CCPC Minutes 11-20-2025 (draft)November 20, 2025
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TRANSCRIPT OF THE MEETING OF THE
COLLIER COUNTY PLANNING COMMISSION
Naples, Florida
November 20, 2025
LET IT BE REMEMBERED that the Collier County Planning
Commission, 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:
Vice Chairman: Chuck Schumacher
Secretary: Paul Shea,
Randy Sparrazza
Michael Petscher
Michelle L. McLeod
Charles "Chap" Colucci
Amy Lockhart, CCPS Rep.
Joe Schmitt (Excused)
ALSO PRESENT:
Raymond V. Bellows, Zoning Manager
Mike Bosi, Planning and Zoning Director
Heidi Ashton-Cicko, Managing Assistant County Attorney
Ailyn Padron, Management Analyst I
James Sabo, Planner III
November 20, 2025
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MR. BOSI: Chair, you have a live mic.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Good morning. Thank you.
Welcome to the November 20th, 2025, Collier County Planning
Commission meeting. Please take a seat. We're ready to start.
Before we go into our roll call, please stand for the Pledge of
Allegiance.
(The Pledge of Allegiance was recited in unison.)
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Great. Roll call, Secretary
Shea.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: Commissioner Schmitt is absent.
Vice Chair Schumacher?
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Here.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: Secretary Shea is here.
Commissioner Sparrazza?
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: Here.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: Commissioner Colucci?
COMMISSIONER COLUCCI: Here.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: Commissioner McLeod?
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Here.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: Commissioner Petscher?
COMMISSIONER PETSCHER: Here.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: Am I saying it right?
COMMISSIONER PETSCHER: Yeah, that's fine.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: If all these -- I figured I better ask
you.
COMMISSIONER PETSCHER: Yeah. It's Petscher.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: Petscher?
COMMISSIONER PETSCHER: Yeah, Petscher.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: Sorry.
COMMISSIONER PETSCHER: That's okay.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: Ms. Lockhart?
November 20, 2025
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MS. LOCKHART: Here.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: Sir, we have a majority. I assume
Joe has an excused absence.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: I'm not going to question.
Moving on, Mr. Bellows, any addenda to the agenda, sir?
MR. BELLOWS: For the record, Ray Bellows. No, we don't
have any changes.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Planning Commission
absences. Our next two meetings would be -- Mr. Bosi?
MR. BOSI: The 4th of December would be the next meeting.
We have two petitions scheduled for that. They're both LDC
amendments. I think it's probably going to be a pretty short meeting
in that regard. And then the 18th, we haven't had any petition, so we
have reserved that as canceled.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Thank you.
And absences for December 4th?
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: Yes, I will not be attending.
COMMISSIONER COLUCCI: Will not be attending.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: So that's minus two.
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: Family's in town.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Anyone else?
(No response.)
MR. BOSI: And, Chair, just for your planning for January, your
first meeting in January is January 1st, so obviously that will be
canceled. So there's only going to be one meeting in January. It's
going to be the 15th of July -- or January, sorry.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: So we're pushing January to
July. Got it. Thank you. That will work.
All right. I guess -- I guess for that one on the 4th we're going to
have to see if the Chair will be here, then. I'll be here. I mean, it will
work.
November 20, 2025
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The 18th -- no, the 18th we don't have any petitions for right
now.
MR. BOSI: The 18th is canceled.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: The 18th is canceled.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: Oh, it is canceled?
MR. BOSI: Canceled.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Great. Approval of minutes.
Would that be last month's? Everybody had a chance to review?
Questions, comments? If not, entertain a motion to approve.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: So moved.
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: Second.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Second. All in favor?
COMMISSIONER COLUCCI: Aye.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Aye.
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER PETSCHER: Aye.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Aye.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: BCC recaps.
MR. BELLOWS: Yes. On November 10th, the Board of
County Commissioners heard the Sabal Palm Road PUD, but that
was continued to the January 13th Board of County Commissioners,
and then the Horse Trials SRA and SSA, those petitions were
continued to December 9th. Then the -- there were two LDC
amendments on the summary agenda, and they were approved.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: All right.
No Chairman's report, no consent agenda.
That brings us into our first item. PL20230012851, Golden Gate
Worship Center -- Golden Gate -- 5890 Golden Gate Parkway
along -- we're doing this as a companion, correct?
MR. BOSI: Yes.
November 20, 2025
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CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: PL2023001050, Golden Gate
Worship Center.
All those wishing to testify or speak on this matter, please stand
and be sworn in.
THE COURT REPORTER: Do you swear or affirm the
testimony you will give will be the truth, the whole truth, and nothing
but the truth?
(The speakers were duly sworn and indicated in the affirmative.)
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Disclosures. Start with
Mrs. Lockhart. Start from the right today.
MS. LOCKHART: Staff materials only.
COMMISSIONER COLUCCI: Mr. Yovanovich. I talked to
him on the phone.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: Staff materials and site visit.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Staff materials only.
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: Staff materials only.
COMMISSIONER PETSCHER: Staff materials only.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Staff materials and spoke with
Mike Bosi.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Mr. Yovanovich, you have the
floor, sir.
MR. YOVANOVICH: Thank you. Good morning. For the
record, Rich Yovanovich on behalf of the petitioner and applicants
for both petitions. It was easier when we just used the visualizer.
With me today is the pastor of the church; Mr. Arnold; Jim
Banks is our traffic consultant; and Marco Espinar is our
environmental consultant.
You have before you two petitions pertaining to a parcel of
property located on Golden Gate Parkway. Because this property is
within the Golden Gate Estates, if you go to the Land Development
Code to rely upon what you're allowed to do on the property in the
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Estates zoning district, you're going to be in trouble because the Land
Development Code says in Estates zoning districts churches are
conditional uses. Unless you practice in Collier County and know
that there's a special provision that applies to Golden Gate Estates
applicable to churches that basically say you can only have churches
under limited circumstances in Estates-zoned property, you're not
going to know that you have to do a Growth Management Plan
Amendment.
And unfortunately for my client, they received a zoning
verification letter from Collier County -- you have it in your backup
material -- that says, "The property is zoned Estates. You need to
do -- you need to get a conditional use for the church."
They bought the property. Came to me. I said, "I'm happy to
represent you. I'll do it pro bono, but guess what? You need a
Growth Management Plan Amendment."
So we were a little bit surprised that they were not allowed to
move forward under the Growth Management Plan. They had to also
do a Growth Management Plan Amendment. So we're here today for
a Growth Management Plan Amendment and a conditional-use
application on this piece of property because of a policy -- and you
read that in your staff report -- that says basically along Golden Gate
Parkway, no more conditional uses.
So when you look at the staff report -- and Mr. Arnold will get
up here and take you through the site plan -- it's not a compatibility
issue. It's not an intensity-of-use issue for the property. It's purely
there's a policy in the Growth Management Plan that basically says
no more conditional uses along Golden Gate Parkway in this area.
Otherwise, staff would recommend approval but for the policy.
So it's a policy decision, and you're to make a recommendation
to the Board of County Commissioners, on this piece of property
does it make sense to waive the policy prohibiting conditional uses
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on this piece of property.
Now, Golden Gate Parkway, we all have traveled it. We travel
it a lot. It's evolved over the years. It's now basically a six-lane road.
There already are a number of nonresidential uses on the properties
right near us. In fact, we have the Able Academy immediately to our
east. We have a single-family home next to us. That individual, I
think, is here and is in favor of the petition, and we have a host, as
you can see, of other uses in the immediate vicinity of what we're
proposing to do.
So from a -- from a compatibility standpoint and other uses in
the area, I think our proposed small church makes sense as a limited
application of waiving the policy.
Now, I know people will accuse me and others of "once one
petition is approved, that sets the precedent for others." I'm sure
Heidi will tell you that's not true. Each petition is viewed on its own
merits. Just because a church goes here doesn't mean you have to
give a church on every piece of property that's located along this
corridor.
So what we're asking for is a very limited small-scale Comp
Plan amendment for this particular piece of property to allow for a
church on the site. It's already been determined to be compatible by
your staff. It's already been determined to be not too intense by your
staff. We're just here because of the change we need to the Growth
Management Plan.
We're -- this is the Comp Plan language where we're adding that
this particular piece of property is allowed to have a conditional use
for a church. That's the Comprehensive Plan language that you're
going to be considering. It's a 6,000-square-foot church and 4,000
square foot -- what's that? -- fellowship hall.
Now, initially the church is going to simply modify the existing
residence for the church uses. This is -- we don't want it to have to
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come back in the future should the church ultimately get to what they
hope to be their full potential and have to come back and amend.
So we're asking for all those uses now. But right now the
intention is to just modify the existing residence for the use. They're
already worshiping in Golden Gate City, but they want to be in a
stand-alone facility near where their worshipers reside. That's why
this location was chosen for the church.
These are the existing Future Land Use Map designations. We
are in the Golden Gate -- the Urban Golden Gate Estates future
land-use district on the property. I think we have an exhibit that
Wayne will take you through that will show you pretty much
all -- I'm going to go back -- all of the commercial that's near here.
If you go to -- you're all familiar with the corner of Santa
Barbara and Golden Gate Parkway. You have commercial on the
northwest corner, you have a church on the southwest corner, and
you have commercial on the northeast corner, and you have
commercial on the southeast corner. We're not far from that
intersection.
I don't know -- if you've driven on Golden Gate Parkway, I don't
think you -- I think you would agree that a single-family home on
that road now is probably not the best use of the property. There are
single-family homes, obviously, on Golden Gate Parkway, but my
guess is they were there when Golden Gate Parkway was a very
different-looking road at the time.
With that, I'm going to turn it over to Wayne to take you through
the site plan and more of the details. And at the end we're going to
ask that you recommend approval of the Growth Management Plan
Amendment as well as recommend approval of the conditional use.
Those are the general overview comments. And if you have
questions of me, I'm here to answer them; otherwise, I'll turn it over
to Mr. Arnold.
November 20, 2025
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CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: You have one right now,
Mr. Yovanovich. Commissioner Colucci.
COMMISSIONER COLUCCI: What was the rationale for the
Growth Management Plan not allowing any more conditional uses?
MR. YOVANOVICH: I think in the old days, back when I was
a young assistant county attorney and after that, it was difficult to get
conditional uses approved in residential urban areas, and the easiest
thing to do was to go out to Golden Gate Estates and, thus, you could
see that there's a number of conditional uses on Golden Gate
Parkway. And the concern was that Golden Gate Estates became the
area that conditional uses were going to instead of going through the
process of dealing with these changes in the urban area. There was
also a cost factor for land associated with all that. So the
Commission said, you know what, we don't want Golden Gate
Estates to be the only area where these are going to be located. So
they put this prohibition in the code to prevent conditional uses.
COMMISSIONER COLUCCI: So that area right now, that
small area, is pretty well urbanized right now.
MR. YOVANOVICH: Yes. And I think it's changed quite a bit.
I think this policy predates the interchange going into -- but I may be
wrong on that, or it's around the same time that the interchange -- I
know they prohibited commercial at the interchange, but I think -- I
think --
MR. BOSI: And, Mike Bosi, Planning and Zoning director.
And Rich is right, the proliferation of nonresidential/churches to
conditional uses in the Estates is what -- is what was the motivation
to put the restriction -- the location restrictions upon where
conditional uses can go very tightly. But on top of the entire universe
of the Rural Golden Gate Estates, it was also that interchange, the
Parkway between Livingston Road and Santa Barbara which the
interchange is in the middle of. There was a restriction upon no new
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nonresidential uses being allowed, and that was specifically because
we didn't want your traditional commercialization of the interstate
interchanges along that corridor.
So it's not only Golden Gate Area Master Plan that has
restrictions upon conditional uses for the entire master plan, but this
specific corridor has also some restrictions upon nonresidential land
uses as well, and that has -- and it's to keep the traffic flow and the
ingress/egress around the interchange to be as free flowing as
possible.
So there's a number of different things that kind of have
contributed to the inability to seek a conditional use on its own but
needing a GMP associated with it as well.
MS. ASHTON-CICKO: The County staff works closely with
the residents when they go through the Golden Gate Area Master
Plan studies, and they're reluctant to make changes to the Growth
Management Plan because they want an opportunity for the public
and the people around it to testify and be able to speak. So that's why
they really haven't made too many changes to the Growth
Management Plan, you know, since its original inception.
MR. ARNOLD: Any other questions before Wayne comes up?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Mr. Arnold.
MR. ARNOLD: Good morning, Mr. Chairman and Planning
Commission members. I'm Wayne Arnold, a certified planner with
Grady Minor & Associates, and here representing the congregation.
And Rich did a good job summarizing, and I think what this comes
down to is really is this an appropriate location to make a policy
modification for allowance of a church. And this slide, I think, says a
lot.
And when you look at all that's going on, immediately next to us
is Able Academy. That's a school for special-needs children. We're
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showing a future interconnect to them on our site plan.
So on our plan, access will continue to be from Golden Gate
Parkway shifting the access. If you made a site visit, it's kind of an
awkward turn, and what we would do is relocate the access point
father east to the property utilizing a turn lane that already exists for
the Able Academy, in part.
We're showing a future stub-out to Able Academy. We did
meet with them early on in the process. We talked about sharing
their access that's existing and then connecting at the same location
here for us.
They were reluctant just not knowing exactly the function of our
church and the hours of operation and how it might interact with
them, but they were open to us having a future interconnection, so
that's why we've shown that.
There's an existing 2,100-square-foot home on the property
today. They would utilize that essentially as it is, retrofitting the
interior and modifying the exterior, and I'll show you some -- a little
bit of those modifications. But like Rich said, this is a lengthy and
costly process for a small congregation church to go through. So
we've made provisions for them to grow the building up to 6,000
square feet. We originally proposed 7,000, backed that down to
6,000, and then we made provisions for an outbuilding that exists
today. It's about a thousand square feet. That could be utilized
immediately as meeting space for them perhaps or a small gathering
space, but we would grow that to potentially up to 4,000 square feet
for a fellowship hall.
So you can see we've got a lot of grass parking shown, as
allowed to do for churches, that help soften everything.
Staff asked us to provide, instead of the 15-foot-wide landscape
buffer that would otherwise be required, a 25-foot-wide enhanced
buffer. So you'll see that as one of our conditions of approval for the
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conditional use, and we agreed to do that. So that would include
additional vegetation to shield the neighbor whose home is aligned
approximately, you know, almost immediately due west of us.
They do have an outbuilding toward the rear of the property, and
we propose nothing but some grass parking and maybe future
overflow parking and something back there.
But the site, as it sits today, will function very well for the
church. They're proposing a 200-seat-maximum sanctuary. And
again, that is the site plan we're proposing.
Here's a proposed floor plan. You can see that the main
entrance to the house exists in this vicinity today. They would do
interior renovations, put in a small stage area, pulpit, and then
obviously some maybe pews. It may be chair seating, but depicted
there.
One feature, there's a pool that exists today that could be used
for baptisms, et cetera. It may get filled in in the future, which would
allow them to grow the building footprint to the south.
Very modest renovations needed for the exterior. These are all
four sides that they had a contractor help them develop. So again, the
front elevation is this one. You can see that it's still very small in
scale and looks very much in keeping with the home that's there
today.
We have conditions of approval, 10 of them. Pretty standard.
I'm not going to go through each one of them, but we have hours of
operation. We have a lighting condition. No outdoor amplified
sound permitted, no private daycare or school outside of the care of
children during congregation services.
So I think, as Rich mentioned, this really is a policy decision. I
think if you read staff's conditional-use staff report, they recommend
approval subject to these conditions except for the fact we need the
Comp Plan amendment as well. The Comp Plan amendment, we
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would say this is a soft denial because staff is using the policy that
exists today as the basis for not supporting it, and they're leaving that
to you and the Board to make that decision.
I'm going back to the other slide, because, again, this
one -- we're a low traffic generator, off-peak hours, six-lane highway.
They're going to bring in water service from the Naples Bridge
Center that's immediately across the street. On that, we did a
conditional use, and they also were given an exception to expand
their facility a few years ago. I'm not sure any of you were on the
Planning Commission for that. But I represented the Bridge Center
and brought them through that process so they could expand and
modernize their facility. So that was one of the exceptions to the
same policy that was adopted by the Board.
Across the street, and very much under construction, is the
David Lawrence Center mental health facility -- sorry, right there.
And if you've been out there, I mean, they're moving fast, and it's
under construction. And I have a slide I can put on the visualizer
that's just a photograph of the construction activity that's occurring.
But again, so when you look at these, I mean, I think the horse is
already out of the barn with regard to conditional uses.
And I do appreciate Mike's comments about the nonresidential,
and I think that was really driven by the fact that the County
Commission did not want this to be a commercialized interchange. I
think Rich may have represented them at one time, but RaceTrac gas
station was very anxious to build a facility here, and they've been
living with that policy, and it's never been the right time to try to
amend that policy to allow a gas station, but we think that's certainly
different to allow a 200-seat small congregation church to be on this
location.
One of the other things that we've looked at, and your staff
asked us and said, "With all the facilities that are available in Collier
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County, you mean you can't find another church location?"
So the church today is located in Golden Gate City. They're in a
strip plaza. There's no outdoor recreational space. There's no space
for a fellowship hall. There's no space to grow, so they're looking to
grow their small congregation that's 100 people up to maybe 200
people or 200 per service at a 200-seat facility.
So they looked at several sites. And the pastor happens to be a
real estate -- Realtor. So he knows the market and knows how to
look at a transaction. But commercial sites on Rattlesnake Hammock
Road, they're outparcels to a shopping center. I mean, they're back in
the same situation that they were. They looked off of Sabal Palm
Road near the Sabal Palm Road project that you-all have heard by the
orange grove and determined that, one, it was too far, too remote, and
too costly to develop because the site had some wetlands on it.
