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BCC Minutes 10/21/1997 R REGULAR MEETING OF THE BOARD OF COUNTY COHMISSIONERS Naples, Florida, October 21, 1997 LET IT BE REMEMBERED, that the Board of County Commissioners in and for the County of Collier, and also acting as the Board of Zoning Appeals and as the governing board(s) of such special districts as have been created according to law and having conducted business herein, met on this date at 9:05 a.m. in REGULAR SESSION in Building F of the Government Complex, East Naples, Florida, with the following members present: CHAIRMAN: Timothy L. Hancock Pamela S. Mac'Kie John C. Norris Timothy J. Constantine Barbara B. Berry ALSO PRESENT: Hike HcNees, Assistant County Hanager David C. Weigel, County Attorney Item #3 AGENDA AND CONSENT AGENDA - APPROVED WITH CHANGES CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Good morning. I'd like to welcome everyone to the October 21st meeting of the Board of County Commissioners. It's a pleasure this morning to have Pastor James Honig from the Grace Lutheran Church here to bless us with an invocation. Pastor Honig, if I could ask you to come to the microphone and give an invocation this morning. If everyone would join me in standing, and we'll follow this with the Pledge of Allegiance. PASTOR HONIG: We pray. Gracious heavenly father, creator, ruler of all, you have called us into community, and you have given us the responsibility to order and to govern our lives together. Grant us your blessing and presence today that both the decisions which are made and the manner in which they are deliberated may reflect your character, full of grace and truth and love, through Christ our Lord, Amen. (The Pledge of Allegiance was recited in unison.) CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Pastor Honig, thank you very much for taking the time to be with us this morning. Mr. McNees, good morning. MR. McNEES: Good morning, Mr. Chairman. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: So, you're pinch-hitting this morning. MR. McNEES: You've got the "B" team this morning. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: How about the "A-" team. MR. McNEES: Mr. Fernandez is attending the state retirement commission meeting today, and so I'm sitting in his place. We have three changes for your agenda this morning. The first is to add Item 8(A)(6). This is a recommendation for procedural steps regarding the Twin Eagles PUD. This item had originally been submitted by staff in time to make your agenda. We wanted to actually create and bring to you a staff recommendation rather than just a question for direction, so we pulled the item. It has since been revised, and we're asking to add that today, to bring your recommendation on procedural steps regarding that PUD. That will become Item 8(A)(6). The second change is to continue Item 12(B)(2) to the meeting of November the 4th, and the last change is to move Item 16(C)(4) from the consent agenda. That will become Item 8(C)(1). Those are all the changes we have today. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Mr. Weigel, do you have anything to add to that? MR. WEIGEL: No. Thank you. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Seeing none, agenda changes, Commissioner Mac'Kie. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Nothing. I'll have an announcement under communications. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. Commissioner Norris. COMHISSIONER NORRIS: Nothing. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Commissioner Berry. COMHISSIONER BERRY: Nothing, sir. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Commissioner Constantine. COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Sixteen (B)(3) I would like to remove from the consent agenda, which I assume then would become 8(B)(1). HR. HcNEES: That's correct, 16(B)(3) to 8(B)(1). CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. And I have no changes on the agenda. COHMISSIONER NORRIS: Mr. Chairman, I'll make a motion that we approve the agenda with changes as noted. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I'll second that. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: A motion and a second. Any discussion? Seeing none, all those in favor, signify by saying aye. Opposed? (No response). Item #5A1 PROCLAMATION PROCLAIMING THE WEEK OF OCTOBER 23-31, 1997 AS RED RIBBON WEEK - ADOPTED CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: *** We are to proclamations and service awards. This morning, it's my pleasure -- and the county participates every year. As you came in, you may have seen the huge sign going up that we put up every year regarding red ribbon week, and Regina Wagstaff, there you are, Regina, if I could ask you to come up to accept this proclamation. Regina is the coordinator for the Collier County red ribbon campaign. The proclamation this morning reads as follows: WHEREAS, prevention resources have been dramatically cut, programs and community based efforts are asked to do more with less and community services compete for remaining limited support; and WHEREAS, substance abuse is the most common risk factor impacting our behavioral health, particularly for our young people, furthering delinquency, teen pregnancy, HIV/AIDS, child abuse and violence and so forth; and WHEREAS, families face unprecedented pressures and stress imposed upon them by the overwhelming nature of today's society; and WHEREAS, prevention and intervention efforts continue to influence non-use of alcohol, tobacco and other drug abuse, it still remains prevalent in every Florida community; and WHEREAS, Floridians must recommit to strengthening families, neighborhoods and communities in educating our citizens about prevention focused initiatives to counter the problems of substance abuse; and WHEREAS, research and data reflect unquestionably that prevention works and that our commitment to education, prevention and positive lifestyles is imperative; and WHEREAS, the red ribbon represents the nation's united effort to support prevention and build healthy and safe communities and to remember the brutal murder of Federal Agent Enrique Camerana; and WHEREAS, the 1997 Florida Red Ribbon Celebration focuses on the importance of supporting our young people and creating an environment in which our youth may flourish; and WHEREAS, the Florida Prevention Association, Incorporated coordinates year round prevention programs throughout the state. WHEREAS, the 1997 Florida Red Ribbon Celebration asks that the citizens of Florida become motivated and involved in alcohol and other drug abuse prevention. NOW THEREFORE, be it proclaimed by the Board of County Commissioners of Collier County, Florida, that the week of October 23rd through 31st, 1997 be designated Red Ribbon Week and encourage all Collier County citizens to wear a red ribbon to symbolize our commitment to healthy and safe environments for each citizen and to participate in events throughout the week and throughout the year that support positive lifestyles. Done and ordered this 21st day of October, 1997, Timothy Hancock, Chairman. I'd like to move acceptance of this proclamation. COHMISSIONER NORRIS: I'll second that. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I'll second that. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: All those in favor, signify by saying aye. Regina, thank you. (Applause.) MS. WAGSTAFF: May I say a few words? CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Please do. MS. WAGSTAFF: On behalf of the Red Ribbon Coalition, I would like to thank the commission for signing the proclamation. As stated in the proclamation, drug use and abuse continues to affect our families, our society, our adults, and especially, our youth. This proclamation will assist the Red Ribbon Coalition in preventing drug abuse in our community. This year's theme for Red Ribbon Week is get mad, see red, take action, and this refers to the last whereas clause in the proclamation asking all citizens to become motivated and involved in prevention efforts. Many citizens this year are taking action. As some of you may have heard, there are going to be three different drug-free marches; on Saturday, October 25th. One is going to be in East Naples. The other is going to be in Immokalee, and the third one is going to be in Golden Gate, and we are asking everyone -- actually, I personally asked some of the commissioners -- to come out and participate in this prevention tool and get involved and put your feet to the streets to fight the drug problem in our community. Thank you very much. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Thank you, Regina. Item #5A2 PROCLAMATION PROCLAIMING OCTOBER, 1997 AS CRIME PREVENTION MONTH - ADOPTED The next item under proclamations, Commissioner Norris. COHMISSIONER NORRIS: Thank you, Mr. Chairman. This proclamation is for crime prevention month to be accepted by Sheriff Hunter, but I don't see the Sheriff here today. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: There he is -- COHMISSIONER NORRIS: There he comes, okay. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: -- in the trench coat. COHMISSIONER NORRIS: All right. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: We have Sergeant Rosa White sitting -- subbing in for Sheriff Hunter with her fine furry friend. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Come on up, guys. You don't look like a shy group. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Can you imagine how many times that one's got to be walked today. COHMISSIONER NORRIS: Can '- COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: COMMISSIONER NORRIS: COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Just line them up across here where they And look at the camera. -- look at the camera over there. Wave to Hom. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Yeah, if you folks just line up and face the camera, we'll go ahead -- COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: That one in the back. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: And read the proclamation. COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: There you go. COMMISSIONER NORRIS: Now we are ready. The proclamation reads: WHEREAS, the vitality of our county depends on how safe we keep our homes, neighborhoods, working places and communities because crime and fear diminish the quality of life for all; and WHEREAS, crime and fear of crime destroy our trust in others and in institutions, threatening the community's health and prosperity; and WHEREAS, people of all ages must be made aware what they can do to prevent themselves, their families, neighbors and co-workers from being harmed by drugs, violence and other crimes; and WHEREAS, the personal injury, financial loss and community deterioration resulting from crime are intolerable and require action by the whole community; and WHEREAS, crime prevention initiatives must include, but go beyond self-protection and security to promote collaborative efforts to make neighborhoods safer for all ages and to develop positive educational and recreational opportunities for young people; and WHEREAS, adults must invest time, resources and policy support in effective prevention and intervention strategies for youth, and teens must be engaged in driving crime from their communities; and WHEREAS, effective crime prevention programs excel because of partnerships among law enforcement, other government agencies, civic groups, schools, faith communities, businesses and individuals as they help to nurture communal responsibility and instill pride. NOW THEREFORE, be it proclaimed by the Board of County Commissioners of Collier County, Florida, that October, 1997 be designated as crime prevention month and urge all citizens, government agencies, public and private institutions and businesses to recognize the power of prevention and work together for the common good. Done and ordered this 21st day of October, 1997 by the Board of County Commissioners, Collier County, Florida, Timothy L. Hancock, Chairman. (Applause.) COMMISSIONER NORRIS: Mr. Chairman, I'd like to move acceptance of this proclamation. COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: Second. COMHISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I'll second that. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: A motion and a second. All those in favor, signify by saying aye. McGruff, good to see you. COMMISSIONER NORRIS: Hey, McGruff, do you want the proclamation? COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: He couldn't wait to get his paws on it. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Thank you very much. I wonder how she's going to type the handshake on there. COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: Thank you, sir. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Thanks for being here today. COMHISSIONER BERRY: You know what dogs do to paper. (Applause.) CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Following up on Commissioner Berry's comment, McGruff, that paper is not used like most papers. COMMISSIONER NORRIS: I got too emotional at the end. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Yeah. You got all choked up at the end of that one. I noticed the only part you choked on was my name. Item #5B1 EMPLOYEE SERVICE AWARDS - PRESENTED Under service awards, Commissioner Constantine. COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Mr. Chairman, celebrating five years with us, serving currently in facilities management, Glen Miles. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Where is Glen? There he is. COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Your certificate and the pin. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Congratulations, Glen. Item #7A JAMES L. WALKER RE MOWING LIENS *** The next item on our agenda this morning is under public petitions, we have an issue regarding mowing liens, Mr. James Walker, and again, for everyone's information, under public petitions, they are limited to ten minutes. The board can give direction to staff but can take no formal action under this item. Mr. Walker, good morning. COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: I just -- while Mr. Walker is passing this out, I wanted to tell you, among his many, many distinctions as representative of Collier County government, I found out lately in my work on the Davis triangle redevelopment that Mr. Walker was on the county commission when the first road in Collier County was paved, and that was Shadowlawn. Okay. MR. WALKER: Good morning. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Good morning. Please. MR. WALKER: Ladies and gentlemen, commissioners all, I think we have a problem wherein there's a parcel of land in Collier County that I now own that I don't want, and I've tried to give it to you, and you don't want it, but somebody's got to do something with it. In 1988, I bought a tax certificate on a lot in Golden Gate. Seven years having expired, I got a notice from the clerk's office that either I had to apply for a tax deed or the certificate would escheat to the state. So, I decided to apply for the tax deed. It came up for bid, and I received the honor of getting the lot. I know, it was my fault I understand now, by not knowing that the County Commission could have liens that was also on a piece of property that wasn't done away with by tax liens, but I thought the real estate taxes was the number one lien in the county, and when I bought a lot at auction for the tax lien, that I cleaned the slate. Two days later when I come in to pick up the tax deed, the lady told me, said, Mr. Walker, I'm sorry, but I find that the county has a $6,000 mowing lien against this piece of property. I went out to a real estate agent in Golden Gate, and they gave me a map so I could go see the lot. It's a good-looking piece of property. However, it's in an area where there's no city water or sewer, and they told me that the lot would sell for about $10,000. So, I added up what I had in the tax lien, and then I determined that I would have to have a quiet title suit, and I don't know what that would be, and then I added $6,000 for a lien that the county has on it, and there's no way we can get that kind of money out of it. So, I decided I would be good, give it to the county and let them use it to build some type of housing. I mean, I know there's different houses that's built for underprivileged people, but I applied to the various agencies, met with Ms. Ashton and Sandra Taylor, and we discussed the possibility of the county accepting the lot. They checked into it and found that they -- that the county themselves would have to have a quiet title suit since the owner of the lot had passed away and they couldn't get a quitclaim deed or anything from the owner, which means that either thirty-five to $4,500 for a quiet title suit, and it would cost you the same as it would cost me, I suppose, and they determined that it would cost too much for the county to accept the lot and for them to use it. Now, the situation I find myself in, I don't care to keep putting money into the lot when I can't get it out, and if I decided not to pay these tax liens, I mean these mowing liens, and there now has been another tax certificate sold for $215 at an 18 percent interest rate, that you someday will have to file for the tax lien that you have holding against it for mowing. As a matter of fact, a letter dated October the 7th that I received from the county manager advising me of my appearance on the agenda this morning, I received 12 -- copies of 12 tax liens dated that date that the county was placing on the property. So, what I'm asking is what can we do because if I decide not to pay these things, some day Collier County will have to live up to the obligation, and with the liens that they have, come back and sell it. No way can you get the amount of money out of it of what you're going to have in it for the mowing liens. So, my question this morning is, is there some way that we can work this situation out that you can accept. As a matter of fact, these tax lien notices I've got become a lien, and they say that they would be foreclosed. If you accept the lot, it saves you all that foreclosing costs, but my question is, what would you like to do in this situation. My guess is that if you go back and check your records, you're going to find that you have several other parcels in Collier County that's in the same situation this one is, that you're going to have more money involved in the cost of lot mowing and clearing than what you can get out of it when it comes time to sell it. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: I have a thought about that. When a bank has a mortgage and the mortgages goes unpaid, the bank forecloses on the mortgage. The -- the borrower can either fight that foreclosure and go through a lawsuit or can offer a deed in lieu of foreclosure, and what I don't understand or what seems to me most logical here is the ultimate end of this discussion is the county forecloses on its lien. If Mr. Walker is willing to give us a deed in lieu of that foreclosure, why would we not accept that and at least avoid the costs of the foreclosure suit? Why isn't that -- it seems to me that that's like our only logical choice in a pretty rotten situation that may repeat itself. We are going to -- either we foreclose on the lien or not, and this way, we can avoid the costs of the foreclosure action. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Mr. Walker, I have a question before we get into that discussion. You state in here that from 1989 through 1996, the tax certificate cost you $2,688.92. MR. WALKER: Yes. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Does that include the -- a reduction in the interest that you received on the tax certificate, because those pay a significant interest? Are you saying from that point to that point, that is the absolute cost to you? You've subtracted out the interest paid on the tax certificate? MR. WALKER: There was no interest paid on the tax certificates. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Because nobody redeemed them. Since the guys never showed up and said, oh, you're right, here, I want the land; I'll pay you the interest you earned. Instead, you just turn it back. MR. WALKER: The certificates I had to redeem -- see, mine was 1988. Then I had to redeem all the certificates from '89 through '96. Yes, the interest was paid to the certificate holder of that year, but I had to redeem all of them since I was the one that was applying for the tax deed on my certificate that was seven years old that was going to escheat to the state. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: The problem we have, Commissioner Mac'Kie, or I have individually with what you're proposing is it puts the county in a position regularly of becoming the eventual owner of property and responsible for the maintenance of that property. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: We are already there. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: No, we are not. The responsibility still falls to Mr. Walker at this point. MR. WALKER: Yeah, but if I don't pay it -- COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Right. MR. WALKER: -- all you can do is take the property. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Mr. Weigel, when the maintenance cost or lien amount exceeds the value of a piece of property, what options are left the county? MR. WEIGEL: Well, there are a few, but I think one distinction needs to be made, and that is foreclosure, yes, it does -- that action, if successful or gone to completion does take the title property away from the current owner, but does not necessarily mean that the foreclosing -- foreclosing party becomes the property owner. It is a successful suit to obtain a foreclosure sale upon which the lien holder, in this case the county if it has superior liens, realizes money from the sale after certain costs are taken care of. It does not become -- COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: But Dave, who's going to show up on the courthouse steps and bid on a piece of property where the minimum bid price has to be less than the value? It has to be more than the value of the property. MR. WEIGEL: Well -- COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: We'll be the only bidder at the foreclosure sale. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Can I -- MR. WEIGEL: That's possible. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Would you please finish the first part? MR. WEIGEL: I just wanted to make the distinction clear that a foreclosure action is not an absolute action for the county as the pursuing party of the action to obtain the property. It forces a sale of the property which goes forward, warts and all, subject to auction or bidding process. The county may end up the owner, but it doesn't start out automatically as the owner if it pursues that. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I guess my concern is -- is a little back of the individual particulars of Mr. Walker's case, and that is that if someone who purchased, through tax certificate or other means, a piece of property refuses to -- I'm not referring to you, Mr. Walker, on this, but refuses to maintain it, lets liens accrue on the property until they exceed the value of the property and then walks away from it, I don't want to do anything in any way, shape or form to promote that or say that the county will be the catchall or that we will not attempt to intervene prior to that occurring. I'm just concerned about the application of this on a more abusive level than what Mr. Walker has presented to us today. MR. WEIGEL: Absolutely, and it's my understanding that staff, and particularly the real property staff, has looked at this from a business standpoint of would this property have any use for the county. It's been shopped or, at least, let's say reviewed by various county departments, I think, including Greg Hihalic's department, to see if there's a use for this property should it, in some form, come to -- or eventually come to county ownership or through a direction of the board that might ultimately come subsequent to today, and the staff may or may not be able to comment to a great depth in regard to the potential needs or uses of the property by the county, but ultimately, that would be a business decision that would come into the strategy, I think, or the ultimate direction recommendation that would come to you in regard to the request that's before you today. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Another question; if -- if Mr. Walker could get Habitat for Humanity to accept a gift of the lot, could we waive the liens? MR. WEIGEL: Well, the waiving of the liens can be accomplished -- there is an underlying cost that's been incurred by the county in hiring contractors to pay for that service that's been received. So, it conceivably could be done. I think we need to make sure that we meet the public purpose aspect, and if the county is not becoming a title holder, we would have to look real closely about, I think, the public purpose aspects. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: We might be on the right track there if a group such as Habitat for Humanity can pick up two -- essentially two homesites for whatever the cost ends up being, 5,000 bucks, 3,000, whatever the cost of cleaning all that up is, and that may be worthwhile for them and takes care of everyone. I don't know. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Unfortunately, Mr. Walker, there's no advantage to you selling the lot, and there's no advantage to us taking it from you. I mean, nobody wins here. The taxpayer gets struck in either situation. MR. WALKER: We have to decide some way because sooner or later, somewhere down the road, this subject will have to be taken up again, because the only way the county will ever get their money is to bring it the same as a mortgage foreclosure, and as long as -- as much money she'll have in it, I don't believe you'll find anybody that will buy the lot that will pay you the money that you have in it. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I just think it's unfortunate the taxpayer gets stuck for a bill that a property owner has a responsibility to maintain. I mean, the taxpayer is going to pay for the maintenance of this property and receive no benefit from it whatsoever, and I think that is -- that's criminal. It's just not right. I don't care if it's going on. I don't care if there's 100 cases. It's still not right. COHMISSIONER NORRIS: Mr. Walker, what's -- what's preventing you from selling that lot today? MR. WALKER: To sell it now, I'd have to go through a quiet title suit, which is going to cost me approximately $4,500, and then I have to pay the county about $6,100 clearing lien. Then I've got the 1996 tax certificate of $215. Then there will be a real estate commission. If it sells for 10,000, what they told me it would sell for, there would be a thousand dollars, so I would have $9,000 out of about $12,500 costs -- COHMISSIONER NORRIS: Well -- MR. WALKER: -- and if I just back off today and say, gentlemen, it's yours, do with it as you wish, I'm only out a little over $3,000, $3,500, but if I go through this thing, I'm going to be out about 9,000, over $9,000. COHMISSIONER NORRIS: Well, you know, that's not what you just said. You said that you sell it for 10,000, net nine, and you've got 12,000 in it. MR. WALKER: No, I said the real estate agents told me that's what it would sell for. COHMISSIONER NORRIS: Well, we're saying hypothetically, you sell it for 10,000. You net nine after commission, and you have 12,000 in it, I think you calculated, so that's a $3,000 loss. Well, you know, I'm sorry you're into a business deal here that didn't pan out, but it's not the taxpayers' responsibility to make sure that you make a profit. MR. WALKER: That's -- that's -- that's true, sir, but see, there's nothing says that I've got to do that. COHMISSIONER NORRIS: Well -- MR. WALKER: All you can do is take the property from me, and I'm trying to give it to you so you don't have to turn around and take it from me. If you'll just accept it, I'm satisfied. I'm out and gone. Whatever I lose, I lose, and that's fine. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Mr. Weigel, I guess I'm concerned there's no legal remedy available to the county to avoid this situation from happening time and time again. MR. WEIGEL: Well, if you give me -- I think you're giving me the opportunity to comment further, and that is, of course, with liens running with the land, we know that the land is forever -- well, not necessarily forever. There could be a statutory time limit, but the land continues to be encumbered by the lien, and that, by law, provides a mechanism or a certain incentive concerning the transactions involving that land, potential transactions in the future. Aside from actions in land, of course, are -- this takes me more to my private practice days where we've got enforcement of judgments, things of this nature, where you're going after assets other than -- other than the land itself and its value, and if you'd like, we can provide you, with some time and with staff's help, a report in that regard also so you would know the full measure of tools that are available for this kind of situation; not speaking merely to this one but the hypothetical of other instances that could come up in the future, because there are some more tools. It's just they -- they are more costly in the sense that pursuing individuals to enforce judgments, post -- post trial proceedings, things of that nature, one always has to make, should make and advise the client of the business expenses in pursuing those things. At the same time, the county may have less of a business option than maybe a public ethical action to go after these things too, and I'll be happy to provide a report in that regard. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I guess not knowing -- and Commissioner Hac'Kie, you're far more familiar with the real estate options than I am, but not being familiar with the other options, I would like to hear back from you, Mr. Weigel, before making any decision on Mr. Walker's petition or any others, for that matter. I want to know, as you stated, what tools are in the bag first before I determine what is the best course of action for the taxpayers of this county. So, if the board feels in a similar fashion, I would like to ask Mr. Weigel to report back to the board on our -- our options on this and other similar situations so that we can make an informed decision. That would be my preference. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: That's fine. COHMISSIONER NORRIS: Fine. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Two weeks? CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Is two weeks sufficient, Mr. Weigel? MR. WEIGEL: We'll do our best for two weeks. If we don't, we'll certainly be close thereafter. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. Two to three weeks then, your best efforts. MR. WEIGEL: Thank you. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Thank you. Mr. Walker, thank you very much. MR. WALKER: Thank you, sir. Item #SA1 CARNIVAL PERMIT 97-3 RE PETITION C-97-4, V. CARLETON CASE, JR., REPRESENTING KIWANIS CLUB OF NAPLES, REQUESTING A PERMIT TO CONDUCT A CIRCUS ON NOVEMBER 22 AND NOVEMBER 23, 1997, AT THE FLORIDA SPORTS PARK ON STATE ROAD 951 - APPROVED CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: *** The next item on our agenda, Item 8(A)(1), I think somebody needs to proclaim November carnival month. COHMISSIONER NORRIS: Motion to approve. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Second. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: We have a motion to approve Petition C-97-4 and a second. Is there anyone here to talk us out of this? Seeing none, I'll call the question. All those in favor, signify by saying aye. Opposed? (No response). CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Motion carries. Item #8A2 CARNIVAL PERMIT 97-4 RE PETITION C-97-3, OUR LADY OF GUADALUPE CATHOLIC CHURCH REQUESTING A PERMIT TO CONDUCT A CARNIVAL FROM NOVEMBER 26 THROUGH NOVEMBER 30, 1997, ON THEIR CHURCH GROUNDS LOCATED AT 219 SOUTH 9TH STREET IN IHMOKALEE - APPROVED *** Item 8(A)(2), Petition C-97-3 -- COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Hotion to approve that. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Second. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: A motion and a second. Any discussion on the motion? Seeing none, all those in favor, signify by saying aye. Opposed? (No response). CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Motion carries unanimously. Item #8A3 - This item has been deleted Item #8E4 CARNIVAL PERMIT 97-5 RE REVEREND JOSEPH SPINELLI OF ST. ELIZABETH SETON CATHOLIC CHURCH REQUESTING A PERMIT TO CONDUCT A CARNIVAL NOVEMBER 5 THROUGH NOVEMBER 9, 1997, AT 5325 28TH AVENUE S.W., GOLDEN GATE, FLORIDA - APPROVED *** Item 8(A)(4), look, another carnival. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Motion to approve the item. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Second. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: A motion and a second. Any discussion? Seeing none, all those in favor, signify by saying aye. Opposed? (No response). CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Folks, there will be a carnival in a neighborhood near you in the month of November. That, I can guarantee. Item #8A5 INTERLOCAL AGREEHENT BETWEEN COLLIER COUNTY AND THE CITY OF NAPLES TO PROVIDE FOR A FEHA COORDINATOR - APPROVED *** Item 8(A)(5), adopt an interlocal agreement between Collier County and the City of Naples to provide for a FEHA coordinator. Mr. Cautero, good morning. MR. CAUTERO: Good morning, Mr. Chairman and commissioners. Vince Cautero for the record. The item before you today is a proposed interlocal agreement with the City of Naples and the county to provide for a full-time coordinator to administer the procedures and policies under the national flood insurance program which is administered under the auspices of the Federal Emergency Management Agency. As you may know, since the early 1990s, the county has been involved in a program called community rating system which allows us to undertake activities that go above and beyond the minimum requirements of the national flood insurance program. In doing so, the communities are rated and people who pay premiums for flood insurance can receive up to 20 to 25 percent discounts. Our rating for this system now, which is based on a system of zero to ten with ten being the lowest, if you will, where no program exists, our rating is currently a seven, and the City of Naples was currently an eight, and they've just lowered their rating to a seven. Our recommendation to you is to join forces with the city who has a part-time FEHA coordinator. The work that is done in Collier County for this program is done by two existing staff members, and they have logged over 400 hours in overtime in the last year. The recommendation is to join forces with the city so that we may reduce the premiums paid by property owners in Collier County and lower our rating to a six which would amount to a 20 percent discount. If you turn to Page 2 of the executive summary, you'll see those numbers. In 1996, we are estimating that property owners that participated in the flood insurance program saved approximately 2.3 million dollars in the unincorporated portion of the county, and just under $500,000 in the City of Naples for a total of 2.8 million. We are estimating that if we can lower our rating by providing additional programs with the city, we'll be able to save the residents of Collier County and the City of Naples that participate in the program over one more million dollars in 1998, and this would lower our rating, we hope, from seven to six. There are -- the programs that I mentioned a minute ago that we participate in above and beyond the FEHA regulations include updated flood insurance rate map information, maintaining our elevation certificates on file, placing information in the public libraries on flood protection materials as well as our office upgrading our digitized mapping efforts and meeting stormwater provisions of our zoning ordinance. Those are just a few of the programs that I wanted to highlight for you. The money would be spent from the building permit fund. Currently, we are estimating that the program in total would cost $57,100. Half of that would be the county's cost. However, mitigating that cost would be the money that we estimate that we spend in overtime now, which is a little over $8,000. The net effect to the county budget would be a little over eighteen or just under $19,000. We are estimating that if you provide permission to engage in this program, the county would spend 18,850 from the building permit fund and in return, potential property owners participating in this program would save an additional 3.4 million dollars in the county. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Commissioner Constantine. COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Will or may? Is it guaranteed that that's going to happen? MR. CAUTERO: It is not guaranteed, but we have -- I am very confident that we will succeed because we have been successful in the past in our program with our rating of seven. COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: The thing I ask every year when -- during budget season when new positions are projected is what are they going to do for 40 hours a week? The FEMA person goes into work, sits down on a Wednesday morning at 8:00 a.m., and what do they do? MR. CAUTERO: What -- what the person does in the city right now is, I would say, is the equivalent to what our people do when they work overtime on this. The programs that I just mentioned, what they do is they maintain those programs. They are constantly answering questions and providing updated information for people. COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I know. I'm looking for a typical day, though. I understand broadly they try to educate the public and they do different things with flooding programs, but on a typical day, they come in on a Wednesday morning -- MR. CAUTERO: Right. A typical day -- COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: -- they sit at their desk -- MR. CAUTERO: -- sorry. COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I'm -- MR. CAUTERO: A typical day might involve -- COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I'm just having trouble filling in -- MR. CAUTERO: Sure. COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: -- 40 hours a week, 52 weeks a year or 50 weeks a year. MR. CAUTERO: A typical day might involve, for this person, updating flood insurance, rate maps, updating the overlay maps, providing new information to citizens and customers that call, providing new information to libraries, providing information to various insurance companies, meeting with builders, meeting with contractors, meeting with building inspectors, providing training, going to training. I'm confident that the person in the city does not have a boring day given the 20 hours a week that they are working, and our hours in staff have been increasing steadily in overtime, and this is a way to reduce that so that those staff members can do other things. COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: How much does the city currently spend on that part-time person? MR. CAUTERO: Half of the fifty-seven one which would be approximately twenty-eight five. COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I guess just doing a little math, if they are there half the time and if we've spent 400 hours, that's about ten weeks' work, that's roughly 36 weeks work, and I'm just wondering, is there that much to boost it -- I'm just having a little trouble. I understand the intent is very good, but if we're spending $9,700 now and making that happen, I'm having trouble justifying spending nearly $30,000 to make the same thing happen. MR. CAUTERO: No, I can certainly understand that. The reason I'm recommending that you do that and spend the additional net $18,800 and change is because it will allow us to do two things; hopefully, and I feel very confident, reduce that rating to reduce the premiums and allow my current electrical plans reviewer to spend more time doing electrical plans review, who is the de facto FEMA coordinator for the corporate of Collier County. So, I have another motive in recommending this to you, and that is to allow that person to do -- spend more time on his job. COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: The final question I have is we are two weeks into the new year, into the new fiscal year. Where was this during the budget season? MR. CAUTERO: The City of Naples approached us very late in the budget process, and we did not package it in time for the budget. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Commissioner Berry. COMMISSIONER BERRY: My question, is there any possibility that -- because I was contacted regarding Everglades City, and I don't know what their ratings are, I don't know any of their background information, is there any way that they could be involved in this? MR. CAUTERO: Yes, I believe there is, and that's on our agenda. We are going to be working with the city officials down there. I believe they contract out their building services, but we intend to coordinate with the city officials to determine for your next budget cycle if they wish to participate in the program, and I would have a recommendation for you. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Mr. Cautero, if I look at the SLUSH model, which is a storm surge model, a lot of these -- this flood protection, let's face it, it's geography. It's elevation. The lower you are, the more you have your work cut out for you to keep your insurance premiums low. The highest land is in unincorporated Collier County. The majority of the land in the county is at a category three or --you know, I mean, just elevation alone, I see a real advantage and a real opportunity to get our rating dropped to a six. My question is, if you're in -- and Everglades City is a good example. Everglades City or even the City of Naples, which is typically at lower elevation than the rest of the county, that's going to take a lot more work, a lot more justification, a lot more effort to get that rating dropped from a seven to a six. I mean, am I at least correct in that as a scenario? MR. CAUTERO: I think you are, but one thing that the officials have told us that administer this program is that if you coordinate your efforts, there are points for that. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: But are they tied together? In other words, could we go to a six and the city not go to a six? MR. CAUTERO: No, we would go together. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Do we want to tie ourselves to that since flooding basically is based on elevation, and if the city is a lower elevation on average than the rest of the county, are we potentially tying -- you know, dragging a weight, so to speak, in trying to get that rating reduced? COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Yes, we are. MR. CAUTERO: I don't think we are because -- I'm sorry, Commissioner, you speak. COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: No, go ahead. I'm sorry. MR. CAUTERO: I don't believe we are because the program that we are talking about is one that is above and beyond the minimum requirements for providing information. It doesn't put an additional burden on someone when they go to construct a facility. It's what you do to educate the public and the insurance industry. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. So, it's not a minimum standard issue? MR. CAUTERO: No, no, and I apologize if I didn't make that clear to you. Insurance companies are not -- some insurance companies, I should say, do not receive this program very well. I know of at least one instance, and it was because it was in the billing department that had to prove to the insurance company that we participated in the program and that his premium should be reduced by 15 percent. So, education is a big component of the program. We would reduce together with the city and, likewise, the city, as you pointed out just a moment ago, has a vested interest in this as well, and they want to see that number drop. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Motion to approve staff recommendation. COHMISSIONER NORRIS: Second. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I have one more question, too. Based on 1996 totals, this says it could expect an additional 1.8 million in reductions off insurance premiums. Do you have any idea what that comes out to per household on average? MR. CAUTERO: No, sir, I don't, but I could find out. I don't know. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: It appears from the multiple seconds it's going to be a moot point anyway, but would you find that out just for my knowledge? MR. CAUTERO: Sure. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Thanks. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: We have a motion and a second on the floor. Is there -- we do have a speaker? MR. HcNEES: You have one, A1 Perkins. MR. PERKINS: Good morning, commissioners; A1 Perkins, Belle Heade Groups. Needless to say, I'm involved in all over this entire county. As far as FEHA goes, the replacement of buildings, if they are demolished by hurricanes on Marco Island and on the beach area, will not be permitted to be replaced. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: A1, that has nothing to do with the issue before us today. MR. PERKINS: It's part of the insurance end of it. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Mr. Cautero, what we are talking about is not FEHA regulations and how they apply to reconstruction; is that correct? MR. CAUTERO: That's correct, sir. MR. PERKINS: Aren't we involved with the insurance end of this thing? CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Mr. Perkins, your comment you just made is not applicable to the item today. If you haven't read the item or don't understand the item, I'd encourage you to get with Mr. Cantetc. MR. PERKINS: But needless to say, the fact that FEHA being involved the last time we had the flood and the emergency management issue throughout this entire county and your elevations, which you so highly recommend and state exactly where they are at, the fact that this involves not only the estates and Immokalee area, but it involves everybody in this county as far as evacuation goes. Now, I'm down to saving lives and trying to protect people. Now, if it takes whatever it takes so they can do this, I'm willing to go the distance on this thing, because it's the people who are involved. We can rebuild just about anything, but we cannot replace the people. With that, I'll conclude. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: With that, there's a motion and a second on the floor. Is there any discussion on the motion? Seeing none, I'll call the question. All those in favor, signify by saying aye. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Aye. COHMISSIONER NORRIS: Aye. COHMISSIONER BERRY: Aye. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Aye. Opposed? COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Aye. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Motion carries four-one. Item #8A6 DEVELOPER'S REQUEST TO REPEAL THE TWIN EAGLES PUD, ORDINANCE 97-29 - STAFF DIRECTED TO PREPARE ITEM FOR PUBLIC HEARING *** The next item is Item 8(A)(6). This is the add-on item, Hr. Arnold, the Twin Eagles project? MR. ARNOLD: Good morning, commissioners; Wayne Arnold, planning services director. This is a request by staff in response to a request by the developer of the Twin Eagles project to bring forward a request by the developer to repeal the existing PUD zoning that was approved by the board on July 22nd. The request is a result of potential litigation filed by challengers to the project to challenge the validity of a PUD zoning outside the urban boundary. Staff and the developer are confident that the project is consistent with our Growth Management Plan. However, the developer stated they have no interest in fighting prolonged litigation as they believe they can still develop a very similar project in an agricultural zoning scenario. We are simply seeking your direction because we are also named in that potential litigation because the county was also a party, obviously. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Commissioner Mac'Kie. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Mr. Arnold, in your opinion, which of the two potential development proposals is better for Collier County? I know that's a very generic question, but we have the grid proposal or we have the proposal that was worked out as a result of the Twin Eagles PUD. Do you have an opinion about which one is better? MR. ARNOLD: By far, I would have to say the PUD provided much better environmental protection. There were several things in the PUD document that the county was able to assist the developer in, namely, some mitigation to the CREW lands, some additional enhancement of vegetation, et cetera. None of those things will be provided under an agricultural zoning scenario unless the developer initiates those on their own, but we certainly don't have those requirements. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: I'm glad that's your professional opinion, because I have to admit to having a chip on my shoulder about this because I worked hours and hours on this with the developer and the Conservancy and CREW and tried to come up with something that was environmentally positive, and I think we did. I've got a real hard time saying let's undo it. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I guess I come from the other -- I agree with you 100 percent that what was done or what was approved environmentally far exceeds what could have been done had it not gone through the PUD process and a public hearing process, but I'm not going to -- I can't hold the property owner hostage because an environmental organization has filed a suit that could cost the taxpayers of this county money. They've asked -- they asked for one thing. They are asking us to rescind that, I believe, which isn't a decision today. It's whether or not to move ahead, and I feel obligated to honor that request on two fronts: one, it's their property, and two, why should I spend taxpayer money fighting that battle unless I have to, and, you know, I agree with you in concept, but those two reasons alone, you know, my move is just to put it on the agenda and let's -- let's discuss -- COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: I have an answer to the second question really, that one reason to spend taxpayer money to fight for it is because it's better for the county, because it sets a precedent for what we expect for development outside the urban boundary and what kind of environmental stringencies we're going to place on those developments. I think it may be worth fighting for. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I think we can still do that. We can do that on our own without -- without holding the property owner hostage -- COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Is your mom here today? COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I don't know. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: -- but again, it's a little odd for a property owner to come forward and ask for a zoning designation and then come back and say, well, we want to rescind it and us to say, no. I mean, that seems a little odd to me. COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I share both of your frustration. I mean, ideally, we want to do whatever is best, but -- and particularly with the time and effort that went into coming up with a reasonable answer. The irony being, an environmental group arguing against the more environmentally viable alternative, but I've got to agree with Commissioner Hancock in that, in my opinion, we can undo property rights type issues. If someone owns a piece of property, they request a use for that, decide they don't want to use that use after all and say, thank you, but no thank you, I'm hard-pressed to ignore that request and say, no, I won't even listen to it. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: As long as we continue to press forward with the Conservancy on the issue of development outside the urban development and PUDs and so forth, I think we need to resolve that anyway. COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Absolutely. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Is today's question just whether or not to rehear it or is today's question to repeal it? CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: It's seeking board direction. There's not an item on the agenda to repeal it today. MR. ARNOLD: We would need to bring back a formal fezone ordinance to you for that to occur. We did ask as part of this motion, not only we believe that it's viable to go ahead and honor the developer's request, but we also believe that we should be able to work with the developer in coming up with some application fees that are more appropriate for what we are trying to do. A lot of staff analysis and a lot of staff time went into the original rezoning. To take it back to the original agricultural zoning with mobile home overlay really requires no staff analysis. However, there will be advertising costs. There will be some staff time involved. There will be some property owner notification, et cetera, that we believe they should be billed for, and I believe they certainly agree to pay. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Commissioner Berry. COMMISSIONER BERRY: One of the concerns I have, and there's always been a lot of controversy about PUDs, but the good part about a PUD is that there are public hearings regarding a PUD, and I'm very sympathetic in this case to going back to the landowner. I really think -- when this was worked out, I think we had the best scenario for Collier County, but unfortunately, they've been forced by a couple of groups to reconsider this and when they go back to this -- if they go back to their original zoning, then what they do on that parcel of land, they are permitted to do currently, I believe, under the current scenario. You really don't have a lot of say in what they are going to do. You would have been better off to stay with the PUD, but they've been forced to do this, and I think this is absolutely a test case in Collier County, and this is what -- this is what it has come down to, and I think that this will probably set some precedent for the future, but I agree with Ms. Hac'Kie and the rest of them up here. I think we need to continue to work toward the original, what they came forth with. I think that's the best way to go, but I -- I'm very, very disappointed that these groups have forced this issue into this particular situation, and I think the citizens of Collier County will absolutely be outraged by this. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Me too. COHMISSIONER BERRY: This was a perfect opportunity where groups had worked together, brought forth a product that was, in my opinion, was going to be a superb project, and what has transpired now, it's not that it's not going to be a good project, but it's going to be done in a manner that we have sat here and said, we don't really like to go in this direction, and I guess maybe it's show time. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: In essence, forcing the hand of the property owner to the detriment of the community. COHMISSIONER BERRY: That's right. That's right. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: I have a question. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I wonder if that's in the bylaws. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Commissioner Norris, I think, was -- had a turn. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Commissioner Norris. I'm sorry. Thank you. COHMISSIONER NORRIS: Well, just, if I'm able to, I'm just going to echo the comments that I've heard up here today. It's very unfortunate that the county, the developer and the Conservancy worked so hard to the Conservancy's credit to have such a positive impact on that proposal, and to do the level of environmental safeguards that were contained within that PUD, I think, was a great show of cooperative effort among all the groups, and then to have some organizations come along that have absolutely nothing to contribute but just to echo a flat no to any proposal whatsoever for any reason, I think, is extremely unfortunate, and I agree with Commissioner Berry that that kind of environmental extremism should be something that causes outrage within our community. We had a very good proposal here, and now we are going to go back to something that's not anywhere near as good. So, that's what they are demanding, so that's what they'll get, apparently. It's just unfortunate that we are left with this situation. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Commissioner Hac'Kie. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: I still think it's okay that, you know, that's what they'll get because they demand it. I want to -- to make a point, too, that both the Audubon and Florida Wildlife were invited and requested and invited and invited to please participate in these discussions that were held between the developer and the Conservancy. It wasn't just that the Conservancy thought this up. There was a great deal of effort to involve the Audubon Society and the Florida Wildlife Federation in the discussions, to ask them to have input at the same time as the Conservancy did, and I think that that's important. COHMISSIONER BERRY: Did they participate? COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: They would not come to the table, would not come to the table -- CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I think that goes to -- COHHISSIONER HAC'KIE: -- and that is a shame. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I think that goes to credibility, but that's simply my opinion. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: But I have a question, and that is about the legal process itself. If the process -- if we don't go forward, if we don't undo what we've done, what happens? Does all development stop on this piece of property until final resolution of the outcome? What happens? MR. WEIGEL: Okay. Well, a lot of very good questions in discussion here, I must state. We can't tell you right now that the ability of the underlying property owner to go forward is absolutely stopped or estopped by the legal actions that are filed at the present time. For the record, I would like you to know that, of course, yes, the county as a co-defendant has received and will have to respond to the writ of certiorari action that has been filed. We read through the newspaper of a declaratory action lawsuit filed. We have not been served yet with that but will be responding accordingly if and when we are served. I hope I have answered your question in part -- COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: You did. MR. WEIGEL: -- and I'm going to continue here with a couple more comments. I think before you today, one might liken the request as provided by the letter on behalf of the underlying landowner, which is attached to the executive summary, and the presentation by staff to the board is that we might liken this to an accelerated sunset request, and it's important, and with the discussion I've had with Mr. Anderson, who is representing the underlying landowner -- I'm pleased he would be here today. For no instant did I expect that he or a representative of the underlying landowner would not be here today, but I think it would be important for him to be present and be able to state on the record, on this record created aside from the correspondence, which will be part of the record, the intent of the party so that it is clearly before you and in the public record created today, and I'd also like Marjorie Student, assistant county attorney, to provide information to you and the public generally of what the case law is in this regard, and she's prepared to state that to you now. MS. STUDENT: Yes, I wanted to -- Marjorie Student, assistant county attorney. There's case law there to the effect and -- and this is only for PUDs, but you cannot impose PUD zoning over the objection of the property owner, and that's the Porpoise Point case, and I think this case might be actually a little stronger. In that case, the local government decided to write a PUD and impose it on a property owner, and the property owner didn't want it. Now -- but I don't believe he knew about it until after it was placed on his property, and then he objected, and the Court said, you cannot do that. The case we have here is a property owner that had obtained a PUD, seeking to have that rescinded. So, those facts are a little different, but they are a little stronger because this would be the county now saying no, and as one of the commissioners mentioned, it's holding the property owner hostage, and legally, I think we might -- the county would really be in the middle if, you know, we didn't address this. So, I just wanted the commission to be aware of that case law. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Thanks. MR. WEIGEL: And before Mr. Anderson may step forward, I just also mention that lest we forget, our building codes and our land development codes are essentially minimum standards. That's not to say they are not good standards, but they are minimum standards, and a PUD potentially and probably in most cases is a, based on peculiarities of the object or property before it and before the board, is often reaching for a higher standard or in certain areas where many different points of the Land Development Code affect land, certain areas, not necessarily all, will be altered to a higher standard, and that's where the agreements that are reached from time to time and the PUD arrangements are, in fact, a bit of give and take, but usually -- and the board's position, I think, always has been that that which is achieved in the PUD is a higher standard than the minimum zoning code that was in place in the first place. So, Mr. Anderson. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Do we have speakers registered on this? MR. HcNEES: Mr. Anderson is registered. He's the only speaker. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I was going to lecture you on what the issue is, but you probably understand it by now. MR. ANDERSON: Thank you, Mr. Chairman, commissioners. For the record, my name is Bruce Anderson on behalf of Ultimate Land Trust, the owner of this property, and I find myself in the unusual and awkward position of saying please down zone my client's property. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: This one will go down in history, Mr. Anderson. MR. ANDERSON: Yes, yes, please note that. We share your unhappiness about having to come before you today. It's only as a matter of last resort that we are here. The county and my client are the two defending parties in two different lawsuits. My client was served yesterday. The groups that filed the lawsuit won't even meet to discuss a potential settlement. There had been a settlement meeting scheduled, but they insisted that the county, you know, participate in, so it was all arranged, and then the day before it was to occur, it was abruptly cancelled with no explanation other than we are ready to go to the mat over this, and well, they'll have to go to the mat by themselves. Our request to repeal the PUD is nothing less than a unilateral settlement by giving the complaining parties the only thing that they have asked for, the elimination of the dreaded PUD zoning. Heaven forbid that we might approve a development that conserves open space in environmentally sensitive areas. These lawsuits are an example of what I call urban envirophobia. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Did you work on that all night long coming up with that? MR. ANDERSON: And it can it be defined as the illogical obsession with an artificial political boundary to the detriment of the environment. My -- my client does hold out hope that before this down zoning process is finalized, that these groups might see the light -- UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER: Amen. MR. ANDERSON: -- as other objective groups have done, but failing that, my client is prepared to go forward with the Twin Eagles development under the agricultural zoning designation and zoning classification that was on the property in the first place, and I'll be happy to answer any questions. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: The decision before the board today is really whether to hear the ordinance repealing the zoning which would have the net effect of basically eliminating the CREW acquisition that had been agreed upon by the petitioner. It will have no effect on increasing or even maintaining the environmental applications contained in the PUD and may, in fact, reduce them, and that is not a decision anyone up here, I think, wants to make, but on the issue of private property rights and the advice from our county attorney, I think we need to hear the item, and I think we'll make the decision on that day, but I think the writing is on the wall today -- COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: It sounds like we have no choice. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: -- for what options are available to us. COMHISSIONER NORRIS: Move staff's recommendation. COMHISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I'll second that. I just -- you know, we make an effort not to repeat what others have said up here, but every once in a while, you feel strongly enough about something, you have to say it, and just -- it is not only unreasonable but totally outrageous and irresponsible for a group to refuse to participate when invited in a process and say we don't want to talk about it; we are not going to talk about it; we are only going to go to court. It's completely irresponsible, and to tie up the county and its tax dollars and our time and private enterprise and private property is completely and totally irresponsible, and just very, very frustrating to have -- the Conservancy was very responsible, sat down, went through the process and tried to come up with something reasonable, and to have unreasonable people gum up the works for -- and possibly set a precedent that will be harming for the future development of that whole stretch outside the urban area is disgraceful. UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER: Here, here. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: We have a motion on the floor. Is there a second to the motion? COMHISSIONER BERRY: I'll second it. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: A motion and a second. I won't ask for further discussion. All those in favor, signify by saying aye. Opposed? (No response). CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Motion carries five-zero. We'll hear the ordinance after it's properly advertised. Item #SB1 ALTERNATE ROAD IMPACT FEE CALCULATION FOR THE SPORTS AUTHORITY - CONTINUED TO 11/4/97 *** The next item on the agenda was moved from the consent agenda, formerly 16(B)(3) is now 8(B)(1) under public works. Commissioner Constantine. COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Yeah, this is the reduction of impact fees for Sports Authority, and I just know -- maybe this map is fine. Maybe that's why it's on the consent agenda, but I wonder if you could run through it with me. I know as Sports Authority went up, they certainly were less than cooperative with the county, and as I look at that, I find it hard to believe that they don't have a pretty strong impact, particularly on that intersection, and I just need a little help to accept what's here. MR. KANT: For the record, Edward Kant, transportation services division. It's difficult to try to figure out where to start with this except to say that in the -- the short answer is that perhaps a -- perhaps a mistake was made. The longer answer is that it was a question, we believe, of interpretation. The Sports Authority approached us back in March of '96 prior to their coming for their building permits and suggested that their type of operation was different from the retail commercial that was in our ordinance under the rate table, and we looked at -- CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I'll say it is. MR. KANT: I beg your pardon? CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I'll say it is. MR. KANT: Never having been in there, I can't address that. We looked at the information they presented to us, and at the time, it appeared that it was not unreasonable that this was a different type of an operation than what we would normally expect in a typical retail store. So, we -- COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Can you -- can you explain to me how? MR. KANT: Because they -- they would -- we thought at the time that they qualified as a discount store as defined in the IDE trip generation handbook as opposed to typical commercial retail, which is kind of a catchall category, at least the way we presented it in our rate structure. On that basis, we accepted the information that they presented to us and calculated what we termed to be an individual impact fee which is Section 310 of the ordinance. Since that time -- and then things just went as they normally would. They went in. They got their building permit, built their building. The controversy with their landscaping and everything else ensued, and, frankly, we didn't think much further of it until about, I'm going to say, September of last year, I believe, there was an audit performed by the Clerk of Court's office on some of the impact fee revenues in development services, and the question arose as to whether or not this was, in fact, an individual impact fee or should it have been presented to the board as an alternative impact fee. At the time, we felt that it was, in fact, an individual impact fee. We had some discussions with the clerk's office, and we got together with Mr. Cautero and his staff and went back and said, well, maybe there is a question there. Maybe it should have gone to the board. We don't know at this point because it's after the fact, but in order to satisfy both the auditor's request and to look -- and in terms of taking another look at it, we said, well, let's bring it before the board, because if, in fact, this should have been an alternative impact fee, that will help provide us with future direction also in this type of an issue. So, that's why it's here before you now asking for an after the fact approval. COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Is their impact really a third? MR. KANT: I'm sorry? COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Maybe I'm oversimplifying this or not understanding it, but is their impact really only a third of what we're averaging out as regular impact? MR. KANT: The impact fees are based on a number of factors. Trip generation rate is one factor; trip length, percentage of new trips added to the roadway. The data that they've presented to us was based on similar stores, that is, freestanding stores that were not in a shopping center that had controlled entrances, that is, we knew that every car that went in there was only going to go to that store. Based on the data that they presented, the number of trips -- we used our percentage of new trips, and we used our, that is Collier County's, trip length. The only factor that we adjusted was their trip rate. We also used the -- based on the information we got, we also used their weekend trip rate, which was higher than their weekday trip rate. Based on that, we made the calculation that showed a less impact fee than what the table would have called for had we used that category. So, the answer to your question -- that's the long answer. The short answer is, yes, they did have a lower impact than we would have expected given that type of business. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I see lower, and that, I don't -- I don't know. I mean, I would agree with you, but it appears to be one-third of what we would normally do, and that's what just amazed me. MR. KANT: Again, I can't address that because that's the number that fell out of the formulas that we used. I believe that it turned out that -- and I can look it up. I think that their trip generation rate was -- and I don't -- unfortunately, I don't have it immediately handy. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Thirty point four one for every thousand square feet. MR. KANT: Yeah, the number for that size store that's used in our calculation is about 90, but that, again, is based on general commercial retail which has a shopping center base as opposed to a particular freestanding store base. I don't want to get in -- I'll be happy to, but I'm not sure you want to get into the technical aspects of it. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Let me ask the impacts here, because stores such as Sports Authority, and I'll say even Toys-R-Us that are special __ MR. KANT: That's another type, yes. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: -- their speciality, but they're the kind of store that people drive a longer trip length to because they attract not just, you know, an element of their industry better known as the big item block. MR. KANT: Called the category killers. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Right. So, I actually would think that they would generate as much, if not more, than being -- than a sporting goods store next to Publix, because they are the type of business they are. I understand that you've already established the trip rate. What my concern is, if we approve this today -- you said something very important to me. You said that it will become a basis for or give direction for future decisions. I'm not sure I want to give the direction that a Sports Authority or Toys-R-Us is one-third of a typical retail by making this decision today. MR. KANT: That -- that was not my intent, sir. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. MR. KANT: My intent was to clarify those issues where we want to come before the board with alternative impact fees. Again, in discussing with Mr. Cautero, we felt that additional oversight was necessary, and we have agreed on a little bit, shall we say finer, tighter procedure, and if, in fact, the board agrees that, yes, this is the type of thing that would be more likely to be an alternative rather than an individual impact fee, then these are the types of fees that will come before the board in the future rather than being decided at the staff level. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: If that is the extent of today's decision, I can support that. What I cannot support are the numbers here without going at length into it and discussing the nature of a Sports Authority or Toys-R-Us type of -- MR. KANT: That's why we'd like to bring those back to you on an individual basis. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: If that's the extent of what you're asking, I can support that as long as there's no indication that we are supporting this as a basis for future -- you know, that this trip rate is a basis for future similar type stores. MR. KANT: Perhaps I was unclear. It was a direction rather than the absolute that I was looking for. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Do we have speakers on this, Mr. HcNees? MR. HcNEES: No, sir. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Seeing none, is there a motion on the item? In order to get it on the floor, I'll make a motion that we approve staff recommendation that this is to be defined as an alternative impact fee and that future uses such as this are to come before the board in that -- under that being an alternative as opposed to an individual road impact fee. Commissioner Constantine. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I'm sorry, just a couple more questions, and that is, the numbers we used to come up with this were strictly those numbers provided by Sports Authority -- MR. KANT: Yeah -- COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: -- and put in our formula? MR. KANT: They had an engineer go out and prepare a trip rate study. We looked at those numbers. We looked at their methodology in doing that, and again, in the future, that type of information would also be presented to you. Typically, if we don't have a problem with the engineering aspects of it, we generally tend to accept those numbers because there's only one or two ways to count cars, and in this case, they counted them with the hoses that you see across the road or across driveways, and then they verify those counts by taking random hourly counts and comparing those with what they got on the tape, and there's really not much other way to do it in that case. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Mr. Chairman. MR. KANT: So, on that basis, we accepted those numbers. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Commissioner Hac'Kie. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: I'm confused now. I thought I understood what we were doing, but now I'm not sure I do. I -- I am willing to support the concept that these may be special items that need to come back in front of the board for a hearing instead of staff making the determination, but I would like to have that kind of a hearing on this one and not have the very first one be a consent agenda item that we don't discuss or, frankly, understand. If you're asking me to say -- if you're saying to me, this is a little special, instead of a cookie cutter situation where the staff can review it and approve it because we know exactly what we're -- what the situation is here, this is different from that. It requires -- it's the kind of situation that should come in front of the board, then I respect that. I want to hear it, but I'm not prepared to make a judgment on it today based on the information we've had. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Hay I direct that to Mr. Weigel, because that was, in essence, my question to Mr. Kant earlier, is that I don't want to approve this trip rate today. COHHISSIONER HAC'KIE: My mom is here, I guess. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I don't want to approve this trip rate today, but I think it has already been done, and that we don't have the authority to go back and change it at this point or increase it; am I correct in that, Mr. Weigel? MR. WEIGEL: Well, I can't tell you definitively that you don't have the authority to go back and change it, but you're certainly correct, I think, the first factual statement which is it was done administratively, at the administrative level and not the board level, and an alternative fee determination is a board function, and that's why it's brought before you today. Typically, it's an -- it's more of a hearing function than what you've had before you today. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: The way the recommendation reads is that the board approves the alternative road impact fees for Sports Authority. So, we are dealing with that issue. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Yeah. I'd like to make a motion to continue it for a couple of weeks. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I'll second that. COHMISSIONER NORRIS: We have a motion on the floor. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I have a motion on the floor. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: I'm sorry. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Is there a second on my motion? Seeing none, it dies for a lack of a second. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: I make a motion that we continue this item and ask staff to make a presentation to us along the lines of what we will get in the future as we see these kinds of alternative impact fee calculations. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I'll second that. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Mr. Norris. COHMISSIONER NORRIS: Well, I was just -- I didn't -- actually, I wanted to vote on the thing today. I don't care to continue it. I just happen not to agree with the conclusions reached by their study, and I was going to make a motion to deny it, but we -- if the -- COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: You'll have to save that for two weeks. COHMISSIONER NORRIS: I'll have to save that for two weeks it looks like. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Mr. Weigel, my question will be in two weeks as we hear this item, is what is available to us in the way of options if we disagree with what staff performed in their individual road impact fee and can we do so based on information presented at that time, can we actually increase the fee and cause Sports Authority to pay additional road impacts? I don't expect a curbside answer now, but I'll ask that answer then because I'm afraid I know the answer or what I fear is the answer is no, but I need to know that from you, and I think it will be pertinent at that time. MR. WEIGEL: Right. I'll get off the curb, and if I can provide all of you that response even before two weeks so you have it going into the hearing or meeting would be good. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Get out on the road with the rest of us. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: That would be helpful. We have a motion and a second. Further discussion on the motion? Seeing none, all those in favor, signify by saying aye. Opposed? COHMISSIONER NORRIS: Aye. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Motion carries four-one. Item #8C1 INCREASE OCCUPATIONAL LICENSE FEES FOR LANDSCAPE MAINTENANCE - APPROVED *** Next item is public services, formerly Item 16(C)(4). This is an authorization to increase occupational license for landscape maintenance. Good morning. MR. BLANTON: Good morning, commissioners. Dennis Blanton, department head for agriculture. The objective of this effort this morning is to develop a funding source for the county's horticultural agent position. What we did was work with the landscape maintenance industry, specifically the Landscape Maintenance Association and the Royal Palm Chapter of the Florida Nursery Groves Association to come up with a method to fund the position. The organizations supported increasing occupational license fees by up to $20 per year. In order to assess the feel of the industry itself, we sent out information to all 924 licensees asking them to give us feedback and vote their concern as well as attend an informational meeting. You have before you the results of that. We received 54 ballots, of which 35 were in favor and 19 were opposed. The associations would like to see the commission give them the opportunity to increase their occupational license fees and feel they have the support of the industry in this matter. COHMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Motion to approve the item. COHMISSIONER BERRY: I'll second it. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Questions? COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Yeah. Is 35 in favor out of 924 really representative? I just -- you know, we've been going along and trying to find a way -- not the board, but you-all have been trying to find a way to fund this horticultural agent, and we had made a conscious decision during the budget process not to do that in some sort of taxing way, and we had said perhaps the industry can choose to do something itself, but 35 people out of 924 just -- there seems like there has to be a better way than that. I mean, that's -- I don't know what that percent is but '- MS. BLANTON: We discussed that at the meeting. The ballots went out in advance of the meeting, and we also asked people to attend, and 15 businesses did, and we had the same concern you expressed. One of the items of discussion was that perhaps, for the $20, people felt it was not important to attend a night meeting, that it didn't matter to them either way. Of course, those that did want to were invited to fax it back or mail it back, and as you point out, quite a few decided not to respond at all. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Unfortunately, the world is run by those who show up, and we spent over $300 in postage sending out to 924 businesses, and we -- MS. BLANTON: No, sir, actually, they did pay the postage. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: They paid it, okay. Well, whoever paid it is not happy because only 54 were returned. MS. BLANTON: True, true. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: So -- I under -- COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I mean, that's 3 percent of all of them are in favor. It's not representative. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Well, we have the president elected that way, too. COHMISSIONER NORRIS: When they take a national poll, though, of 250 million people, they only have three or 4,000 responses. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: And there's a scientific way in which to do that. You don't simply mail it out -- I mean, frankly, if there's a group or a couple of groups who organized this effort, obviously, they are going to respond, and I mean, you can stack the deck if you're only going to have this many responding -- it's not -- if you do a direct mail piece, 3 or 4 percent is what you're going to get back on almost anything, and so -- I mean, what better way to have your small group go ahead and vote. It's just -- COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Mr. Chairman. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: If we can find a more representative way to do this with the industry, I don't have any opposition, but to have 3 percent of them say they are in favor of it and say, that's representative of the industry, I'm not comfortable with that. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Commissioner Hac'Kie. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: I'm glad to hear that there is any support among the industry to tax themselves for a service that the county is providing to them, but more importantly, if this is a service that benefits that organization, it goes right along the lines with what the philosophy of the board has been, and that is, let the users pay, and this is a horticultural agent. It is a resource to these companies. If we are going to provide it, it is the kind of service they should pay for, whether it's particularly popular among them '- I'm surprised that it wasn't a vote, no, we don't want to pay for it; we want it for free. So, you know, I think it's exactly along the lines of users should pay. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I think during the budget process, though, we were not going to provide it for free, and that was why we had said they need to raise the money themselves, and I'm just suggesting that they need to -- if we are going to go ahead and pass, essentially, another tax on them, they ought to be able to participate in that in a more active manner. I just don't -- CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I differ with you in looking at it as not a tax but a fee. There's a service being provided to that industry. That industry has chosen, whether by lack of response, by lack of participation, not to become a part of that process. When you -- if we sent a notice out to every taxpayer in the county and said, do you mind if your tax bill goes up ten bucks, I bet we'd get more than 3 percent because they're sensitive to property taxes. This is a fee that is -- as we decided, is only -- that industry is served by it. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I bet when they start paying it, we'll hear from 3 percent or more of them. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: And it can be repealed and the position can be eliminated. COHMISSIONER BERRY: I was just going to suggest that -- let's go ahead and try this for a year, because you do have this response in front of us. Let's try it for a year, and if next year when we get into the budget cycle, prior to that time, please run some kind of a survey or get some kind of feedback so we have an idea about where we're at on this, and if we choose -- at that point in time, if there is no support for this, then we'll have to take another look at it, but I know I received a letter in favor, supporting this particular thing, so I'm willing to go along with it for this year, but let's get some better facts next year. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I agree with Commissioner Berry. There's a motion and a second on the floor. Would the motion maker like to include Commissioner Berry's request for survey information before next budget year? COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Sure. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. We have a speaker, Mr. McNees? MR. McNEES: Yes, sir, you have one, Ron Grant. MR. GRANT: Good morning, commissioners. I'm Ron Grant, president of the LMA, Lawn Maintenance Association in Florida. We, as an organization, were also disappointed with the results of the poll. However, verbally, and I'm in contact with a lot of our industry, there is a general feel that the need of the agent is essential and critical to our industry on two fronts; one is for education. There's very little education available to our work force. The ag. agent supplies that, especially on pesticides, limiting license, pruning techniques. They do a great job of putting on classes for the Hispanic work force, putting on classes in Spanish, which are just not available through any other venue to us. What we are looking for and what you've approved is avenue to pay for the overall field, despite our response to the ballot of all the industry, as we need this agent. It's invaluable to us in many fronts. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Could you commit to Ms. Blanton to assist in getting a better response for next year so we have a better industry indicator than what was presented this year? MR. GRANT: Absolutely. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Thank you very much. MR. GRANT: Yes, we will do that. Thank you. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Thank you, sir. With that, we have no more speakers. A motion and a second on the floor. Further discussion on the motion? Seeing none, all those in favor, signify by saying aye. COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: Aye. COMHISSIONER NORRIS: Aye. COMHISSIONER BERRY: Aye. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Aye. Opposed? COMHISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Aye. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Motion carries four-one. Thank you, Ms. Blanton. With that, we are to 10:30. Let's take a five minute break and return. (Small break was held). CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: If I could have your attention, we are going to reconvene the Board of County Commissioners' meeting for October 21st. Ladies and gentlemen, if I could ask for your assistance in curtailing your conversation, we will get back on track on the agenda today. We left off -- excuse me, folks, if I could ask your conversations to come to a halt, please. Thank you very much. Item #9A REVISED DRAFT MEMEORANDUM OF UNDERSTANDING-ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT (EIS) SOUTHWEST FLORIDA, BETWEEN THE ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS, COLLIER COUNTY AND LEE COUNTY - CONTINUED TO OCTOBER 28, 1997 *** Back on the agenda, we're to Item 9(A) under county attorney's report. This is a board consideration for approval of a revised draft HOU for the environmental impact statement for Southwest Florida being proposed by the Army Corps of Engineers, Collier County and Lee County, and we do have Mr. John Hall, the -- one of the chiefs of the regulatory side of the Army Corps of Engineers here, and I'm sure any specific questions, John will target you and ask for your assistance. I'd like to bring the balance of the board and those members of the audience and those watching today up to speed on this. We have had discussion after discussion with both the Army Corps of Engineers, Lee County and anyone else who has really come to the table on that issue about the EIS, and you'll notice the "P" has been dropped. It is not a programmatic environmental impact statement. It is just termed an environmental impact statement, and that is, again, to be consistent with federal authority with what is being proposed. I can tell you honestly that we have had a positive and open dialogue with the Corps of Engineers. With the understanding that this board and many people who are familiar with this item has, that the Corps has jurisdiction to perform this type of study, their efforts, in my opinion, have been toward collaboration, not toward exclusion, and I think as a response, there are two things I'm going to ask the board to do today. I believe the memorandum of understanding that we have worked on with the assistance of the Chamber/EDC coalition -- I say assistance, but in essence, they have done a lot of leg work. Susan and the members of that group deserve a lot of credit. The Chamber of Southwest Florida has been very involved and very instrumental, and I think credit is due there. What we have before us, I think, is about as far as we're going to get at a preliminary stage in looking at an environmental impact statement and what it may or may not mean to Southwest Florida. The details, such as the scoping of the process and so forth, the reason they are not in there as far as the defined scope is because that's an element of