE: Can we have a copy of those letters from the
biologists?
MR. HANCOCK: Certainly. As a matter if fact, I have a
couple of full packets I'll provide to the court reporter for the record.
I'll give one to you and one to the court reporter.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Thank you, sir.
Yes, ma'am.
MS. STUDENT: The next speaker is Brad Cornell, and he will
be followed by your last speaker, Tom S-i-e-m-i-a-n-o-w-s-k-i.
MR. CARLSON: Siemianowski.
MS. STUDENT: Siemianowski.
MR. CORNELL: Hi. I'm Brad Cornell, and I'm here on behalf
of Collier County Audubon Society. And I appreciate the
opportunity to say a few things about this huge plan that is in front of
you, and it's hard to grab -- put your hands all the way around it. But
I do want to make the one broad comment that it is basically a good
effort. The landscape scale protections for our resources in the rural
fringe, I believe, are going to work with the TDR program, with the
preservation proposals, the regulations. I think this is a good -- a
good effort. I do applaud what staff has proposed, and I believe that
they have taken into consideration a lot of what the people in the
community have expressed.
Page 73
January 23, 2002
However, with that said, I want to make one very large caveat, ^
and that is to do with agricultural land use. And I do want to
specifically counter what the legal advice that the county has gotten,
and that is that we have gotten our own legal advice -- advice from
our own counsel on the ability of local government to regulate
agricultural use. Under the Right to Farm Act, our understanding is
and our opinion is that while you cannot eliminate the use of ag --
allowance of agriculture, you can regulate it. And that would mean
in areas of environmental sensitivity you could say -- for instance,
sending and NRPA lands, you could say only unimproved pasture
and native range would be allowable agricultural uses. However, that
still complies with the Right to Farm Act. So this would be our
recommendation, that the county regulate the intensity of agricultural
use in the environmentally sensitive lands we're trying to protect.
Otherwise we've -- we've lost that game.
I would also like to point out that on buffering conservation
lands and sense -- environmentally protected areas, like the sending
areas, that a one-mile buffer is a generally good idea county -wide if
we're going to talk about county-wide policies and in the rural -- rural
fringe.
We have received information from -- and you have too from
Mike Duever of the South Florida Water Management District. He
has substantiated, through his studies and other studies, that one mile
is a generally good range. Now, there are certainly adjustments that
can be made to that based on the local site-specific conditions. But as
a general policy one mile of buffering around your wetland --
particularly your wetlands, just for wetland purposes, not to mention
wildlife issues, is a very good policy.
And I would also like to mention that on wetland policies I also
concur with the other environmental colleagues of mine that have
spoken on this, that we do need stronger local authority over
Page 74
January 23, 2002
particularly the receiving area wetlands. We need to have some sort
of local program that monitors, assesses, assigns mitigation values,
and basically protects those isolated wetlands that the agencies are
not going to be able to and have even told us that they are not going
to be able to. This is something that I believe is in the best intrance --
interest of the county.
Even though we've protected the majority of wetlands, the
percentages in the receiving area are still a very large functional set
of wetlands, and they're very important for species such as wood
storks, wading birds, and other wildlife that utilizes these kinds of
wetlands, so we should not ignore those.
But I do want to underscore the agricultural exemption. If
there's not any other issue you attend to, please address the issue of
agricultural exemption from these protections. We must -- if we're
going to protect those environmentally sensitive lands, we must
regulate ag. It's not to say that we're going to eliminate it. We're
going to protect it, but we must include it in our regulations. Thank
you very much.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Thank you, sir.
MS. STUDENT: And the last speaker is Tom Siemianowski.
MR. SIEMIANOWSKI: All right. Since I'm the last speaker,
I'll be brief and be gone. My name is Tom Siemianowski, and my
family and I have lived in Big Corkscrew Island area, which is now
called the NRPA CREW receiving as I've been to the meeting today,
for the past 26 years.
After driving to this meeting today along Immokalee Road and
951 and seeing the density and development of-- of the area that I've
lived in for the last 26 years, it -- it made this trip even more
important to myself and to my community.
I have seen the growth of Orangetree, Waterways, Jones' Mining
Company, Simpson Fill Pit, the Palmetto Berry Plant and the tower
Page 75
January 23, 2002
next to it, and it's starting to get scary. I know Mr. Lorenz mentioned
listed species. I have seen owl and hawk, otter, deer, turkey, eagle,
fox, wood stork, panther, and bear. And that's just on my property.
I agree with Mr. Carlson that the animals can't see an imaginary
line that -- that they won't cross. They roam freely throughout Big
Corkscrew Island in -- in the whole area there.
I have friends from Dade and Broward that come over just to
photograph the animals, and that's just on the property. They go to
the -- to the sanctuary for the -- for the cypress, but the -- the animals
are all around us. I notice that the taxpayers have spent money on the
presentation, the hearings, the meetings, the consultants, the
advertising, the staff, the data, the maps. And after hearing this
information presented today and my observations where I live, I feel
that some of this data is flawed. And I think that -- that this panel,
since you'll be making the decision based upon this data, that you
need the correct information.
Mr. Carlson and Miss Lynne did ask -- they brought up good
questions on maps, wetlands, wildlife, and ratios, and I feel that their
questions weren't answered.
This so -- so-called receiving area that I live is beautiful. It's full
of wildlife. It's -- has lots of water in the rainy season and then
months after. It has spectacular vegetation, and we have plenty of
space. And this is why my neighbors I have talked to -- and this is
why we moved there, and we hope that it remains this way. Thank
you.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Thank you, sir.
Is there anyone else from the public that would like to address
the council?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. Hearing none, Mr. Coe.
MR. COE: Marco, have you got a copy of what your
Page 76
January 23, 2002
presentation was?
MR. ESPINAR: No, sir.
MR. COE: Even if it's handwritten can you put it together?
MR. ESPINAR: For the record, Marco Espinar. No, I have not
written anything else, going through a verbal presentation today, but
I'll -- I'll put something in writing.
MR. COE: You know, even if it's in a rough form. Who should
he get that to?
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Bill. Bill Lorenz.
MR. COE: Get -- get it to Bill, because we're obviously going
to have another meeting, and we want to make sure that we've got a
hard copy of it because you're so detailed on the thing. Okay?
MR. ESPINAR: Thank you.
MR. COE: I just want to make sure that you understand we're
going to try to incorporate it because we had five minutes allotted,
because we've got a lot of stuff we got to do. Thank you very much.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. Mr. Lorenz, go ahead.
Finish your conversation.
MR. LORENZ: No. Just, Mr. Chairman, the comprehensive
planning manager has indicated that you really need to make your
recommendations today.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Well, here's what we have. We're
going to lose Mr. Stone at about 12:30, leaving six of us, I guess, to
proceed with this. Why don't we -- why don't we pound on here until
about 12:30, go as far as we can get, take a break for lunch, and then
come back and go with it.
What would your be -- what would be your recommendation,
Mr. Lorenz, on how to proceed at this point?
MR. LORENZ: I think you have some major issues that have
been brought up. It would be good to bring those issues back to the
board and have somebody make a motion and -- and vote on each one
Page 77
January 23, 2002
of those issues. If you want to get into individual language, that's
going to take a lot of time. But to the degree that if you have specific
re -- recommendations with regard to boundaries or -- or what other
approaches we should be pursuing, those would be important.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Why don't -- why don't we do this:
Seeings with the number of folks here and so forth and the issue that I
hear -- probably the biggest we're hearing is the Big Corkscrew area,
what do you say we bring that up -- Mr. Carlson as -- is very, very
knowledgeable of this particular area, and I'm hearing things from
folks that live there and even from Mr. Mulhere. What -- what will
you do about the big problem with the folks that live at -- on Big
Corkscrew? Mr. Carlson, what do you think?
MR. CARLSON: I'd like to project the map up there and make
a general comment that puts the receiving areas in a -- in a general
context, if I could do that.
Can somebody -- can somebody put the map projected up there
and adjust the lights.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Ed, we want you to go up there and
kind of make -- you know. There you go.
MR. CARLSON: Okay. I'd like to comment on the A,
receiving area and the overall picture. If I could have the big map...
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: The big map.
MR. MULHERE: Are you talking about this map?
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: This one?
MR. CARLSON: I'm talking about that map.
MR. MULHERE: Okay. The only way that that is available is
on the visualizer and on that screen.
MR. CARLSON: Okay. Let's go to the screen.
MR. MULHERE: There it is.
MR. CARLSON: Okay. Here's our situation, and we're stuck --�
with this geology and topography. We've got two major wetland
Page 78
January 23, 2002
flow-ways that are critical to the future of this county. They're major
water resource areas. And to protect those water resources you're
protecting wildlife and habitat which is what we're here primarily to
do, in my opinion.
So here you have this fantastic flow-way of Corkscrew Swamp,
and it seeps over the boundaries of the sanctuary into these
neighborhoods. And what you need to do there is concentrate on
protection, because we're only halfway to buildout, and we're
stressing out our water resources. So you need maximum protection
of these flow-ways. That water is recharing the groundwater. It's
feeding the Cocohatchee River and important rivers in -- in Lee
County.
Down here you have the same thing with the Belle Meade. You
have a very important hydrologic system, very important to our
future and our water resources, wildlife habitat and wildlife species,
and that's flowing down supporting the Ten Thousand Island system.
The flow-way, you need maximum protections, as much protection as
you can get here and here (indicating).
Now, right here (indicating) you have the flow of people. And
this county sacrificed for Golden Gate Estates. We devastated that
property. There was no consideration of environmental protection
when the estates went in. The -- the design goal was drain it, destroy
the wetlands, move the people in.
The only thing more extensive than the drainage system is the
road system. Every single parcel has access. It's drained, and it's
paved, and it's ready for people. You got a rural village going in
right in the center of it. And how in the world we could look at this
rural fringe and not consider the estates and have the receiving areas
which are, in my opinion, urban sprawl -- this is an urban sprawl
.-. plan, in my opinion -- and not consider the possibility of increase in
density in the estates and putting extra density in Orangetree and
Page 79
January 23, 2002
around Orangetree and going into these rural lands that have these
hydrologic values and resource values, I think, is a horrible mistake,
and this is a plan for urban sprawl, not to prevent it, but to produce it,
bottom line.
The A area -- it's not littered with panther telemetry points
because they can't catch them. You turn the hounds loose down here
(indicating), the catch dogs, the houndsmen and his hounds, runs all
over the place, no boundaries, no fences, no private property. They
catch the panther. They put a collar on it, and you get marks all over
it.
You go up here, you turn the hounds loose, in just a few minutes
you're at a private property boundary. You're at a barbed wire fence
that says no trespassing. That have been down -- they have been up
there. They've tried to catch those panthers. They can't do it.
There's just not enough space to run the dogs; otherwise this would
be a priority-one panther habitat with telemetry points all over it.
So I just think -- I just think we've made a tremendous basic
flaw in this whole plan, and I'd like you to address -- you know, we
talked about transferring development rights from here -- from here
to the urban area. Nobody said anything about the estates or
Orangetree cannot be considered in this plan; if not, why not, and if it
can, that's where we should be going.
MR. MULHERE: Okay. The final order defines the assessment
area, and it specifically expressly excludes Golden Gate Estates,
specifically and expressly, number one.
MR. CARLSON: To deny its existence.
MR. MULHERE: No. It denies it as part of the assessment
area, number one.
Number two, Golden Gate Estates is a platted and vested
subdivision. Yes, you are absolutely right, though I doubt that
anyone standing here today had anything to do with it, there are
Page 80
January 23, 2002
certainly -- if things could be done today, they would be done much
differently than they were at the time that that was platted in terms of
drainage and the roads and those other things.
There is a study going on in Golden Gate Estates that will
probably take at least another year, and there is a committee put
together called the Golden Gate Estates Restudy -- a Master Plan
Restudy Committee. We made a presentation to them. Anyway, that
study is going on, and that will look at mobility issues and other
issues within Golden Gate Estates.
I would disagree with your characterization of these receiving
areas as furthering sprawl. I would take the exact opposite position.
I would indicate to you that these receiving areas will minimize the
existing extremely deleterious impacts of sprawl associated with
Golden Gate Estates by providing for services in and around the
Golden Gate Estates area that don't exist today, reducing the
requirement for folks to get on those roads that are already heavily
impacted because there aren't any services out there.
Third component would be balancing private property rights and
natural resource protection --
MR. CARLSON: Why can't services go into the rural
settlement area in Orangetree?
MR. MULHERE: They may. And that has been a
recommendation of the Rural Fringe Committee that there is 1200
acres of agricultural land out there. And that would also, perhaps, be
an appropriate place for rural village mixed-use development.
However, that can only be a recommendation, because that land is
outside expressly -- again, outside of the assessment area.
MR. CARLSON: Well, how many times have we heard the
term "comprehensive plan"? We're planning with blinders on. We're
not comprehensive planning.
.-. MR. MULHERE: I appreciate your comments. And I think if
Page 81
January 23, 2002
those are the comments of the committee, then you can make some ^
recommendations to us, and we will carry those forward.
Now, I also think you heard from several representatives of
environmental groups that strongly support this plan that have
indicated that overall they think it's a very good plan. So obviously
you have your opinions as an individual. And we're happy to hear
those, and we're happy to hear the opinions of this committee, and
we'll carry those forward. But we believe this is the best plan, and
that's why we developed it.
MR. CARLSON: Well, in my opinion, this transfer of the
density rights really isn't worth it except for the northern Belle
Meade. It's not worth -- I mean, we've got projects that are funded
like CREW, the CREW NRPA, and the Belle Meade. There's a
funding source there for them, and we're going to continue to work
on those. And we don't have to transfer development rights to make
those work.
MR. MULHERE: And I understand that.
MR. CARLSON: In Belle Meade there's no funding. So I -- so
I think that's where the action is here, and that's where transferring
development rights can have a better benefit.
But in these rural lands you could keep the density at one unit
per five acres, let developers cluster, and in the long run be better off
than putting rural villages out there where you have density bonuses,
industrial uses, commercial uses, and changing the whole rural
character of that part of the county. You've leapt over the estates. If
that's not sprawl -- here's the urban; here's the estates. And then
you've leapt over into the northern part of the county with density
higher than you have in the estates.
MR. MULHERE: Actually, that's --
MR. CARLSON: That is sprawl.
MR. MULHERE: Actually, that's not true. Actually, there are
Page 82
January 23, 2002
only -- there is only one example of where we've leapt over the
estates, because the other three areas -- two examples, because two of
the areas immediately abut the urban area, do they not? Two of
these --
MR. CARLSON: Twodo and two do not.
MR. MULHERE: Okay. So that -- that's not exactly true. In
some cases we have it, and in some cases we haven't. But,
unfortunately, we've got to deal with an existing situation in Golden
Gate Estates. Our direction for the county from the governing
cabinets part of the assessment was twofold, was to develop natural
resource protection strategies both for the assessment area but also to
apply them county-wide -- and you've heard what those strategies are
-- and then also to develop strategies for protecting -- balancing those
natural resource protection strategies with private property rights.
And that's where these rural villages and receiving areas come
into play, because we are required -- not only is it referenced in the
final order, but also the Burt J. Harris Private Property Rights Act
says that when we enact as a local government restrictions on a piece
of property that impact the vested land rights and reasonable ex --
investment-backed expectations, then we have got to do something to
compensate those property owners for that lost value.
And one of the primary tools that are referenced in the Burt J.
Harris Private Property Rights Act is the transfer of development
rights process. And I think if you were -- let me -- let me reword
that. I think for many property owners who are in sending lands the
TDR process will allow them an opportunity to recoup some of that
lost value.
Again, I understand your opinion. You've expressed it very
clearly. We have a more difficult task, I think, of trying to balance
the natural resource protection strategies with the private property
rights. We have made some proposals here. Again, we're here to
Page 83
January 23, 2002
hear what your concerns are and to take your recommendations
forward to the Planning Commission and the Board of County
Commissioners.
MR. CARLSON: If it was the desire of this county and its
commissioners to preserve rural lands because of their wildlife
habitat and hydrologic values, would there be no way to make parts
of the estates receiving areas?
MR. MULHERE: Oh, I -- I -- no. I can't say that. There may
be a way, and that may be something --
MR. CARLSON: Well, then that's where we should --
MR. MULHERE: Maybe that should be a recommendation --
MR. CARLSON: It's drained, and it's paved, and it's ready for
people. And you're going to go into a rural area and impose five --
ten times the density, if you -- even more if you do the rural villages.
And we're not going to change anything about the estates, which is
the most appropriate place in this county to put people?
MR. MULHERE: Well, again, we are requiring clustering. We
are doing exactly what the statutes call for and allow innovative
planning techniques, including rural villages, compact development,
moving out. We are requiring with those rural villages the green
space, a green belt around it. In exchange for allowing that
development, we are preserving in excess of 66,000 acres of land
within the rural fringe. Again, you know, I mean, I guess it's just a
question of balance.
MR. CARLSON: Let -- let me ask you this: With a rural
village, the -- the bonus and the extra density you get from the rural
village -- and I was reading in here -- and there's all kinds of ways to
get bonus density way beyond the one-dwelling-per-acre change base
density, there's affordable housing.
MR. MULHERE: Within the rural village structure, correct.
MR. CARLSON: Do all of those units come from the sending
Page 84
January 23, 2002
area?
MR. MULHERE: No. The way the rural village is structured,
you get your base density. So if-- in other words, and -- and maybe
if we use an example that we've used other times of 1500 acres of a
thousand-acre rural village and a 500-acre green belt around it, you
have a one-per-five base density. You're in a receiving area. You
have a one-per-five base density. So at 1500 acres, that's 300 units.
MR. CARLSON: So if-- if you want to go -- and you can put at
least two rural villages up here in A and a whole bunch of them down
here in D --
MR. MULHERE: Well, they've got --
MR. CARLSON: But listen to me. If those extra bonus units
don't come from a sending area, that's more population.
MR. MULHERE: Well, actually, you didn't let me finish.