There are other sites in the Parkway near the interchange.
There's -- but that site was really too small and didn't allow for any
growth of the existing single-family home. That's on the northwest
quadrant of the interchange. There's an old model home that sat
there, but now it has a frontage road and also part of the ramp for
Golden Gate Parkway interchange. It's squeezed in terms of its
ability to grow anything, so we just determined that it was too small.
There was another site that you-all recently approved in the past
year on Collier Boulevard at 13th. FP&L bought a portion of that
property and created a new substation expansion, but you-all
approved that site recently for an indoor self-shortage facility, and
that's under construction. So a lot of the sites that they looked at are
not viable and available.
Staff also produces and has published this exhibit. It's in one of
your Golden Gate Master Plan exhibits, and it highlights all the
locations that are potentially available for conditional uses. So I went
to every one of those sites and analyzed them for the church, and just
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the one I would highlight, again, is the one I pointed out, the one at
13th on Collier Boulevard. That's supposedly permissive for a
conditional use, but it's going to be a self-storage facility.
So this map was produced and hasn't been updated for well over
10 years. So in 10 years a lot of has happened in Golden Gate, and
most of these sites don't work. And it's a little bit complex because
we have three different plans for Golden Gate. We have the Urban
Estates, we have the Rural Estates, and we have Golden Gate City,
and they all carry with them some distinctions.
But in this area you can have conditional uses that are in an
activity center. You can have some that qualify because they're
adjacent to certain other uses, or you can have others that are
considered transitional. And there are criteria with them.
And when I started looking at a lot of these sites, to qualify for a
transitional conditional use, for instance, you have to have a
50-foot-wide buffer on some of those sites. Well, some of those sites
are 75-feet wide. You can't put a 50-foot-wide buffer in and still
develop a 75-foot-wide site.
So we did this analysis, and I think staff concurred with us that
from these exhibits that have been produced by the County, there are
no sites that really qualify for -- that could be suitable for a church
unless you came through some other process, because I can't ask for a
deviation or a variance unless I file separately for a variance, and that
comes with it a whole separate set of requirements.
So, you know, we're here saying that we've really done a good
job analyzing this. And of all of sites that we've found, this one
seems to make a lot of sense. I think unless the neighbors changed
their mind in the last 24 hours, the neighbor has been supportive.
The buffering is good. The scale of this building's going to be small.
In the Estates you're limited to a 30 feet height limit. We've put in a
buffer that's larger than is required by code, and we think those other
November 20, 2025
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conditions will safeguard our neighbor and still make this a very
compatible use.
Jim Banks is here. He did the traffic analysis. It's a minuscule
amount of traffic generation that occurs with a 200-seat church, and
especially when you consider that those are off-peak hours. They'll
have an evening service during the week. They'll have potentially a
Saturday or Sunday service. Those are all off-peak hours, so you
don't really have additional impacts to Golden Gate Parkway.
So for those factors, we think that this all makes perfect sense to
allow the exception in this one location. So with that, I'll be happy to
answer questions.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Mr. Arnold, if I can just ask
you a question. When you say there's no other properties available,
there is a church property that is available that's stuck in between two
churches. That would be one that we did approve a couple years ago
that's now up for sale. It would be right between No. 13 and 26 along
951. It would be subject -- let's see. You've got an "E" marking on.
Was that property not considered?
MR. ARNOLD: I did analyze that one. And I believe that that
carried with -- it's one of those requirements where it had these large
buffer requirements.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: So it would be too small?
MR. ARNOLD: It would be too small.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Okay. Thank you. I just want
to make sure we're dotting all of our I's and crossing all our Ts.
I don't see any questions. Anybody have any questions?
COMMISSIONER PETSCHER: I've got a question.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Go ahead.
COMMISSIONER PETSCHER: A couple questions. I don't
see anything about your lighting, parking lot lighting. What kind of
parking lot lighting are you doing?
November 20, 2025
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MR. ARNOLD: We don't have details -- we don't have details
of the parking lot lighting, but we do have a condition that's condition
number -- it's No. 3. So at that time we're going to illustrate that the
lighting will reduce light spillage beyond the property lines. Parking,
outdoor area lighting should be required to utilize cutoff fixtures in
order to reduce glare to the neighboring properties. If the parking lot
lighting is located within 100 feet of an existing residential dwelling,
the lighting shall be limited to 15 feet in height and shall use full
cutoff fixtures.
MR. YOVANOVICH: That's your -- commonly referred to as
the Dark Skies standards pretty much.
COMMISSIONER PETSCHER: Yeah. I mean, I would
just -- I would just say that I think all the lights should be limited to
15 -- because it's in a residential area, all the lighting should be
reduced to 15-foot in height and 3,000 K bulbs to be lighting fixtures.
MR. YOVANOVICH: Okay.
COMMISSIONER PETSCHER: And my other question is: It
looks like the Able Academy has a turning lane onto their -- onto
their property. Is there any way of extending that turning lane so you
guys could have more -- so there would be more of a less disruptive
stop going into the church?
MR. ARNOLD: Yes, we think that the County, when we get in
for the Site Development Plan review, they will probably -- we'll do a
more detailed traffic analysis, and probably that will tell us we need
to extend that turn lane at least across the frontage of our property. It
extends partially across our property today, but it would be extended
to the west to accommodate traffic flow.
COMMISSIONER PETSCHER: No further questions. Thank
you.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: No other questions?
(No response.)
November 20, 2025
Page 18
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Staff?
MR. ARNOLD: Thank you.
MR. BOSI: Mike Bosi, Planning and Zoning director.
As mentioned by the applicant, staff is not supporting the
Growth Management Plan based upon the prohibition of the no new
nonresidential land uses. Staff does recognize, and it was mentioned
that this policy has been breached before for the David Lawrence
Center recently as well as the expansion of the Bridge Center. So
there have been projects that have been deemed -- that provide
enough public benefit to provide the justification before. Staff
wasn't -- staff didn't feel a church of 6,000 square feet was that
communal public benefit that was going to be provided to go against
the existing policy for no new nonresidential land uses; therefore,
that's why staff is recommending denial on it.
And another issue -- and I just want -- there's another -- I just
want to show an example of another reason why we are not in
100 percent support is related to -- there's more than one -- there's
more than one zoning district that allows churches, and every one of
the site locations that were focused upon were the Estates zoning
district. And Estates -- and any residential zoning district within
Collier County would allow for a church as a conditional use without
the need for a Growth Management Plan.
One of the things I wanted to point out within the staff report, I
believe it's -- I'll get down to the page. The -- Golden Gate
downtown commercial subdistrict, this area here, which is only about
a mile -- a half a mile to a quarter of a mile away from the existing
site, allows for a church, a church within -- a church within this
proximity here, and there's a PUD as well, a commercial PUD that
has commercial uses if they wanted to sit a church there, which is all
vacant parcel. If they wanted to sit a church there, they could go
through a comparable-use process, and they could show from a traffic
November 20, 2025
Page 19
standpoint, from an intensity standpoint their church would be a
comparable use to the commercial uses that are allowed for;
therefore, they can move forward.
And further to augment that, to show you in terms of where the
R -- that downtown subdistrict is all along Golden Gate Parkway
from Santa Barbara to the canal. And as you can see -- and here's the
area I really wanted to point. These parcels here, empty parcels,
those are Residential Multifamily 6, RMF-6. A church is allowed as
a conditional use. They could come in and seek a conditional use at
this location.
So there's other options -- there's other options available, staff
felt. Now, there could be pricing issues. There can be -- there can be
availability issues. Staff does not look into that.
Just wanted to point that out. That, in combination of the
Growth Management Plan restrictions, were the motivations why
staff is recommending denial.
Staff does recognize that if the Planning Commission feels
there's enough public benefit provided for it, that the church being
proposed is of an intensity and a density and an impact to the
surrounding property owners that -- or surrounding property within
this area that's very complimentary, would not be a -- burdensome to
the infrastructure or, I think, incompatible with any of the adjoining
uses.
The church use as itself is relatively benign. It has -- proposing
services on Wednesday evening as well as Sunday morning, areas of
nonpeak traffic, which -- when they will be active.
So the impact from a transportation standpoint is de minimis.
The impact from a compatibility is de minimis as well based upon the
relatively benign use and the limited activities that are associated
with the church. But because of the policy, we are recommending
denial.
November 20, 2025
Page 20
If the Planning Commission does recommend approval related
to the Growth Management Plan and feels that there's enough public
benefit, you'll see staff has put a -- suggested a number of conditions
with -- the applicant has agreed to, because we feel if we can get past
the issue of the policy decision, that this church would be something
that would be sitting relatively compat -- not relatively -- very
compatible with the surrounding land uses within the area, and it
would still be in line with the restriction of not adding commercial.
Now, this is a nonresidential use because it's considered
institutional, but we're not adding conditional uses -- or commercial
uses, which is really where the individual subdistrict -- or restrictions
between Livingston Road and Santa Barbara on Golden Gate
Parkway, those were the uses we really wanted to restrict, new
commercial uses, because we wouldn't want the traditional
commercialization of an interchange.
So for those reasons, staff is recommending denial, but if you
do -- if the Planning Commission does recommend approval based
upon the presentation and the overall de minimis impact of the
church to the surrounding property owners, staff would recommend,
and as the applicant has agreed, to the conditions of approval related
to the CU within your packet.
And with that, staff would answer any questions that you may
have.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Before I go to you,
Commissioner Sparrazza, I'm going to ask -- actually, you go first,
because I might follow up with some --
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: Mike, thanks for that
explanation.
If in a year or two or three or, really, any amount of time down
the line the church is doing amazingly well and they wish to hold
other meetings on other times that are not designated here within this
November 20, 2025
Page 21
policy, Wednesday night and Sunday mornings, if they wanted to
have an AA meeting on Tuesday nights or another sermon on
Thursdays or Saturday mornings, are there any limitations to what
Mr. Arnold is asking, Mr. Yovanovich is asking, and what the
County will allow?
I also would like to kind of just say within reason. We don't
want a carnival to be held there, but if they wish to expand to help the
community with other meetings that would be beneficial to the
community, are there any restrictions? Just trying to look ahead and
to make sure no one is boxed in.
MR. BOSI: There is -- one -- as a church, as a nonresidential
land use, they would be available for temporary-use permits for
events such as that up to 52 times during the year they would be
eligible for a conditional use or for a special-use permit.
For -- in terms of if they wanted to add, like, daycare outside of
the church at times, that would be something that would require a
modification to the -- to the existing conditional use.
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: Right. I guess I was more
concerned with them allowing more services to help the community,
as I said, another evening, extra service. I won't quite call it a club
but a gathering to continue to help the community.
And, Mike, I apologize. My carnival was a joke. I
wasn't -- wasn't meaning that.
MR. BOSI: But they would be eligible for -- I mean, churches
have those as fundraising activities. They would be eligible, and
those -- a conditional -- or a special-use permit requires coordinating
with all the safety-service providers, coordinating with transportation.
There's a lot of different restrictions that are placed upon it to make
sure that there's safety that's composed with it.
But as it is -- as it's proposed now, any official events and
activities beyond the hours that they're providing for operations, they
November 20, 2025
Page 22
would not be able. Now, if it was holding a --
MS. ASHTON-CICKO: Could I jump in for a second, Mike?
It's silent to renting it out to, like, the Boy Scouts or AA or any of
those organizations. So it would -- I think it would be interpreted that
it's allowed during 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. because there's no prohibition or
limitations.
MR. YOVANOVICH: Well, the hours of operation are actually
Monday through Friday 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
MS. ASHTON-CICKO: Yeah.
MR. YOVANOVICH: So I agree, Boy Scouts could come use
the facilities between 9 a.m. and 9 p.m. That's a typical -- most -- I
shouldn't say -- the churches I've attended have also had Boy Scouts
and Girl Scouts. Some of them have AA meetings. Those are typical
uses of the facilities, but they're always during the normal church
hours.
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: Okay.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Let me interject. They also
rent them out for special events. You can rent them out for
Quinceañera, you can rent it out for a birthday party, wedding, those
type of uses, too.
MR. YOVANOVICH: Okay. The churches I've been affiliated,
if you're a member of the church, yes, you can do those things, but
typically they don't -- but -- I'm not saying others do, but that's
not -- the intention is not to turn this into --
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Revenue center, I get that.
MR. YOVANOVICH: -- a convention center, I mean, to make
money.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: I just wanted to open it up and
say --
MR. YOVANOVICH: This is -- this is going to be a church.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Item No. -- let me see here.
November 20, 2025
Page 23
Item No. 5, 6,000-square-foot church, 4,000 related structure. Table
A shows church at 11,000 for both structures. So that's just a typo.
That's on I think it's Table A in Wayne's presentation that went up.
MR. YOVANOVICH: Of the presentation? Well, it's 10-. At
one time it was 11-. We must not have corrected that.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: It was seven. It was seven and
four. Now it's six --
MR. YOVANOVICH: Seven and four. It's six and four, yeah.
If we missed that, I apologize.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: I'm just proofreading for your
next meeting, Rich, that's all.
MR. YOVANOVICH: You're going to have to send me where
that is, because I don't see that in the draft resolution, but I'll take
your word for it. It may have been somewhere in an earlier rendition,
but --
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Got it.
MR. YOVANOVICH: -- we'll make sure it doesn't carry
forward.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Go through it.
No outside -- so Golden Gate City has gone through a lot of
transition in the last few years, especially after COVID when a lot of
people were buying houses sight unseen. Golden Gate City had
forever been known as a walking town.
So my question to your pastor would be is how many of his
parishioners are walking there versus driving? Because I do have
some concern with the location is outside of kind of Golden Gate,
and you've got them crossing a six-lane highway. You're either on
one or two sides to get there.
MR. YOVANOVICH: Right now it's not limited -- there are,
obviously, members that live in Golden Gate City, but it's not
limited --
November 20, 2025
Page 24
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: You're anticipating more of a
clear traffic versus --
MR. YOVANOVICH: We have people driving now, yeah. It's
not -- it's not the typical, you know, walk to a church. There are
people already driving to the church.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Okay. That answers my
questions for right now, so -- the one question I did have for staff is
did churches qualify under the Live Local Act, that you could convert
a church into single-family or into multifamily housing as long as it
was for affordable?
MR. BOSI: Not the Live Local Act that is advertised for the
commercial or industrial land -- or land uses for the conversion if you
have affordable housing, but there is a provision that if you have a
religious institution, you can -- you can -- a jurisdiction, Collier
County, must consider the allowance for residential development if
they provide a portion of that residential development for affordable
housing.
MR. YOVANOVICH: But it's not a matter of right. It wouldn't
be a matter of right. It would be through a public process.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Can I ask the County
Attorney? Is that correct?
MS. ASHTON-CICKO: I believe that's correct.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Okay. That answers my
questions.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Is there any public speakers?
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: That's what I'm getting into
next.
Public speakers, please.
MR. SABO: Mr. Chairman, we have two, Elizabeth Block, and
she has been ceded time from Cindy Brown.
Is Cindy Brown here?
November 20, 2025
Page 25
(Raises hand.)
MR. SABO: All right. Elizabeth Block and then Maria Rosas.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: That was five minutes, so
you've been ceded 10 minutes.
MS. BLOCK: I'll do my best. I'm kind of nervous.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: I'm sure you will. I'm sure you
will. Don't worry about it. I do a horrible job up here twice a month,
so...
MS. BLOCK: I appreciate the questions you all asked. And
when I'm finished, I would really appreciate if we could hear what
those conditions are if this property was restricted to less
development that Mike had mentioned. We didn't hear what those
conditions are that they would impose if you were going to approve
it.
I have to say that I have a really great relationship with Jean
Paul and his family and the people that I've seen on that property.
And when they bought the property, they were talking about a small,
low-intensive use of it. And I have no problem with it. I'm the
next-door neighbor. I'm -- I abut this property on the western side. I
do have some concerns for my own protection.
Water on that property has been a problem. I bought my house
in '98, and at that point in time, their property would flood four to
six inches deep on the back end of it. I know that because we were
riding horses back there, and -- so we were very aware of what that
property did.
The guy that they bought it from tried to put in an agricultural
use and started bringing in roughly 50 dump trucks worth of fill so
that his plants weren't getting flooded when we had our torrential
rains, and then what happened is my property now has literal
waterfalls coming over onto it when there's a lot of rain from the
property that the church plans to build on.
November 20, 2025
Page 26
So if they're going to have to raise things up, bring in more fill, I
need to have some kind of protection where they retain their own
water.
The only thing that the prior owner was able to do is he put a big
pump in at the back of his property and at the middle of his property
and sent the water to the swale at Golden Gate Parkway, and then
Code Enforcement came along and said, "You can't do that." I liked
him doing it because it stopped flooding my property from his
property.
So this year we haven't had the kind of torrential rains that we
had in the past, so I wasn't able to show Jean Paul, you know, what
actually happens.
But I have a real concern about that if you're building this kind
of development on that property. That property has a ton of water
that it holds, and the more fill that's come in there, the more it's being
dumped on my property. So I would ask that you somehow protect
me with conditions for that.
The light pollution, thank you for asking about that. I love
walking outside and seeing the stars. I just want to make sure that
whatever goes in next door isn't taking that away.
I don't know how this would impact my property value, but I
have no problem with their first intent to build and remodel and a
small expansion, but when you're talking 6,000 and 4,000 square feet
plus parking for 200 people, I don't see how that's going to work.
There's very little parking available there right now. Maybe 10 cars
can park there. I just -- I don't know what that's going to -- this is
going to do to my property value. I would hope that they would have
to come back to ask for the 6,000 and 4,000.
I have no problem with the expansion they want to do right now
where they're fixing up the house of 2,000 square feet and using the
shed that was built with agricultural zoning, so it didn't go through
November 20, 2025
Page 27
the permit process. But they want to take that and put stucco on it
and turn it into a fellowship hall. I love the idea. I think it's great for
them. And I have no problem. They've been very respectful
neighbors.
But when you start going 6,000 and 4,000 square feet, it's a
massive change on that property, and I just don't know that it's fair to
put a reservation in now for something you want to do in the future,
because who knows who's going to end up owning the property at
that point in time. If it's them, I think we'll have a good working
relationship, but what if somebody else ends up owning the property
and wanting to change the use? You mentioned something that I
didn't even know about that some of these properties can be
converted to multifamily housing. That's a really scary thought.
Water, you guys addressed it, would be coming from across the
street at the Bridge Center.
Sewer was -- what's the deal with sewer on this property? I
would love it if maybe Mike could address that later.
Electricity, how are you going to power these buildings? Are
you going to start putting power poles down the property between me
and them, or how do you provide electricity to something like this?
That wasn't mentioned in any of the meetings that we've had.
That's about all I've got. I just -- I want to say they've been great
neighbors, and I would welcome them to have their church there. I
just don't think it's fair to reserve the possibility of expanding without
restriction at some point in the future.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Thank you for your comment.
You did great.
MS. BLOCK: Thank you.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: She's been here before.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Commissioner Shea.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: She's been here.
November 20, 2025
Page 28
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Oh, okay.
Commissioner Shea.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: Just an easy question. You're on the
west side adjacent. Who's west of you?
MS. BLOCK: West of me is a private property owned by Mark
Fields and his daughter.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: Okay. There's another church on
that side. Is it farther down or some --
MS. BLOCK: If you're continuing to go west toward the
interchange, you have a vacant property that is owned by the church
that is one property west of that, so you have -- so next to this
property you have me, Mark Fields and his daughter, a vacant
property, and then the church, Manantial de Vida, and then you're at
the intersection of 60th.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Thank you. And we'll dig into
your questions when we get into rebuttal.
MS. BLOCK: Thanks. Appreciate it.
MR. SABO: Next speaker, Maria Rojas.
MS. ROJAS: Hi. My name is Maria Rojas. I'm in the
neighborhood of where all this changing is being done. I'm back and
forth from the East Coast and Naples. I live in 63rd Street close to
the 75.
And I was in Bosta (phonetic) when I saw a letter saying that
it's -- in Golden Gate Parkway they're going to turn two and a half or
three acres into multifamily home. It's affordable housing. I got
scared, because I'm building a house right on Golden Gate Parkway,
and it's Button Lane and $3 million home. And I was -- and I get
approved all the plans, and then now it's going to be another church
over here.
And I own a property in 64. I think Arnold mentioned is
in -- right next to 64 is a church. I wonder if this church is moving to
November 20, 2025
Page 29
the new facility that they're going to be open on Golden Gate
Parkway, or is this a different church?
MR. ARNOLD: It's a different church.
MS. ROJAS: It's a different church. So the church that I have
in there, I'm going -- I think it is vacant for a while. I don't know
what is the future of that. Is somebody allowed to have one, two,
three church, or if that license for that church is going to somewhere,
are they going to sell it, or what they're going to do with the
property?
And when I saw the map, I thought this church next to me and
64th is the same one -- the same owner they're going to build on
Golden Gate Parkway and I guess, is that -- no. Okay. So that
was -- and I thought, too, there were -- I came for the meeting. I
thought there was a meeting, too, for the multifamily housing that
they're going to be in Golden Gate Parkway because I have not
knowledge of what's going on, what is the plan.
MS. BLOCK: That was last week, a neighborhood information
meeting.
MS. ROJAS: Yeah, just -- it's information. Nothing's going on
yet. So that's why I say I'm going to stay until everything is going on
in here.
So I don't have no issues, you know, with the church having
in -- we need a church, you know. We need church in every
neighborhood. So a church I welcome, you know. That's where we
go, and, you know, we sit down, pray, and talk when we need to talk
to up there.
And so the only thing is they have to make sure, you know, all
the neighbor -- because they have a -- this is single-family-home
neighborhood, so they have to make sure neighbor on the left and the
right -- you know, pretty much that's the people they're going to hurt
more because -- or they're going to be happy, so I don't know, but
November 20, 2025
Page 30
they have to make sure everybody be on the same page, you know,
and they approve and they -- and, you know, we're able to get
no -- no bad feelings in between church and neighbors so when they
do whatever they do and they allowed to do so they don't have the
County coming and do, oh, the church or that because this in here is
so typical. Anybody can call, and they can come in to tell you
whatever because you don't have the freedom in your home to do
things, you know.
And so this is -- I was scared because when it's 64, I thought
that's the church is moving to Golden Gate Parkway. I guess it's not.
So I'm going to have the church next to me because I own -- so
I -- when I put my name, I thought I'm coming for the multifamily
affordable housing because across the street is -- I'm going to
have -- the house that I'm building is almost two, three thousand -- I
mean, 2, $3 million home, so I need to know what type of housing
are we talking about; what kind of affordable, you know, is.
But I don't have no questions. I think I came in the wrong
meeting, but I'm glad I came to hear what's going on, and I
don't -- you know, church, they're welcome everywhere, you know,
but --
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Just not across the street from
me again.
Ms. Rojas, real quick, you said you're on 63rd?
MS. ROJAS: Yes.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Okay. So you've got -- the
Center Point Community Church is right there on the corner.
That's --
MS. ROJAS: Yes. I have right on the corner, yeah. Go around
my house, yes.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Okay. Gotcha. Excellent.
MS. ROJAS: And I have -- on the 64, that is not working
November 20, 2025
Page 31
church, is that, 64?
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: I'm not sure they know.
MS. ROJAS: You mention in there, there was -- can you able to
put all the churches you have, like --
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: No. That's -- I appreciate it,
but when we get to that affordable one, I look forward to seeing you
there.
MS. ROJAS: All right. No, no, no. The church, there is a
church on 64.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Okay.
MS. ROJAS: Right there on 64th Street.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: All right.
MS. ROJAS: That is right next to me. I own another property
right there, but there's nothing going on in there. It's not working.
It's closed.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: I gotcha. It's closed down?
MS. ROJAS: Yes. But the church, I thought that was the
church is moving because you mentioned there is only small churches
only for 100 people, and now they're doing the other church for 200
people. I thought that was the same church that they're moving from
64th to Golden Gate Parkway, so, yeah.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Thank you.
MS. ROJAS: Okay. Thank you.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: And we'll see you at the next
meeting.
MS. ROJAS: Okay.
MR. SABO: No further public speakers.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Excellent.
Rich.
MR. YOVANOVICH: Well, in response to the concern about
water management, we will actually improve the water management
November 20, 2025
Page 32
right now because right now it's a free flow of water. When we go
through and get our Site Development Plan approved, we'll actually
have to have a water management system to keep our water on our
site and discharge it at the county's location and at an appropriate
discharge rate. So the water management will actually be better than
it is today if the church goes through and the church gets improved.
I think she wanted us to put the conditions up. These are all of
the conditions that are applicable to the property. We didn't read
them all, but, one, we've got to get state and federal permits, which I
just mentioned one of them, which was getting Water Management
District. It's limited to the master plan area. The lighting, as
modified, will be Dark Skies, and they'll all be 15-foot elevation.
The hours of operation we went through.
The size of the church is 6,000 square feet and the
4,000-square-foot structure. We're going to have to bring that
1,000-foot structure up to whatever the habitable standards are if it's
going to be a habitable facility. So it's not going to be just simply,
you know, going in and using that facility. If we're going to turn it
into something that requires modifications under the building code,
we'll go in, and we'll have to make those modifications under the
building code.
Where are we getting sewer?
MR. ARNOLD: We're not.
MR. YOVANOVICH: So we're doing septic? So we are doing
septic for our -- for sewer, but we are getting county water, or water
from -- off of Golden Gate Parkway.
If there's significant traffic generation, we have that same
condition that every other church has, we have to have a police
officer or traffic control there should there become a traffic-related
issue with parishioners coming to church. So we have that typical
condition; that's there.
November 20, 2025
Page 33
We have -- as you can see, it's such a low traffic generator, it's
20 p.m. peak-hour trips during the peak. That's not a lot of -- that's
not a lot of traffic. That's probably --
So we cannot have a private school or daycare other than
daycare associated with services. So that's typically a concern about
traffic generation. We're not going to have that on this facility.
No outdoor amplified music. And then we have the -- Wayne
did take you through the buffer on the westernmost -- the additional
buffer that we're going to have there.
So again, we've looked at this as to what may happen should the
church expand. You have a Site Development Plan that's associated
with this. The traffic impacts are already determined. They're
limited. The light is limited. The impact on the hours of operation
are all limited. It doesn't get any bigger than 200 parishioners at any
one time, whether it's in 2,000, 4,000, or 6,000 square foot.
So we think that, you know, all the -- all the testimony has been
that it's compatible with the neighborhood. The only reason we're
here for the Growth Management Plan Amendment is because of that
policy; otherwise, as Mike pointed out, churches are conditional uses
pretty much anywhere. You just don't want a church on every piece
of property. So you go through a review. Predominantly it's a
compatibility review when you go through a conditional-use review
process.
And all the testimony from the expert planners is this is
compatible. It is not a negative impact to the neighborhood.
I hope we have addressed the neighbor's concerns about water
management and lighting and all that to where she'll have the quiet,
peaceful enjoyment of the home that she experiences now. And
should Pastor Paul no longer be the pastor and it's a different church,
they're going to have to live with the same conditions.
You can't go from a church to a commercial or retail use. You
November 20, 2025
Page 34
can't go from a church to a multifamily use without, one, amending
the Growth Management Plan, and two, changing the zoning on the
property, which will all require the public-hearing process just like
we have today with the same notification requirements.
So this church can't sneak other uses in. The use is -- the Estates
use is single-family and a church. That's what can go on this site.
Nothing else. So there is -- there are guarantees that this is not going
to evolve into something else without going through a public-hearing
process.
And I'm sorry the lady came for the multifamily project. That's
not here before you today. I didn't even know anything about that
project, but anyway...
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: But I'm looking like a
Christmas tree over here right now, so hold on a second. I'll go with
Commissioner Shea, Commissioner Colucci, and then Commissioner
McLeod.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: It's actually a question for Mike.
The conditions of approval up on the screen, you agree with those?
MR. BOSI: Yes.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: Those are your conditions as well,
right?
MR. BOSI: Those were arrived upon through --
COMMISSIONER SHEA: But that's part of your
recommendation is --
MR. BOSI: Correct, correct.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: Okay. Thank you.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Commissioner Colucci.
COMMISSIONER COLUCCI: Is county sewage not
accessible?
MR. YOVANOVICH: It's not there.
COMMISSIONER COLUCCI: You said something about the
November 20, 2025
Page 35
septic system.
MR. YOVANOVICH: That's -- all of Golden Gate Estates has
septic.
COMMISSIONER COLUCCI: Okay. All right. Thank you.
MR. YOVANOVICH: So it's very expensive to extend sewer.
COMMISSIONER COLUCCI: So it's not -- it's not available?
MR. YOVANOVICH: It's not readily available, no, sir.
COMMISSIONER COLUCCI: All right.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Commissioner McLeod.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: And that's a concern of mine,
too, because as you all know, I keep bringing this up, you know, is
there availability for sewer? And at the last meeting, it was like, "Oh,
yeah, Michelle, no, there's all -- there's accessibility for this," and
then here we go with another septic.
COMMISSIONER PETSCHER: How is water available and
not sewer?
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Good question.
MR. BOSI: Within this corridor -- and unfortunately I don't
have Anthony Stolts here. Within this corridor -- and we learned this
during the Hope Home Planning Commission meeting -- there's no
capacity within the wastewater. Wastewater is at maximum capacity,
so there's no ability to tap into the wastewater. There's
ability -- there's potable water where it's available. There's no
wastewater available. So based upon that, that's why we would allow
for the utilization of septic.
MR. YOVANOVICH: Right. And it's no different than what
Temple Shalom did. Remember a few years back we came through
for the expansion of Temple Shalom and the Jewish Federation
building? They're on septic. They're in Golden Gate Estates, but
they're on -- they're on water. They connected to water, but they're
on septic. It's very expensive to bring sewer to bigger-parcel lots.
November 20, 2025
Page 36
The assessment for those individuals would be a big number.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: What is David Lawrence at? What
do they have; septic?
MR. YOVANOVICH: I don't think they have septic. I don't
think so.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: So it is nearby.
MR. BOSI: I believe -- no, the David Lawrence Center is
required for it. Because of the capacity, the size, the demands
associated with it, they are on potable and septic -- or not septic, but
wastewater.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: So public wastewater is nearby.
MR. YOVANOVICH: But it's not --
COMMISSIONER SHEA: Not big enough?
MR. YOVANOVICH: Yeah. We can't -- it's not accessible to
us.
COMMISSIONER PETSCHER: It's tapped out for the area.
MR. YOVANOVICH: This really is a small use. You know, it
could -- a septic system is not -- is really not an issue for this size
church. We're -- the David Lawrence Center, totally different use.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: So I have a couple more
questions. So, Mike, at the last meeting we talked about how Golden
Gate City in the future has plans to go with sewer. So -- at the last
meeting we talked about how Golden Gate City has a plan to go to
sewer.
MR. BOSI: Yes.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: When that happens, then is there
capacity for a property like this? How far out of the city do you take
that?
MR. BOSI: And once again, that would be a question that our
utility department could answer with more specificity. But I would
say that if -- when that project starts for the septic -- or the conversion
November 20, 2025
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within Golden Gate City, the capacity within the Golden Gate
Parkway area will have to be increased to be able to handle the
additional loads because it's all interconnected. Our sewer
systems -- the sewer system isn't individual block by block. It's an
all-interconnected system. So because of that -- to be able to handle
the additional capacity of all the additional homes within -- within
Golden Gate City that eventually will get transitioned, they will have
to have a much greater capacity within the overall system, so it will
be addressed as part of that.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Okay. Right. And I --
MR. YOVANOVICH: And I understand the concern. And I
hate to offer conditions, but, you know, if they ever build a sewer line
that fronts our property, we're happy -- that has capacity, we're happy
to tap in. To extend to sewer -- let's just imagine the David Lawrence
Center actually had capacity. That's a $200,000 connection fee.
That's a huge number.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Right.
MR. YOVANOVICH: So if -- but if you have the sewer line
with capacity in front of us, we'll tap in.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Can we make that a condition,
then?
MR. YOVANOVICH: I just offered it up.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Oh, thank you. So that's one
thing.
Also, the neighbor to the west had mentioned concerns about
parking. There's only 10 spots currently on there. Can you tell me
how many members are at the church now?
MR. YOVANOVICH: Well, we're -- again -- whoops, I went
the wrong way. I could have Mr. Arnold come up here. But there
will be site plan improvements to add parking.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Right. But I mean,
November 20, 2025
Page 38
currently -- we don't know when that will happen. I'm sure there has
to be fundraising to build the buildings and...
MR. ARNOLD: So, again, Wayne Arnold.
The County requires three parking spaces per seven seats for a
church. So before they could open even with any capacity for a
church, whether it's, you know, today at 80 people, let's say, they still
have to provide parking that meets code for those, and that requires
them to put in handicap accessible parking, internal circulation for
them.
The one advantage we do have, we are allowed for a church to
have a larger percent of grass parking. We have paved drive aisles or
stabilized aisles, but we can have grass parking. So that helps soften,
you know, the parking as well.
So we'll have drive aisles that are highlighted in here, for
instance, in dark gray, but we also have provisions for all these other
little open parking spaces. Those would be grass parking. I'm
sure -- we've been to a lot of different churches around where they
have grass parking.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Yeah. How many members at
the church right now?
MR. ARNOLD: I think it's under a hundred.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: And so how many parking
spaces would that be, then? If you have 100 chairs or --
MR. ARNOLD: I'll do the math.
MR. YOVANOVICH: It goes into 100 --
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: Fifteen times.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: So 15 parking spots.
MR. ARNOLD: Three per seven.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Will already be put in --
MR. YOVANOVICH: So that would be 45 spaces. If we had
105 people, it would be 45 required parking spaces. So we have to
November 20, 2025
Page 39
upgrade the parking.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: So from the get-go, you're going
to have to identify 45 parking spots.
MR. ARNOLD: That's correct.
MR. YOVANOVICH: Correct.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: And you have it in the plan
and --
MR. ARNOLD: Well, the plan is going to have to be consistent
generally with this plan that's on the computer screen. So that would
be the arrangement of parking. We made some provisions for
existing parking in front of the house, which would be in front of the
church, and then the balance of it sort of goes along the side. We're
trying to soften that, obviously, for the immediate neighbor, too.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Yeah. I was just concerned for
that neighbor. I didn't want to see parking, like, everywhere, maybe
even encroaching in her space.
MR. YOVANOVICH: You can see it where it's on the arrow,
so you can see it's basically next to the school.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Okay. But again, my concern
was, like, overparking and encroaching, so, if you can --
MR. ARNOLD: What I would say --
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Yes.