Some do and some don't.
First of all, there is a requirement currently written into the plan
that no rural village may be within a mile of another rural village. So
there is some limitation on the number.
Now, originally it was written to limit that number to three.
However, it was recommended that these are -- that these are a -- a
good plan to enhance preservation because they will direct the
development to more compact areas, even within the receiving areas.
So we've -- by designating sending, receiving, we've already directed
the development to certain areas that have the lesser environmental
quality. And then by further directing that development into a
compact mixed-use development, we will minimize any sprawl-
related components. I'm getting to your -- your point.
And so the process to attain the density that you may have
within a rural village does require some level of TDR purchase but
not all TDR purchase. And what it requires -- again, you get your
base density. And the example I used was 1500 acres. You would
Page 85
January 23, 2002
get 300 units, 1500 divided by 5. You have a minimum density in a ^
rural village of 2.5 dwelling units per acre; that's the minimum. The
maximum is 3.5. So if you get to the minimum, you've got your base
that's 3, you must then go and acquire.8 dwelling units per acre for
each acre in the rural village. And the example I used it was a
thousand acres, so you would have to go and acquire 800 TDRs. You
would now be up to 1100 units. If you take 2.5 times a thousand,
your rural village area, your minimum density is 2500 units. And
you have attained, through the TDR purchase and through the base
density, 1100. So you're short the difference between 2500 and 1100,
1400 units, you get a bonus. If you do those things, you do get a
bonus, and the bonus you get, as we prescribe it, is two dwellings
units per acre to bring you up to your minimum --
MR. CARLSON: So we're not halfway to buildout anymore.
We just set the bar up higher and increased the population of the
county.
MR. MULHERE: Well, I'm not sure about halfway to buildout
or not. I'm not sure that that analysis has been done.
MR. CARLSON: Well, let's say we were. We're not there
anymore because this allows additional units not -- not -- how many
people do you figure per unit? Three?
MR. MULHERE: No. Two point five.
MR. CARLSON: Two point five.
MR. MULHERE: This is the number that we use.
MR. CARLSON: So we're talking some significant population
increase here, and that's not urban sprawl?
MR. MULHERE: No, it's not. And we would be talking about
-- yes, there is a population increase associated with these. In fact,
it's -- it is -- it is a prescribed methodology to minimize the impacts
of urban sprawl, both by statutes -- it was also discussed heavily and
recommended strongly by the governor's growth management study
Page 86
January 23, 2002
commission. There have been a number of studies done -- done over
the years.
If you look at this book which is called Rural by Design by
Ralph -- by Randall Arrant (phonetic), this book was the basis of
many of the recommendations that we've made.
We also looked at rural villages in other areas, including
Horizons West in Orange County. We reduced the sizes somewhat
because a lot of people raise the issue about proposed size, which in
your -- in your draft is a thousand to three thousand, a minimum of a
thousand, a maximum of three thousand. But a lot of folks that we've
spoken to and a lot of advisory boards that we've spoken to and
committees have expressed concern over that three thousand as being
too large and that thousand being also too large for the minimum.
So we have -- we are currently revising that to propose 500 to
2,000 as the size limit, the 500 minimum, 2,000 maximum. But, I
mean, I understand we have difference of opinion. And I -- and I am
certainly happy to hear that and carry forward the opinions of this
committee, and individually everyone is free to express their opinions
as we move forward as well.
MR. CARLSON: Well, my opinion, then, is that except for the
northern Belle Meade area where I see some real advantage to
transfer develop rights, I think this is an urban sprawl plan. I think
we can go ahead with our land acquisitions for NRPAs in the fringe
that are in existing acquisition programs and that Area D becoming a
place to put rural villages is a red herring, and it should remain a rural
-- a rural density and cluster communities. And as a community
we're better off in the long run.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Thank you, Mr. Carlson.
MS. LYNNE: Can I ask a question?
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Miss Lynne.
MS. LYNNE: I don't understand why Golden Gate was
Page 87
January 23, 2002
exempted. Who made that decision? .�
MR. MULHERE: I guess you'd have to say the governor and
cabinet.
MS. LYNNE: Why are the government and the cabinet telling
us how to divide up sections of our county?
MS. STUDENT: I can give you some background. This was
pursuant to EAR valuation and appraisal report amendments to the
Comprehensive Plan that we adopted back in 1997, and DCA found
those amendments to be in noncompliance. And wetlands and
environment were a big issue there, as were other issues about the
estates as well.
But, in any event, we had an administrative hearing, and there
was a recommended order proposed by the administrative law judge
that came down in March of 1999. And by the time we got. through
that process -- the county had been trying to work all these things out
-- it was a very short time frame to work them out with the
Department of Community Affairs. We had some intervenors, and it
was sent to the governor and cabinet, because that was a
recommended order, and in a noncompliance case the recommended
order goes to the governor and cabinet for the final order.
And based on the record of the proceedings and the decision of
the administrative law judge in the matter, this is what the governor
and cabinet recommended.
MS. LYNNE: So, in other words --
MR. MULHERE: Also, I just want to add one other thing. I
think that it may -- in addition, the fact that it is a platted subdivision
which is rapidly developing, has been rapidly developed. And there
are some vested property rights issues there at -- and the same thing
with Orangetree with which a settlement agreement exists. That may
have been also a part of the reason why they excluded those from the
assessment area.
Page 88
January 23, 2002
MS. STUDENT: Yeah. Thank you, Bob. I think that probably
weighed in making their decision.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. Let's -- let's move forward
with some specifics here.
We've got a lot -- some folks here from Big Corkscrew. I've
heard what they have to say. I'm looking at a drawing that takes part
of that sending -- that primary sending area, which would be
essentially the east half of Section 22 and 27 and Sections 23, 24, 25,
and 26. What happens if we recommend making that a secondary
sending area rather than a primary sending area?
MR. MULHERE: The effect of that would be that -- that there
would be a lower density receiving. I think you -- I'm not sure.
Maybe I misunderstood. But if it was a secondary receiving area?
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: It's a primary receiving area right
now.
MR. MULHERE: Correct. If it was made secondary receiving?
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Yes.
MR. MULHERE: The effect is that within secondary receiving
areas the maximum allowable density that can be transferred into that
area is -- is lower. Bill, is -- I think.6. Instead of 1 to 1, it's .6 acres
--6 units per acre.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: So -- so a little more than half.
MR. CARLSON: Well, what about all the bonuses?
MR. MULHERE: Well, if you're asking if a rural village bonus
can be applied in that area if it was a secondary receiving area, I
believe that they are precluded. They're only allowed in primary
receiving areas.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: I think it's primary.
MR. CARLSON: But there's no -- there's no kind of bonus?
MR. MULHERE: Yes, there are some kinds of bonuses, I think,
and -- and they relate to enhanced or more preservation or on-site
Page 89
January 23, 2002
mitigation. So if you increase your on-site preservation through
clustering, then you may be able to get some additional bonuses.
That affordable housing bonus, that two-units break for a rural village
would not apply.
MR. CARLSON: I would not support that motion.
MR. MULHERE: May I also just add that I -- I listed a couple
of potential options earlier that if you were inclined to recommend
removing that from a receiving designation, I would like the
committee's feedback, if I can get it, relative to those options because
we will be bringing those options to the board.
MR. COE: Have you evaluated the option the young lady
brought up earlier about another area?
MR. MULHERE: No. We haven't evaluated that because that
area is part of the eastern lands, and the board already bifurcated this
process. It's not that that couldn't happen down the road as part of the
eastern lands assessment, that it could be designated as -- as a
receiving area. But it's a separate study going on. It's not part of
these rural fringe amendments.
Now, it could be a recommendation. We would carry forward
that recommendation.
MR. COE: I'd like to make that motion that we take this out
completely as a receiving area and that, you know, whenever they do
the other plan, go ahead and figure in the other parcel as a receiving
area.
MR. MULHERE: Now, of course, that's further east than the
areas that we're defining right now. And so, again, depending on
what happens in the eastern lands, that would require -- you know,
that -- that begins to identify a receiving land that is much further
removed from the estates.
MR. COE: Well, correct. But the goal is you were to preserve
this land and to protect the environment.
Page 90
January 23, 2002
MR. MULHERE: Yeah, I understand.
MR. CARLSON: The objective is to just leave these people
alone who went to the county commission years ago and said, "We
want our density frozen at one unit per five acres across the board,
whether it's a house or a trailer or whatever. That's what we want
because we want a rural area." And we want to respect that and just
leave them alone. We don't want to change anything.
MR. MULHERE: Well, that's what I recommended. If I
recommended removing the -- if you recall, if I recommended
removing the receiving designation, we would leave them as they are
today. That was my recommendation pen -- but there were some
alternatives in order to minimize the negative impacts on the TDR
process that I laid out for you. If I don't get a recommendation from
you relative to those, that's okay. We're still going to --
MR. COE: What about the recommendation to consider the
young lady's --
MR. MULHERE: I got -- I got that. I got that. And that was a
motion.
MR. COE: That's four; that's not three recommenda --
MR. MULHERE: That's four.
MR. COE: You want us to vote on one of these four?
MR. MULHERE: Well, at least if you gave me some feedback
relative to any one of those alternatives. Remember --
MR. COE: I'd like to make a motion for the fourth
recommendation, that you-all consider the land that the young lady
brought up, the one farther east.
MR. MULHERE: Okay.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: And remove this from --
MR. COE: And remove this completely. Do you want to vote?
Anybody want to second it?
MR. CARLSON: I'll second it.
Page 91
January 23, 2002
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Moved and seconded. Do we have ^
any discussion?
MS. LYNNE: Can -- can someone just review which areas
we're talking about?
MR. MULHERE: Sure. Correct me if I'm wrong, the motion
would be to remove the receiving designation on the Big Corkscrew
Island area, not in its entirety but as shown on that map, which is the
area that's developed, which is about approximately five sections of
land, and to designate a fairly equivalent portion of land, which is
largely impacted as a rock quarry and some other things, out here in
this notch that's in the eastern lands portion of the assessment.
MR. HILL: I would prefer to have those -- I suggest we have
those as separate motions so that they don't hinge together on a pass-
fail basis when it goes to the commission.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: The maker of the motion, then,
would you break those into two motions? One, to remove those
sections; two, to recommend that a like area be identified in the
eastern lands? Mr. Coe?
MR. COE: Yeah. That's fine.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Seconder?
MR. CARLSON: Yes.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. So the first motion would
be that eastern half of those -- let me -- can I have my little map back
here? The eastern half of Sections 22 and 27 and all of Sections 23,
24, 25, and 26 be removed from the sending area.
MR. CARLSON: Receiving area.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Receiving area. Excuse me. Sony
about that.
Discussion?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Hearing none, all in favor?
Page 92
January 23, 2002
(Unanimous response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Opposed, same sign.
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: It passed unanimously.
The second motion is that we recommend that a like receiving
area be established where? In -- in a general area within the eastern
lands?
MR. MULHERE: Well, I think we can describe it as the notch
that extends into Golden Gate Estates. I understand where it is.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. Notch within the eastern
lands. Is that okay,.Mr. Coe?
MR. COE: That's fine.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Seconder?
MR. CARLSON: (Indicating.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Discussion?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: In favor?
(Unanimous response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: It passes unanimously. Okay. We
got one thing out of the way.
Yes, sir.
MR. GAL: I'd like to make a motion that the staff explore the
possibility of sending -- transferring development rights into the
urban area.
MR. CARLSON: I'll second that.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. Well, we have a motion
then, and -- and I think Mr. Mulhere brought up earlier that in-fill
parcels -- we're talking about in-fill parcels, Mr. Gal, within the urban
area?
Page 93
January 23, 2002
MR. GAL: No. The entire urban area, whatever that may be. '.'`
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: The undeveloped parcels which are
in-fill parcels with in -fill. Okay. We have a motion that staff
recommend that we -- that we allow TDRs to be sent to undeveloped
parcels within our in-fill parcels within the urban area. Mr. Carlson
seconded it. Discussion?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: In favor?
(Unanimous response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: It passed unanimously.
MR. CARLSON: I'd like to make a motion that the county staff
and our county commissioners explore with the state and the DCA
the possibility of having some lands in the Golden Gate Estates area
explored as possible receiving areas, because of their much greater
suitability for residential development and the need to protect water
resource and wildlife in the rural area.
MR. COE: I'll second the motion.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Second motion. Do we have
discussion?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Hearing none, in favor?
(Unanimous response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: It passed unanimously. Okay.
How about we take -- what do we need for lunch? Is a half hour
enough for lunch?
MR. COE: Give them 45 minutes.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Forty-five minutes, okay. Thank
Page 94
January 23, 2002
you very much. Yes, sir.
(A lunch break was held from 12:22 p.m. to 1:15 p.m.)
(The following proceedings commenced, Mr. Stone not present:)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Could we come to order?
MR. HILL: Mr. Chairman, before we get on specifics, would it
be proper to request that our final -- final actions be delayed until our
next reg -- regular meeting, February the 2nd? The statement was
made that we have to do that today.
MR. LITSINGER: Stan Litsinger, comprehensive planning
manager.
Due to the tight schedule, I do not believe that if you delay your
recommendations past today we'll be able to incorporate them into
the documents that we send to the Planning Commission and the
Board of County Commissioners. As a matter of fact, the Planning
Commission agenda notebooks are going out on Friday, and then the
board will have its transmittal hearing, based on the Planning
Commission's hearing, on February the 7th on February -- February
the 27th. And based on that action is -- those are the documents that
we will send to the Department of Community Affairs.
So my answer to your question is I don't believe we have
enough time to assimilate any recommendations you might make at a
later date.
MR. HILL: So there's not enough time between the 2nd and the
7th to get it to the Planning Commission? Is that --
MR. LITSINGER: As far as -- I would leave that to your
discretion. We would have to include them as last-minute handouts
which tends not to make commissioners happy, if they have not
received them in their agenda packages, whether their planning --
probably yourselves included. They do not like to receive last-
second materials that they have not had time to review, so they tend
not to receive serious consideration.
Page 95
January 23, 2002
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Now, there will be time to get it to ^
the BOCC.
MR. LITSINGER: That's correct.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: No question about that.
MR. LITSINGER: That's correct.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: My feelings are, if it gets tight with
the Planning Commission but -- you know, let's get what we can do
today, and then there will be many things we'll be able to look at.
Let's agenda it for the 2nd. If it gets tight with the Planning
Commission it gets tight with the Planning Commission, but we'll
have time to get it to the BCC. I -- what's the pleasure?
MR. HILL: That's what I would -- because the Planning
Commission doesn't meet until the 7th.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Uh-huh.
MR. HILL: So if our 2nd -- February 2nd meeting, if we
introduce additional recommendations there, that could parallel in
with the Planning Commission five days later --
MS. LYNNE: I --
MR. HILL: -- in order to get to the BCC.
MR. COE: The way I understand --
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Wait a minute. One at a time, one
at the time. Mickey.
MR. COE: The way I understand what he's saying is this Friday
is a mailout of our recommendations. We want to get as much done
as we can today --
MR. HILL: To the Planning Commission only.
MR. COE: -- to the Planning Commission. That will go out on
Friday. And from the 4th or the 2nd, whenever is our next meeting,
if during that meeting we have anything to go, it's probably going to
go in a handout form; is that correct?
MR. LITSINGER: That's correct.
Page 96
January 23, 2002
MR. COE: So we need to do as much as we can today.
MR. HILL: It will go formally to the BCC.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: In one form, one document.
MR. LITSINGER: Yes.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Miss Lynne.
MS. LYNNE: According to my calendar, our next meeting is on
Wednesday, February the 6th with the planning meeting the next day.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: That's true. I hadn't thought about
that.
MS. LYNNE: So I would say we should get as much done
today as possible.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Get as much done. If we have to
do something on the 6th, we do something on the 6th. The Planning
Commission won't get it, but the Board of County Commissions will.
Now, how are we going to go about this? My thought is to poll
r-. each of the members of the council if they have a particular item they
want to bring up, discuss that item and vote on it. What's your
thought, Bill?
MR. LORENZ: I'm for it. That sounds certainly good to me as
a staff member.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. All right.
MS. STUDENT: Mr. Chairman --
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Yes.
MS. STUDENT: -- I think what we'll need is a final vote on all
the rest of it that wasn't, you know, brought up, because there may be
selected items that each member may have issues with that you'll vote
on, but there may be pieces left out that haven't been voted on, so
we'll need something to take care of the remainder.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: So the final motion that would be
approved --
MS. STUDENT: Everything else.
Page 97
January 23, 2002
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: -- recommending the rest of the ^
document, except as noted by the other motions.
MS. STUDENT: Right.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. Why don't we start — how
-- let me see, how can -- age. We'll let age do it first.
MR. HILL: Oldest or youngest?
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Oldest.
MR. HILL: Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
I would like to ask Dr. Prosser -- and I see Mr. Hancock is not
here. I'd like to address the question of that one-mile area east of 951
in the Belle Meade NRPA or Belle Meade sending area. If I'm
correct most of the northern half of that stretch is pretty well
developable with the First Unite -- or First Church, the golf course,
the new apartments that are up there.
MS. PROSSER: That's right.
MR. HILL: The bottom -- the south end of the bottom half is a
PUD that we've already approved here.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: No. That's in the first mile. This
is the second mile.
MS. PROSSER: This is the -- yeah, go ahead.
MR. MULHERE: I'm sorry. I -- I want to clarify that. I'm
going to step over to this map.
The -- the first mile east of 951, in this area here (indicating) is
designated as residential urban fringe. And within that area that's
where the developments you are talking are primarily lo -- primarily
located.
MR. HILL: I stand correct. I apologize.
MR. MULHERE: One mile east of that within this orange
portion which is, you know, proposed to be designated as the Belle
Meade NRPA and, in fact, is currently on interim basis designated as
the Belle Meade MRPA -- NRPA, that's the area that Mr. Hancock
Page 98
January 23, 2002
was referring to.
MR. HILL: That was part of our original request or request for
NRPA designation. I'd like to go on record to -- it -- it's in here as
being removed; is that correct?
MR. MULHERE: No.
MR. LORENZ: The -- staff is recommending that the
boundaries for the Belle Meade NRPA remain the same as that we
adopted as interim boundaries.
MR. HILL: Then I would like to move that we accept -- accept
that, if that is necessary.
MS. LYNNE: I second it.
MR. HILL: And, Dr. Prosser, do you have anything to add to
that?
MS. PROSSER: I do. I want to thank you for the promotion. I
am not a doctor, but I appreciate it. That's all.
's*"" MR. HILL: It will come in the mail.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. We have a motion on the
floor from Mr. Hill that essentially says that we should -- we agree
with the staffs recommendation that the eastern -- western one mile
of the Belle Meade NRPA should remain in the NRPA, and it's a
second by Mrs. -- Miss Lynne; is that correct?
MR. COE: That's correct.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: All in favor of the motion?
(Unanimous response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Opposed same sign.
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: It passed unanimously.
Anything else, Mr. Hill?
MR. HILL: Yes. If I can, Bill, there was a table. You have to
pardon the senior moment here. There's a table that shows the -- on
-- the third one down on the sheet that starts with the landscape scale.
Page 99
January 23, 2002
It's entitled, "Wetland protection."
MR. CARLSON: What was that page again?
MS. LYNNE: Six.
MR. HILL: There's no page number -- oh, page six. I'm sorry.
Can you focus that a bit?
MR. LORENZ: Yeah. I'll bring it up better.
MR. HILL: I -- I question in the secondary receiving graph that
it's up to 52 percent?
MR. LORENZ: Yes.
MR. HILL: That seems awfully high.
MR. LORENZ: Yes. That -- the secondary receiving is high in
wetlands. You can see where a large port -- portion of those wetlands
are in the -- these sections (indicating) and also in these -- this section
here (indicating).
MR. HILL: But we're identifying as a receiving area property
that's 52 percent wetland?
(Mr. Stone entered the room.)
MR. LORENZ: Yes, that's correct. Now, the other thing, look
at the secondary receiving areas. Oops. Secondary receiving lands
contribute to only 2 percent of the total wetland land cover of the
rural fringe. So, indeed, it does have a higher percentage
composition , but it's a very small area that exists. And our
preservation standards for this area are also at a 60 percent vegetation
retention standard.
MR. HILL: We're talking 2 percent of the 93,000; right?
MR. LORENZ: Well, 2 percent of the wetland land cover,
which would be -- I think it's around fifty-seven or fifty -eight
thousand.
MR. HILL: You are talking about 500 acres of wetland
approximately.
How does anybody else feel about this?
Page 100
January 23, 2002
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Well, is it -- is it -- that 500 acres,
then, would fall under the rules of WRAP analysis and everything of
that sort; is that correct?
MR. LORENZ: That's correct. It would be subject to these --
this area would be subject to a vegetation retention standard of 60
percent and be subject to the wetland policies that are -- exist under
6.2.
MR. COE: Would we have any net loss in wetlands?
MR. LORENZ: Our wetland policies say that we want to have a
no net loss, no net functional loss. And that would be based upon the
functional analysis, whether that be the WRAP or that be the
potentially future unified assessment procedure.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay.
MR. HILL: One other item -- and I got lost on the pages, but
Marco's discussion of that asphalt plant.
r-. CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: 39 and 41, Item 14 on 39, Item K
on 41.
MR. MULHERE: And I'm -- probably didn't do a good job of
clarifying that point, but, again, see if I can take another stab at it.
That language, you can see, is not underlined or struck through. It's
existing language in the Comprehensive Plan. It's language that we
put in the plan to implement the requirements of the final order, both
prohibitions and allowances. Those -- that language will no longer
apply to the rural fringe once these or whatever ultimately is adopted
of these amendments by the board -- once they're adopted, that
language will no longer apply, but that language will still apply to the
eastern lands portion until November when Comprehensive Plan
amendments are adopted by the board relative to that.
It needs to remain in the plan. It is directly from the final order.
Whether there's a conflict or not in terms of asphalt being allowed in
NRPAs and not allowed in other areas is not germane to this
Page 101
January 23, 2002
discussion, because that's the requirements of the final order, and
they will still apply to the eastern lands portion. In the fringe we are
not allowing asphalt plants in sending lands.
MR. CARLSON: But you are in receiving lands.
MR. MULHERE: Yes, we are in receiving lands, yeah.
MS. STUDENT: Bob, I have a further clarification, because
I've looked at this also, and it would appear to me that these are old
things from the old ag rural part of the plan where the asphalt plant is
permitted --
MR. MULHERE: That's correct.
MS. STUDENT: -- from way back when before we even got to
the final order. And then you have the prohibition for the interim
development provisions, which would mean for the assessment area
you can't have the asphalt plant. And then on the NRPA area it
doesn't really reference it, because the way I read this in the plan it's
referring to the agricultural rural land-use designation. So that would
be, if anything was left out of the assessment area, you could still do
an asphalt plant in there, but the NRPAs are part of the assessment
area so -- that's the way I read it.
I -- I realize that it's a bit confusing, but that part is old language
of the plan that was amended when we had to do the final order to
prohibit certain uses. So I think that may put it in perspective for
you. I hope it does.
MR. CARLSON: Well, I'm confused. If we made a
recommendation that asphalt plants and other industrial activities not
be considered in receiving areas, would that -- are you saying that
that's irrelevant to the --
MR. MULHERE: No. No, no. No. That's -- I mean, that's a
fine -- that's a perfectly acceptable recommendation. Currently -- to
answer your question, currently as proposed under the list of
permitted uses --
Page 102
January 23, 2002
MS. STUDENT: Yeah. That's at a different part of the plan
under the receiving areas.
MR. MULHERE: Under the rural fringe -- under the rural
fringe district, permitted uses include asphalt and concrete batch-
making plant. And if your recommendation was to ec --
MR. CARLSON: Was it also refuge handling? Like, is that a
landfill?
MR. MULHERE: Facilities for collection, transfer, processing,
and reduction of solid waste.
MR. CARLSON: Is that a landfill?
MR. MULHERE: Yes, I believe that could -- that would
include a landfill.
MR. CARLSON: Well, then I'd like to make a motion that the
EAC recommend to the Rural Fringe Advisory Council, the staff, and
the commissioners and everybody on the planet that -- that those
industrial uses of asphalt plants, concrete, and refuge handling and
transfer not be allowed in receiving areas.
MR. COE: I'll second that.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. Moved by Mr. Carlson,
second by Mr. Coe.
Any discussion?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: The motion clear? In favor?
(Unanimous response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Opposed same sign.
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: It passed unanimously.
MR. HILL: One brief question, Mr. Chairman, on page 40, I
guess that's Section L, interim natural resource protection areas. In
the first paragraph, why are those words overstriked?
MR. MULHERE: Natural resource protection area?
Page 103
January 23, 2002
MR. HILL: Yes.
MR. MULHERE: You'll see that the -- the designation NRPA,
the acronym NRPA, is not struck through. Earlier we -- where we
used the term in the first instance, natural resource protection areas,
we insert the acronym in parens. So there's no reason to waste space.
MR. HILL: And why is CREW scratched out?
MR. LORENZ: Mr. Chairman, I'll take a stab at that. I believe
Bob is -- the intent of this language is to -- to note that the interim
natural resource protection areas are now only those in the eastern
lands.
MR. MULHERE: Correct.
MR. LORENZ: Because when this language goes through the
north Belle Meade, the CREW, and the south Belle Meade CARL as
proposed will be the final NRPA boundaries of the rural fringe.
MR. MULHERE: Permitted. And they are referenced in the
rural fringe section. So they are no longer interim, and that's why
they're struck through. We've done some of what the final order
requires, and we're reflecting that with this language.
MR. HILL: Okay.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay.
MR. HILL: I have a couple more, but go ahead.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. Miss Lynne, what do you
have?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Are you going to be next? Oh, she
left. I'm sorry.
How about Mr. Carlson?
MR. CARLSON: I'd like to go last.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: You'd like to go last.
MR. CARLSON: Except for one comment.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: You and Mr. Coe are going to have
Page 104
January 23, 2002
to flip a coin.
MR. CARLSON: I have a tremendous number of comments
that I have to actually flip through the documents to see everything.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay.
MR. CARLSON: Let me ask you this about the rural village
concept and the bonus density. Is there any reason why all of the
density associated with transfer of development rights, not just the
base density --
MR. MULHERE: Uh-huh.
MR. CARLSON: -- but all of the density come from the
sending areas?
MR. MULHERE: The reason that we didn't structure it that way
is because we believe that the result of that will be -- and this may be
something that you'll -- you'll actually appreciate -- is that we believe
the result of that will be that you will not see the creation of any rural
villages because the cost of acquiring all of those units will exceed
any market desire to go in there and create these. And we are
proposing that we want those rural villages to be created. We are
proposing that that compact type of development that's called for in
9-J-5 and in many other places by many other experts will be
beneficial to the area in terms of creating a mixed-use compact
development that will provide for some services.
So we are offering that as a -- exactly as it is indicated, as a
bonus. We are proposing it as a bonus. It may be -- I mean, certainly
that can be a recommendation that if-- if-- if the base density --
minimum density stays at 2.5 and you get your base density, then any
other increase in density to achieve that comes from TDRs. That can
be a recommendation.
The concern would be that it would be unlikely that you would
see any rural villages developed. That's the rationale.
MR. CARLSON: But it sure does solve that 2-to-1 kind of ratio
Page 105
January 23, 2002
of sending to receiving.
MR. MULHERE: Not if-- not if no one exercises the right;
then we have created --
MR. CARLSON: Well, how do you set the value on those?
MR. MULHERE: The value will be set by the marketplace.
Right now the current estimated value by our expert, Dr. Nicholas, at
a base value is 18,000 per unit. Now, he feels that that will go up
significantly once a bank is created and some of those units are
purchased to move that bank into -- you know, into operation. And
that's what has happened in other examples of successful TDRs, is
once that a certain portion has been acquired and the market starts to
move, the value of those has increased. But he's indicated the base
density at this point by his valuation to be about $18,000 per dwelling
unit.
So, again, if you go back to the example of a thousand-acre rural
village and you say you have to acquire all of them through a TDR
other than a base density, you can create a formula right now based
on his base value as to what someone might have to spend in order to
acquire those to meet that minimum density.
Another thing that could be done is to reduce that minimum
density so that it's not quite as much that someone would have to
purchase. You can reduce the bonus from two to one. I mean, there's
a lot of options out there. What you have before you is our
recommendation. But there are a lot of options.
I mean, if you went with a bonus of one, then they'd be buying
one and getting one.
MR. CARLSON: Well, I'm not ready at this point to do that
kind of analysis in my head and figure all that out.
MR. MULHERE: I understand.
MR. CARLSON: But I -- but I disagree vehemently with
creating more residential units in this county than we already have.
Page 106
January 23, 2002
And, to my mind, it's still conducive to urban sprawl to create these
communities out in the rural areas.
So at the very least I would recommend that we make a motion
that all of-- unless I'm missing something here and making some
kind of tactical mistake, but I don't see it --
MR. MULHERE: That's okay.
MR. CARLSON: -- that all transfer of development right, units,
in this program come from our sending areas.
MR. MULHERE: So for rural villages -- just make sure, for
rural villages beyond the base density in order to achieve the
minimum density, that all of that should come from TDRs?
MR. CARLSON: Say that again.
MR. MULHERE: That beyond the base density, the one per
five that they enjoy, the one per five is their base density, they've got
to get up to a minimum density, that in order to achieve that
.-� minimum density the entire amount come from TDRs and none from
bonuses.
MR. CARLSON: Correct.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. Now, is everyone clear
what someone has to do to obtain the rule -- the rural density --
MR. MULHERE: Rural village?
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: -- rural village ?
MR. MULHERE: I can go over it again.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Why don't you go over it very
quickly, because there's some things -- myself, I think we should
encourage that, because it eliminates the 1 s and 5s and 1 s and 20s
with septic tanks and wells and things of that sort and brings them in
and creates more open space. I think it's the opposite of urban --
essentially development sprawl, not urban -- urban sprawl.
What does someone have to do to qualify for the rural village
and to get the density bonus?
Page 107
January 23, 2002
MR. MULHERE: Well, first of all, as I said, no rural village
may be located closer than one mile to another. They have to come
in through a zoning, a PUD zoning process. In some cases,
depending on the level of development that's proposed, they may rise
to a DRI, probably in quite a few cases.
What they need to do to get their density is they may -- they may
take the base density of the village and the green space area -- of
course, they can't build in the green space area, so it goes into the
village. They must then also acquire.8 dwelling units per acre from
TDRs from sending lands for each acre in the rural village. Again,
the example I used was a thousand acres, they'd have to go out and
acquire eight hundred units.
Once they do that, and given that during their zoning process all
other components of the rural village have been addressed; access,
community service provisions, green space, parks, that all of--
schools, all of those --
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: -- are community services.
MR. MULHERE: Correct. And those are all identified.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: That require utilities?
MR. MULHERE: That's correct.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Water, sewer --
MR. MULHERE: That's correct.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: -- everything.
MR. MULHERE: Then they would get a density bonus, the
way we've got it written, of 2 dwelling units per acre. That's how you
would accomplish --
MR. CARLSON: Well, see, this is my problem. I can see this
being an advantage if we take the allowable density that we have in
this county, take what we have now and move it into a rural village
and not create additional units. I mean, you're -- you're bringing in
additional population which is going to need additional roads, so it's
Page 108
January 23, 2002
not going to have septic tanks. You're bringing thousands and
thousands of additional people into the county.
MR. MULHERE: Well, certainly the number would be in the
thousands. Quantifying it -- I mean, with no maximum number of
rural villages established here, except that there's a separation
between them, but there's no maximum number established --
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: And they can only be in the
sending area?
MR. MULHERE: They can only be send -- in the receiving
area.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: The receiving area which consists
of how many total acres?
MR. MULHERE: About 33,000.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: 33,000.
MR. MULHERE: And, also, frankly, the market is going to
--� dictate how many of these you get. This is not an inexpensive
proposition, so the market is going to dictate how many of these can
be supported. In my opinion, I don't think you'll see more than four,
including Orangetree, as a prime location. However --
MR. CARLSON: That's just in the rural fringe.
MR. MULHERE: No. Three in the rural fringe and Orangetree.
MR. CARLSON: We've still got the rural lands to go.
MR. MULHERE: But the rural lands -- I really can't comment
in terms of what might ultimately come out of there. But at this point
in time they haven't proposed a transfer of development rights
process similar to what we have. They have a whole different
process that they're looking at.
MR. CARLSON: Well, I'm sorry.
MR. MULHERE: No, I understand. I understand. That's why
I'm --
MR. CARLSON: I'm going to disagree even -- even with some
Page 109
January 23, 2002
of my own environmental colleagues, because I think this only works
if it -- if it brings existing units together and keeps existing units out
of--
MR. MULHERE: And I understand that.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. We have a motion on the
floor.
MR. CARLSON: And it's very tempting, because you look at
the north Belle Meade, and it seems like that's a thing we can do, and
we do it with this, but look what you loose in the D area. Look what
you loose down there. I mean, it's --
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay.
MR. CARLSON: These are going to be huge D -- they can be
3,000 acres, huge.
MR. MULHERE: Actually, we've reduced that down to 2,000
acres.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Maximum size. What can be the
maximum density within that 2,000 -- maximum number of
residential units within that 2,000 acres?
MR. MULHERE: Seven -- seventy-five hundred.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: So there can be a maximum of
7500 within 2,000 acres.
MR. MULHERE: Correct.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: All right. There is a motion on the
floor, and the motion is to eliminate the density bonus for the creation
of the rural villages. Do I hear a second?
MS. LYNNE: Can I make a comment? No.
MR. CARLSON: What was the motion?
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay.
MR. CARLSON: That all transferred development rights that
are used in the transfer development rights scheme --
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay.
Page 110
January 23, 2002
MR. CARLSON: -- including, perhaps, rural villages come out
of the designated sending areas.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: And rural villages not receive a
bonus.
MR. CARLSON: Yes. No, they can, but it has to come out
of--
MR. MULHERE: Yes, but -- but the semantics -- may I just --
because the semantics that you are discussing right now are very
important because actually what you just said -- what you just said as
far as your motion is, in fact, the case. All TDRs are coming out of
sending areas.
I believe what your intent is not only that all TDRs come out of
sending areas but that be the only way that someone can achieve
additional density. And I think that's the key component, unless I'm
wrong. Isn't that what you're saying?
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: I think that's what -- I think that's
what the motion is.
MR. MULHERE: They don't get a bonus.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: The rural village does not create
additional bonus units --
MR. MULHERE: Correct.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: -- that are not available in sending
areas. Okay. All right.
Motion on the floor. Is there a second?
MR. HILL: Yes. I have a comment.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Second by Mr. Hill.
Yes, Mr. Hill, go ahead.
MR. HILL: If we took all of the allowable density that exists in
the county at this point in time available for development, what
•-. you're proposing will go beyond the current level for the entire
county; is that correct?
Page 111
January 23, 2002
MR. MULHERE: That's correct.
MR. HILL: To me I think we might want to consider limiting
any future increases through TDR, bonuses, whatever --
MR. MULHERE: That's --
MR. HILL: -- to the density which is allowed at the present
time on a gross county landscape --
MR. MULHERE: And that would be achieved through only
TDR --
MR. HILL: I think that's what Mr. Carlson is referring to now
in the total scheme.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. Yes, ma'am.
MS. LYNNE: I'm wondering if a better way to communicate
that information, rather than saying limit the trans -- or limit the
villages to transfer of TDRs to just say that there should be no -- have
the resolution say there should be no increase in total density in this
county for any reason.
MR. HILL: That was going to be my next motion after we
approved the language in Mr. Carlson --
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Let's -- let's vote on Mr. Carlson's
motion. Those in favor of Mr. Carlson's motion say aye.