MR. ARNOLD: What I would say, having dealt with a lot of
churches in my career, they typically, one, don't have the funding to
put in a lot of extra parking spaces. It's expensive. Obviously, we do
have some churches that have large, large congregations. But I mean,
we're talking a congregation that's about 100 today, and they want to
grow that. And, yeah, they will have to provide the parking that's
required by code for that. And I don't think they'll be providing
excess parking by much. I mean, you want to make provisions for
some, but it's very expensive to put in parking lots and
November 20, 2025
Page 40
improvements.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: And I understand that. I just
want to make sure that there's not that overflow situation. And I love
grass parking because it's less impervious space -- or more
impervious -- impervious space.
And then there was -- the homeowner had also mentioned
electricity concerns. I'm not quite sure what she was mentioning, but
can you just address --
MR. ARNOLD: I took it as are we going to be extending a
power line somehow between our building and hers. And, I don't
know, there's electrical service to the house today, and my
assumption is that will be upgraded to service the church. So I don't
know -- I don't think there's any intent or any need to have some
other electric corridor that would be between us.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Okay.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: I think the concern was it
would be strung all over the property to each. You're going
underground. You're taking a main meter and then going under for
service.
MR. ARNOLD: Generally that's what's dealt with these days,
yes.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Thank you.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: And -- oh, just one other. She
also mentioned a concern for space. These buildings are, whatever,
4,000, 6,000 square feet. I think this is a question for Mike. Would
we be able to limit size of the buildings for a parcel?
MR. BOSI: Mike Bosi, Planning and Zoning director.
You have every right to suggest reductions or modifications to
what's being proposed. This is a conditional use. If you feel the use
has a chance to encroach upon an adjoining property in a negative
way and you feel that there is justification to reduce or put additional
November 20, 2025
Page 41
conditions, buffering, spacing, setbacks, those are the type of things
that would be appropriate to suggest at the time -- at this hearing.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Okay. Then I'll ask my
colleagues to weigh in on that. But before we do that, just with the
other concerns that she had, water protection. I thought that Rich's
explanation was very good. If they do tear down and build new,
they'd have to abide by the new standards for water management, so
that's going to help you. We want that.
And then the lighting concern at 15 feet the whole way, so
hopefully that will satisfy the owner, and she's nodding her head, so
I'm happy to see that. Okay.
So just at some point, Chair, if we could have a discussion as to
the size of these facilities and --
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: If you want to let
Commissioner Colucci go next, and then we'll circle back with --
COMMISSIONER COLUCCI: Well, I was ready to -- if there
are no more questions, which I guess there are, I was ready to
recommend or make a motion, but I guess I'm not ready for that.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Thank you. Yeah. So let's go
back to Commissioner McLeod on that discussion on the building
size. So the 4,000, 6,000. So 6,000 for the congregation, the front
space, and then 4,000 for activities. Like Rich said, you have some
daycare in there while services are going on, different things during
the day, meeting rooms. Thoughts? Questions?
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: Chair, I'll start off.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Thank you.
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: Mr. Arnold, the west side
buffer, on Page -- I don't know -- it's 74 in our packet, it said
15-foot-wide Type B. Was that updated?
MR. ARNOLD: The condition, and what's on the site plan, it's
for a 25-foot-wide buffer.
November 20, 2025
Page 42
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: Okay. That's what I
thought, that there was --
MR. ARNOLD: And it's upgraded to be a Type B with some
additional plantings.
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: All right. The initial plan
was 15. You have taken upon yourselves, working with --
MR. YOVANOVICH: Staff.
MR. ARNOLD: That's correct.
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: -- the County to increase
that to a 25-foot-wide buffer, Plan B.
MR. ARNOLD: That's correct. That was a staff request, and
we agreed with that.
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: That certainly, in my eyes,
diminishes any visual problems you may have from the neighbor on
the west to see what's going on on this property with that widened
landscape buffer.
So I'm satisfied and would allow -- my recommendation is if the
church believes this is proper square footage -- and they have reduced
it from 7,000 to 6,000, the fellowship hall has remained at 4,000, that
I believe they know best, and with a 25-foot-wide buffer, I believe
that should make both neighbors be happy with each other, so I'm
satisfied.
MR. YOVANOVICH: And if I can, we have a height limitation
of 30 feet. We can also add that it will be one story not to -- one
story not to exceed 30 feet. I think that hopefully will also have the
neighbor comfortable that you're not going to have people peering
into her yard unless they're really, really, really tall.
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: Rich -- or I'm sorry.
Mr. Yovanovich or Mr. Arnold, how tall is that cross?
MR. ARNOLD: I don't know the height of that, but it's --
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: Does that count as the 35
November 20, 2025
Page 43
foot or is that a --
MR. YOVANOVICH: Thirty feet.
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: Thirty foot, or is that a
supplemental?
MR. ARNOLD: There is a height exception for certain things in
the Land Development Code, and I think steeples may be one of
those. I don't know what, then, the maximum height is. Mike -- like,
the Estates is 30 feet. It's 30 feet. I think that's just a depiction. I
don't know that that's exactly what has been decided by --
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: The architect there?
MR. ARNOLD: Yeah, I think it's just a rendering. I mean, I
think -- the church doesn't want to spend a fortune renovating the
structure, but obviously, most churches depict some sort of steeple or
cross, so...
MR. YOVANOVICH: So whatever the code allows is the
maximum height we'll go for that steeple. Again, one story, though.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Commissioner Shea.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: Just a follow-up to Michelle's
question. Mike, does -- you have planners on staff. Do you feel
there's a size that there's too much building with the 10,000 square
feet on that size lot? Are you comfortable with it, your staff?
MR. BOSI: The size proposed and the number of parking
spaces, based upon the conceptual plan, staff feels has -- has been
designed to be compatible and be -- and be in a sense where it will
not impose any negative impact upon the adjoining properties. The
property to the west being a single-family residential house, that
25-foot buffer does -- 25-foot landscape buffer does provide for some
extra protections to provide for it.
And I would think the one thing that maybe you could put as an
additional condition, and the applicant might have to work out the
specific wording, but there can never be a church service as well as,
November 20, 2025
Page 44
you know, individual activity within the outparcel building or
the -- what --
MR. YOVANOVICH: The fellowship hall?
MR. BOSI: The fellowship hall. You may want to have a
restriction upon not having those two buildings be utilized at the
same time. I mean, I can see during the service that child care could
be provided there, because that's customarily associated with it. But
another outside event, another individual activity happening in the
fellowship hall while church services is going on, I think, has the
ability to potentially put an intensity that staff isn't anticipating based
upon the limited number of church services that they're having.
MR. YOVANOVICH: Mike, are you referring to things
unassociated with the church in the fellowship hall?
MR. BOSI: Yes.
MR. YOVANOVICH: I'm trying to understand, are you
worried about that, you know, the Boy Scouts are going to hold an
event in fellowship hall while we're having a worship service?
MR. BOSI: That's what I'm talking about.
MR. YOVANOVICH: I think we'd be okay with a condition
that says a user unrelated to the church utilizing fellowship hall while
the church -- the main church building is also being utilized. I think
it would be impossible for us to say we're not going to have people in
fellowship hall while there's a church event going on. I mean, that
happens all the time. So I don't think that's what you were saying.
But if it's an outside user, you can't have an outside user of the
fellowship hall at the time that church services are going on in the
worship center, then we're okay with that kind of a condition.
MR. BOSI: That's what I was suggesting that would be
the -- that could be problematic, because during the church services,
the daycare's going to be going on. There's other activities that are
associated with the church. But if it's an outside group utilizing their
November 20, 2025
Page 45
fellowship hall while church service is going on, I could see that
there may be an over-intensification of the use at that period -- that
period of time.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Can I ask the resident of --
MR. BOSI: Ask the Chairman.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Yes.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: May I -- may I ask the resident
of the west side to come back up to the podium?
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Yes, please. That's why we
have them swear in, so they can testify, call them back in.
MS. BLOCK: Elizabeth Block, neighbor.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Elizabeth, can you share again
what your concern was with regards to the size of these buildings?
MS. BLOCK: Mostly about the intensity of use on the property
and how much it would affect my property and my use of my
property.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: But if there's enough shielding
then with the plantings --
MS. BLOCK: Yeah, I love that they're going to not go two
stories.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Right, okay.
MS. BLOCK: And they do have parking at the back. And I
don't know if you guys are aware of it, but the guy before they owned
it put in very stable hard pack all the way to the back where they're
planning on having their parking -- so as long as they can handle all
the parking and not create a problem for me using my own property.
Their current -- I forget what you call it -- a pull-out lane to go
into Able Academy?
MR. YOVANOVICH: Turn lane?
MS. BLOCK: Yeah, the -- yeah, thanks. The turn lane starts at
the mailbox for this -- for the church property, which is all the way
November 20, 2025
Page 46
on the west side of their property line. So the turn lane starts there.
So they're only going to capture, I'm guessing, eight or so feet to
extend that turn lane if they move their existing property. So that
also makes me wonder how much of my property they're going to
end up taking to create a turn lane. I'm -- I think on Sundays, no
problem, there's not really a lot of traffic on the Parkway.
So depending on the times that they use it, it may not be an
issue. But I mean, I want to make sure I can get in and out of my
property. It's already difficult when there's busy traffic. But I think
when this church is planning to use their property, I don't think it
would create a problem for me. I just don't know how much of my
property they'd end up having to extend that turn lane into because I
have -- I have a driveway entry that's concrete that was installed at
the time of the widening of the Parkway, and it looks to me like
they'd be obstructing that if they have to bring the turn lane over to
my property.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Maybe Rich can address that,
then. Thank you.
MS. BLOCK: Shall I go?
MR. YOVANOVICH: You can stay.
We will not be taking any of her property for purposes of our
turn lane. We're not going to be taking any of her property, okay.
Anything we do has to be in the existing right-of-way.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Okay. So I'll make a -- oh.
COMMISSIONER PETSCHER: Oh, yeah -- no. I was going to
say I feel that the church knows what they need for their membership
as a -- for size for the growth that they're going to make. If we try to
downsize that in any way, it could just inhibit more parking or
more --
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Yeah. I was just going to
comment. I was just doing simple Google Earth, and the church
November 20, 2025
Page 47
that's a couple doors down to the west, just doing an overhead
measurement, it looks like it's about 10,000 square feet. So I mean,
this is kind of in line with that.
COMMISSIONER PETSCHER: Yeah, this is.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: The one -- the one issue I have,
and I'll ask County Attorney, is, is it possible to tie this conditional
use to the current owner until construction begins? And the reason I
say that is because just like this other church on 951 where they never
even broke ground, and now the property's back up for sale. So
instead of being residential, it's now zoned as conditional use for a
church.
MS. ASHTON-CICKO: So you're essentially saying that the
conditional use would expire if the applicant --
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Doesn't do any construction
and sells the property to somebody else.
MS. ASHTON-CICKO: I think you probably could. It's -- you
know, under the LDC, when they get a conditional use, I believe it's
three or five years.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Five. So it's five years.
MS. ASHTON-CICKO: So it would be kind of unique, and I'm
not sure whether applicant would accept that condition.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: No, five years is good. Five
years is fine, because I know getting congregation -- what I'm
concerned with is the fact of turn around selling it to another church
who then wants to come in for a larger church because it's already got
a conditional use.
MR. YOVANOVICH: But they'd be back here --
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: I know they would be back
here, but there would be no --
MR. YOVANOVICH: Same process.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: But then that conditional use
November 20, 2025
Page 48
would then impede the owner next door. I'm just trying to be
respectful. She already -- your neighbor is good. I like to
keep -- they're good. Everything else is good.
MS. ASHTON-CICKO: If you're trying to limit intensity, I did
hear that the building's going to be one-story, and you could ask that
it be one-story, both the fellowship and --
MR. YOVANOVICH: I assumed that, since I offered that up,
that that was going to become a condition, just like the other
condition about connecting to sewer. I assumed whatever motion,
whether they specifically mentioned that or not, those would be
conditions.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: And, Commissioner Shea, did
I not clear you out, or do you have a question?
COMMISSIONER SHEA: I think we --
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Covered that.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: -- cleared that.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: All right. So if there is a
motion to approve, then obviously, those conditions will be
one -- tied to the one-story buildings. It's tied to the septic converting
to sewer at the point of time whenever that is available. Is there any
other further conditions that --
MR. YOVANOVICH: And those two conditions go in the
conditional use.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Into the conditional use,
correct.
MR. YOVANOVICH: And we also modified --
MS. ASHTON-CICKO: It was also the -- all lighting 15 feet
and 3,000 K.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: 3,000 K.
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: 3,000 Kelvin.
MS. ASHTON-CICKO: And then I don't know if you accepted
November 20, 2025
Page 49
the no separate outside events activity in fellowship hall during
church service.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: I had that note down as well.
No outside activity other than the church at the time of service.
So have we got a motion? Do you want to summarize that and
make a motion to approve -- go ahead, Commissioner Colucci.
COMMISSIONER COLUCCI: Here's the motion. I'll probably
bungle it, but -- the motion is to recommend an amendment to the
Growth Management Plan to allow the project to move forward on a
conditional-use basis. What did I miss?
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: That will include 15-foot
lighting.
COMMISSIONER COLUCCI: Well, that's -- that's other
conditions.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: But it has to go in your motion.
COMMISSIONER COLUCCI: Well, finish it, then. I don't
know -- I understand --
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: I'll try it.
COMMISSIONER COLUCCI: -- but I don't know how to
finish it.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Okay, Commissioner McLeod.
Amend the motion to include --
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: To include five additional
conditions, one being tapping into sewer when that's available to the
area; limiting the structure to a one-story; limiting the height to no
more than 15 feet; limiting the light fixtures to 3,000 Ks or Kelvins;
and no -- the fifth additional condition is no outside activities during
worship service. Was that it?
MR. BOSI: No outside groups.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Oh, no outside groups.
MR. YOVANOVICH: Using the fellowship hall.
November 20, 2025
Page 50
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Using the fellowship hall
during --
MR. BOSI: During church services.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: -- during church services.
MR. BOSI: Yes.
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: One minor correction if I
may add is that both buildings are limited to single-story.
MR. YOVANOVICH: Correct.
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: Yep.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: I will second.
COMMISSIONER PETSCHER: I'll second.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: All in favor?
COMMISSIONER COLUCCI: (No verbal response.)
COMMISSIONER SHEA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Aye.
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER PETSCHER: Aye.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Aye.
So PL20230012851, along with its companion,
PL20230010505, passed unanimously.
MR. YOVANOVICH: So all those conditions were related to
the conditional-use petition, correct?
I just want to make sure that's on the record.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Yes, sir.
MR. YOVANOVICH: So your motion was for both, correct?
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Correct.
MR. YOVANOVICH: Thank you.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: The original, the amended, and
the amended, yes.
MR. YOVANOVICH: Got it.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Thank you.
November 20, 2025
Page 51
It's 10:25. How about we take a 15-minute break before we get
into this next one; does that sound good? So we'll restart at 10:40.
(A recess was had from 10:25 a.m. to 10:40 a.m.)
MR. BOSI: Chair, you have a live mic.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Thank you. All right.
Next item is PL20240013798 and its companion item,
PL20240012938, for the Growth Management Plan Amendment and
conditional use for the northwest corner of Shady Hollow East
Immokalee Road.
All those wishing to testify or speak on the matter, please stand
to be sworn in.
THE COURT REPORTER: Do you swear or affirm the
testimony you will give will be the truth, the whole truth, and nothing
but the truth?
(The speakers were duly sworn and indicated in the affirmative.)
MS. ASHTON-CICKO: Did you do the disclosures on this
item?
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: That's what I was just going to
go into.
MS. ASHTON-CICKO: Okay. I'm sorry.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Disclosures.
MS. LOCKHART: Staff materials only.
COMMISSIONER COLUCCI: Staff materials only.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: Staff materials and site visit.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Staff materials only.
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: Staff materials only.
COMMISSIONER PETSCHER: Staff materials, a site visit,
and a correspondence with Mr. Trebilcock.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Gosh. Okay. Staff materials,
spoke with Mike Bosi, spoke with Norm Trebilcock. That's it.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Excellent.
November 20, 2025
Page 52
Good morning, sir. I open the floor to you.
MR. DuBOIS: Good morning. Thank you for seeing us today,
Planning Commission. My name's Richard DuBois. I'm here on
behalf of the applicant, the Orangetree Bible Church, and I'm here
with RDA Consulting Engineers. Thank you for your time today.
We're here to discuss the Orangetree Bible Church project that
we are here for a GMPA and a conditional use. Our project team
consists of myself; Mike Delate; Jim Banks is our transportation
consultant; and Marco Espinar is our environmental consultant.
Quite similar to the previous project that you guys just listened to.
The Orangetree Bible Church was established approximately
two years ago, and they currently have about 100 churchgoers. They
are currently meeting at the church at Paul -- or I'm sorry -- at the
Palmetto High School right around the corner to the east of the
property that we are looking at today. And the reason that we're here
and the reason that we're looking at this parcel is it's centered within
their churchgoers' community. They have a lot of people that attend
this church that live in this community. And there aren't many
parcels available in this area specifically that would allow for a
church use by right. They're all very similar to the previous project
you saw where Estates-zoned properties will allow for the church
with a conditional, and this property also would require the GMPA to
modify the future land use and create the subdistrict allowing the
church.
So -- next one.
With what we're looking at today and what we're looking at
proposing for this church, the intention is to integrate into the
community. The intention is to be a member of the community. And
we've already, ourselves, and then also with discussion with staff,
come in and put in some conditions of approval that would limit the
uses of the church on this property. For example, services are being
November 20, 2025
Page 53
proposed only on Wednesdays and on Sundays. In addition, they are
capping the church at less than 300 seats and with a gross floor area
of 12,000 square feet or less.
As part of this, throughout the process, we've -- through talking
with staff, through talking with the neighbors and hearing some of the
concerns, we're looking at proposing some enhanced buffer material
along all four sides of the property, not just along the road frontages,
but also to the neighbors to the north and to the west, and then to
discuss the stormwater management. Any and all stormwater
management systems for this property will adhere to the South
Florida Water Management District rules and County rules at time of
SDP.
One other thing to bring up, too, is the 50-foot
way -- right-of-way reservation along Immokalee Road that we
would be dedicating to Collier County with this project's approval for
any future right-of-way improvements. Based on discussions we
have had with staff during the permitting process, we understand that
eventually Immokalee Road would likely upsize in this area. So in
order to be a good neighbor, we're already offering that as something
to the County with this application.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Let me ask a question of the
attorney real quick. Would that right-of-way -- is that already
implied for an increase, or would they have -- would the County have
to purchase that land from the owner?
MS. ASHTON-CICKO: It is provided in the resolution that the
County pays the fair market value of the date before the conditional
use is approved. So the value of the property today is what would
apply, not the value after conditional use is approved.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Not later on. So either way,
the property, it's not like they're dedicating that to the County and not
being compensated for it.
November 20, 2025
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MS. ASHTON-CICKO: Correct.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: They're just basically selling it
to the County at current market price versus whenever the County
decides to expand, correct?
MS. ASHTON-CICKO: Yes.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Thank you. I'm sorry. Go
ahead.
MR. DuBOIS: So just to summarize the location that was
selected for this property that the church identified, the main -- the
main selling factor for this property for the church was the location
off Immokalee Road. It's an easily accessible road and a highly
trafficked road, and this parcel is right off the Immokalee Road.
Now, we proposed our site access off of Shady Hollow
Boulevard after discussions with staff. The County has no desire to
have another property be accessed off of Immokalee Road. So we
are -- we are proposing a single access with a turn lane off of Shady
Hollow Boulevard to help minimize any impacts to that street.
Just to give you guys a quick summary of the property, I'm sure
you've all seen it, but here is the property on the corner of Immokalee
Road and Shady Hollow Boulevard East. To the north and the parcel
immediately to the west, they are both currently vacant properties,
and the closest property is after the vacant property to the west. And
that corner of that home would be approximately 394 feet, 395 feet
from where we're proposing that church building, but it would be
about 165 feet away from any proposed site improvements besides
buffer material with that being parking. So just to give you a
summary of how far away this proposed improvement is from the
adjacent neighbors.
To summarize the site plan, as you can see, there's the proposed
50-foot-wide right-of-way reservation, and then in addition we're
proposing the 25-foot landscape buffers to the south, to the east. As
November 20, 2025
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this is in the Estates, we're providing 75 feet of native vegetation to
the west and to the north and also supplementing that with some
additional buffer planting materials as well to provide that full, I
believe, it's a Type B buffer material to that, to those adjacent
properties.
We would be looking at putting in a preserve -- or dedicating a
preserve along with this project. The intention of the church would
be to put in grass parking for a substantial amount of their parking on
the property, and then there would be a small playground use for
children either during church services or directly after, but obviously,
within the hours of operation with the -- that our -- that our client, the
applicant, is proposing with this application.
Just to give everyone an idea of what we're looking at
proposing, this is a conceptual elevation of that building. Nothing
has really been finalized or set in stone yet, but this is the type of
construction that the church is looking to build. It will be a nice
finished product that -- their desire is to fit within the community and
be a part of the community, not stand out like a sore thumb.
And to go with that conceptual elevation, here's a conceptual
floor plan of what they're looking to do at this location for this church
to continue to provide a home for their churchgoers and to provide a
place in the community that's their own building instead of utilizing
space from a school.
Just to summarize the traffic quickly, it has been an item that's
come up as a concern, which is why we added the turn lane to help
address some of the concerns. With the current churchgoer count of
approximately 100 people, if we assume there's two and a half people
per vehicle per household, that would be around 40 vehicles with the
current congregation. Most people leave within 30 minutes after a
service is over, and that would be about 1.3 to 2 cars per minute
exiting onto Shady Hollow, just to give you guys an idea what that
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may look like.
Even with looking at the capped future churchgoer seat number
of 299 seats, that would still only increase to about four or five cars
per minute exiting out onto Shady Hollow with this project.
One of the other conditions that we've placed on this project if
there is still concerns about traffic -- traffic after that point is that, if
necessary, the church would coordinate with the Collier County
Sheriff's Department to ensure that someone's out there directing
traffic should that need arise and should that become a concern,
similar to many other churches here in the area.
Coming into today, as you guys have in your staff report, there's
the conditions that we've already agreed to and the conditions that
we've already worked through with staff.
Coming into this meeting today, here are three other conditions
that we would like to discuss and offer with this project. The first
one regarding landscape buffers. This is essentially stating that we
would be planting larger plant material at the time of planting and
some additional tree material as well.
As it relates to No. 2 with the parking and site lighting, this is
similar to what you just heard with the previous church project that
we would be committed to doing Dark Sky compliant light fixtures
with pole heights not greater than 15 feet. So, you know, the goal
here -- really, the goal is to build a community church and to fit in
with the community. We don't want to be the sore thumb. We want
to be a place in the community for people to come and to, you know,
worship God.
And then the No. 3, the proposed right-turn lane into the site on
Shady Hollow Boulevard, we would just request that we would
not -- we would not need to provide compensating right-of-way along
that right-of-way for that turn lane, as that right-of-way width is
already sufficient to accommodate a turn lane.
November 20, 2025
Page 57
And then that's our presentation today. I'm sure there will be
questions.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: There is. Let's start with
Commissioner Shea first, and then we'll go to Mike.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: Mine's an easy one. Is the petitioner
here?
MS. ASHTON-CICKO: Excuse me just a second. Has staff
reviewed and approved the conditions that were put on the visualizer?
MR. BOSI: The condition -- the additional conditions that were
just proffered today, we have not reviewed them, so we would --
MS. ASHTON-CICKO: And I do see, like, a deviation from our
Land Development Code that requires compensating right-of-way.
So I am a little bit concerned about, you know, his deviation that he's
putting up there, whether staff is in agreement that it's not required,
so I just needed to put that on the record.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Thank you. That was on my
question log for you on that, especially the conditions.
Go ahead, Commissioner Shea.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: Yeah. The only question I had is is
the petitioner here?
MR. DuBOIS: Yeah, the petitioner is here. Pastor Dennis and
his wife. They are here as well, so...
COMMISSIONER SHEA: Oh, okay. Usually you sit over
there. No, you don't have to. I just -- I just wanted to make sure you
were here. Thank you.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Petscher, Commissioner
Petscher.
COMMISSIONER PETSCHER: Yeah. You said there's no
institutional availability in the area. Right across the street on
Immokalee Road that's not on a public residential street, there is an
available parcel for sale. And it looks like you purchased this last
November 20, 2025
Page 58
year, and I know that parcel was for sale last year. So why didn't you
guys go with this rather than -- or go with this one rather than one
that's already zoned for institutional?
MR. DuBOIS: Is the zoning Estates on that as well?
COMMISSIONER PETSCHER: No. It's zoned institution
already.
MR. DuBOIS: Is it?
COMMISSIONER PETSCHER: I could look it up on Collier
Appraiser and tell you that. But it's literally across the street. It's
200 feet away.
MR. DuBOIS: Sure. So at the time of purchase, you know, we
talked with the church, and this is the property that they identified as
the property they'd like to move forward with.
COMMISSIONER PETSCHER: Pricing issues?
MR. DuBOIS: They've looked at pricing, wetlands, access, all
those kinds of items.
MR. HUSTEDT: I'm happy to -- sir, we did look at that
property.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: I'm sorry. What's your name,
sir, for the record?
MR. HUSTEDT: Sorry. I'm sorry. Denny Hu -- Dennis
Hustedt, pastor of Orangetree Bible.
We did look at this property. We looked at a number of
properties all over the area. We were looking, searching, hunting.
That one is quite swampy. In fact, we had a hard time even locating
anyone who was selling it. We discovered it was John R. Wood, but
they didn't have it on the records. It had been off the records for so
long. But when we did investigate and look at it, very wet.
The land we're looking at here that we're seeking approval for
is -- has been designated by the County as upland. It's all upland,
which -- and, in fact, our environmental expert who we paid to have a
November 20, 2025
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look at the place said he's not seen that in years where the County
actually gave upfront approval to upland. Massive, of course, cost
difference, as I know you would be aware.
COMMISSIONER PETSCHER: Thank you.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Okay.
COMMISSIONER PETSCHER: Those were my only two
questions.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Okay. So with that, I'm going
to turn it over to staff.
MR. BOSI: Mike Bosi, Planning and Zoning director.
As mentioned by the County Attorney on the newly proposed
requested supplemental conditions of approval, reviewed 1 through 2,
and I don't have any issues with those. Three, I don't understand
what value that had -- there's no -- that, I believe, should be stricken.
Staff would not support a condition that says the proposed right-turn
lane into the site at the Shady Hollow Boulevard estates -- East will
not require compensated right-of-way given that -- I'm not sure that
they made that determination. That would be a determination that
staff -- or staff would make during the site planning to see if that was
required. So I wouldn't want to tie any hands as to making the
declaration as to whether there was going to be a compensated
right-of-way needed or not needed. It's not an appropriate condition
for the conditional use.
MR. DuBOIS: And we have no issue with withdrawing that if
staff doesn't find it acceptable.
MR. BOSI: And there is another issue that the applicant has not
addressed, and I've got a display that -- again, Mike Bosi, Planning
and Zoning director.
The recommendations that were contained within your staff
reports for the conditional and the GMP was recommendations of
support with additional conditions, and staff still recommends the
November 20, 2025
Page 60
conditions. An issue was brought to our attention late last week, and
it's on us and it was on the staff -- or it's on the applicant for both
missing this.
Within the -- within the screen, you see you have a 75-foot
setback indicated here between the front of where they would be
proposing the facility and the end of the right-of-way.
And then you have the 50-foot right-of-way reservation, but that
occupies 50 feet of that 75 feet. So when the road is expanded,
Immokalee Road is expanded to its final condition, the church and
the playground would find themselves 25 feet away from the road.
Staff has asked the applicant to move the facility back an
additional 50 feet to be in compliance with the 75-foot front-yard
setback required within -- customary within the Estates when the
condition -- when the road is expanded. They have not agreed to
that.
Now, I understand that their basis for their application was what
they put forward on their conceptual plan. It is a conceptual site plan.
It's not a site plan that's been engineered. It's a site plan that is put
forward for the conditional-use process.
Staff feels if you're asking for a Growth Management Plan
Amendment and you're an applicant -- and I get it. It's the late hour.
Staff assumes responsibility. They assume responsibility for missing
it. But now that we know that there's -- there's another 50-foot
reservation that's going to cut into their 75-foot front-yard setback, at
the end of the day when that road construction is finalized, you're
going to have a playground and a church that's 25 feet from the
roadway when there's a 75-foot requirement for -- within the Estates
zoning district.
So staff is not recommending denial of the GMP and the
conditional use. We are asking for an additional condition that they
set back their building an additional 50 feet to the west to be able to
November 20, 2025
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accommodate the 75-foot setback at the -- at the final condition of the
Immokalee Road expansion. That is the issue that staff has with the
proposal.
Other than that, the modifications, the two additional conditions
that have been proffered staff supports. We think it's a project that
fits within the -- within the land-use arrangement, but it's only
the -- it's the additional 50 feet, and we understand the applicant's
position. We're asking the Planning Commission to recognize that
this is a -- it's a conceptual site plan, and we found -- and the issue's
been identified well before any site planning or the specifics of a
building permit has been even requested.
And based upon that, we think it's appropriate for that additional
50-foot, and staff would support that recommendation.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Hold that thought.
MR. BOSI: And any questions?
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Yes, Commissioner Colucci.
COMMISSIONER COLUCCI: I guess where I'll start is
25 -- an eventually 25-feet space between the buildings and the road
is, to me, pretty much a nonstarter.
MR. DuBOIS: Yeah, it's --
COMMISSIONER COLUCCI: That's not enough. Hold on.
MR. DuBOIS: Go ahead.
COMMISSIONER COLUCCI: If the petitioner is reluctant to
move it back, why?
MR. DuBOIS: Wonderful question. So we found out about this
very late, late afternoon Tuesday. So we've had time to discuss it and
work through it now with ourselves internally and with the applicant.
We have no objection to shifting that setback measurement from
the right-of-way reservation line instead of the current property line.
COMMISSIONER COLUCCI: Well, that solves that problem.
MR. BOSI: Staff would agree. That is in -- I was working
November 20, 2025
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off -- under incorrect information, or maybe their position has
changed somewhat compared to our conversation we had on
Tuesday. Regardless, with that, staff would -- is recommending
approval of both the conditional use and the GMP.
COMMISSIONER COLUCCI: Okay.
MS. ASHTON-CICKO: And the Board will see a slightly
different site plan with the 75-foot back from the right-of-way
reservation than what you're seeing today.
MR. DuBOIS: Correct.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Any other questions? No?
Public comment?
Thank you.
MR. SABO: Mr. Chairman, we have several speakers. The first
is Peter Rasmussen. He was ceded time by Michele Dyer. Is
Michele Dyer here?
(Raises hand.)
MR. SABO: All right. That's 10 minutes for Mr. Peter
Rasmussen. We're setting up the visualizer for him.
MR. RASMUSSEN: Hello. I apologize ahead of time for not
knowing acronyms and sources and --
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: No worries.
MR. RASMUSSEN: -- everything, but some of my comments
are based on something we received from somebody in the Planning
Commission discussing goals and objectives and policies of land-use,
public facility design.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Would you mind spelling your
last name for me, please.
MR. RASMUSSEN: R-a-s-m-u-s-s-e-n.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Thank you.
MR. RASMUSSEN: Something that hasn't been talked much
about -- how do I move around here? Can we -- I need to find the
November 20, 2025
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area. Oh, there it is. Okay.
So you can see the church site right where the arrow is. Well,
let me back up. So the goals, there are certain goals that are listed
that are going to be problematic. Natural resource concerns, safety,
quality of life of the local residents, preserving rural character.
There's a legitimate traffic concern which will affect the quality
of the local residents. The entry to the church -- and I'll come back to
this later -- is not from an arterial or collector roadway but from a
two-lane residential road that is adjacent to the interconnection of a
major arterial roadway.
This narrow residential road provides -- also provides access to
the CREW Bird Rookery which is further west on Shady Hollow
Boulevard. It dead ends down in the CREW Bird Rookery, which
makes this road a little bit different than other residential roads
because of weekend traffic to the -- to the Bird Rookery.
I've got some numbers. The Bird Rookery attendance on
Sunday during high season is between 165 and 389 -- I've got these
numbers I can hand to you after if you need that -- with an average of
266 on any given Sunday.
Currently there are 41 homes that use Shady Hollow Boulevard
to access. We have 96 -- or 92 additional lots that could be built out,
and currently we're seeing about three or four houses per year being
built that would be accessed on Shady Hollow Boulevard.
Further up on Immokalee Road, north of Immokalee Road,
there's also a 2,000-home subdivision that's going to be built which
will obviously increase the traffic on Immokalee Road. And I'm
bringing this all to a close because the traffic that they talked about I
don't think identified the real problem.
The church, as he showed on his slide, expects a maximum of
120 vehicles, and they spread that over -- spread that out over 30
minutes after the service, and they came up with four cars per minute.
November 20, 2025
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That was his number. Anybody going to church, I think the real
number is before church starts. People arrive -- you know, after
church they -- they spread out, but arriving I'd say the majority of
them are going to arrive within a 15-minute time frame.
And if you do that, that gives you 6.7 cars per minute, and
obviously, that wouldn't be spread out evenly over the 15 minutes, so
I think you could double that at points, which gives you basically one
car every five seconds is going to be turning off of Immokalee onto
this road. There is a turn lane. It is a single lane. As you can see --
MR. BOSI: Point to the -- yeah, touch the screen.
MR. RASMUSSEN: I can just touch it? This one?
MR. BOSI: Point to something.
MR. RASMUSSEN: As you can see, Immokalee Road is a
single road at this point, a single-lane road. There is a turn lane.
Up -- just further up, it goes from a 45- to a 55-mile-an-hour. As you
know -- you've driven these roads -- people start at acceleration well
beyond. So, it -- Immokalee went from a two-lane shortly before
this, very shortly before this, to a single lane, and now it's
accelerating. So there is significant traffic there. If we're trying to
get five cars per second [sic] into that turn lane onto Shady Hollow
Boulevard, there's going to be times it's going to block that road. It's
going to block a major artery -- a single-lane major artery road.
I'll come back to that, but that's probably my biggest concern is
the safety issue related to this traffic coming into this small two-lane
road.
Overflow parking on special occasions, Christmas, Easter, the
only option is to park along the side of this two-lane road. There's no
shoulder. It's just a -- literally you can't do a U-turn. You have to do
a three-point turn. It's going to be in the grass. After the church is
over, there's no way to turn around. They're going to have to go up
the road, do three-point turns, or use people's driveways to turn
November 20, 2025
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around to get back out, not unlike the church parking where they can
do a left turn to get back to Immokalee.
Similar to the previous thing, I don't know that they have any
daycare. You know, all their traffic is based on a Sunday meeting
and a weekday meeting, but I think we need to limit daily -- a future
daycare option. Many churches opt for that. I don't know if that's in
their plan or not, but I think it's something we need to talk about.
The next thing I wanted to talk about is a little more subjective,
and it deals with the natural resource concerns and the rural character.
We share our neighborhood with all kinds of wildlife. We've got
bears. We've got panthers. We've got bobcats. Many of the
lots -- most of the lots are half nature. I would venture to say many
residents have never been to the back side of their lot.