MR. COE: Aye.
MR. CARLSON: Aye.
MR. HILL: Aye.
MR. GAL: Aye.
MR. SOLING: Aye.
MR. STONE: Aye.
MS. LYNNE: Aye.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Opposed? Aye.
It passes 6 to 1, Sansbury dissented.
It sounds like Mr. Hill had the next motion. Mr. Hill, do you
have something else, sir?
Page 112
January 23, 2002
MR. HILL: I move that we recommend that the future allowed
density in Collier County not to exceed the current allowed density
on a gross county-wide scale.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: That density exists January 23,
2002.
MR. HILL: Correct.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. Do I hear a second?
MS. LYNNE: Second.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: A second by Miss Lynne. Do I
hear any discussion?
MR. COE: We've got -- there may be a problem with this,
particularly when we've already asked Mr. Mulhere to take a look at
the estates to see if we can't increase the density there. We're talking
out of each side of our mouth here.
MR. MULHERE: May I also --
•� MS. LYNNE: That's just TDRs.
MR. CARLSON: No. That was the feasibility of the estates
becoming a receiving area that would receive units from the sending
areas, same system.
MS. STUDENT: May I --
MR. COE: Two, two and a half units, whatever it is, per five
acres out there.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Let me ask a question about
something now. As you said there's a lot of potential purchases
coming up on lands that we've got a lot of different agencies
purchasing lands right now, okay. That land gets purchased, what
happens to that density?
MR. MULHERE: If it gets purchased by a governmental
agency?
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Yeah.
MR. MULHERE: It's gone.
Page 113
January 23, 2002
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: It's gone?
MR. MULHERE: Correct.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Yes, ma'am.
MS. STUDENT: I need to make a comment. I'm concerned
that that motion dealing with the county-wide issue is beyond the
scope of what we're about today, because we are dealing with the
rural fringe assessment area.
And, also, the density concept -- I'm going to defer to
Mr. Mulhere. But we have a density rating system, and we have a
base density. And you can get increases if you do work-force
housing. You can get decreases if you're in a traffic congestion areas.
So while we have a base density, there's a certain degree of fluidity to
it, because there's conditions upon which you get more or less. So it's
kind of hard to say as to future development, you know, that hasn't
been developed yet in the county what it might be because of the
density rating system in the plan. And I just wanted to throw that out
as well as of paramount importance to me is that we're getting
beyond the scope of the rural fringe area.
MR. MULHERE: I just want to add a couple of things.
Currently the only mechanism to achieve an affordable housing
project that is realistic, given the land costs in this county, is through
an affordable housing density bonus. So you go in and you ask the
Board of County Commissioners for a number of dwelling units that's
permissible under the Comprehensive Plan for affordable housing.
The same holds true on any number of developments in the urban
area where the land may be currently designated agricultural or at
some lower density, but the Comprehensive Plan allows for a density
higher than that. So in every one of those examples, you would be
increasing density from what is currently allowed or authorized
under -- under the underlying zoning.
Another example would be -- well, there are some other bonuses
Page 114
January 23, 2002
in the plan that are authorized. And if you come in and qualify, you
can ask for some other bonuses.
There's nothing -- I mean, I -- and I understand your motion.
And I'm happy to carry it forward, whatever you-all end up
approving. But there's nothing -- there's really no -- there was no
intent or no concept here that would preclude as a policy elements
that would allow for increased density in certain areas that are
identified as being maybe more appropriate for that type of
development and density. And I'm not trying to convince you
because, you know, really -- I mean, I've already done my
presentation. But I think that motion goes very, very far in terms of
restricting existing rights that are authorized under the
Comprehensive Plan for land throughout the county where increased
density may be very appropriate.
MS. STUDENT: It could almost be construed as a moratorium
on any rezones county-wide where you could achieve a greater
density that you have under the plan, but you don't yet have it
because you're in its holding zone which has a lesser density with it.
And, again, I have to reiterate. I'm concerned about going
beyond the scope of what we're doing.
MR. CARLSON: Okay. We won't do that. But -- but this
whole transfer of development rights program, the concept, was sold
as a way to transfer development and units out of sensitive areas and
into somewhere else.
MR. MULHERE: Correct.
MR. CARLSON: And it's much more than that.
MR. MULHERE: Why?
MR. CARLSON: Because it creates more units.
MR. MULHERE: No. The transfer -- the transfer process
doesn't create more units. The transfer process doesn't create any
more units.
Page 115
January 23, 2002
MR. CARLSON: The rural -- the rural village concept -- .
MR. MULHERE: The bonuses do. You've made a motion with
respect to that, and I wrote it down.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. Mr. Hill, would you
consider amending your motion to direct it toward the lands included
in the rural fringe study?
MR. HILL: Certainly.
MR. MULHERE: That's -- that's so that the base density that
exists out there now, 93,000 -- on private lands, whatever the private
lands are, whatever that number is, divided by 5, basically is the base
density. Don't forget there are some nonconforming lots where
someone may enjoy a unit that that number not be exceeded.
And obviously the way to get to that, I believe you already
covered in your motion, is that there can be no increase in density in
the rural fringe under that motion except through a TDR, and I think
that achieves the same result.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: And -- okay. The seconder agree
with the revision of the motion?
MS. LYNNE: Yes.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. I just would comment that I
think it ties the hands of being able to utilize density to achieve things
that are in the public good, affordable housing, types of developments
in some areas. So I -- I'm going to have to oppose the motion. But
let's vote on it. Those in favor --
MS. LYNNE: Well, can I make another comment?
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Yes, ma'am.
MS. LYNNE: It's also not in the best interests of all the
residents of Collier County to have
increased density in this area because we're exhausting our -- our
water and other resources
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. Favor?
Page 116
January 23, 2002
MR. DUANE: Any public comment? Because a lot of these
items you've discussed after we had public comment this morning,
you're kind of--
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: What's the pleasure of the board?
I really think the public comment period --
MR. DUANE: I can't respond to your comments.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. Well, we're discussing
amongst ourselves now. Thank you very much. All the comment
period had ended.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: What is the pleasure of the board?
Favor?
MR. CARLSON: Aye.
MR. HILL: Aye.
MR. SOLING: Aye.
MR. STONE: Aye.
MS. LYNNE: Aye.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Opposed? Aye.
MR. COE: Aye.
MR. GAL: Aye.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: The motion fails.
Who's next? Miss Lynne, do you want to be next?
MS. LYNNE: I'd like to discuss the issue of allowing
conservation areas and conservation easement acreage to send their
density elsewhere. I think that's inappropriate.
MR. MULHERE: Just as a clarification, we're not proposing to
allow it from conservation areas, but we did not preclude
conservation easements on private lands. So if you're designated
conservation, you can't transfer under our proposal. But you're
correct. If you have private land and you have conservation, we
haven't precluded that.
MS. LYNNE: Right. The Corkscrew Sanctuary, for example --
Page 117
January 23, 2002
MR. MULHERE: -- is precluded. Corkscrew --
MS. LYNNE: That's precluded.
MR. MULHERE: That's correct.
MS. LYNNE: So we're talking about private lands which have
conservation easements. And I don't think that it's appropriate for
them to be allowed to send development rights somewhere else
because their development rights have already been terminated
essentially.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Well, let me ask a question on that
then. What would motivate one to take a piece of private property
and turn it into conservation, which is what the goal, I think, of all of
us is if they cannot transfer the development rights off of that
property?
MR. MULHERE: You can do it before you --
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Conservation easement, yeah.
MS. LYNNE: These these are --
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: If someone had a con -- if someone
decides to grant a conservation easement on their property, which is
what we're looking to do is to conserve the property with the very
limited uses that are under conservation easements, and they wish to
be able to take that -- their TDRs and transfer them someplace else, to
me that is a carrot to get more lands with conservation easements. I
think what you're talking about defeats the purpose.
MS. LYNNE: But someplace that already has a conservation
easement has already gotten some benefit because the PUDs or
whatever they are, they have already gotten their payoff for
preserving that land, and they shouldn't be entitled to additional
payoff.
MR. MULHERE: That's only -- I feel I need to make a
clarification again. It probably wasn't clear before. That's partially
true and then again not true in all circumstances. I think it's
Page 118
January 23, 2002
^ important you at least hear this.
In Collier County you are allowed to develop at your -- at your
gross density. So if you have, for example, let's use a PUD, and
within that PUD you identified some conservation lands and you've
put a conservation easement over those lands, you can still develop
the density from that conservation land within your project. So by
not precluding someone from transferring the dwelling units from
that conservation easement, you still have an opportunity -- there is
still an opportunity for someone to take some of the units that they
are authorized to develop on their land and -- and, you know, send
them to another area.
Under your scenario they would not be able to do that. I'm not
saying it's right or wrong. I just wanted you to understand that -- that
it doesn't mean that they can't develop the units. It just means that
they can't develop the units among that portion that has a
conservation designation on it.
I think I understood your -- all of you collectively to support a
concept that would not allow conservation -- a transfer from a
designated conservation easement anyway so, I mean --
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. What's the pleasure? Do
we have a motion?
MR. HILL: Would you repeat that?
MR. CARLSON: Well, what my problem was that lands are
included on the map of sending areas on projects that were done.
That was my problem.
MR. MULHERE: I understand.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Miss Lynne, do you want to -- do
we have a motion?
MS. LYNNE: I've just gotten more confused again. Explain
what you -- explain your point again, please.
MR. CARLSON: That there were receiving lands designated on
Page 119
January 23, 2002
the future land-use map -- excuse me.
MR. MULHERE: Sending.
MR. CARLSON: There were sending areas designated on the
future land-use map that were already in preserves in projects that
had already been approved and were done and built and over, and I
didn't think it was fair to go back and offer that kind of bonus for
people who created preserves and were happy with their project.
MS. LYNNE: Isn't that what I -- isn't that what I said? That's
what I meant to say.
So I would move that any property that's already been -- already
has a conservation easement is not allowed to be a sending area.
MR. GAL: I'd just like to amend the motion.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Yes, sir. Proposal to amend the
motion, Mr. Gal.
MR. GAL: Lands that are privately held that currently have a
conservation easement or other restrictive development that exists in '.'
perpetuity be excluded from the TDR program.
MS. LYNNE: Cool. That's fine.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Currently, okay.
MS. LYNNE: Currently.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Not the future.
MR. GAL: Currently.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. Do I hear a second? Is the
amendment okay with the maker of the motion?
MS. LYNNE: Yes, yes.
MR. COE: Second.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Second. Discussion?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Favor?
(Unanimous response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Opposed?
Page 120
January 23, 2002
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: It passes unanimously.
Miss Lynne, do you have anything else?
MS. LYNNE: I have a whole list.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Let's do it.
MS. LYNNE: Let's do it? Okay.
The golf course issue, we don't want -- let's see, we don't want
golf courses in the sending areas. Is that currently the case?
MR. MULHERE: That's correct.
MS. LYNNE: You can't have a golf course in a sending area.
Can you have a golf course in buffer lands?
MR. MULHERE: You can have a golf course in buffer lands if
it's designated receiving. You can't have golf courses in sending.
You can have golf courses in receiving.
MR. LORENZ: And -- and the more specific language with the
'~ buffer area is the golf course rough or the more passive areas can be
adjacent directly to the natural reservation. That's how the language
currently states.
MR. MULHERE: So if-- if you have a receiving area that's
adjacent to a natural reservation, you may have a golf course there.
But only that portion that can be immediately adjacent to the natural
reservation is that portion that is what? What did you just call it?
MR. LORENZ: Golf course rough.
MR. MULHERE: Golf course rough.
MS. LYNNE: The buffering, then, the buffering for the NRPAs,
I think that has to be a mile. I think we've heard enough testimony
from experts that that needs to be a mile?
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: I don't agree with that. No, we
haven't. We've talked about it, but we have not heard testimony from
experts that have convinced me that it should be a mile.
MR. MULHERE: I think that's Bill's area of expertise.
Page 121
January 23, 2002
MR. CARLSON: We heard testimony today from someone who ^
hired consultants who said there was an influence of the 951 drainage
canal within a mile of their proposed project.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: That's true.
MR. LORENZ: As a staff member, let me explain the staffs
position with regard to the buffer language that would deal with
adverse impacts from draw-downs.
What I recall from Dr. Deuver's presentation and the analysis
that he did was based upon the canals that were put in place, the
Fakahatchee, and -- and various canals in the six -- late '60s and early
'70s, those systems, their water control elevations were set such that
they drew the local groundwater table down 6 to 7 to 8 feet. The --
the impact to a wetland system is going to be directly proportional to
the amount of draw-down that's allowed. So past historical data in
Collier County where you do see those long, large effects is because
we had a terrific draw-down with those old canal systems.
South Florida Water Management District currently has a set of
regulations that they use to identify what would be an adverse impact
to a wetland as a result of a drainage control structure, the elevation
that it's set. That -- that procedure is referenced in these policies.
And what staff has recommended is that that procedure be followed
to determine what would be an add -- adverse impact. So rather than
using a presumptive number such as a mile buffer or a thousand foot
with regard to water table impacts, we're proposing that that
procedure be used.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: And I think what I'm saying is that
I don't believe that anybody should be able to adversely affect the
water table in Corkscrew but determine whether that is -- I think the
procedure should be followed rather than arbitrarily saying a mile or
2 miles or a half a mile or what have you.
MR. CARLSON: But there is data to designate that
Page 122
January 23, 2002
influences --
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: It might be.
MR. CARLSON: Or a mile and go beyond a mile. And in this
report, if I read -- if I remember correctly, the requirement is that
the -- any development that goes adjacent to a NRPA have some sort
of hydrologic monitoring program to ensure that they're not having a
deleterious impact on water tables in the NRPA; is that --
MR. LORENZ: Yes. On page 32 in the conservation coastal
management element, parentheses 4, is the language that we're
proposing that would adopt the South Florida Water Management
District's procedure to determine what the adverse impacts would be.
MR. CARLSON: Well, seeing as developments can be as small
as 40 acres -- is that also correct?
MR. MULHERE: In receiving lands, yes. That's only to
transfer in.
MR. CARLSON: As somebody who is in that business and
does hydrologic monitoring and knows how expensive it is and how
labor intensive it is and how difficult it is to analyze that data and
retrieve it and manage it, you know, I think it's unrealistic to think
that that will happen. The better approach is geographic and just
have a buffer and not rely on developers to come up with hydrologic
monitoring and analysis plans and programs. Who's going to monitor
it?
MR. MULHERE: I do want to add --
MR. CARLSON: I mean, who's going to check?
MR. LORENZ: Well, this -- this is -- this is a procedure that's
set up up front to be incorporated in the setting of the water control
elevations. Now, there can be -- there can be some monitoring.
We're not proposing any monitoring. We're simply proposing that
that procedure be set up front to set the appropriate level of the water
control elevation, such that if you don't have an adverse impact at the
Page 123
January 23, 2002
boundary at the natural reservoir -- "'"'NMR. CARLSON: Then the monitoring burden falls back on the
people who are trying to preserve the natural areas. So nothing
changes.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: No. The monitoring is on the
permittee to call the system, okay.
MR. CARLSON: There is no monitoring.
MS. LYNNE: Yeah. I mean --
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: In the case of the South Florida
Water Management District permits and the case that we're talking
about in my development, the development I'm involved in, I've got a
monitoring requirement. I have to do monthly and quarterly checks
on lake levels, on levels in the wells, on levels in the Airport Canal.
And I have to file them. If I don't file them on, I get a letter from
Mr. T's office, says, "You'd better get them filed or you're going to
get fined." So there's an aggressive program to make sure it happens,
but it's not like it doesn't happen.
MR. CARLSON: But they're not proposing that program.
MR. LORENZ: That's correct. The county -- in our proposed
amendments, we're not proposing monitoring.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: But the district will require it if
there's a surface water management or whatever the term is for that
permit today, and they enforce it pretty good.
MR. CARLSON: Is that the case, that the district will
automatically require that kind of monitoring for every project?
MR. MULHERE: I can't answer that.
MR. LORENZ: I don't know.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: I don't know the answer.
MR. MULHERE: I did want to add that I recognize that
primarily your responsibility here is to look at the natural resource
protection measures.
Page 124
January 23, 2002
I think it's important to put on the record, though, from the
staffs perspective, we're also talking about some balance in terms of
the impacts that we're ultimately going to have on private property
rights and on those properties that have been identified as receiving
lands. And, you know, we're trying to basically protect the natural
resources and minimize the impacts on those lands that have been
identified as appropriate for development. And there will be a
significant impact associated with a mile buffer around all of the
natural resource protection areas that will extend, in some cases, into
receiving lands. In other cases, the boundary adjacent to the natural
resource protection area is a sending area, and you may have some
level of protection as a result of that sending area designation.
MR. COE: I'm curious. I keep hearing from my good friend,
Bruce Anderson, and now from you about this Burt Harris Act. Is
that it?
MR. MULHERE: Burt J. Harris.
MR. COE: How many lawsuits have been filed under that act
and won?
MR. MULHERE: I don't know.
MS. STUDENT: I may be -- there have been several filed. The
current number I don't have, but it requires an extensive alternate
dispute resolution process, and they find their way through that where
the local government does some -- you want to call it horse trading
with the developer to come up with a reasonable alternative, and then
they settle out. But they must go through that process before they
find their way to circuit court. My understanding is that's what
happens to most of them.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Never gone to trial.
MR. COE: Now I'm hearing that it's never gone to trial.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: It's always been settled.
MS. STUDENT: That's not necessarily -- that is the last that I
Page 125
January 23, 2002
knew. Currently I could do some checking to see if any have gone to ^
trial, but that was the last that I knew. And I'll be happy to check on
that up in -- the attorney general's office keeps track of this.
MR. COE: The reason I'm curious is, I'm one of those people
that have had to do -- deal with threats before. And I have to assess
the level of importance of that threat. And if it ain't going to court,
what's the level of the threat?
MR. MULHERE: Well, I -- if I inferred in any way or
suggested to you that your actions should be based on a potential
threat of a Burt J. Harris Act, I don't believe I said that, and if did I
would retract that statement.
MR. COE: Thank you very much.
MR. MULHERE: Because what I think what I said was under
the Burt J. Harris Act, here are provisions that can be used to
minimize the likelihood of a claim or to address the lost impact on
private property owners. I certainly have never suggested that we
will either be sued or might, you know, lose or -- or prevail on a
lawsuit, not being an attorney.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: All right. Let's -- why don't we do
this --
MR. GAL: I just want to say that we've -- before petitions have
come up and I can think of two attorneys that have been before us
that have threatened us with Burt J. Harris lawsuits, and I -- and I
think after the last time I went and looked at the -- the statute itself,
and it's not necessarily a slam dunk for the landowner. There are
some hoops that the landowner must go through --
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Exactly.
MR. GAL: -- to bring a suit. And property rights is always
thrown at us --
MR. MULHERE: My only reason for bringing it up is that the
final order and under the Burt J. Harris Act the county does have an
Page 126
January 23, 2002
obligation to look at and attempt to balance the impacts on private
property rights. I assume that that is not an objectionable goal under
those statutes. And I'm not suggesting to you that -- that there would
be any likelihood of any one entity prevailing or not prevailing. I'm
simply identifying for you what we have done as policies to try to
balance the natural resource protections with the private property
rights; that's all.
MR. GAL: I have one other question.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Go ahead, Mr. Gal.
MR. GAL: Does the final order of the state require that this
county put in its objectives and policies that while we want to protect
environmentally sensitive land, that we're also going to protect
property rights? I know -- understand that we need to be cautious of
people's property rights and include that in our planning and thinking
which I think we've done. But do we need to state that as an
objective?
MR. MULHERE: I don't think we need to state it as an
objective. I mean, I don't think there's any statute -- I think you're
asking if there's any statutory obligation. I don't think that there is.
As long as it was a component, in my mind, in the development of
those policies, then I don't see why it would have to be expressly
stated.
I'd defer to Marjorie though because it's really more of a legal
question I think.
MR. GAL: I'd like to make a motion that references to
protecting private property rights, because -- not because it's not
important but because this is a growth management plan, that they be
removed from the objectives and policies. And I can -- two pages in
particular, page 18 and page 23. And I don't know if there are any
other areas. 23 of the CCME section.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: We're talking about of--
Page 127
January 23, 2002
MR. GAL: Why --
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Page 18 of 23 of the future land-
use element.
MR. GAL: Right. Private property rights are being protected
by the state. Why does the county need to add another layer of
protection?
MS. STUDENT: I guess I need to explain something about that.
All this stems from the United States Constitution. And in our
Constitution there's a provision that you can't be deprived of life,
liberty, or property without due process of law. And that's been made
applicable to the -- I'm not going into a big treatise on that, but it's
made applicable to the state and also local governments. Also, there's
a provision that a government can't take property without paying for
it, and that's what's known as condemnation, a physical taking. And
then that body of jurisprudence has been extended to recognize that
when you put certain restrictions or controls on how somebody can
use their land that may impact their property rights, that's called
inverse condemnation.
When that happens and it's proven up, it can be what's called a
regulatory taking, and the local government has to compensate the
property owner. And because of the common-law recognition of
protection of private property rights, zoning regulations are usually
construed against a local government in favor -- or a state
government or the federal government in favor of the property owner
because we have this common-law history that comes to us from our
English jurisprudence when the king used to go in and just
expropriate people's property for his own use, and our founding
fathers said we don't want to do that here in this country.
So that's kind of like a history of it. And the Burt Harris came
about to go a little further than taking jurisprudence and give some
additional protection because of the situation in the State of Florida
Page 128
January 23, 2002
where a lobby of private property interests got together and had this
passed because they felt that private property rights were not
adequately protected by the takings jurisprudence because there as
long as you had a minimal beneficial use of your property it wasn't
necessarily taking. It applies to all levels of government, not just if
the state does it, the county doesn't. It's a constitutional principle
that's applicable to the county and something we have to be mindful
of in our regulations, and the Burt Harris Act is made applicable to
local governments as well.
MR. GAL: I understand that. But we don't change that by
removing that language from the growth management plan.
MR. MULHERE: That's true.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: But one of the purposes is to blend
the good planning, good environmental protection and the protection
of property, private property rights. I think it's a key thing to a land-
use element or a comprehensive plan or anything. It's one of the
items that you have to take into consideration. That's why we're
talking about PDRs. To throw it out of the -- of the formula is -- you
can't do that. I mean, it's part of the formula in what we're doing is
good comprehensive land planning.
MR. GAL: We're not throwing it out of the formula. We're just
removing the language from the objectives and policies.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: I don't agree with that. I mean,
the objective is exactly what we say here, protect environmentally
sensitive lands and habitats for listed species while protecting private
property rights. That's what we're doing. We're coming up with
something that the environmentalists -- the property -- the private
property owners can all live with so we don't get into a bunch of
litigation. And we achieve the goal of-- of having a nice place to
live and preserving the environment.
MR. GAL: I don't want to get into a bunch of litigation. That's
Page 129
January 23, 2002
one of the points.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: All right. We have a motion on the
table.
MR. CARLSON: Repeat the motion.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Repeat the motion, Mr. Gal.
MR. GAL: That we remove from the objectives and policies
language references to protecting private property rights.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Do I hear a second?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: The motion dies for lack of a
second. Okay. Where were we? Miss Lynne, you had some other
items, I believe.
MS. LYNNE: I don't think we finished the buffering.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: What are we doing on the
buffering? Let's move forward.
MS. LYNNE: I would have to say that I agree with
Mr. Carlson, that the monitoring would be -- is so intricate that it's
not likely to be carried out. I know from my own experience in my
own neighborhood that when developers are required to do things to
protect the neighborhood, that oftentimes the development gets built
and the follow-up never happens. I think it's -- in theory it's a good
idea. In practice I don't think it's going to protect our wetlands from
draw-down. Wetlands vary in how much they've got from year to
year and from decade to decade, and that wouldn't be monitoring --
wouldn't take that into account. You could have a really wet year
and, say, somebody can build up to within, you know, 50 feet. And
another you'll have a dry year and it would be really defected.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: All right. Let's get on with the
motion. What's the motion?
MS. LYNNE: I move that a minimum buffer of a mile be
around the NRPAs.
Page 130
January 23, 2002
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. Motion on the table that we
establish --
MS. LYNNE: You can amend it if you want.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: A minimum buffer of one mile
around all the NRPAs. Do I hear a second?
MR. CARLSON: Well -- well, just in the spirit that the buffer
can be rural lands, one of the things that bothers me about this plan is,
if it's implemented and you've got conservation areas and NRPAs and
receiving areas, there's no rural land in the future; right? There's no
low density rural land.
MR. MULHERE: Well, there is.
MR. CARLSON: Where is it?
MR. MULHERE: Well, there -- there may not be -- there's a
different designation now, rural fringe mixed use in this area. There's
still some --
�-. MR. CARLSON: No. I mean within the fringe study area that
we're looking at today.
MR. MULHERE: I think that depends on your definition of
rural lands because within the sending lands private property owners
could certainly retain a dwelling unit and build on it, and those would
be rural lands. That would be at least equal to the amounts of lands
in the receiving area.
MR. CARLSON: The spirit of the buffer proposal is that when
you have receiving areas up against conservation lands and NRPAs
where hydrology is ultimately important, there needs to be more than
a 300-foot buffer that includes golf course roughs that -- it's a
formula that if you think ahead -- think about Collier County a
hundred years from now with all of the people that are going to live
here. And think about what's happened in central Florida, the
Tampa/St. Petersburg area, where the water use, in spite of their best
planning, they suck whole lakes dry. This happened. That if we're
Page 131
January 23, 2002
really serious about protecting these conservation areas and NRPAs,
that we have to have a significant buffer. It can be rural land. It
doesn't have to be, you know, totally natural area with no people. It
can be a low density, one-per-five-acre rural area without drainage
systems and canals that -- that we have in the county today.
MR. MULHERE: Let me just see if I can clarify that statement
because it can be important toward the motion. Within that one-mile
buffer area what you're suggesting is the allowance that currently
allowed density of one dwelling unit per five acres would be
permitted, so they would be more or less neutral lands as well, rural
neutral lands. One caveat, an additional caveat, is that you do have
natural resource protect areas that currently directly abut a pretty
significant portion right here, that currently directly abut the urban
fringe and the urban area, so you would basically be taking this entire
strip of--
MR. CARLSON: No. I mentioned specifically the interface
with receiving areas.
MR. MULHERE: Well, I know you did, but the motion didn't;
that's why I'm raising it.
MS. LYNNE: He can amend.
MR. MULHERE: Okay.
MS. LYNNE: Go ahead. Amend.
MR. CARLSON: That the buffer apply to the interface of
receiving areas and conservation areas and NRPAs.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: And the buffer be one mile.
MR. CARLSON: And the buffer be one mile.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: No matter what?
MR. CARLSON: No matter what.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: No matter what. Okay. There's a
motion. Is there a second to that motion?
MS. LYNNE: Am I allowed to second the amended motion?
Page 132
January 23, 2002
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: You made the motion. I don't
believe you're allowed to second --
MR. CARLSON: What this does -- can I continue to discuss it?
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Go ahead.
MR. CARLSON: Where the greatest impact of this motion is is
in the north Belle Meade where you really don't have enough space
between the sending area and the receiving area for that kind of
buffer. I mean, it's just not there. So that's unfortunate.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Even if there's a water
management plan in place, hydrilodic -- hydrologic data that says it's
not going to have an effect, we're still going to have a mild buffer?
MS. LYNNE: Hydrology changes from year to year. What
you're monitoring this year isn't going to apply in ten years.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Let's -- let's move on the motion.
Come on. We've got a motion. Do I have a second?
MR. HILL: To get it on the table, I'll second it.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Second, it's on the table. Further
discussion on the motion. And the motion is that we establish in
sending areas a one-mile buffer around NRPAs, and that buffer, what
can happen in that buffer?
MR. MULHERE: The way I understood it, that 1 dwelling unit
per 5 acres would be permitted, that rural density --
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: So those -- so, basically, the one
mile of the sending area that surrounds the NRPA --
MR. COE: No, receiving area.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Receiving area -- I get them mixed
up; I'm sorry -- is no longer a receiving area.
MR. CARLSON: That's correct. It's a neutral area.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: It's a neutral area. That's the
motion, seconded by Mr. Hill.
MR. CARLSON: That the conservation and NRPA areas be
Page 133
January 23, 2002
buffered by neutral lands.
MR. HILL: I am -- I am all for giving the protection that this
motion represents. However, to fix it at one mile I don't think allows
the difference in impact in various places of the county. I would
rather see a very strict enforceable implementation of a monitoring
system in order to establish and maintain it rather than a somewhat
arbitrary one mile, although that may be valid in certain places. I'd
rather see us go the other way.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay.
MR. COE: Well, the thing is, is if we're monitoring this thing --
let's say we've let something in there whatever it is and we're
monitoring it. What happens if all of a sudden the monitoring say,
hey, this shouldn't be here?
MR. MULHERE: That's established up front. It's the -- the -- as
part of the submittal of the project, they go through this process. And
they have to establish, based on modeling, what the impacts are going
to be. And, therefore, you determine what the appropriate buffer is.
That goes in. That's in place based on that.
Subsequently you certainly want to continue to monitor that to
see if there are other things that could be done if there are negative
impacts that were unanticipated. But it's based on -- it's an up-front
determination.
MR. COE: I understand that. So all of a sudden up front they're
wrong. Then what do we do?
MR. MULHERE: Then we look for other ways to resolve the
matter. I mean, you know, this is -- this is going to happen in any
circumstance. Suppose it's more than a mile. Suppose the impacts
go two miles, in some circumstance, based on the conditions that are
in effect. We've got the same situation there. They only require a
mile But --
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Let's -- let's move on the motion.
Page 134
January 23, 2002
^ Okay. All those in favor of the motion signify by saying aye.
MR. CARLSON: Aye.
MR. GAL: Aye.
MR. SOLING: Aye.
MR. STONE: Aye.
MS. LYNNE: Aye.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Opposed? Aye.
MR. STONE: Aye.
MR. HILL: Aye.
MR. COE: Aye.
MR. HILL: With respect to the motion, I would like the counsel
to revisit the question.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. What we ought to do is we
ought to get Mr. Tears to send every one of you guys a letter like he
sends me every time my guys forget to do the monitoring. It's a real
^ friendly letter.
MR. STONE: I get one every now and then.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Yeah, I know. It happens quite
often, about five days after your report is supposed to be done. It
doesn't get there.
Okay. What would you like to do, Mr. Hill?
MR. HILL: Well, I need to give that some that thought. But I
think we need to give them alternatives. I'm not prepared at this time
to put that in a formal motion.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. Moving along, what -- Miss
Lynne, do you have anything else?
MS. LYNNE: Go ahead.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Yes, you do?
MS. LYNNE: No.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: No? Okay.
Mr. Carlson.
Page 135
January 23, 2002
MR. CARLSON: Based on a lot of the comments I heard here
today, do we vote on whether golf courses are appropriate as green --
green belt space?
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: No, we did not.
MR. CARLSON: Well, I would like to support the comments I
heard here today and move that the EAC recommend that golf course
development, at it applies for buffering for villages, communities not
be considered green space.
MR. COE: Ni second the motion.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Made and seconded. In discussion,
what about the portions of the golf course that are left in natural
condition?
MR. COE: Define natural.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Palmettos, pines.
MR. COE: Nobody driving through it, nobody clipping grass.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Nobody driving through it.
MS. LYNNE: No irrigation.
MR. COE: No irrigation.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: No irrigation.
MR. CARLSON: It would count as green space.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: It would count as green space.
MR. MULHERE: A couple of questions: I understand what
you said. You said golf courses shouldn't constitute green space.
What we actually refer to -- the only place where we really refer to a
green belt -- and you're correct that proposed golf courses would be
allowed in that -- is around a rural village. And the reason why golf
courses are allowed in that is because that's only allowed in receiving
lands, and golf courses are allowed in receiving lands.
But I understand what you said. But there are some other
components of this. For example, golf courses, what was raised -- I
think that one of the speakers raised that golf courses shouldn't be
Page 136
January 23, 2002
permitted as open space, which is different than preservation or green
space. Open space by definition in the county does include golf
courses, and it also includes other passive recreation-type facilities,
trails, those kinds of things.
Open space is a different concept than preservation or green
space. Open space has a higher standard generally in the county. It's
60 percent in the urban area, and it's proposed to be 70 percent in the
rural fringe, and that means yards. It could be tennis courts; it could
be a swimming pool. It could be a golf course. And -- and it also
includes conservation and green space and preservation areas.
So I just want to be clear that I don't think what you're saying is
you object to a golf course where it's permitted being counted
towards open space, but you object toward -- towards it being
considered green space or a natural pres -- or a preservation area? Is
that correct, or am I --
MR. CARLSON: Yeah. It depends on what the vision is of the
-- these buffers between rural villages. If-- if that buffer is nothing
more than a golf course, I'm opposed to that.
MR. MULHERE: Yeah.
MR. CARLSON: That -- there should be some real
environmental value to anything considered green space and a buffer
between that kind of intensive land use, and a golf course just doesn't
cut it.
MR. MULHERE: I understand that. I got that point. And the
intent would be that the green space area would allow an opportunity
for the property owner to meet, to largely meet, their native
preservation or wetland protection requirements, all of those things
that -- within the rural village area that may not --
MR. CARLSON: Because without that, the -- the habitat -- the
wildlife and the habitat values that we're supposed to be protecting
are kind of slipping away.
Page 137
January 23, 2002
MR. MULHERE: What if you have --
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Let me ask a question. Say if you
take 150 acres and you do a study of 150 acres regarding what's
there, okay, birds, fish, squirrels, everything that's there, and you take
that and you build a golf course that's done right into the standards
and the permitting standards that the district has and you do that
study again when it's finished. Which one do you think is going to
have more birds, fish, and wildlife? There's going to be more
afterwards. There's going to be more afterwards. I guarantee it.
MR. CARLSON: There's so much variability there. There's no
way to comment on it. I would doubt that the post golf course
development would have a higher diversity in funds and of wildlife in
this area.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: I would argue that point so...
MR. MULHERE: Just to be clear, what you are proposing is
that golf courses not be allowed to meet the green belt requirements
in rural villages if they move forward and also that they not be
allowed, except for the natural areas, which you've defined, as green
space or buffer areas adjacent to natural reservations.
MR. CARLSON: Correct.
Was that my motion?
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: I think it was your motion.
MR. COE: As amended by Bob Mulhere.
MR. MULHERE: I don't think I amended it. Hopefully, I just
made it clear.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: I think Mr. Coe seconded it, didn't
he?
MR. COE: I'm sure I did.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Do we have any further discussion
on that particular motion?
(No response.)
Page 138
January 23, 2002
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Hearing none, in favor of the
motion signify by saying aye.
MR. CARLSON: Aye.
MR. GAL: Aye.
MR. STONE: Aye.
MR. HILL: Aye.
MS. LYNNE: Aye.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Opposed? Aye.
Next, Mr. Carlson?
MR. CARLSON: Did we vote on the agriculture issue?
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: No, we did not.
MR. COE: I got that one.
MR. CARLSON: Go ahead, Mr. Coe.
MR. COE: See what we've got on the ag here. I've got one
recommendation that we change on the nonfunctional conservation
easements, areas, from sending areas. Let's see, we already did that
one, good. That's off.
Okay. You mentioned earlier about the residual rights.
MR. MULHERE: Correct.
MR. COE: What happens if someone strips the -- gets -- gets a
permit for ag, strips the land to plant berries or whatever, and then
sells the rights?