So it's a -- one of the things we love about living where we do is
coexisting with nature. There's no way that the wildlife would be
able to do the same thing on that property. That would just eliminate
that much more area where the wildlife could do that. Many of our
lots provide shelter, food, and a home for the animals.
I agree with the Dark Sky lighting, if they do that 15-foot Dark
Sky 3,000 Kelvin.
Just a personal thing, when I'm going home at night, it's a -- I
don't know if the petitioner's ever even done this. When I go home at
night, I turn off Immokalee, their streetlights. Instantly, it's peace.
It's quiet. It's dark. It's one of the favorite things -- every
time -- every time I do that, I love living there just because the
feeling I get when I turn off that road, and all of a sudden it's -- my
blood pressure goes down. I'm sorry.
Back on this, what is it, the conditions. As I understand it, there
are four sets -- or four criteria that must be met in order for you to
even grant this. Provide essential services, I guess if it comes to
that -- well, I guess only one of these has to be met. I'm not sure that
November 20, 2025
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a church is actually an essential service.
And again, I don't -- I'm not opposed to the church. I go to a
church where we met in a schoolhouse and then we built in the
Estates, but we met at least one of these criteria. It must be near a
neighborhood center. This is not. It must be adjacent to an existing
nonresidential use. This is not. And it must be on or oriented toward
an arterial or collector roadway, and this is not.
If they figured out a way to access it off Immokalee Road, many
of my concerns would be moot. But to try and access off this little
two-lane residential area where, unlike most other roads, we are
busiest on weekends. It's -- it is not like Golden Gate where they
said, "Oh, it's a Sunday. It's not busy." That is our busiest time on
this road, because of the Rookery, because people are out on their
four-bys and their motorcycles, and it's a -- I can't come up with a
number, but it's probably five times as busy on a weekend as it is
during the week.
You got a taste of this, but the petitioner, in a meeting on
August 11th, stated the main reason -- the main reason they wanted to
build on this lot was because of the cost. You know, we talked about
this other lot. It's available across the street. You can build a church.
It's going to cost him more. He's going to have to bring in the fill.
So -- and my thing, it's not your job, it's not your duty, and it
shouldn't even be your concern about saving him money. They can
build what they want, meet all the criteria on this place across the
street.
And then in closing -- and I don't -- please don't take this as
a -- I don't even want to say -- it's a concern. If somebody gets killed
on that intersection, it's going to come to light that the concern was
brought up in this meeting, and it's something for the petitioner as
well. I don't know that they would want that on their head. I think
it's something that they -- that intersection, trying to turn left on there,
November 20, 2025
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is just dangerous, and I don't think that's been properly addressed
with any type of a traffic survey.
So any questions?
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Go ahead, Commissioner
McLeod.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Mr. Rasmussen, where do you
live on the street?
MR. RASMUSSEN: We're further down. In fact, I should have
mentioned that. I'm the president of a small HOA this lives further
west, just straight west on Shady Hollow after you cross -- in
fact -- yeah. Can I zoom out? Okay. You see the lake?
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: So it's past Wilson Boulevard,
then?
MR. RASMUSSEN: Yeah, just past Wilson there's a lake. Our
HOA consists of the lots along the southern shore of that lake. And
then you can see where the Bird Rookery trail is out here. So our
subdivision is right along here -- our HOA I should say.
When I did the lots, I considered, you know, this road as well
because that's how they would access it, rather than doing a U-turn
and coming in. You know, they'd have to do a U-turn and come back
in this way. So I considered all lots along either side of Shady
Hollow Boulevard to get my numbers.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Okay. Thank you.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Any other questions?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Thank you, sir.
MR. RASMUSSEN: And I'll just give those to you. They have
the numbers that I used.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Perfect.
MR. RASMUSSEN: Thank you.
MR. SABO: Mr. Chairman, your next speaker is Colleen
November 20, 2025
Page 68
Araujo.
MS. ARAUJO: Hello. I'm Colleen Araujo. I'm the resident
right next door to this.
So I don't want to make this an emotional thing, but I want you
to know that I waited 23 years to move away from people to the
country so I could live with nature, I could have a garden, I could
have my dogs in the yard and not have people all around just, you
know, all the time.
So happy when I moved to this house, so happy. Love my
home. Love the nature, and there is a lot of nature. I have bears that
come through my yard that go through the next yard to go to the next
yard to go to the sanctuary. We have animals everywhere.
My concern is I didn't want to move next to a commercial
building, and even though it's a church, it's still commercial. There
are people coming and going. There will be parking lots. There will
be traffic coming right in and out next to my house. Every time a car
door closes, my dogs are going to bark. This is a personal disruption
for a resident that lives so close to a facility like this.
I work really hard out in my yard. I'm very proud of my home.
I take very big pride in my home. The last thing I want next to me is
a commercial building. I don't want lights. I don't want a big
building. I don't want people coming and going all the time. I don't
like the fact that there will be kids running around making noise all
the time. Kind of defeats the purpose of moving to the country.
I feel like owning a home there, I wasn't expecting a commercial
building to be put up next to me, which is what is trying to happen
now.
So in my defense, I just want to say if any of you waited that
long to buy a home in your perfect area that you wanted to live in
thinking it's going to be nothing but people living next to you,
families and homes with dogs and people -- come to find out that
November 20, 2025
Page 69
there's going to be a commercial building right next to you, which
will also stop all of the nature that travels through, which will stop
everything that goes on now, the peace.
They say it's on Sundays and Wednesdays. Well, I'm right next
door. It doesn't matter what day it is. Cars coming and going. The
driveway's right next to me.
Now, they have to move the structure back further west away
from Immokalee Road. That puts it closer to me. It's just not
acceptable. It's not comfortable. I'm not -- I don't approve of it. It
wouldn't matter if it was a church. It wouldn't matter what
building -- what commercial it was. It really wouldn't matter. It
doesn't matter to me one single bit.
What matters to me is that it's a commercial building. It's going
to have commercial traffic. It's going to add umpteen amounts of
traffic to -- to our road. Our road is a small, little two-lane road. It's
very quiet. People are quiet there. It's just -- it's a nature-loving road.
I am going to be affected the most. It's very disheartening to me
to have property that you think is going to be safe from something
like that only to find out that somebody else is petitioning to build a
big structure on it. I just have to say if any of you were in this
position, how would you feel yourself? It's -- it's just disheartening.
I don't want it there. I don't want anything there but another home
maybe. That's fine. But I don't think it should be allowed to be a big
facility, and I don't think it should be allowed to be a commercial
facility.
That's all I have to say.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Ms. Araujo, can I ask you a
question?
MS. ARAUJO: Yes.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: How often do you hear
gunshots out there?
November 20, 2025
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MS. ARAUJO: A lot.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Are they coming from, like,
the street over and on your street as well?
MS. ARAUJO: They come over from the street over. I don't
rarely see -- hear anything on my street.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Your street.
MS. ARAUJO: The street -- next street over, I do hear some
guns, but I do understand from somebody there's some range -- gun
range over there.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Yeah. Collier County,
anything over -- anything over an acre and, like, a quarter you can put
in your own shooting berm, and as long as your expelled ammunition
does not leave your property, you're more than legally welcome to
shoot.
MS. ARAUJO: I mean, it's not like it's every minute of every
day. I mean --
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: So you do hear it?
MS. ARAUJO: Well, you do hear it.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Okay.
MS. ARAUJO: If you lived in the Estates and didn't hear
gunshots, you've got to be deaf.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: I do live in the Estates.
MS. ARAUJO: You know. You know how it is.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: I do. And I appreciate the
comments. Thank you.
MS. ARAUJO: Thank you. Anything else?
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Anything else? No. Great.
Next speaker.
MR. SABO: Mr. Chairman, the next speaker is William Dyer.
MR. DYER: Good morning. I'm William Dyer. I am a Shady
Hollow resident, along with my wife Michele, and we have been
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there since 2016. We live further down by where Pete lives, but we
access, obviously, Immokalee Road every day, numerous times every
day.
So we're here. Pete covered a lot of what I was going to say, but
I do have some points I want to bring up. Number 1, it's not a Collier
County, it's a State of Florida thing about shooting on more than an
acre, which is -- nothing you can do about it. And you're right, the
Collier County Government can't even control that so, yeah, there are
a lot of gunshots out in Collier, but it's very rural. We moved out
there from Marco because we wanted private, quiet, you know,
peaceful environment.
With that said, the lot across the street that they're talking about
it's right next to the -- pretty much right next to the Collier County
Sheriff's Office and next to the EMS building there. All right.
Maybe a little down. Very usable land. Maybe a little wet at the
time. But it's very usable, right?
So, No. 2 I'm concerned about is that in lane, the left-turn lane
there coming onto our road, and then they're going to have to make a
right-turn lane going in, well, I'm a little concerned about that. First
of all, the traffic north and south is tremendous, even Sunday. Fifty
thousand people go to that bird CREW park a year is what I'm told.
That's a lot of cars, okay. They know one way in and one way out.
Sure, you've got Wilson Road and other things, but they don't know
that, along with all the residents there. Now, it's not overly built, but
it is very concerning to us.
If -- I know the County has already denied access to Collier. I
would deny access to Shady Hollow because of the traffic, the
concern. It's all right there at that intersection coming out making a
right on Collier is difficult -- I'm sorry -- Immokalee, it's harder to
make a left. So if all their parishioners live in the area and they've
got to turn left, you've got cars coming down -- and it's very difficult
November 20, 2025
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to make a left-hand turn going north on Immokalee Road. So we're
concerned.
I would rather see it exit, especially after they put the widening
road in -- all six lanes is what I'm understanding. It's going to go six
lanes further north, I believe. You know, three and three, plus the
turn lane. Well, it would be a whole lot easier to get out on
Immokalee Road, in my opinion. Obviously they didn't like that
idea, but we don't like the idea, quite frankly, coming out on Shady
Hollow. You know, it's a small, two-lane rural road, but it's very
busy with the park down there. So with that said, that's our -- one of
our concerns.
Okay. A lot of people bike and ride, families are walking up
and down on the sidewalk there and down the roads. We have no
sidewalks on Shady Hollow. There is -- it's a swale. And I'll tell
you, right in that area, and you can ask the speaker that just spoke, it
floods in the summertime in the heavy rain. It's just -- water just sits
right there. So there really is no parking on the berms if that parking
lot overfills. You know, if he gets up to 300, you know, parishioners,
that's a lot of cars, a lot of people.
I saw a little playground or preserve in the back, assuming
where the kids are going to go play, right next to residents' houses
and stuff like that.
So our concern is -- we're not against a church, but there's
options there where they don't have to be on a residential property on
a small private little -- not private, but it's very a heavily used little
rural road is what it is. And if that wasn't the option going over there,
then I wouldn't approve it coming on Shady. Let them go out on
Immokalee and deal with that there. I don't know if that's any better
or worse.
But it definitely will affect our lifestyle. It will definitely affect
the wildlife, everything that goes on. And that road is
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extremely -- like I said, 50,000 people a year, all right. Holidays,
weekends, it's crazy, it really is, up and down the road. Just come
down. You live -- you live in the Estates. Have you ever been down
to Bird Rookery?
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: (Nods head.)
MR. DYER: Yeah. Pretty packed. I mean, they're talking
about having to expand their parking lot down there and make it
bigger. I mean, it's crazy. And we hate -- we love the people coming
down, you know. We enjoy the park ourselves. There's 50,000 acres
of preserve back there; however, with that said, we don't need extra
problems to deal with that we have to deal with.
So that is my concern with the church going in there. You
know, we don't have a -- we're not opposed to a church going in
there. It's more opposed to, like, the other -- the last speaker said,
putting any commercial buildings there, you know, especially when
there was approval across the street.
So that's all I really wanted to put out there are some of our
concerns. And as a neighborhood, you know, we just feel like we
have a right to let you know how we feel. So there it is.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Thank you.
MR. DYER: Does anybody have any questions?
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Any questions?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: No.
MR. DYER: No.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Thank you.
MR. DYER: All right. Thank you very much.
MR. SABO: Our next speaker is Mike Pyles.
MR. PYLES: Good morning. My name is Mike Pyles. I live
on Shady Hollow Boulevard West. I'm last house on the end of the
road before you enter the Rookery. And I'd like to reinforce mostly
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what Bill and Pete talked about regarding traffic in the intersection at
Shady Hollow and Immokalee Road.
One thing, though, you've heard some numbers today. These
numbers aren't static. When I bought my lot in late 2014, there was
an article shortly after that in the Naples news that the Bird Rookery
was getting 35,000 visitors a year. Last news article I saw in the
Naples news on the Bird Rookery was that that number had grown to
50,000. Likelihood, it's going to keep growing. As Bill mentioned,
there are already plans to expand the parking lot, something that I
understand the CREW preserve people resisted because they thought
the traffic was already putting too much stress on the animal
environment, but it's a growth area.
You've seen the Google map of the intersection. You've seen
the numbers about the cars. The church is presented as maybe
passing through.
I'd like to just talk about what the reality is like of turning at that
intersection onto Immokalee Road. It's an odd intersection. It's the
point at which a two-lane road suddenly expands into a three-lane
road and then shortly further along into a four-lane road. Traffic
coming east off Immokalee Road tends to accelerate as they move
into what they perceive is a larger highway. The County, in fact,
calls it a highway now. It's been designated recently a memorial
highway, and that's what it is. If you come in the other direction,
they've already discussed the turn lane that's there now.
The traffic is fast on that road. I know what the speed limits are,
but when I turn onto that road, I have to get up to 60 miles an hour as
quickly as I can to keep from impeding the flow of traffic. And when
traffic is passing at that speed, you can't turn into small gaps between
cars. You have to wait for very large gaps to open up.
That doesn't often happen because there are no nearby traffic
lights that stall traffic for a while and create open spaces and traffic
November 20, 2025
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you can turn into. It's a steady stream of cars at high speed
proceeding with gaps that are very difficult to turn into.
There's another dimension to it, too. The next road south of
Shady Hollow Boulevard is 41st Avenue, and people -- and that road
has more residents on it than our road does. You can't turn left onto
that road from Immokalee Road because there's a median still there.
The median only disappears up near our road. So people accessing
that road come up to this intersection to make a U-turn onto
Immokalee Road to get a block down to the road they live on.
And I think you-all know what the experience is like with
U-turns in Naples. Most people don't realize that U-turns have
right-of-way. People using U-turns know they have the right-of-way,
and I can't tell you how many times I've come close to watching an
accident at that intersection as there's confusion between a U-turner
and someone trying to turn right onto that road.
It's quite often -- we often go left heading toward Immokalee.
We've had to sit, with us being the only car at the intersection, a
couple minutes, three minutes to be able to make a turn to the left
because you have to wait for traffic to clear in both lanes. And I
mentioned earlier the issue with having to wait for gaps the way
traffic is flowing.
I can't imagine what it would be like when church lets out and
you have only 30 or 40, and later, larger number of cars lining up to
try to make that turn. You're going to have traffic jams at that
intersection, and you're not going to relieve a lot of it with an extra
turn lane because they're going to be confronting the same issues.
So maps look one thing; numbers tell you something else.
Sitting at that intersection, it looks very different. And it is not the
right location to have any high volume of traffic pass through over
the space of a short few minutes. And I'm also sort of generally
perplexed if what the purpose of the land-use restrictions are, if
November 20, 2025
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they're so easily waived for the convenience of someone who didn't
have the budget to buy a lot that would work that is zoned properly
for the use.
So those are my considerations, thank you.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Thank you, sir. Thank you.
Next speaker.
MR. SABO: Last speaker, Lisa Rasmussen.
MS. RASMUSSEN: Hi. I'm Lisa Rasmussen. My husband is
Peter Rasmussen, and we live on Shady Hollow down across the
canal.
As we've all stated, our street is not your typical residential
street. We have a public entity at the end of our street that we do face
extra traffic on our road that other residential roads do not deal with.
I have stated in a previous preliminary meeting that they had
that I am strongly opposed to these changes. The residential property
was purchased with the intent to make these changes before we, the
residents on that street, were given any recourse.
Statistics show that once -- the big white board that goes up on
the property, once it goes up, our chances of making any change to
that is 10 percent -- 10 to 15 percent even though we raise our voices
against it.
It was stated that the reason for building the Orangetree Bible
Church at this location is because of the cost of buying the property.
It was so affordable, and it would be a convenience for the patrons. I
think to purchase residential property knowing full well the intent
was to make substantial changes to a residential property against the
standards of a residential property is deceptive business practice.
There are rumors circulating that there will be an intent to
establish a daycare in the future as part of -- as part of that property.
I know they would have to come back and get approved for that, but
they'd probably get it, and that would increase the traffic even more.
November 20, 2025
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It gives me little faith in the limited conditional-use proposal
that it will remain as stated or that we, the residents of Shady Hollow
Boulevard, can restrain, reduce, or stop these proposals. We already
have increased public traffic on this street due to the CREW Bird
Rookery, and as remaining residential lots are purchased and built on,
the traffic will only increase. What is to keep -- someone else with
another affordable lot trying to build a business venture on a
residential lot in residential areas. What will keep them from doing
so if you set a precedent?
There are appropriate building lots in the same general area that
fit the standard for this proposal without having to change to the
conditional use. Yes, it may cost them more money to build what
they want to build, but it will cost far less for all of the residents on
Shady Hollow Boulevard in ways that are more valuable than money
and cannot be replaced, such as old-growth trees, wildlife nesting
birds, dark sky, peace and quiet.
And the next I thing I see is a traffic light because the traffic will
be so bad at that intersection.