MR. MULHERE: That's a great question. There is a
requirement in the comprehensive plan currently that you are not
permitted to rezone your land if you've cleared it for agricultural
purposes. I think it's for ten years. Now, it's not currently in this
proposal, but that stipulation could be extended in sending areas for
folks that would clear their land for agricultural purposes would not
then be allowed to transfer their development rights for some period
of time. Ten years is what is -- is in the code now. I mean, I think
that's a very legitimate question and a very -- a very good question.
Page 139
January 23, 2002
And we need to look at that a little bit.
I guess I just want to establish the position that we were coming
from as staff and a consultant. Remember, initially we recommended
that no ag be permitted in sending areas because just look at the basic
principles here. We're saying these are the highest value natural
resource areas. We're also not saying -- then to be clear for
agricultural purposes. But subsequently we received information
from the counsel to the county that you could not preclude that if it
was consistent with the Right-to-Farm Act, so we took the next best
step. And we said if you transfer after that in remaining use, you
cannot clear any additional land for ag. Your question is a very good
one, and I don't think we've adequately addressed it.
MR. COE: Another question I have, not being one that takes no
for an answer very easily, I find it hard to believe that an attorney can
say that we can't regulate agricultural land in this county. I don't
believe it.
MR. MULHERE: I mean --
MR. COE: I'd like to get a second or third or fourth opinion
because I'm sure there's an attorney we can find someplace that will
be able to tell us that we can regulate the ag uses on this land,
period --
MR. MULHERE: I think you --
MR. COE: -- particularly when you're talking about buttoning it
up at, say, Corkscrew and somebody wants to put in -- which has
already happened evidently -- an orange grove and pump water away
from Corkscrew into a canal, and we're going to permit that?
MR. MULHERE: Well, I really can't answer the question as I'm
not an attorney. And, again, I told you where our position was and
the only reason we changed that position. We -- we will get a written
finding from these counsels to the county so that you can look at it,
and we'll get it as quickly as we can, as to what their position is.
Page 140
January 23, 2002
We'll be very clear that if we cannot prohibit someone from farming
under the Right-to-Farm Act, what are our opportunities, legitimate
legal opportunities, to regulate that agricultural -- those agricultural
activities in relationship to their potential impacts on natural areas.
MR. COE: Why don't we go to the state also?
MR. MULHERE: Well, we had some initial discussions with
the state. We were up there. We met with them. And they were in
concurrence with the Right-to-Farm Act precluding the county from
-- now, that was verbal; it wasn't in writing.
MR. COE: So -- now, let me get this in my mind, because I'm
incredulous. You mean to tell me somebody can back their ag use up
to Corkscrew, have an orange grove, pump water way into their canal
to get the water away because they've got to have dry feet for the
plants, for the trees, and they can do that?
MR. MULHERE: You know --
MR. COE: And we can't control it.
MR. MULHERE: Water issues, I understand, it's of concern,
but it's dealt by the regulatory agency, the Water Management
District. Presumably as part of the process of what they authorize
they would be looking at whether or not there were negative impacts
to adjacent lands, issuing that withdrawal permit or whatever that
particular permit is called; I think consumptive-use permit.
The -- again, I -- I think that the state does have very strong
protection -- protections for agricultural uses in place. I don't know --
I can't stand here and tell you that I've got something in writing from
the county's attorneys on this matter that clearly tell us, yeah, we can
or, no, we can't. I can tell you that they were pretty firm in their -- in
their findings to us that we could not -- that we -- that we put the
language in that we did, which was subject to the Right-to-Farm Act
and there are some best management -- there are some best
management practices defined in the Right-to-Farm Act so in order --
Page 141
January 23, 2002
if you were going to be consistent with the Right-to-Farm Act, you've ''
got to incorporate those best management practices.
Maybe some of those best management practices deal with, you
know, how you handle water and pesticides and things like that. I
would assume that it would.
MR. COE: So this letter that you're going to get is going to tell
us that we can't regulate ag lands.
MR. MULHERE: I don't know it's going to tell you. I'm not
going to prejudge that. I'm going to ask them for exactly what you
asked for. It's clearing. It's clearing that I would assume is the
destructive --
MR. COE: The clearing?
MR. MULHERE: Yeah.
MR. COE: The draining of water and those sort of things. And
specifically I'm looking at and just the easy one, the lay-up is -- and I
maybe -- seeing him biting at the bit over there. Let me talk. Ed's
got some pretty valuable property that's probably some of the most
valuable property in this county. And to allow unbridled agricultural
uses next to such an important property, I think, is ludicrous.
MR. MULHERE: Well, I share that opinion with you. I share
that opinion with you. I think so does the staff.
MR. COE: Well, perhaps, we cannot take no for an answer
from the attorney and get them to find a way to do this.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Why don't we put that in a motion
form and --
MR. COE: So I'd like to make a motion that we have the county
attorneys put together a way that we can control agricultural uses
close to our protected lands.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Put together --
MR. MULHERE: Review the legal.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Determine from the state what we
Page 142
January 23, 2002
can do.
MR. COE: Yeah, okay. State -- I don't care who it comes from.
MR. MULHERE: So you -- you would like a -- a review of the
legal constraints, if any, on regulating agriculture in sending lands.
MR. COE: Uh-huh.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: That sounds good.
A motion by Mr. Coe. Second? Mr. Carlson seconded it, didn't
you?
MR. CARLSON: Yes.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Favor?
(Unanimous response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Hearing none, the motion passes.
MR. HILL: Mr. Carlson, try this on for size for a moment.
Plans for a property to develop adjacent to a NRPA must establish at
the time of application the impact on the hydrology, parentheses,
water table, at the interface boundary. The impact must be limited to
a maximum of-- and I put in temporarily a half a foot -- during the
dry season. The water table impact must be monitored and reported
at a frequency determined by the South Florida Water Management
District.
MR. CARLSON: Well, if you read in the plan about water
management strategies, you can actually put in walls and things to
buffer your drainage impacts from wetlands. And so, I mean, I --
there could be concrete walls and -- and seepage barriers that go up
between these developments and important water resources areas, so
I just -- I think that's a whole can of worms that we might regret
recommending.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay?
MR. MULHERE: Mr. Chairman, going back to that last motion
Page 143
January 23, 2002
in which I paraphrased it and you moved, and as I wrote it down, it
was to request legal -- a review of the legal constraints, if any, on
regulating ag in sending lands. Barbara just indicated that -- and I
think she's right -- that there may be also the same analysis needs to
occur related to receiving lands that may be adjacent to a natural
reservation. So I would think you would want to amend your motion
to simply indicate, you know, whether it's -- whether it's sending or
receiving, if there's -- if there's going to be a potential impact to the
natural areas, the natural reservation, or the sending designation, what
can be done to regulate it.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: That okay with you, Mr. Coe?
MR. COE: Yes, that's fme.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Amended, motion, change.
MS. LYNNE: Can I ask just one more thing?
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Yes, ma'am.
MS. LYNNE: Can we add to the motion or to whatever you're
going to ask these people, that the point is to preserve the hydrology
of the area which has county-wide impact that -- that there's a point to
restricting, it's not that we don't just want agricultural?
MR. MULHERE: That's only one point. The other point is to
protect the habitat and other things; correct?
MS. LYNNE: Correct.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: All right. Mr. Coe has a couple
more little things.
MR. CARLSON: Before Mr. Coe made that brilliant motion, I
was going to do something like move that the EAC recommend that
agricultural lands associated with NRPAs, conservation areas, be held
to the same native vegetation preservation standards as other types of
development.
MR. MULHERE: So apply the preservation standards to ag as
well.
Page 144
January 23, 2002
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: I think you -- that's where you
have to start considering --
MR. COE: Start considering what?
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: The form. What's it called?
MR. COE: Yeah. See, I think that would infringe. I would
recommend that we consider waiting until we get the readout from
the attorneys and -- and I -- I hope I made it real clear about the
attorneys trying to find a way around the law, I mean, still within the
law obviously.
MR. MULHERE: You made it very clear. And we'll make it
clear to them. I'll -- I'll have to say also, though, that we'll ask for
this immediately, probably tomorrow, try to get something up to them
and, no, we won't try. We'll succeed. We'll get it to them tomorrow.
I mean, we're moving forward with this process, you know. I think
you're going to have to try to do it as expeditiously as possible.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: I think if we miss -- if we do some
things that we do miss the Planning Commission, we do have enough
time to get further comments to the Board of County Commissioners.
Okay. Mr. Coe.
MR. COE: Yeah. Page 28 they talk about wetlands, if I
remember correctly.
MR. HILL: In the FLUE?
MR. MULHERE: Of the coastal conservation --
MR. COE: Anyway, the one that's on the wetlands, and we
mentioned this earlier that we wanted to make sure that there was no
net loss in our wetlands.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Just clarify, 6.2.7, 6.2.8.
MR. COE: I guess that's it.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: All right.
MR. COE: And you said that the current plan was for no net
loss of wetlands. Now, if-- who -- who is the agency that's going to
Page 145
January 23, 2002
be looking at this? Is this us, or is this South Florida Water
Management District?
MR. MULHERE: Well -- well, actually, the way that we've
written in recommending these policies, we don't have the statutory
obligation to permit wetland impacts. And it would be the South
Florida Water Management District, or it could be the Corps. Is that
basically it? Is the DEP involved in that?
MR. LORENZ: It's-delegated from the DEP to the Water
Management District.
MR. MULHERE: The Water Management District or the
Corps.
MR. COE: That's getting to my point. My point is is we're
evidently going by the minimum standards here. But what do we do
in the case of mitigation?
MR. MULHERE: Well, we had --
MR. COE: Because in the case of mitigation, we've already
heard South Florida Water Management District testify in front of us
that sometimes their mitigation for loss of wetlands they do uplands.
MR. MULHERE: Yeah, that's a great question.
MR. COE: And we want to make sure that there is no net loss to
wetlands. So basically an agency that's above us, we're requiring to
do above and beyond what their -- what they normally do. And how
do we police that?
MR. MULHERE: Yeah.
MR. COE: And how do we place that monkey on their back?
MR. MULHERE: Well, I -- I think we've addressed that. It's a
great question. In fact, I would have to compliment the
environmental staff, the county for raising this issue to my attention
and to our attention as we develop these policies. What we proposed
to do was have a policy indicate that there would be no net loss of
wetlands, in fact, that uplands couldn't be used as mitigation for
Page 146
January 23, 2002
impacts to wetlands and that in order for us to ensure that, we need to
have that WRAP score up front, which was something that, I think,
Marco Espinar was concerned about because of the timing. But we
are asking for that up front. So they at least have to go sufficiently
into the process to have gotten an approved WRAP score from the
agency, and that has to be submitted to the county.
Then, beyond that, they would be put on notice as part of their
stipulations or conditions of approval, even if they haven't gone all
the way through the process to get a permit, that if they are intending
to mitigate for any impacts to wetlands, that there has to be no net
loss and, further, that, you know, mitigation in the form of uplands
would not be acceptable.
MR. COE: Do you have a memorandum of understanding or a
letter of understanding with the South Florida Water Management
District that they're going to do this?
MR. MULHERE: No. And we don't really care. If they allow
that, that's fine. They're just going to have to -- they're just going to
have to address our requirements. In other words, they're going to
know it up front so when they go through the process, knowing that
up front that we're not going to accept mitigation that doesn't meet
these requirements, they're going to have to negotiate mitigation that
does meet these requirements.
MR. COE: With who?
MR. MULHERE: With the agency.
MR. COE: And they say that's okay with them, South Florida
Water Management?
MR. MULHERE: We -- we -- I don't know that we've discussed
it with them.
MR. COE: Well, then how do we know it's going to --
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: One at a time, guys.
MR. COE: Basically what you're saying to me is, we're telling
Page 147
January 23, 2002
them up front --
MR. MULHERE: That's correct.
MR. COE: -- that they need to have the WRAP score first.
MR. MULHERE: That's correct.
MR. COE: And that any mitigation is going to have to be, you
know, one for one basically, no net loss.
MR. MULHERE: That's right. Correct.
MR. COE: We haven't even contacted South Florida Water
Management District who does that mitigation as part of their
process.
MR. MULHERE: But if they have to go above and beyond
what's called for by the district to meet our standards, then they will
have to do that. And knowing that up front they're not going to get
an approval from us unless they meet those standards, knowing it up
front when they go in to negotiate mitigation, if the mitigation they
negotiate doesn't meet our standards, then they may have to do
further mitigation to meet our standards.
MR. COE: So, in other words, they're going to come back to
you after they've gone to --
MR. MULHERE: That's correct.
MR. COE: Okay.
MR. MULHERE: Prior to final approval.
MR. COE: I understand.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: What else?
MR. COE: Go to somebody else and let me look at my stuff
here.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Mr. Carlson.
MR. CARLSON: I've got a point. I'm on -- what is it -- the
CCME here, CCME, page 25. There's a policy 6.2.3, Collier County
shall implement a comprehensive process to ensure wetlands and the
natural functions of wetlands are protected and conserved.
Page 148
January 23, 2002
Then if you go over to the next page on 26 and the first
paragraph after Subsection 4 where it says, "Collier County shall
allow for more intensive development to occur in rural fringe
receiving lands, north Golden Gate Estates," is that getting to the
point I raised earlier that that's the policy?
MR. MULHERE: No. I -- I think the intent -- the intent there --
and, Bill, I would defer to you, but I believe the intent there was to
indicate that within those areas, there -- there can be more intensive
development, and there may be -- there may be, you know, mitigation
and impacts that were not going -- that are not going to occur in the
large connective wetland systems. But, anyway, I'm going to defer to
Bill on that.
MR. LORENZ: I think we talk about directing incompatible
land uses away from everything ahead of that in that Policy 623
parentheses 1, 2, 3, 4, beginning on page 25, come down to 26.
^ That's where we're directing away from. These are the large
landscape features that we've said are significant to direct away from.
We have to direct development to someplace as well, so I
wanted to put, if you will, the equal sign on the equation. Make it
clear that we are directing development to these other areas and --
and we don't have the other types of protection mechanisms that we
have in the cons -- for instance, in the conservation lands, the NRPA
lands.
MR. CARLSON: So the county's policy is to allow for more
intensive development in north Golden Gate Estates and the rural
settlement area district which is Orangetree?
MR. LORENZ: Yes, that -- those densities are going to be
much -- are going to be higher in terms of wetlands -- in terms of
directing development away from those other areas. These areas are
going to be what's left in the county that's going to be higher intensity
development.
Page 149
January 23, 2002
MR. MULHERE: I think what's not intended there by the term ^
intensity development is higher than what's already permitted or
proposed. What is intended is to indicate that within those areas the
development is more intensive than it is in these other areas,
conservation, natural resource protection, sending.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay.
MR. CARLSON: That's too bad.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. Anybody on the right have
anything? Mr. Coe?
MR. COE: Yeah, I have more.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Mr. Coe's got one. Go ahead.
MR. GAL: Let's look at the permitted uses and sending areas on
page 47.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Forty-seven of the FLUE.
MR. GAL: Here it has agricultural uses. I'd like to delete
forestry from those agricultural uses.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Where are you?
MR. GAL: 5-A, page 47, 5-A.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: 5-A, gotcha, okay.
MR. GAL: I'd like to delete forestry. I had a question. What
are essential services, as defined in the Land Development Code?
MR. MULHERE: You know, I apologize. I don't have a copy
of the Land Development Code with me here but --
MR. GAL: Are you talking, like, sewer plants?
MR. MULHERE: Sewer lines. Sewer plants, I think, require a
condition -- they require a conditional use so there's a public hearing
but, yes, they are an essential service. Transmission lines, police
protection, you know.
MR. GAL: What are sporting and recreational camps?
MR. MULHERE: Sporting and recreational camps are hunting
camps -- I'm trying to think of what else.
Page 150
January 23, 2002
MR. COE: Gun ranges?
MR. MULHERE: Hiking camps. They could be --
MR. GAL: I mean, are those subject to --
MR. COE: Hand grenade pits.
MR. GAL: -- development standards?
MR. MULHERE: Yes, they're subject to development
standards. The development standards are not within the
comprehensive plan. Those are found in the LDR. Again, they're all
subject to those -- those preservation natural resource protection
standards, again, 80 percent, 90 percent if you're in a NRPA. So,
yeah, there are some uses remaining that are permitted.
MR. GAL: And -- and I'd like to delete oil, mineral extraction
and related processing excluding earth mining.
MR. MULHERE: I feel like I should tell you something about
that one. I don't object to your recommendation to delete it, but I
believe most, if not all, of the lands within Collier County attached to
your deed is a right for the under -- for the -- the land, former
landowner, the Collier family, to extract minerals and oil. And I
don't think that there's really a market for too many minerals, but we
do know that there's some oil out there because they're extracting it
right now in the Big Cypress. I think you'll have -- just want to throw
it on the record. That's a right that they enjoy, and it follows with
everybody's deed. So I'm not sure how we can regulate that. Maybe
we can; maybe we can't. We chose not to fight that fight in our
recommendation. I just want to throw that out there for your
consideration.
MR. GAL: If it's not in the permitted use category, then is it a
prohibited use?
MR. MULHERE: Yes. If it's not expressly permitted, it would
be prohibited.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay.
Page 151
January 23, 2002
MR. GAL: Well, it's about property rights so --
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: All right. Mr. Coe.
MR. GAL: I --
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Oh.
MR. GAL: At the present moment I'm moving to -- I'm -- to
remove forestry from the permitted uses in sending areas.
MS. LYNNE: Is that because somebody can cut down all the
trees and then sell their development rights?
MR. GAL: Yes.
MR. COE: Okay. I see the point.
MS. LYNNE: So what we want is a most -- some mechanism
for prohibiting that activity?
MR. GAL: Yeah. I want to remove forestry from the permitted
use.
MS. LYNNE: I'll second it.
MR. GAL: From the sending area.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. And the reason being?
MR. COE: So there's no logging permitted.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: There's no logging permitted?
MR. COE: Uh-huh.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: I know that. But if we farm, we
have to clear it, take the logs off the property. If we ranch, we have
to clear it, take the logs off the property.
MR. MULHERE: It is a farming. It is an agricultural use,
forestry. And it's all tied into what you directed us to do in terms of
finding out whether or not we can regulate that.
MR. GAL: If you -- I'll table the motion since we are going to
find out what we can do.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. I think it's probably going
to be under the ag rule.
MR. COE: I've got a couple more.
Page 152
January 23, 2002
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. Mr. Coe.
MR. COE: I'd like to recommend that we remove all currently
approved PUDs or any other projects that have already been
permitted from the program.
MR. MULHERE: Okay. Largely that's -- that's already in
place. I just .want to clarify.
MR. COE: I want to make sure it's clear because we've
approved a lot of projects, hundreds, matter of fact, thousands. And
they've already been permitted. They haven't even moved the dirt
yet.
MR. MULHERE: Right.
MR. COE: And I don't want them to be permitted to get credits
in sending, receiving, and all that bunk.
MR. MULHERE: That's what I thought, and that's why I say
clarify it because what we're talking about is actually much more
limited than what you're suggesting because within the rural fringe
area, which is the only area where we're identified sending and
receiving and currently the only area where you would be able to
transfer development rights from sending to receiving, we're not
including any PUDs that were approved in the urban area into that
mix. There's only a few PUDs that were approved. But I did
understand your motion to say if you have an approved project.
MR. COE: Uh-huh.
MR. MULHERE: PUD or otherwise, conditional use for a golf
course. You are precluded from enjoying the ability to transfer
joints.
MR. COE: Absolutely. And I'm making a motion for that.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. Motion. Second?
MR. CARLSON: Second.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Second by Mr. Carlson.
Discussion?
Page 153
January 23, 2002
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: In favor of the motion?
(Unanimous response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Opposed, same sign?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: It passed unanimously.
MR. COE: Okay. I got another one. We've talked numerous
times about the old beach. I'm surprised Matt wasn't here today. But
I want to propose -- I want to make a motion that we -- there will be
no beach raking during the turtle season extep -- except for storm
emergency.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Where in the code are you related
to? What's the reference --
MR. COE: Thirty-eight.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: -- what's the reference point?
MR. MULHERE: CCME.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Page 48?
MR. COE: I think it's 38. Basically it gets added in that there
will be no beach raking during the turtle season except during storm
emergency.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Didn't we just -- didn't we just pass
a very extensive ordinance that spells that out, I thought, a few
months ago?
MR. COE: But that isn't spelled out in this; that's why I want to
make sure that it's spelled out here.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: I don't think -- I don't think that's
what the ordinance says.
MR. CARLSON: Yes. There was -- there was beach raking
above the tide line or below the tide line.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Very complex.
MR. COE: Is anybody from the environmental office here?
Page 154
January 23, 2002
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Barb.
MS. BURGESON: For the record, Barbara Burgeson with
planning services. The most recent, I think, two sets of amendments
allows beach raking during sea turtle nesting season after the
monitoring is in effect.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay.
MR. COE: So I'm recommending that there is no beach raking
whatsoever during the turtle nesting season unless there's an
emergency like a hurricane.
MR. CARLSON: Like dead fish, things like that.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Even though we just went through
an extensive process and set an ordinance up and we're now saying
that we don't want to live by what we agreed to two months ago?
MR. GAL: I'll second the motion.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. Any discussion?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Hearing those in favor.
MR. GAL: Aye.
MR. COE: Aye.
MR. STONE: Aye.
MS. LYNNE: Aye.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Opposed, same sign.
MR. CARLSON: Aye.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Aye.
MR. HILL: Aye.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Mr. Hill, Mr. Sansbury, Mr.
Carlson, motion fails.
MR. COE: I got one last comment.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay.
MR. COE: I just don't know the answer to this. I've had several
people send electronic mail to me recently regarding the fees for
Page 155
January 23, 2002
permitting in the county. And there's only certain uses for the fees
that are paid by developers or people that are permitting, you know, a
house or whatever it may be. And our fees are way low compared to
the City of Naples, not that that's necessarily the standards, but just to
do a broad-brush comparison.
I've heard several times by various people that are part of, like,
the environmental office and some of the other offices that there
aren't enough people to inspect, to check, to do the water monitoring,
whatever it may be. If so, why don't we just raise the fees and hire
the people?
MR. MULHERE: I think that --
MR. COE: I realize that it's not on what we're doing right now,
but maybe somebody can take that back to their office and we could
find out.
MR. MULHERE: I think you're talking about permitting fees?
MR. COE: Yeah. I mean, the developers are paying the fees.
MR. MULHERE: Or so -- actually --
MR. COE: Are we -- are we providing the service to the
developers to do timely permitting?
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: I want to comment, developers are
paying the fees.
MR. COE: That's correct.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Homeowners of everybody that's
building a lot in Golden Gate --
MR. COE: Right.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: -- are paying those fees. So
remember there's a lot of people other than developers paying those
fees.
MR. COE: That's correct. That's what I'm saying is why not
just increase the fees and hire enough people to do the job to support
the developers?
Page 156
January 23, 2002
MR. MULHERE: I think that, generally, those -- statutorily
those permit fees are tied to -- to the need for the activities which
they -- they cover, and you have to establish some sort of a need
there. And the Development Services Advisory Committee is a
committee that the board set up that is the committee that would
review initially anyway proposed fee increases. And it would be my
recommend -- I mean, I would take that recommendation, if you
wish, or staff could to -- to the administrator for community
development who I think would deal with them through that.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Great.
MR. LITSINGER: Stan Litsinger again.
I'd like to make a comment on this issue about what fees
collected relative to permitting and petitions for development, what
those fees may be used for and what the appropriate level of those
fees might be which the Board of County Commissioners has some
^ discretion in. At this current time the county manager has directed
the budget director, along with staff, Mr. Joe Schmitt, our new
division administrator to do a Nexus analysis as to what exactly is the
legal latitude in the application of the fees we collect in what we
know as Fund 113, which is the community development fund. So
that issue is being examined as to what latitude we can use.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Thank you.
Mr. Carlson, you look like you got a whole list there. What else
you got there?
MR. CARLSON: Well, I'm -- I'm also in the CCME on page 28
on Policy 6.2.7, talking about mitigation requirements for a loss of
wetlands. And Sentence B says loss of storage or conveyance
volume resulting from direct impacts to wetlands shall be
compensated for by providing an equal amount of storage or
conveyance capacity on site and within or adjacent to the impacted
wetland.
Page 157
January 23, 2002
This can be done in a very artificial way and not have anywhere ^
near the same natural resource values as a natural wetland that was
there conveying water and storing water. So I think there's a lot of
potential here to degrade wetlands with the way this is worded. Even
though it requires appropriate South Florida Water Management
District permit approval, they will permit a swale as opposed to a
flow-way. We've seen that in the northern part of the county.
So if I had my druthers, B would read, loss of storage or
conveyance volume resulting from direct impacts to wetlands shall
not be allowed.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Do you want to put that in the form
of a motion of a recommendation, 6.2.7 1-B be revised with that
language?
MR. CARLSON: Yes.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. Does everybody understand
the motion?
MS. LYNNE: Uh-huh.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Is there a second to the motion?
MS. LYNNE: I'll second it.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Motion, second. Do we hear
discussion?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Hearing none, all in favor of the
motion signify by saying aye.
MR. GAL: Aye.
MR. CARLSON: Aye.
MR. COE: Aye.
MR. STONE: Aye.
MS. LYNNE: Aye.
MR. HILL: Aye.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Opposed, same sign. Aye. How
Page 158
January 23, 2002
^ many -- I was the only dissenter on this one?
MR. COE: (Nodded head.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. Okay, sir.
MR. CARLSON: I don't have anything else right now. I'm still
looking.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: All right. Back and forth.
Anybody else have anything? Mr. Hill?
MR. HILL: Mr. Beller (phonetic), when he presented this
morning, referred to Mirasol. And if my notes are correct, there are
two sections on the west side of that which has been purchased by the
school corporation; is that correct?
MR. MULHERE: No. There's -- let me reiterate there. There
are four sections that are designated as -- as secondary receiving
lands. Two of those sections fall within Mirasol, and two, I think,
Miss Payton indicated, had been purchased by the county and the
school board. And you've already made a motion to exclude or
preclude the two sections that are in the Mirasol PUD because you've
made a motion previously to not allow the TDR for approved
projects, so that would be already taken care of out of the picture,
based on your earlier motion.
The two sections that, if they have been purchased by the county
and the school board, they cannot transfer units, that had to be
receiving. Well, they could sell it, and then somebody could transfer
units in, so that would still be a valid issue because those are
designated as secondary receiving. So they would currently allow -- I
mean, I don't think the county is going to go out there or the school
board is going to get out there and develop it, but they could sell off a
portion of it, and it could be developed with receiving units into it.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. Mr. Hill? All right.
MR. HILL: I -- the recommendation wasn't -- Nancy, was this
by you to make that a neutral -- was that your recommendation?
Page 159
January 23, 2002
MS. PAYTON: Yes.
MR. HILL: I move that those two sections in the mere --
adjacent to the Mirasol PUD be denoted as a neutral.
MR. MULHERE: Well, they're actually not adjacent to the
Mirasol. There's two within Mirasol, and then there's two -- right
here (indicating) in the what we'll call, I guess, the eastern corner of
south of Immokalee Road of sending -- of receiving area within B.
You can see it up there on the map, yeah.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: The title to those two sections is
with...
MR. MULHERE: I can't verify that.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: But the school board or county
government or somebody?
MR. MULHERE: That's the indications. I haven't done the
research to verify that. I know at one point they were interested in
purchasing it. They have may already, in fact, done that. I just don't
know the answer to that.
MR. COE: Yeah, I don't remember if they actually did it. I
know they were discussing it, right.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. Mr. Hill, if you want to
restate the motion...
MR. MULHERE: But if they were neutral -- I just want to
throw out there, if they were neutral, just to give you some sense of
comfort with respect to that motion, not to influence you, if the
school board wanted to put a school there and they were neutral, they
still could.
MR. HILL: I don't know how to define that piece of ground.
MR. MULHERE: The secondary receiving area other than the
one -- other than the one included in the Mirasol --
MR. HILL: Right.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay.
Page 160
January 23, 2002
MR. HILL: -- be redesignated as a neutral.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: As neutral. Second?
MR. CARLSON: Second.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Discussion?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Hearing none, all in favor signify
by saying aye.
(Unanimous response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: It passed unanimously.
MR. COE: You might want to take a break.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Why don't we take about five.
(A break was held from 3:04 p.m. to 3:16 p.m.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay.
MR. MULHERE: Mr. Chairman?
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Yes, sir.
MR. MULHERE: I was asked to clarify, and if I misspoke -- I
don't think I did, but if there's some confusion, relative to discussion
that Mr. Coe and I were having related to the -- the language
precluding mitigation for impacts to wetlands in the form of upland
mitigation and how would we make sure that that happened, if I gave
you the impression that we would -- that that would happen as a
result of sending the applicant back to the district to modify their
permit, that's not necessarily the case. We don't really -- it doesn't
matter whether they go back to the district and modify their permit.
What matters is that they show us a permit that meets our
requirements. And if it doesn't, then they -- they don't have to modify
the permit. They may just have to mitigate more on site to meet our
requirements, and that could satisfy us. But either way, what we're
saying to you is that they would not get an approval unless they meet
Page 161
January 23, 2002
the requirements in here.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. All right. We're at 3:15.
We need to start moving on this thing because some of us have to get
out of here at four o'clock.
Where do we stand? Mr. Carlson, what else do you have?
MR. CARLSON: Confusion.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Mass confusion?
MR. CARLSON: Mass confusion.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Uh-huh.
MR. COE: I'd like to discuss the buffer that we talked about
earlier and we just can't seem to get around it. That's the kind of
buffer I like.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay.
MR. COE: All right. We've talked about a mile buffer, but
there's a lot of areas out here where you can't get a mile buffer. So
how do we get around this and create a buffer, because I think it's the
intent, based on what I've heard today in testimony by various
citizens and from the discussion here on the EAC, over years of
discussion with the EAC, that we'd like to tackle that and establish
buffers ?
MR. MULHERE: It's a tough issue. I suggest to you -- and I
think what Bill has proposed here, coupled with a minimum buffer,
which we have in there, don't we?
MR. LORENZ: Uh-huh.
MR. MULHERE: 300 feet.
MR. COE: 300 feet.
MR. MULHERE: So you have a minimum buffer which can be
exceeded and will be exceeded based on the up-front evaluation of
the potential hydrological impacts as a result of the development. So
you've got -- I mean, I -- I don't know if there's a case that, you know,
the study reveals that you know what? It's going to have an impact
Page 162
January 23, 2002
that extends 2 miles. But there's no outside limitation. There's a
minimum 300 feet. However, it can exceed that based on the analysis
that's done up front, and then you establish a buffer.
MR. COE: How long -- how long did that study go on, the one
that the guy presented to us -- I guess it was last month? There was
several years that thing went on, didn't it?
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Seventies. Five, six years.
MR. CARLSON: Yes.
MR. COE: I mean, are developers going to be required to do
that study over that length of time so that they can get a good idea of
what impact they're going to have?
MR. MULHERE: No. It's a modeling.
MR. LORENZ: Right. It's -- it's a modeling exercise that a
groundwater hydrologist will do to try to estimate what their general
impacts are. As you noted earlier, you know, once you set your water
^ control elevations, then you're going to set -- then you're going to set
your elevations of your roads and your -- and your buildings. And
you're pretty much fixed in. Even -- even when you start talking
about monitoring, I didn't propose monitoring for the hydrologic
impacts because that -- you're going to be fairly much set as to what's
going to happen in -- in that.
But the Water Management District has determined that you can
realistically go through a modeling exercise and come up with an
assessment. Is it a hundred -- is it going to be a hundred percent
certain? No. There's not a hundred percent certainty with it. But if
you -- if you don't go through an exercise like that, then you set up
front some presumptive number of which it's very difficult to try to
defend when someone can come in and say, well, look, I can go
through this exercise and -- and show you with reasonable certainty
that we're not going to have an adverse impact.
The -- this issue was tackled in a -- in a study that was done for
Page 163
January 23, 2002
the St. Johns Water Management District for buffers, and it's --
typically Mark Brown. It was done in the early '90s. They went
through an exercise for the -- for the general system that you would
find in those areas. They specified a -- a -- they worked their
numbers backwards from a -- a draw-down of less than, I want to say,
a tenth of a foot, if I recall properly. They did some groundwater
modeling, and they determined for certain systems up in those areas
that you'd have a three- or four- or five-hundred-foot buffer that
would be appropriate from a groundwater perspective.
We -- as staff we -- we toyed with the idea of trying to come up
with a particular number to model against, such as some diminimus
number of a -- of a tenth of a foot. And rather than -- rather than
specify some other procedure, we then recommended that you utilize
the South Florida Water Management District's procedure because
that's what they have adopted for the district. So we -- we -- we
struggled with the -- the same idea as well, and -- and proposed the --
the procedure that's currently as -- as your proposal because of those
issues.
MR. COE: Well, you say to us not to be arbitrary and just
establish a one-mile buffer without basing it on any scientific data.
How'd you come up with 300 feet?
MR. LORENZ: 300 feet was -- if you look at some of the
wildlife information, now, 300 feet is not set up to be a hydrologic
number. That's set up to look at some of the wildlife issues. If you
look in your data analysis that was tabulated, there was also a number
that this Rural Fringe Advisory Committee felt comfortable with.
Recognize, also, within -- within the buffer information, that if
you have a particular set of species, for instance, if you have a bald
eagle's nest that's within a natural reservation, you're going to have to
have a setback of 1,500 feet, 1500 feet. That may take you past the
300-foot buffer. So you have to read the buffer language in your
Page 164
January 23, 2002
proposal that it's just not 300 feet. We have some additional
requirements that have to be met as well.
The hydrologic information may -- may establish that you have
to set -- set back much further distance for water -- for water el --
water control elevations. It could be greater than the 300 feet. We
don't know. That's why you have to go through the modeling
exercise.
So there's a number of reasons to set the buffers, wildlife issues,
storm water or groundwater withdrawal impacts, and those are --
those are built into that buffering language that we proposed.
MR. COE: Okay. Thank you.
MR. CARLSON: Here's -- here's the givens. Here's what I can
tell you having lived with this for so long is that, you know, we -- we
have an important upland areas to protect in this county. But when
you look at the conservation area map and the NRPA maps, you
know, the vast majority of the areas that we're trying to protect are --
are wetland water dependent water -- I mean, water is the key
element and should be the primary factor that we're considering when
we're talking about buffering our conservation areas, natural areas,
NRPAs, from negative impacts.
I can tell you that -- and we've been doing that for years and
years and years at -- where I work, but when your adjacent land is
rural without an official drainage system, without a canal system,
without a planned system, there is no deleterious impact on your
hydrology. The relationship of rainfall to water level doesn't change.
When your -- when your neighboring land use is 1 dwelling per 5
acres without improved drainage, no problem. When your adjacent
land use is agriculture, the water level fluctuates wildly. I can tell
that when they turn their pumps on; I can tell that when they turn
their pumps off.
Now, what happens when you start improving drainage? We
Page 165
January 23, 2002
heard today one mile east of the 951 canal there's degraded
hydrologic conditions in the eastern end of the Bell Meade NRPA.
So, you know, we sort of know something here.
MR. LORENZ: But let me -- let me respond to that in terms of
951. The water elevations that are set in the 951 canal are at least 4
to 5, 6 feet below normal groundwater tables. That canal system was
set prior to any formal review or any review of the -- of the drainage
system standards that you would currently have now. And I guess
what I'm saying is that the -- the degree of impact is proportional to
the -- to the water elevation -- water control elevation that you set.
And the canals that we currently have have been put into place that
you would never see those water -- those elevations except to that
dis -- those levels now through the South Florida Water Management
permitting.
So I don't think that it's -- it's fair to equate those past alterations
with what we propose to see in the future.