So thank you for listening to my emotional proposal, but that's
how I feel. I strongly oppose a conditional use, not a church. I don't
have anything against a church, but this is not the place for it. So
thank you for listening to me.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Thank you.
MS. RASMUSSEN: Any questions?
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: No, okay.
MR. SABO: That was the last speaker. No further speakers.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Rebuttal?
MR. DuBOIS: All right. For the record, Richard DuBois with
RDA Consulting Engineers.
Just to address some of the concerns that were brought up,
specifically -- mainly traffic, right? That's the main concern that
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we've heard throughout this process. And we're working towards
being a good neighbor. We originally proposed two entrances for
this property off Shady Hollow. Originally our goal was to provide
access off Immokalee Road. Based on coordination with county
staff, that was not an option so, therefore, we changed access to
Shady Hollow. Originally two entrances for fire ingress and egress to
the property, and then we moved it down to one to provide even less
of an impact to the street.
In addition, the concern with traffic coming into church at a
faster rate. To help address any potential concerns on Shady Hollow,
we proposed a turn lane into the site. Based on the limited amount of
traffic that's being generated for this church -- less-than-300-seat
church. The turn lane is something that we're -- that we're proposing
to do to help with traffic. That's not necessarily something that
would be required for the project.
So in addition, regarding the buffering for the project, we came
in here today proposing and happily offering additional buffer
material to help ensure that we are fitting into the community as best
we can. You know, the church's goal here is to come in and be a
member of the community, as they have been the last two years
they've operated, and they're looking to build this location as a home
for their community and help improve the community with also
improving that corner which is right off of Immokalee Road. We are
property right on Immokalee Road, which is currently being
expanded potentially to a six-lane highway.
So one, you know, as we were discussing it, you know, Wilson
being there came up. And we understand if we were here today
talking about something maybe further down the street on the corner
of Wilson and Shady Hollow, we understand that that would be a lot
to ask. However, with this being right off Immokalee Road, with the
expansions that are currently occurring to Immokalee Road, you
November 20, 2025
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know, one of our thoughts is that this does fit within the growing
community and within the growing area, and it fits -- it fills a need
for this area that does have a lack of churches.
Other than that, we have -- the church has proposed limiting
themselves to only Wednesday operation and to only Sunday
operation for limited hours. They're trying their best to fit within the
community here and be a member of the community, not a nuisance
to the community.
Thank you.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Commissioner McLeod.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Yeah. I think I have -- I have
question -- not "I think." I have questions with regard to
transportation, traffic. I was hoping Mike could come up to the
podium.
MR. DELATE: Good morning, Commissioner. It may be best
that Jim Banks, our traffic consultant -- oh, I'm sorry, the other Mike.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Oh, yes, yes. Sorry. No, no, no.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: No, no. No, no. The other
Mike.
COMMISSIONER PETSCHER: Mike Sawyer.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: We've got a lot of Mikes
around here.
No, no, sir. You can have a seat. Thank you.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: Every Mike came up.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Every Mike's up here.
UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER: Later? May we ask a question
later?
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Well, we've closed the public
comment, but I may call you back up.
UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER: Okay, thank you.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Hello.
November 20, 2025
Page 80
MR. SAWYER: Good morning. For the record, Mike Sawyer.
COMMMISSIONER McLEOD: Thank you, Mike. I have three
questions for you. When is Immokalee scheduled to be a six-lane
highway?
MR. SAWYER: Okay. In this particular case, right now it is
listed as a critical need in our LRTP both in -- the existing 2045 as
well as the upcoming 2050. It is currently looked at going from
two- to a four-lane separated facility in this location.
COMMMISSIONER McLEOD: At what time, I'm sorry; the
scheduled time?
MR. SAWYER: Right now it isn't -- we don't have a date as far
as when the improvement is actually going to occur. What it is, it's
on our LRTP, the Long-Range Transportation Plan, as a need
currently and that it is going to be going from a two-lane to a
four-Lane separated facility.
MR. BOSI: Mike Bosi. And I can help out a little bit as well.
When Mike says, "The project's on the Long-Range Transportation
Plan," it means it's outside of your Capital Improvement Element,
your five- and your 10-year program. So it is beyond 10 years. The
early -- I mean, it's -- it's definitely beyond 10 years before this road
is going to be contemplated or constructed. So there is at least 10
years before the road would be anticipated.
And based upon funding, funding availability could dictate that
it could be even longer before the project gets started.
COMMMISSIONER McLEOD: And you're saying even from a
two- to a four-lane, or to the maximum six?
MR. BOSI: Expansion beyond what it is today, to a four-lane.
COMMMISSIONER McLEOD: Okay. And then, Mike, there
was a concern about that island that happens before -- on --
COMMISSIONER PETSCHER: 41st.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Is it 41st? Wait. Here's my
November 20, 2025
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map. Okay. Yeah, 41st. So you have that island in front of there and
you have to go all the way up to Shady Hollow and then turn around
to do. Why is that?
MR. SAWYER: Oftentimes when we've got a divided facility
that -- you know, such as the one south where Immokalee is divided,
you know, two lanes on both sides, what we try and do is we try and
condense the number or reduce the number of median openings just
so we can continue having traffic flow in both directions and keep
capacity on those roadways as long as we possibly can. The idea is,
yes, we do encourage the use of U-turns at those locations as far as
getting people in and out of the residential streets.
COMMMISSIONER McLEOD: But would that change once
we develop that area?
MR. SAWYER: It certainly could change. Right now we just
got through revising our access management and adopting FDOT
standards as far as median openings, and we are now fully compliant
with those standards.
We also do have the potential of having deviations from those
because we just introduced that deviation process. But generally
speaking, we try and keep -- we try and keep those medians and those
separations as far as we possibly can just so that those -- we get the
most out of those roadways. I guess that's what I'm trying to say.
We're trying to keep the capacity as far as we possibly can out into
the future. Whenever we have the -- have more median openings,
more separation, more conflict points, those are the times when your
capacity on your roadways comes down.
So we look at -- when we look at the capacity on a roadway, we
look at the number of lanes, certainly, the configuration, is it
separated or not, the number of traffic signals, and the median
openings, and at that all goes into a formula that says, okay, in this
particular length, from this point to this point, all of those things add
November 20, 2025
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up to this particular capacity, and you'll see that in the AUIR. All of
the roadways there have a capacity, and it is based on that formula.
And what we try and do is we try and keep as much of that capacity
as we possibly can, because we keep eating it up, quite honestly.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Right. Yeah.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: Is that capacity based on peak hour?
MR. SAWYER: Yes, and peak direction, and peak direction.
You've got to remember we have directions on all of our roadways.
It's generally north and east in the p.m.
COMMMISSIONER McLEOD: And, Mike, my last question
is, so staff is recommending that there not be access on Immokalee.
Can you --
MR. SAWYER: Correct. The reason --
COMMMISSIONER McLEOD: -- explain the thinking behind
that?
MR. SAWYER: Yeah. The reason for that is that, again, it's the
same type of thing: We don't have to have as -- we want to have as
few conflict points on Immokalee, and having the access on the side
street enables us to control that traffic better. Instead of having
additional traffic coming directly onto Immokalee, we can control it
better at the intersection.
COMMMISSIONER McLEOD: It's just in my mind I'm
thinking Immokalee's going to be this six-lane roadway, and it will
eventually in my eyes have commercial up and down it. Is there an
example here in the county where we did try to redirect traffic down
a less trafficked roadway or less traveled roadway to avoid a
commercial access from a major highway?
MR. SAWYER: That's generally what we try and do in all
cases. We try and get as much of the traffic onto secondary roadways
instead of the primary whenever possible.
COMMMISSIONER McLEOD: Do you have an example here
November 20, 2025
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in town where we -- where that's working well?
MR. SAWYER: You can look at Livingston where you have
eliminated access all up and down Livingston.
COMMMISSIONER McLEOD: Okay.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: 951 as well.
MR. SAWYER: As opposed to Pine Ridge. If you look at the
number of conflict points that we've got on Pine Ridge -- it's an older
roadway. It's still six lanes. But if you compare that to Livingston,
you'll experience a much different condition, much safer, and still
retaining as much of that capacity on that potential roadway as
possible.
COMMMISSIONER McLEOD: Okay. That's very interesting.
Thank you.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Mike, what staff reviewed, was
there any -- was there any consideration for the Audubon park at the
end, the traffic that's generated from that?
MR. SAWYER: At this point, no. What we look at when we
look at these requests is the trips that are generated by this particular
use, and we look at what the capacity is on the adjacent roadways, on
the ones that we track -- not the public road -- or the secondary
roadways. What we look at is the primaries that we all keep track of
that are the ones that are real critical for everybody.
When it comes to the SDP, then it's a much deeper dive into the
actual trips that the use is actually generating and how those are
going to operate on those roadways. So if there are needs for
additional turn lanes, if there is a need to extend an existing turn lane,
those will all come out with the SDP.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Commissioner Shea.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: This is a tough one for me. I was
out there, and I'm very concerned. First of all, your traffic studies are
done on peak hour. This particular application presents a totally
November 20, 2025
Page 84
different issue to me, which was with the Rookery. So we have two
nonpeak-hour peak uses happening potentially at the same time. I'm
very worried about any traffic calming getting out onto Immokalee
for just the residents, much less having, you know, the church
services and the Rookery happening at the same time.
I'm looking for some comfort. Because you keep saying you've
studied it -- and we do study it. We study it for the good of the
whole, but we're not studying it for the good of the residents, because
we're not looking at what is the true busiest time and the
most -- probably most unsafe condition where you have a lot of cars
leaving at the same time.
So I'm -- I'm kind of confused in my mind which way to go with
that. I'm very worried about what they're worried about.
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: Can I jump in and throw a
little math into this?
COMMISSIONER SHEA: Absolutely.
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: The Rookery has roughly
50,000 visitors a year. That's a thousand a week. It's about 140, 150
a day. This church is proposing about 140, 150, once they get built
out, during that short, call it, two-hour time frame for maybe the early
morning mass and another two-hour time frame at maybe an
11 o'clock mass, whatever their schedule is actually going to be.
The Rookery at the end, if it's, easy numbers, 150 people for the
day, I don't think all that 150 are going to take place within those first
few hours. Maybe I'm wrong. I don't know. But we do have a
concentration of traffic use on a Sunday morning. Wednesday
evening I'm not too worried about because probably traffic for the
Rookery will be diminished by the time the 6 o'clock mass takes
place, so that's not bad.
And the other comment, a couple of years ago, 10 years ago,
whatever it was, Rookery was at 35,000 in a year which, obviously, is
November 20, 2025
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roughly 80 cars a day coming to visit it. And I don't want this to be a
negative comment against the Rookery and the nature. But at what
point would you tell them you can't allow any more visitors because
we don't want any more traffic on the road? It's just something to
think of for concentration of traffic and where you're allowing the
traffic to be the origination from, the church or people coming and
going to the Sanctuary, Rookery.
It's a tough call, but this is concentrated within a couple of hours
maybe twice a day on Sunday, and a couple hours one -- on
Wednesday evenings which will probably not affect it at all, or very
minimal. It almost sounds to me that residents on Shady Hollow are
more concerned with people going to the Sanctuary than the church
because that continues to increase. And what can be done about that?
MR. RASMUSSEN: No, it's the intersection. It's the
intersection.
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: Right. And the only way to
get there is off of Immokalee down Shady Holly.
MR. RASMUSSEN: It's the intersection --
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: Okay. So just simple math,
we're talking about 150 cars for the two-, three-, four-hour period on
a Sunday morning.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: Trying to get on
Immokalee -- trying to get on Immokalee Road.
COMMISSIONER PETSCHER: I would say 50 percent of that
weekly -- that weekly traffic is going to be on Saturday and Sunday,
and then I'd say 75 percent of that is going to be between 7 and 12 in
the morning because it's just -- it's too hot to -- I go there every
weekend. So it's just too hot to walk after 12 o'clock. So I see the
traffic. I know -- I live -- live on Rookery Lane, so I border the
Rookery, so --
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: Okay.
November 20, 2025
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COMMISSIONER PETSCHER: -- everything they're saying is
pretty valid. I think -- I like churches. Churches are great. I think
this is the wrong location for a good project. I think the -- there's
other locations out there. There's one across the street. I just -- this is
a residential street -- we're just putting a church on a residential
street, and to increase the traffic on a residential street is not fair, in
my opinion, to the existing neighbors.
I felt -- you know, I felt sad when -- I mean, when
Ms. Rasmussen -- I'm butchering your name -- said that the only
10 percent -- there's only a 10 percent chance of change once that
white sign goes up. I --
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: I was once voted -- I voted no
more than I voted yes, so don't worry, I don't think that's really all
there.
COMMISSIONER PETSCHER: But no, I'm just -- I can't
support this project because it's just not the right location for the
right -- for the right -- I support the project, but just not for this
location.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: Are we in discussion now?
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: We're in discussion. And to be
honest with you, there's a ton of projects -- that stat might be correct
with the Board, but what statistic that's not out there is how many
projects don't come to Planning Commission because staff interacts
and is able to talk about them and tell them it's not going to work here
and go through why.
So, Mike, go ahead.
MR. BOSI: And just to provide -- I'm not sure how that number
was derived upon, but I can tell you that the majority of petitions that
go to the Planning Commission leave the Planning Commission with
additional conditions of approval, whether it be in the PUD or
whether it be in the conditional use. So that 10 percent really maybe
November 20, 2025
Page 87
is about get ultimately denied, but in terms of what modified,
every -- the majority of petitions that come before you will leave with
additional conditions imposed within the PUD or additional
conditions imposed within the conditions of approval based upon the
testimony that you hear at the hearing from the individuals who are
being affected by it.
So take comfort in that. I think it was about denial compared to
improvements to the project based upon the concerns that have been
expressed by individuals who live in closer proximity.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: I'm going to go to
Commissioner Shea next, but I just wanted to ask you real quick,
Golden Gate Estates residential, you develop a lot and put up a home,
you can only clear 40 percent and retain 60 as wooded, roughly,
approximately?
MR. BOSI: As open space, yes.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Yes, okay. Forty for your
home, and then 60 is natural. That's kind of -- okay. Go ahead,
Commissioner Shea.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: Since we're in discussion, I just
want to support Mike's opinion. I think -- I just don't feel right about
this. I think this has more of a negative effect on -- I always try to
balance community benefit versus neighborhood effect. I think the
neighborhood effect caused mainly because it's on the street where
the Rookery is, I think -- and the -- and some of the highway
improvements on Immokalee could be 10, 20 years out, because you
have plenty of capacity on Immokalee. I'm worried about the safety
of getting on and off Immokalee. So for that reason, I think there are
better locations as well.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Commissioner Colucci.
COMMISSIONER COLUCCI: While traffic is an issue, that's
not my issue, that's not my big issue. My big issue is we're
November 20, 2025
Page 88
continually asked to balance between development and rural
preservation. On this one, I'm sorry, I just come down in favor of
preserving what we have when I think there are other places this
church could be located. That's all I have to say.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Well, I think -- I think if
we -- you know, there was a comment, is it essential service, I do
think churches are essential. That's a given.
Is it for a neighborhood center? You could -- you could argue
that it's close to the new Publix and everything that's going in, which
could be --
THE COURT REPORTER: Chair, can you get on your mic.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: I'm sorry. I apologize.
And then adjacent to -- you know, was it nonresidential use? I
mean, there's a lot of points you could argue here. The issue that I
have is if it was going to fit with the rural character, then 60 percent
of this lot would stay woods. If it was connected to Immokalee Road
versus a residential street, I also think that it would be a considerable
use. But when you look at what the residents -- and I always go back
to what the residents bought into. You bought into a single-family lot
on a rural street, and that was the intention. It was never the
intention -- if so, it would have been -- you would have had
commercial out front.
I did want to ask Mike, on that -- the future land use that went
in, is it conditional use along Immokalee Road on that now, or is it
still just Estates?
MR. BOSI: No, it's still Estates, and part of -- we are going to
engage within the -- an update to the Rural Golden Gate Estates
Master Plan starting sometime in 2026 at the direction of the Board
of County Commissioners, and part of that discussion is going to be
identifying appropriate locations, expansions of existing
neighborhood centers, maybe new neighborhood centers, but also the
November 20, 2025
Page 89
aspect of opening the Golden Gate Estates potentially and asking the
residents what their perspective is related to allowing for conditional
uses when you're on a collector or an arterial road, because if you
look at the southern portion of Immokalee Road from this parcel, you
see a transition of Randall -- or you see the 47 acres -- the curb. You
see some of recent commercialization being added to these areas.
And I think that's an improvement in bringing goods and services in
closer proximity to some of the residents, but it most certainly is an
area of transition.
And at six lanes -- at six lanes, is it appropriate to have a
single-family -- to have a single-family home that has access points
to Immokalee Road, access on Immokalee Road? That doesn't -- you
know, there are some folks that may feel they're comfortable living in
those conditions. Other folks would feel that maybe a nonresidential
use would be more appropriate, whether it be commercial or
institutional, such as a church or other areas.
We need to engage the community in those conversations
because there is a transition happening within this area. If you also
recall, the school bus barn that was for the school district, that's just a
couple -- or that's no more than a quarter of a mile to the north of this
facility that we're talking about.
But I do recognize the issue of the Rookery facility at the end
adding additional trips to this local road that normally would not be
part of the equation.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: I mean, even the houses
abutting Collier Boulevard are on a six-lane, and they turn out of
their driveway onto Collier Boulevard, everything south from
Vanderbilt all the way down to Golden Gate Parkway. So it's doable,
and that's just how it's been. I mean, before that was expanded, it was
a larger dirt road back to their homes. But anyway.
Commissioner McLeod.
November 20, 2025
Page 90
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Yeah. I just wanted to make a
point. It was noted that perhaps there's a better site for this church
down the road on Immokalee, and that was not convincing to me. So
you're moving it from one lot to another but along Immokalee. What
has convinced me, though, is the conflicts with the timing of the
church and the visits to the Sanctuary. So I had the same concerns as
Mike and Paul, then, with this site location.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Well, I also have -- I also have
safety concerns when people have shooting berms in their backyard.
You know, we've got a charter school that's force-placing themselves
in the middle of a residential shooting zone right now, and every
house around that charter school have shooting berms. So that's why
I was asking if you can hear gunfire, because I guarantee you that
other people are shooting. Yes, they're responsible. Their
ammunition is not expelled and going through the trees, but at the
same time, that's not something I even want to question.
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: Quick question, if I can, for
Mike. Why is this lot so much bigger, or am I not understanding it
correctly? This is, what, 4.8 acres, something like that, and the other
lots on the road are two and a quarter?
MR. BOSI: For the most part, it is about two and a quarter.
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: Yeah. Was this lot intended
to go more commercial, or it just happens to be a larger --
MR. BOSI: It just happens to be a lot that was never subdivided
to the minimum two and a quarter acres that is required -- or that's the
minimum lot size within the Estates.
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: Okay.
MR. BOSI: There's no -- there was no directive or guidance
within the Growth Management -- or Golden Gate Area Master Plan
or the LDC that required these lots to be larger and not be subdivided.
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: Gotcha. And when the
November 20, 2025
Page 91
general maps are written for entrances on the lots, this particular large
lot would never have had it going onto Immokalee. It would have
always come onto Shady Hollow, correct?
MR. BOSI: This lot, with the access -- with a local access road,
would have -- even a residential property would gain access to a local
road, but the lot above it, the lot above that, those two lots that are
kind of sandwiched in, on the -- on the west side, they have to gain
access to Immokalee Road.
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: To Immokalee, because
there is no other exit?
MR. BOSI: There is the only -- that's the only access to the
transportation system is the --
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: Right. They're landlocked.
MR. BOSI: Yes.
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: Okay. All right.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Thank you.
So we'll close discussion. So if anyone would like to make a
motion on PL20240013798 and its companion, PL20240012938,
please do so.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: I'll make a motion that we reject
both of them on the grounds of the discussion that you've heard
previously.
COMMISSIONER PETSCHER: I'll second that.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: All in favor?
COMMISSIONER COLUCCI: Aye.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Aye.
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER PETSCHER: Aye.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Aye.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Motion carries.
November 20, 2025
Page 92
COMMISSIONER SHEA: Against?
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Against, PL -- carries against.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: No, I'm confused. Did we vote
unanimously?
COMMISSIONER PETSCHER: Yes.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: Oh, okay.
MR. BOSI: And that was the clarification, was it unanimous
with unanimous recommendation of denial?
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Yes.
COMMISSIONER PETSCHER: Correct.
MR. BOSI: Thank you.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: All right. Moving on, so we
have PL20 -- Terri, keep going?
THE COURT REPORTER: (Nods head.)
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: This is going to be a quick one.
Terri's saying you can keep going. She's running the show. I'm just
here.
PL20240008204, the Milestone Tower conditional-use
southwest corner of Everglades Boulevard North and 58th Avenue
Northeast.
Sorry. Start with disclosures, if I may, first.
MS. LOCKHART: Staff materials only.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: Staff materials only.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Staff materials only.
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: Staff materials only.
COMMISSIONER PETSCHER: Staff materials. Oh, I'm sorry.
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: Punch bug.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Patience.
Staff materials only.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: We'll ask Commissioner
Colucci when he comes back.
November 20, 2025
Page 93
All those wishing to speak on the matter or public comment,
please raise -- stand, raise your hand, and be sworn in.
THE COURT REPORTER: Do you swear or affirm the
testimony you will give will be the truth, the whole truth, and nothing
but the truth?
(The speakers were duly sworn and indicated in the affirmative.)
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Good afternoon.
MS. SOLIK: Good afternoon. Mary Solik, 121 South Orange
Avenue, Suite 1500, Orlando, Florida. I am legal counsel for
Milestone Towers.
This is a proposal for a monopole tower in the Estates district.
And Milestone Towers is a Virginia-based cell tower developer.
I like to say that companies like Milestone are the developers of
vertical real estate. They build wireless towers and then lease the
space on the towers to the licensed carriers in the marketplace.
This is 160-foot monopole tower. Verizon is the anchor tenant,
but we also have T-Mobile committed to install on this tower. It's a
little bit unusual to get two carriers out of the gate on a tower, and
that is a strong indication of the need in the community for expanded
wireless service.
This is the -- that was a really cool arrow thing I saw before.
Does that work --
MR. BOSI: Touch anywhere.
MS. SOLIK: Okay. This technology is new to me.
Right here is our tower location. We're on the southwest corner
of 58th Avenue Northeast and Everglades Boulevard. It's on a
2.65-acre parcel. This is Everglades Boulevard here running north
and south.
These are the Verizon existing proposed and proposed without
propagation maps that we were required to submit as part of our
application. Unfortunately, we did not -- we weren't able to get a
November 20, 2025
Page 94
Verizon rep here today. We will have a Verizon rep at the BOCC
hearing. But I've been doing cell tower zoning work for 30 years,
and I play an RF engineer on TV quite often, so I'll walk you through
this.
The blue -- the blue dot is the proposed location. The green
dot -- the green areas that surround yellow dots are locations where
Verizon has existing sites on air.
The yellow dots are proposed Verizon sites that are coming on
air. There's a new tower up here, there's a new tower that's been
approved down here, and then Verizon is proposing a small cell
installation that's in permitting right now, I believe, along Oil Well
Road.
So this map here shows the existing coverage when you put all
of those other proposed Verizon facilities on air. And we still have
red areas. Green area -- green is good; that's reliable coverage. Red
area is unreliable coverage. So our blue dot here is right in the center
of this area that has unreliable coverage, and this third slide is the
addition of the proposed tower, and the red goes to green.
This is the T-Mobile Verizon -- T-Mobile propagation maps,
and Olga Maffeo is here with me today. She is the T-Mobile RF
engineer. So I'd her to come up and walk you through this.
I should also have introduced Matt Forkas. He's sitting over
there. He's with Milestone. He's the project engineer. He flew down
from D.C. for this particular hearing.
So, Olga, if you want to come up and walk them through what
you've got going on out there.
MS. MAFFEO: Good morning. I'm Olga Maffeo. I work for
T-Mobile, live in Boca Raton, Florida.
So the existing coverage in this area is very poor, as Mary
explained, not only for Verizon but also for T-Mobile customers. So
at this point we're trying to deploy or trying to work with other tower
November 20, 2025
Page 95
companies to provide service -- reliable service to this area, and this
is one of the towers we are trying to support and make sure that we
are collocated as a second carrier.
So blue is no service. We do a little more explanation. We have
different levels. We put more than Verizon does. But no service, and
then we have poor, moderate, and reliable. The idea is to have really
reliable coverage for all customers in the different areas that only
provides in-building and outdoor coverage at the same time.
Right now the in-building coverage is basically not in this -- in
this areas of about a mile and a half, and that's what the tower is
going to provide reliable coverage for.
And the second -- the second map shows the coverage with this
particular tower, and we also have other -- other plan, and the third
map shows the other towers that we're trying to collocate with, too,
so, you know, to make the whole area more reliable for every
customer that we have.
MS. SOLIK: And, Olga, is this -- is this down here -- this is the
one that's south of Oil Well Road that's been approved, the same one
that Verizon's going to be -- it's preparing to install on.
MS. MAFFEO: That's correct.
MS. SOLIK: So that's one that's already in the works. So this is
the proposed tower location up here.
Here is our site design. This is a 2.65-acre parcel. It has been
subdivided from a five-acre parcel. Our landlord is also the owner of
the property to the west, and that is the remainder of the five acres,
and I believe he plans to build a struc -- a residential home on the
western property that's not shown in this map. So our site's
2.65 acres, meets the minimum of 2.25 acres for Estates and the
minimum in Estates to put a cell tower on.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: So are you leasing this, or are
you purchasing this lot?
November 20, 2025
Page 96
MS. SOLIK: We lease the tower site.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: But you own the property?
MS. SOLIK: No. Our landlord owns -- Evo Builders --
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Oh, so the five acres is five
acres. It's not subdivided?
MS. SOLIK: Evo Builders has subdivided what -- you see
here --
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: I'm just talking about from,
like, a property tax position, like -- it's not two owners. Is it still one
owner of the lot?
MS. SOLIK: It's one owner of the lot.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: All right. That's fine. Thank
you.
MS. SOLIK: But your Property Appraiser will carve out -- once
this is done, the Property Appraiser will carve out a little square on
here because that will be taxed differently, and Milestone is
responsible for that different taxation.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Got it.
MS. SOLIK: So it's a 160-foot tower that code required that we
be our tower height away from the property lines. We meet the
setbacks all directions: 161 to the north -- or 161 to the east, 160 to
the north, 161.7 to the south, and 181 to the west.
This is our -- this area here is our native vegetation preservation
area required under the code, 10 percent of the lot. The lot's heavily
treed, and all of that other vegetation around here is all scheduled to
remain. Like I said, the landowner owns the property, the
2.6 -- 2.25 acres to the west, and that's where he intends to build his
home.
The tower goes right in the center. The four carriers' ground
equipment is located in here. It's proposed for an 8-foot fence that
meets the code, and the 10-foot-wide Schedule D landscape buffer
November 20, 2025
Page 97
around the base of the tower. We meet all of the code requirements
for the performance criteria for towers.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: If I may ask just another
question. I saw in the packet there will be no light on this tower.
MS. SOLIK: Correct. Anything under 200 feet does
not -- doesn't need a light.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Does not need a light, okay.
Thank you.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: So this tower doesn't collapse on
itself because you have a --
MS. SOLIK: It does. Well, it has -- it has -- it will be designed
to have a 25-foot-fall-zone radius, which is all within the compound.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: Oh, okay.
MS. SOLIK: And the -- they buckle -- exactly. They buckle
over on themselves. And the engineering support letter for that
determination was in your package.
This is the design. It is a monopole. It's 160 feet to the top of
the steel. It has a 4-foot lightning rod on the top. And then these are
the proposed Verizon antennas at -- mounted at 155. The T-Mobile
antennas will be at a center line of 145, and the tower will be capable
of supporting two additional users, here and here.
And here's our stone wall at the bottom, and that is a code
requirement that you allow for collocation on the towers. I think
we're only required to have three users, but it will be designed for
four. And it will meet the needs of all of the licensed carriers in your
marketplace.
Community benefits, enhanced public safety. We're seeing
numbers up close to 90 percent across Florida in terms of how many
911s calls come into your sheriff's departments for 911 service. It's
approaching 90 percent come in from wireless phones.
Increased economic activity, you know, benefits all of the
November 20, 2025
Page 98
user -- you know, all the devices the users want to use in their homes.
It will add choices for connectivity out of the gate. We'll have two
users that will be using the towers, so there will be enhanced service
and consumer choice. And then once we -- once we get that tower in
the air, I think you'll see the other carriers on there as soon as their
budgets allow.
And you heard a lot about Golden Gate Estates rural GMP
policies today. Your county did adopt an amendment in 2019 to
allow for communication towers in Golden Gate Estates. That is why
you're seeing so many of these applications come in. We weren't
allowed to get into this community to provide service prior to this
Comp Plan amendment. And I took this language here right from the
staff report for the LDC amendment that was done to implement the
Comp Plan change. And this -- that amendment apparently
originated from the majority of residents surveyed, really requesting
and needing enhanced service.
So that's the end of my presentation. I have to say to you I was
in Charlotte County yesterday, and I packed the house. And
ironically, it was a cell tower on a church property. And we were the
last item on the agenda, like today, and we got an approval, and the
county security staff made the board members and our application
team stay in the room for a while, and then they escorted all of us to
our cars. So you should very much appreciate that I have not brought
you an angry mob today. We sent out over 1,100 letters for our
community meeting.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: Did it pass?
MS. SOLIK: With that, we would ask for the approval.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: Did you win?
MS. SOLIK: Yes, 3-1, 3-1. Yes.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Wow.
MS. SOLIK: So we would ask for your recommendation today
November 20, 2025
Page 99
to the Board.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: So --
COMMISSIONER SHEA: Staff?
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Staff report.
MR. BOSI: Mike Bosi, Planning and Zoning director.
As contained in the staff report, staff is recommending approval.
We've got a couple conditions, minor. The applicant, I believe, has
agreed to those conditions. I would agree with them this is the reason
why we amended the Golden Gate Area Master Plan to lift the
conditional-use prohibitions specifically for communication towers.
It's all the reasons why the applicant has indicated, emergency service
connectivity. You know, it's just -- there was an inability to provide
reliable service to the Estates. Now that we've allowed cell towers to
be located within -- if you're adjacent to a collector or arterial road,
we're seeing more and more towers, and you're seeing more and more
coverage being propagated.
And I will say, having two towers -- or two carriers on deck
before the tower is even submitted does indicate that this tower will
be of value to the community and will provide the increased
communication ability and reliability, and staff is fully in support of
it, and can answer any questions that you may have.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: I'm not seeing any questions.
Oh, go ahead. I'm sorry. Oh, you're right, I'm sorry.
Commissioner McLeod.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: I've been waiting.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: I apologize.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: It's Mary, right?
MS. SOLIK: Yes.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Mary, can you -- just out of
curiosity, how do these types of projects get put together? Like, I see
that Evo Builders is the owner of the land. Like, did you seek him
November 20, 2025
Page 100
out or --
MS. SOLIK: That's a very good question.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: -- do you partner together to
come up with something like this?
MS. SOLIK: That's a very good question. And I will tell you
that we've probably been in this process for a year and a half, Matt,
before we yet to hear. It takes a lot of -- there's a lot of runway
before we get to a board hearing.
We -- companies like Milestone start with the request from their
client, their customer, Verizon, and Verizon says, "I need a tower,
and I need it in this little quarter-mile search ring. I need it in this
tiny little area. Go find me -- go build me a tower in that location."
So we take that location, and then we look at your code, first of all, to
see where we can do it, and then we start approaching property
owners.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Okay.
MS. SOLIK: Now, in this particular instance, we have to be on
2.25 acres, and we have to be on an arterial or collector road, and that
limited us to properties that fronted on Everglades Boulevard.
So we start looking around, and then we start approaching
landlords. And I've -- I told you I've been doing this for 30 years.
We have an acronym that I kind of developed. Buildable -- BLZ,
buildable, leasable, zonable.
So we find a site that's not all wetlands, that's got access, that
doesn't have an eagle's nest on it or something else that would
prohibit us from putting a tower on it, and then we have to find a
willing landlord. And this landlord has given us the dead center of
his property. That's unusual, you know, because, really, we've taken
the utility out of his property, and then we have to find something
that's zonable. So we have a lot of different layers that overlay the
starting point, which is the technology.
November 20, 2025
Page 101
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: And then there's been three or
four different tower requests that have come before us in this last
year, and there's a different agent for each of these requests.
MS. SOLIK: Different company?
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Yeah.
MS. SOLIK: Yeah. When I started this, all of the carriers built
their own towers. I must have done 300 towers for T-Mobile all over
the state of Florida. And then the tower companies -- or the wireless
carriers decided that -- that infrastructure was not their core business,
and a lot of them sold their portfolios, and then a new industry sprung
up, and that is the -- like I said, the vertical real estate guys, the
companies like Milestone. So they're out there trying to find -- you
know, partnering with the carriers to do what's really kind of become
a build-to-suit industry. So that's why you see different -- the carriers
are all the same, but the companies are different.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Right. Okay. Great. Thank
you.
I guess I'll make a motion to approve.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Public comment? Any public
comment?
MS. SOLIK: Look at this. Whoa.
MR. SABO: No --
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: No public comment?
MR. SABO: No public comment or angry mob.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: I think I got -- I think
somebody's calling me from Charlotte County right now. Hold on.
All right. So there's no -- we close. Now, for Board discussion,
I'm just going to make a motion to approve as presented.
COMMISSIONER PETSCHER: I'll second.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Unless there's any -- there's a
second. Is there any discussion?
November 20, 2025
Page 102
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: Michelle, any comments?
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: No. Thank you for covering for
me.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: All in favor?
COMMISSIONER COLUCCI: Aye.
COMMISSIONER SHEA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Aye.
COMMISSIONER SPARRAZZA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER PETSCHER: Aye.
COMMISSIONER McLEOD: Aye.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: It passes unanimously.
MS. SOLIK: Thank you, all.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: Thank you.
All right. Great meeting, everybody. I'm going to go to church
tonight and pray.
Yeah, I don't think she needs security to get out. Mike will walk
her out.
All right. With that being said, I hope everyone has a wonderful
Thanksgiving, and we'll see you back here right before Christmas.
COMMISSIONER PETSCHER: December 4th.
CHAIRMAN SCHUMACHER: December 4th. Meeting
adjourned. Have a great day.
*******
November 20, 2025
Page 103
There being no further business for the good of the County, the
meeting was adjourned by order of the Chair at 12:24 p.m.
COLLIER COUNTY PLANNING COMMISSION
__________________________________________
JOE SCHMITT, CHAIRMAN
These minutes approved by the Board on ____________________,
as presented ______________ or as corrected _____________.
TRANSCRIPT PREPARED ON BEHALF OF VERITEXT BY
TERRI L. LEWIS, RPR, FPR-C, COURT REPORTER AND
NOTARY PUBLIC.