MR. CARLSON: Well, you know, when -- when I argue about
other things, people tell me, well, it's the best available data, and it is
the best available data.
The other thing I worry about is there's -- there's two issues:
There's surface water management when you're talking about canals
and drainage systems, drainage ditches, but then there's groundwater
use. And as those receiving areas increase in population, you may
put in well fields for potable water, but all those people are going to
put in irrigation systems to water their lawns. And that's going to
come right straight out of the groundwater table.
That's the way it's done at Orangetree. They don't -- I think all
those dwelling units in Orangetree are required to have an irrigation
well. That's above and beyond whatever their water use is for potable
water that comes out of their plant. And over time, can you imagine,
you know -- think in long term. A hundred years from now when it's
Page 166
January 23, 2002
built out, the incredible amount of water use. And, you know, I
would like things like Corkscrew and the Bell Meade to survive over
the long term. And I -- I have my doubts.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Yes, ma'am.
MS. LYNNE: This modeling system that South Florida Water
Management is using, what is its accuracy? There should be a
percent accuracy?
MR. LORENZ: I don't know. I couldn't tell you that.
MS. LYNNE: Were their models based on actual field studies?
MR. LORENZ: Yes. The -- well, what I recall in the -- the
basis of review, that there is a set of protocols they have to go
through that -- that would be fairly representative and typical of-- of
general groundwater modeling. They'll have to establish some
natural background elevation. They do specify that -- I mean, if you
can -- if you can infer that information for a particular area, you have
to submit the data and the supporting documentation.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Much -- much of the data that was
submitted to us several weeks by Jim Duever was utilized as some of
the basis for the modeling. So it's from data such as the stuff that he
put together in the '70s and '80s that they've plugged into the
computer and brought up to date and so forth to set up those models.
MR. LORENZ: And they also specify actually there's a
condition in there that would indicate that if-- if there has been a
severe alteration to the -- to the groundwater table as a result of past
-- past efforts, that you don't automatically get to use that as your
base levels, that you're going to have to have a higher water table
elevation. That's some specific information and in that basis of--
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. Let's move forward. Ed,
what do you got?
MR. CARLSON: I got one more thing. I don't know if we
brought up -- going back to the rural village concept, the actual size
Page 167
January 23, 2002
of those, I'm not an expert on rural villages. But, quite frankly, I was ^
just blown away by the size, the potential size, of them, thousands of
acres. You know, that's just a concern for me. I don't know how to
put that in the form of a motion to limit the size to some other smaller
area. But I -- I think that's -- that's a DRI scale thing. And when
we're talking about a rural village thing, I get kind of a warm, cozy
feeling of a small little hamlet, you know, and a lot of green space
around it in a small concentrated, you know, living area. And, you
know, it's -- it's -- that's not what it is. It's a -- it's a huge subdivision.
MR. MULHERE: Well, not necessarily, it is -- as I indicated
before, the -- we agreed with the -- the concerns that were raised and
actually reduce the size from what you have before you from 500
acres to 2,000. At the upper end 2,000 is pretty big.
However, the intent there was that these are things that, you
know, will grow over time. That may be a 20- or 30-year
development pattern in a rural village that starts out very small and
then grows and, you know, 2,000 acres may be reasonable with 7,000
or 8,000 residents and still take on the components of a village.
Maybe it matures into a rural town at that point in time. It's still
within a receiving area. It's still where we want to direct land uses to.
It's still going to be mixed use in development. It's still going to be
compact in nature. And from our perspective, there was no negative
or no down side to that.
MR. GAL: Okay. What's -- what's 2,000 acres in miles, just so
I could picture it?
MR. CARLSON: A mile is -- square mile is -- 640 acres in a
square mile.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Four square miles.
MR. GAL: Four square miles about?
MR. CARLSON: Well, I'm tired -- I'm not going to beat that
horse again but --
Page 168
January 23, 2002
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: All right. Do we have anyone else
that wants to make a motion for recommendation for revisions,
additions, deletions, what have you?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Hearing none, then --
MR. CARLSON: Wait a minute.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay.
MS. LYNNE: We've got the e-mail from Allie Santoro and her
suggestions. And I'm just suggesting, since she wrote them up we --
as a courtesy, we should go over them.
MR. CARLSON: I think you took On the task.
MS. LYNNE: Okay, okay. Page 40, 3-A.
MR. MULHERE: Forty of the CCME?
MS. LYNNE: Well, I've looked at both page 40s, and I don't
see this section.
MR. LORENZ: What's it referring to specific -- does it have a
MS. LYNNE: It says, page 43 A, not allow new unacceptable
farming practices or golf courses unless they have mechanisms to
maintain water tables.
MR. MULHERE: Okay. That's got to be in the FLUE.
MR. LORENZ: That's in the FLUE.
MR. MULHERE: I think she's referring to primary receiving
lands, which would be on the bottom of page 42.
MS. LYNNE: Forty-two?
MR. MULHERE: It starts there.
MS. LYNNE: Then 3-B.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: What are we doing? Are we doing
that line by line on Allie's memo?
MS. LYNNE: That was just my suggestion. I'm not sure what
she's referring to here.
Page 169
January 23, 2002
MR. MULHERE: Okay. Well, there is -- there is a 3-A and B ^
on 40. But, again, I think maybe there's some confusion there
because those are interim natural resource protection area restrictions
that were called for and adopted as -- pursuant to the final order.
Again, that would apply in the eastern lands and wouldn't apply in the
fringe once these other things were adopted.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: I believe on 43-A what we're
referring to is the line that we were talking about, agricultural uses. It
says not allowing unacceptable farming or golf courses unless they
have mechanisms to maintain water tables and forth. I think we
addressed that.
MR. MULHERE: I think so too.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay.
MS. LYNNE: Okay. Page 24, 6.1.4 -- I think we may have
already done this -- not promote new clearing of ag lands if in
sending areas. Did we do a motion pertinent to that?
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Yeah.
MS. LYNNE: Okay. 6.1.5, why should the county have
reduced preservation requirements?
MR. COE: Fifty.
MR. CARLSON: Fifty percent.
MR. LORENZ: This is in this conservation and coastal
management element.
MR. MULHERE: Page 24.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Yup.
MR. LORENZ: Yeah. I have it up on the screen.
MR. MULHERE: The -- the county purchased that land. So,
therefore, all of the taxpayers of the county purchased that land.
The -- the intent with respect to that, some portion of that land which
is immediately adjacent to the existing landfill is to create a resource
recovery facility and a county barn facility.
Page 170
January 23, 2002
Our discussions with the utilities or public works division was
that -- that they would need to utilize a higher percentage of that land,
probably about 80 acres maximum or -- I'm sorry -- a hundred -- was
it 150 acres maximum? 160? Anyway, 50 percent preservation
standard was sufficient for them to be able to utilize the land for the
intended uses.
And what we proposed was that they preserve at least 50 percent
and, of course, they still have to go through the permitting process
with the agencies. The county is not absolved from going through
that process.
I guess you would have to find as to whether or not you believe
there is a public purpose for the county to be able to utilize existing
land for public purpose or not utilizing that land and going out and
purchasing new land.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: What's the pleasure?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: All right. Hearing none, how
about 6.2.7, apply to ag practices as well? Again, I think that comes
under whether -- what is permitted under the -- what's the name of
that act, Fair Farming Act?
MR. MULHERE: Right-to-Farm Act.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Right-to-Farm Act, yeah. Page 31,
paragraph 1-E, little 1 says used as fenced walls or tunnels, uses, to
encourage wildlife to use natural corridors to -- never mind. I'm
sorry. Forget it. Everybody can read it.
MS. LYNNE: I think what Miss Santoro is asking here is that
we include the word "tunnels," use of fencing walls, tunnels or other
obstructions to encourage wildlife to use natural corridors to separate
wildlife corridors from areas of human activity.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. Anybody want to move to
change 6 --
Page 171
January 23, 2002
MR. COE: I'll make -- make that motion.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: -- to add the word "tunnels" in that
particular paragraph, which is page 31? That is on Item 1-E, little e,
1, add the word "tunnels."
MR. COE: Do we have a second?
MR. CARLSON: Wait a minute. Tunnels is not an obstruction.
Lower down there's a roadway crossing.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. You're right. You're
absolutely right.
MR. CARLSON: So, you know, I don't know if that helps.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: No.
MS. LYNNE: So should we add to --
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: No.
MS. LYNNE: Should we add it to No. E 3, use of appropriate
roadway crossings, signage and tunnels?
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Well, I think appropriate roadway
crossing are tunnels are overpasses.
MR. MULHERE: That was the intent.
MR. CARLSON: What's the official name? Are we calling
them underpasses, or what are we calling them? Wildlife crossings.
MR. COE: I call them tunnels.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Well, okay.
MR. CARLSON: Maybe an appropriate --
MR. MULHERE: They have them both ways. Some places
they're above the roads.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: I think that covers it in that
particular paragraph. Let's look at 34 EIS, waive for single-family
homes, but what about species, i.e., eagle's nests we have lost?
MR. CARLSON: Oh, yes. I understand that.
MR. CARLSON: Single -family residents are exempted from
any wildlife surveys.
Page 172
January 23, 2002
MR. MULHERE: From an EIS.
MR. CARLSON: Oh, okay. It doesn't exempt them from any
statutory state or federal requirement. It just means that we're not
going to require in an existing platted subdivision -- because don't
forget, any new project is going to have to do this. It's the existing
platted subdivisions that have single-family homes that haven't gone
through this process, primarily Golden Gate Estates. We're not going
to require a single-family property owner to conduct an
environmental impact statement.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Understandable. Thirty-eight
Policy 3 -- 7.3.2.
MS. LYNNE: I think what Allie wants here is not only does the
lighting have to be protecting -- the absence of lighting protecting sea
turtles but, also, they're going to inspect for the removal of beach
equipment when they do their nighttime surveys. I would certainly --
^ I would make a -- go ahead.
MR. CARLSON: Barbara, is that already an requirement in
there somewhere?
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: That's in the ordinance, beach
ordinance, I believe, removal of furniture. Remember we went
through that whole thing?
MS. LYNNE: Right. But this is saying that there are nightly
inspections.
MR. CARLSON: Oh, county staff shall conduct nightly
inspections. They don't have to remove.
MS. LYNNE: No. They're not going to remove it. They're
going to inspect for removal. I think Allie wants to make it clear
when they're going out to inspect the proper lighting conditions. She
also thinks there should be reports on the proper removal of beach
equipment.
MS. BURGESON: Right. I think -- for the record, Barbara
Page 173
January 23, 2002
Burgeson -- what's currently required for the night monitoring is the
lighting issues. We don't require that staff, which is the natural
resources department, staff-- do the monitoring for the beach
equipment. At -- that typically falls on the code enforcement
department.
But I would -- I would agree that with the language that's in the
Land Development Code that requires the beach furniture to be
removed, that if that department, while they're doing those
inspections, determines that there's a noncompliant issue, that they
should address it.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: What's the pleasure?
MS. LYNNE: So I move that we add "and removal of beach
equipment" per Allie's directions here.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Second?
MR. STONE: I'll second that.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Second. Discussion?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Hearing none. In favor?
(Unanimous response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Opposed, same sign.
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Passed unanimously.
MR. MULHERE: One potential correction to that language,
staff just raised an issue with the -- the wording, "nightly." I don't
think there's any way that we're going to guarantee that there's going
to be nightly inspections. Periodic, intermittent. Nightly is probably
not likely to occur, and I certainly would hate to have something in
here that says we're going to have to do something when I really don't
see it happening, and I'm hearing that from the natural resource
staff-- !"-,
MR. COE: Why don't we say regular.
Page 174
January 23, 2002
MR. MULHERE: Regular.
MS. LYNNE: It's already in there, the language.
MR. MULHERE: I know it is.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: But we're saying we don't think
we can do that.
MR. LORENZ: Put it this way. We don't want to infer that
we're going to be doing each and every night inspections.
MR. COE: I'll make a motion to change it to regular instead of
nightly.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Second it, somebody.
MR. STONE: I'll second that.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. Discussion?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: In favor?
(Unanimous response.)
r-. CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Opposed, same sign.
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Unanimous.
MR. COE: Way to blow through the agenda.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: All right. Now, we have to move
on the entire document; is that correct?
MR. MULHERE: It would be -- now that you've dealt with
individual things --
MS. STUDENT: Individual items too.
MR. MULHERE: And that motion would be subject to your
other motions.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. Now, do we make two
motions, one on the land use and the other one?
MR. MULHERE: I think that would be a good idea because we
may send separate ordinances out for that.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. Why don't we have a
Page 175
January 23, 2002
motion that we move the recommendation of the land-use element ^
with the conditions that we have requested by previous motions.
How does that sound?
MR. MULHERE: Good.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Mr. Coe, did you do that?
MR. COE: I did that.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Mr. Carlson?
MR. CARLSON: Second.
MR. HILL: This wouldn't preclude us on the next meeting
making additional recommendations, would it?
MR. MULHERE: Nope.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. In favor?
(Unanimous response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Opposed, same sign?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: It passed unanimously. How about
the conservation and coastal management element?
MR. COE: I make the same recommendation I did the last one.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Good. I'm glad to hear that.
MR. HILL: Second.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Mr. Hill, you second?
MR. HILL: Yeah.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Favor?
MR. HILL: Aye.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Aye.
MR. CARLSON: Aye.
Mr. GAL: Aye.
MR. COE: Aye.
MR. STONE: Aye.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Opposed, same sign.
MS. LYNNE: Aye.
Page 176
January 23, 2002
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: You're opposed?
MS. LYNNE: Uh-huh.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: For the record, it passed 6 to 1.
MS. STUDENT: There's one other element.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: What is that?
MR. MULHERE: It's the central water and sewer policies sub --
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Actually, two, aren't there?
MR. MULHERE: Well, they're subelements.
MS. STUDENT: They're subelements.
MR. MULHERE: Potable water and potable sewer. And I can
tell you very briefly what those entail. That is that we will be
extending -- the county will allow or permit the extension of central
water and sewer into receiving areas.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. Mr. Coe?
MR. COE: I'll make a motion to so move.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: The sanitary sewer and potable
water?
MR. COE: Both of them. That's right.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Second?
MR. HILL: Yup.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Second by Mr. Hill. In favor?
(Unanimous response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Opposed, same sign?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Hearing none, unanimous.
Anything else?
MR. MULHERE: Mr. Carlson, it will all depend on whether or
not the receiving areas go forward. It will be a moot point if they
don't. If they do, then by extending central water and sewer you at
least minimize -- you allow for the benefits of clustering through that
process.
Page 177
January 23, 2002
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. Mr. Coe.
MR. COE: I got one more question. Has anyone sat down and
looked at how many units have already been approved yet not yet
built?
MR. MULHERE: There was an exercise done a few years ago
by the county. I don't know whether that's been updated. I mean, I
can --
MR. COE: Versus the water and the sewage --
MR. MULHERE: Oh, that's been done. That's been done very
recently.
MR. COE: So that has been done?
MR. MULHERE: Yes, that has been done within the last few
months.
MR. COE: Okay.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay?
MR. COE: Okay.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Anybody have anything else?
MR. CARLSON: In this day and age with the computers and
the information, it's like you go to the store and they scan on the point
of sale system and they automatically know what their inventory is,
what's gone out.
MR. MULHERE: That's a very good point.
MR. CARLSON: Man, that should be up to date like every day.
Work on that, will you?
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Did you put bar codes on those
wood storks, same thing.
MS. LYNNE: I've got one more question.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Yes, ma'am.
MS. LYNNE: About the part of the order that says we're
supposed to look at unique agricultural areas, and I believe the
comment was made that we were just doing that in the eastern
Page 178
January 23, 2002
section.
MR. MULHERE: Well, primarily was.
MS. LYNNE: But if there is a unique area in our section,
shouldn't that be addressed?
MR. MULHERE: It doesn't read exactly like that. The final
order says that we should develop measures to protect prime
agricultural uses, uses, maybe areas.
MS. LYNNE: Areas.
MR. MULHERE: Areas. So what does that mean? Well,
prime, by definition, refers to the soils, the quality of the soils. And
they're mostly only found in delta areas, from what I understand. So
ours is not prime; it's unique, and it's unique based on weather, more
so than anything else, rainfall.
Based on our valuation, there are relatively -- I say relatively --
few examples of-- of active agriculture in the fringe area. There is
some, especially in D. But it's a very small percentage when
compared to the eastern lands portion where the majority exists. We
believe we have proposed some measures. I mean, we're not
precluding someone from farming. We're not even precluding them
from farming after they transfer their development rights within a
receiving area. That is an incentive to continue to farm if you retain
your land and, you know, with sending lands and transfer your
development rights.
So we do have some incentives. Clustering is a huge incentive
for agriculture.
MS. LYNNE: I'm just -- if it's really true that the gentleman
who was here earlier that we have an area, one of only two in the
continental United States that is frost free year-round --
MR. MULHERE: Okay.
MS. LYNNE: -- that does seem to me to be something that
should be looked at.
Page 179
January 23, 2002
MR. MULHERE: I think we have looked at it, and there's no
requirement that those property owners, if they want to continue to
farm there, there's nothing that's going to cause them to not farm in
what we've proposed.
In fact, there are provisions that -- that might allow them to
realize the benefits of clustered development on a portion of the
property and continue to farm on the other portion. If anything, it's
enhanced their ability to have flexibility. I mean, we haven't taken
away that right. We've just added some additional rights since it's a
receiving area for clustering primarily.
CHAIRMAN SANSBURY: Okay. We are adjourned.
* * * * *
There being no further business for the good of the County, the
meeting was adjourned by order of the Chair at 3:44 p.m.
ENVIRONMENTAL ADVISORY COUNCIL
THOMAS SANSBURY, CHAIRMAN
TRANSCRIPT PREPARED ON BEHALF OF DONOVAN COURT
REPORTING, INC., BY BARBARA A. DONOVAN, RMR, CRR
Page 180