the study, one of the first elements of the study, and they've made it very clear to me from the Corps side that identifying the scope before beginning -- you know, at this point, there just isn't the information. They have to begin efforts to do that, and it will be a two month process. So, the scope is generally defined in there, but will be refined in the first two months. My feeling is, through all of the conversations we've gone through, is twofold. First is, as I just mentioned, I think what we have before us is nearly as good as we are going to get with trying to make sure that the interests, both environmental and private property rights are protected and recognized in the partnership between the Corps of Engineers, Lee and Collier County, and I think that was one of our primary goals, was to make sure that this type of study did not hold up unnecessarily property owners from seeking the necessary permits they need in addition to protecting and recognizing the environmental and economic impacts of what's being proposed. I believe the HOU outlines those and says that those are, in fact, priority considerations. The second thing is that the -- we kind of -- Collier County kind of took the lead with the assistance of the Chamber/EDC coalition in getting the ball rolling by putting everyone at the table, and, again, I thank A1 Reynolds and Susan and everyone for your assistance there. It has kind of turned to Lee County a little bit for some of the details. They heard this item last week and have fired off some very specific questions that could affect the language of the document in front of us today. It is important to me that we and Lee County, when we consider for approval, are considering the same document. They will be hearing theirs next Tuesday. So, I'm going to -- and I know, John, you made some -- John made some extra effort to be here today at my request, and I appreciate that. What I would like to do today is to have a discussion on the MOU as the board feels appropriate and members of the public feel appropriate in the form of really looking at the elements of the MOU, asking questions as to the particulars of that so that if we have any additional concerns that are not represented, that can be addressed for next week. The reason I would like to see this come back next week for action is, again, because I think it's important that Lee and Collier look at the same document for approval. I'm comfortable with the document in front of us, but I don't want to get ahead of Lee County on this one. We have worked together so far. Seven days is not a time killer, but I really think it is important that we, as a board, make a decision in the very near future as to whether or not we are going to sit at the table and be a partner and a principal in this study to help guide it and direct it for Collier County's best interest. Commissioner Mac'Kie. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Just a process question. You know my position is going to be yes, yes, yes, let's do it, but -- but my -- I didn't understand, if we postpone this for a week, then next Tuesday, both we and the Lee County Commission will, on a Tuesday, vote on an agreement. How will we know that we are accomplishing anything by postponing it for a week? CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: We don't, because we don't have the answers to some of the questions that Lee County has posed, and they are specific questions that could affect the language. What I'm trying not to do is have two elongated hearings on the details of the document. We can certainly do that. We can adopt the HOU in front of us today and send that message to Lee County, but this has been such a collaborative effort with John Albion and the Lee County Commission. I believe whatever happens up there, they're going to have a split vote. Whether it's for or against, I think it's going to go split. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: So, what will happen in the next seven days, we'll have more details in writing? CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Correct. The actual agreement before us may change, and I need to know those changes, so -- I -- actually, I came in this morning, I arrived at the office this morning expecting for us to act on this HOU today, and I was hoping that would be the case, but understanding what Lee County has requested, and maybe John can give us some more information on the nature of that request and, you know, and so forth, maybe the speakers can do that also. I'm not sure who's registered to speak on this, but I would just -- I would hate for us to adopt it this week and then have -- and Lee County adopt something different next week and then we're back into somewhat of a negotiation phase. I think that would be some waste of effort there. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Yeah, let's don't close off the possibility that we may get enough information today to make a decision. I mean, yeah. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: That may be the case. I think it's very clear that I'm supportive of us being a principal in this agreement. I am convinced that our best effort to represent our residents is from within the deliberations, discussions and decisions and not from without, and I think to take any other position would be detrimental. Commissioner Constantine. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I think if we're going to -- if new details will come during the week, we probably want to take a look at those and be prepared, but -- and, frankly, I need to say, and I think the board expressed this when the issue first came up, is we're concerned with some suspicions, some worries along the way, but for us not to participate, I think would be -- COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Stupid. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: -- foolish, yeah. I mean, it's no different than this morning when the group had concerns about a particular thing and walked away, refused to go to the table and talk about it. So, I think the direction we'll head will probably be to participate, but if there are details that will come out this coming week and we haven't heard them yet, I want to be sure and hear those before I give any definitive answer. That's all. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I may have -- it would probably be -- and I'll wait for that after the registered speakers to request this, but I came -- I would anticipate asking for an agreement, a consensus agreement on the document before us today pending any changes offered by Lee County. That would be what I would like to do today because, again, I have to say that the folks from the Corps of Engineers have really worked in good faith effort on this. You know, don't worry, John, I'm still a skeptic, but they have worked very hard with us, and I think we need to show good faith on our part in trying to be a fair member of that team, and that's what I'm trying to accomplish. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: That sounds like a great way to go. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: With that, let's go ahead and -- Mr. Hall, if I could ask for you to possibly address the commission first on what happened at Lee County, and if you have received the questions from Lee County, if you think they will have a material effect on the document, I think that's important to understand a little bit. MR. HALL: Okay, certainly. My name is John Hall. For the record, I'm chief of the Corps of Engineers, Jacksonville District regulatory division. The -- we have not received anything now in the way of additional questions or requests for modification language from Lee County. The one issue that became very clear to me as a result of their public hearing was a concern about the relationship between the study and their proposed airport changes or expansion to the airport. We -- we did meet yesterday with the -- with Mr. Ball, the manager of the airport or -- what -- I don't know exactly what his title is, to discuss what their plans are. Based on what I heard in that meeting, I do not -- I do not share the concerns -- I do not think I share the concerns that some of the Lee County commissioners had about this study causing the loss of FAA grant money to the airport. That's the only -- but we will be meeting, I think, the 27th up in Jacksonville with representatives from the airport to discuss in more detail their plans and actually see drawings and things like that. So, that's the only issue that so far has actually come to our attention, and we are trying to accommodate that issue. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: What I would like to see is a manner of process, and we discussed this a little bit last week, is if the board is not comfortable taking action, finaling on this document today, to schedule it for next week to have and request either sign on or get off next Tuesday so you, at least, know where we are and where we sit and what our involvement will or will not be in this study, and that's more or less what you've requested of me, and I think it's more than fair. I just want to ask that if -- again, my basis is I want to have the same document in front of me Lee County does, and if they have reservations or affects -- or changes to the document, I want to make sure we are dealing with the same page, and I hope that doesn't cause a problem. MR. HALL: Not at all, no. I mean, we -- we -- I certainly would agree with you, and I think Karl Miller would too, that we need to have the same thing, that we are all -- that we are all working from. I will tell you that just from my personal perspective, I -- I cannot make it down here next Tuesday because I have some other commitments, but it does not mean that my absence means that we are not interested. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Well, I arm twisted you real hard. I know you made some changes to your schedule to accommodate today, and I wanted the board to have the opportunity to address you today on specific questions or concerns relative to the Corps operation and manner in which you anticipate the study being done, which we have talked about at length, but there may be some additional questions on. Before going to speakers on this item, can I ask if the board has any questions specifically of Mr. Hall? Commissioner Mac'Kie. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Just one, and it may be the same question again, but I wanted to be sure I understood the answer. As far as you know so far, the only communication with Lee County that may result or that could result in a change to the HOU relates to FAA funding; is that the Lee County issue that you're aware of at this point? MR. HALL: Yeah, that's the only thing that we've clearly heard so far. There were concerns that a couple of the county commissioners had last week, but they simply have not been -- have not been crystallized and presented to us. We've worked on the one that we heard clearly a concern about. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: I guess -- CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: You're having a meeting Monday. You're having -- you said the 27th? MR. HALL: Yes, yes. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: I guess what I, you know, would hope is that we could let our community know at least today whether or not we are going to participate and then make it subject to, as you said, Commissioner Hancock, if there are changes, and of course, we'll review those later. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: If we can refine it or define it to that narrow scope, I would agree with that -- COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Right. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: -- and I think the speakers will help let us know whether that's possible today or not. Commissioner Constantine. COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I just have some questions. The executive summary we have runs through a number of the items, item by item, and I wanted to -- I circled maybe a half a dozen of these that I just want to be careful of. The very first one, (A), the Corps will participate with EIS with the cooperation of Collier and Lee County Boards. The three parties are principals, but the provision has removed the signature status of the cooperating agencies, and I just wanted to understand how we define cooperating then, because it appears there's no authority but you can come and discuss is how that appears to read to me. MR. HALL: Well, the -- I'm perhaps not the best one to describe in any detail cooperating agencies. That is a -- that is a phrase that comes out of the Council on Environmental Quality national environmental policy regulations, and it is -- it is -- my impression is that it is the intent of -- of being cooperating agencies to -- to -- to encourage full participation in the process, and so that is normally the phrase we use when we are preparing an environmental impact statement of any kind. I think the distinction that we've made in this particular document is that we are trying to recognize the county -- the two counties' unique role as the governing bodies of the counties by calling them something else, which is the principals along with the -- along with the Corps to recognize the -- the extra status or whatever you -- would be the right word of the county commissions themselves and the conduct of the counties' business. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Let me see if I can put it in practical terms. The -- as principals, the Army Corps, Lee County and Collier County agree on the make-up in membership of any standing committees. A cooperating agency does not automatically put them in a -- in one of those committee positions. That decision rests with the three principals. So, in essence, because of the public process itself, anyone can be a CA or participating organization by the public nature of it anyway, but there may be some that are bringing actual funding to the table, the South Florida Water Management District or Fish and Game, and I think those would be designated as CAs. That's my understanding, John, right? MR. HALL: That's -- yes, I think so. Yeah. I mean -- again, I don't want to -- I think we've made some -- the important thing is to ensure a public process, and that's -- but what we are trying to make are some fine distinctions here that don't really exist under the NEPA regulations now. COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Commissioner Hancock referenced this earlier, but you've had the benefit of a full explanation on it, and I'm just hoping we can, too, that Item D where it talks about the scope being generally referenced and that the final nature and extent of those issues is yet to be defined, and just explain to me that process and why we can't have a little clearer picture on that now. MR. HALL: The -- excuse me. The -- the EIS development process requires that the starting point be this -- this thing called a scoping process, and the intent of the scoping process is to have the federal government, the agency that's preparing the EIS, go into this EIS preparation process without any preconceived ideas of either geographic scope or issues that should be covered in the environmental impact statement. So -- so, from a practical perspective when we go through this process, we need to follow those requirements that are established in the Council on Environmental Quality regulations. That being said, at least from my perspective, we could -- we could say, okay, well, we want to have this just cover one watershed or two watersheds or three watersheds and then -- in some ways, that would make me more comfortable just as it would make you more comfortable because it better defines what kind of resources I'm going to have to bring to bear because we've committed to pay for this, but -- but -- but it's hard to do that, because we really need the public input, and so what we've done in the document is just say, in general, it appears to us based on the information we have now that this may be the geographic scope of the area and -- but we really need the scoping process to finalize that. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Let me ask kind of a simple question, I guess, and maybe it's just me, but how do we determine a necessity of an EIS if we don't have any predetermined conception of what we are looking to do? I assume there's got to be something that triggered this thought to start with. MR. HALL: Yes, there is, and I think we have presented some of that before. I think going back into the history a little bit, we, five years ago or so, were processing a series of permit applications on which we had reoccurring -- in the process, we had reoccurring issues, okay. Those were reoccurring issues really sort of came to a head with our review of the Gulf Coast University permit application; same issues, very, very difficult to deal with on a project specific basis. We saw coming in our direction a number of other applications, and we've talked about them before. Host of them, honestly, at least at this time, are in Lee County, but expansion of the airport, which is -- which is, obviously, a point of contention now, the University Village, the water management district's proposal that they are working through this focus group to come up with a solution for flooding problems in the Imperial River basin which does extend down into Collier County, and then just some specific developments that we actually have applications for now suggested to us that it simply would be better to try to look at these problems in a holistic way and try to solve them once and for all, not solve a little piece here and then a little piece there and little piece there, which, selfishly from my perspective, takes a lot more of my staff time, and there are already complaints that we can't do our job fast enough, so why -- why walk into something that we know is going to take more time. I mean, there are all of these -- there seems to be an incredible amount of -- of apprehension, misinformation. There's no way that I can prove, except if we agree to do this and we do it, to prove that, in fact, what we are proposing in the final analysis is better government rather than worse government. I mean, the sad fact of the matter is that there may be a lot of people who don't -- who don't think the federal government has any business in doing these kinds of things. The sad thing to me about that is that I -- I'm not a proponent of big federal government either but the simple -- CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Excuse me, Mr. Hall, Mr. Hall. MR. HALL: Yes. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Mr. Agoston and everyone else here in the front, I ask that you give Mr. Hall the courtesy afforded every other speaker, including yourself, in this forum, not to comment during his remarks. MR. AGOSTON: Well taken, sir. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Thank you. Mr. Hall. MR. HALL: And I'm sort of -- may I'm belaboring this, but -- but, I mean, we have no way of avoiding our responsibilities under the laws we've talked about before; the Clean Water Act, the Endangered Species Act and NEPA. I mean, they're federal laws that, whether anybody likes it or not, have been on the books for a long time, and we have to figure out some way of discharging our responsibilities under those laws, and what we're trying to do is come up with a more responsible way than we have used in the past, and it's from my perspective -- it's as simple as that. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: No, I understand, and I understand the way the federal law is written. If you have to enter into this without any scope and make that the first step, that's fine. I think probably the concern that you referenced there is -- under one of these, you say you cannot pre-commit to any scope limitation, and I think that just -- when it's wide open to anything, that makes people, including me, makes people nervous. A couple of other questions, page or still same page, Item I, it references EIS will be funded by the Corps and us, if we so elect, but there's no obligation to the county to fund the EIS. My question is, what will the obligation be to fund any results or findings? Is there a potential to be some fiscal impact on the other end? MR. HALL: In terms of the county's possible fiscal requirements? COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Yeah, not as far as the EIS itself but the findings of the EIS and if those are, indeed, implemented or -- and I get on -- a different question on here will have to do with DCA, but -- MR. HALL: As best I can determine, none whatsoever. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: And as best I can determine, none whatsoever. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: And I think that is a very, very important point. That has been a point that has scared a lot of folks. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: The one thing that we tried to do, and you'll see it in several points in here, is to recognize the study without allowing it to tie the hands of this board, whether it be a comp. plan amendment or a financial application, the fiscal application later, and the Corps has been cooperative in that. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: You described for me a little bit about the principals' definition of that and the participation level. Item N on the next page talks about the board provides input but the Corps determines the scope and geographic boundary based upon comment and scoping process. What is the limitation there as far as the input of the board? If Lee County and Collier County both choose to participate and both express some genuine concern with the direction the scope heads straight out of the blocks, what impact does that have realistically? MR. HALL: First, I would say that -- that the -- there are two things that we, the Corps of Engineers, hope to get out of this study. One is an environmental impact statement that -- that will -- will satisfy both the process we have to follow and the intent of NEPA, and the second one is something that I hope for, again, if for no other reason than selfish reason, of some kind of a general permit that reduces my workload burden in the area in terms of detailed review. Saying that, we'll be very, very receptive to the two counties' concern on the scope of the study, but in the final analysis, like any NEPA document, this NEPA document is the Corps' document, and one of the things that we have to be very, very careful about is -- is not letting any party or any side influence the document, either the direction or the information, in such a way that the document will end up in, sadly in the Corps' view, I guess, will end up having -- having a bias. So, that's all we are really trying to do. I mean, we are recognizing that -- that -- that -- that -- you know, that zoning and county land use planning and all of those things are not our responsibility. They are your responsibilities, and so from that perspective, we feel it is -- it is most important that we listen and that we participate with you very, very closely. I mean -- again, maybe I'm sort of dancing around the thing, but I -- I guess if -- we will listen very carefully, and we have built in here, I think, a safety valve that if for whatever reason either county feels that this thing is going off in some direction that they -- that they really don't like, you can bow out, and I hope that doesn't happen, and I will work as hard as I can to make sure it doesn't, but at the same time, we've got to be -- we've got to be fair to the process, I think. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Two more questions, and then I'll be completed. Item Q talks about -- and I like what this says. I just need someone to explain it to me with more clarity, I guess, and that is that change from previous drafts, DCA makes no representation as to involvement in implementation of county comp. plan provisions. The county provision that the DCA cannot require the county to adopt the provision thus has been deleted. I think I like what that says. I just need you to explain it to me in a little more clear language, I guess. MR. HALL: Okay. Well, let's see if I can. Really, Lloyd Pike (phonetic) is more -- more -- our chief counsel is more facile with understandings of language than I am, but when we started this process, one of the options was that we actually incorporated into the document at the recommendation of a couple of county commissioners was that there actually be a requirement that whatever -- whatever suggested changes to the county comp. plans came out of this process be adopted by the county -- by the counties and incorporated, and so we were having discussions -- in the revisions of the county comp. plan -- CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Just so you know, I wasn't one of those. MR. HALL: No, I'm not -- our records would indicate -- I mean, I don't remember who they were either, but -- CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: That's okay. MR. HALL: -- and so we were talking with the Department of Community Affairs at the time about working with us and with the counties, that if that was an eventuality that came out of this, that -- that DCA would be cooperative in trying to expedite that process. COMHISSIONER CONSTANTINE: That whole section has been deleted? MR. HALL: And that whole section has been deleted. So, as far as the Corps is concerned, and I think DCA is concerned, the study will reach conclusions and, perhaps, make recommendations. It's really up to the county to decide whether or not they want to go to DCA with amendments to their comp. plan. It's not -- it's not going to be dictated by the study. COMHISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Right. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: And DCA has written a letter in support of that specific concept which was kind of like DCA coming to the support side of the independent or individual comp. plans, which is something we haven't seen in my three years on the board. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Final question is, can you explain to me a little bit what is the airport issue that is the concern in Lee? Forty percent of the traffic that comes in and out of there is Collier County traffic. We share in their foreign trade zone. It's very important to us -- I serve on the airport special management committee, and we want to, hopefully, be able to move ahead with that expansion as it's a cog in the economic wheel here for Southwest Florida. MR. HALL: As I understand it now, the airport has received money, both from the FAA and from the airline industries and maybe some other sources, too, I don't know, to go ahead with planning for some taxiway expansion, some -- and I don't understand -- addition of some terminals to bring the total number of, I called them last night slips for airplanes, and that's just because I know more about boats than -- up to a total of 27, I think, and then I think they want to put in a new roadway, and -- and -- and I think the concern of Lee County is that -- is that if -- if EIS captures the airport through the scoping process, that they may lose that federal participation funding and that their plans for planning and designing these additional facilities will go up in smoke because they don't have the money, and I don't think it's the intent of the -- at least, it's not my intent to -- to -- to in any way hinder the ability of the airport to go ahead with the planning process. So, you know, I'm not sure it's an issue, but -- but -- we have a dialogue established, and we will continue that dialogue in a meeting on the 27th. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Hopefully, it's not an issue, and those have become what I think, if it becomes an issue, Collier may be equally concerned because that's a huge piece in our economic development puzzle, and long term economic benefits of that airport and its expansion are very important to the whole Southwest Florida community. It sounds like you're already addressing those, and hopefully, we can get by without that being a concern, but we'd hate to have, and I'm sure Lee says it better than we do, but we'd hate to have -- CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: No. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: -- one federal agency, with no ill intent, gum up the works with another federal agency. So, I appreciate your effort on that, and thank you for answering my questions. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I'd like to point out in your package, Item K, Page 5, Paragraph 1.16. This is something that's been very important to me. It reads as follows: a major goal of the EIS is to provide criteria for the development of a general permit, criterion for determining appropriate levels of mitigation and identification of areas of particularly sensitive environmental value to be targeted for preservation or restoration. The reason this is important to me is this kind of goes to the heart of what the study is to do. Right now, every single application that goes through the Corps permit, the Corps of Engineers, they bring their full resources to bear on that particular project as much as they can. What we are talking about this study doing -- we've talked about streamlining in other areas and so forth -- is that in the scope, however that may be defined, there are going to be areas in which the Corps will recognize as not particularly sensitive to the development pressures that exist. Those areas will be subject, hopefully, to what is called a general permit, which means, in essence, these areas, here are the rules, everybody knows them, go on in, and this is how we are going to apply them, which is really the one thing the development community has been looking for, is just give us a consistent set of rules, and that's been difficult to do project to project to project because the circumstances change. This has the potential of actually benefiting those properties and those property owners who sit in the area of general permit. What it causes is the areas that are not identified in that which are of particularly sensitive environmental value, the Corps would have brought resources to bear on anyway. That doesn't change, but it does help those that are outside of that loop or outside of that area to know the rules better, and those that are inside, I think this is the start of identifying the rules, recognizing the importance of mitigation, clearing of exotics and other things to enhance existing systems and protect existing systems. So, I think that statement right there really strikes the balance of what I hope this EIS would achieve, is a consistent set of rules that clearly defines the role and the participation of the Corps of Engineers in the permitting process for landowners, and I think that's -- I'm glad to see that in there, and I wouldn't have supported it without it, and I do appreciate it. Further questions for Mr. Hall? Seeing none, John, if there are any additional questions, if I can ask you to hang around. Why don't we go to speakers. Mr. McNees, how many speakers do we have on this item? MR. WEIGEL: You have eight. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: We have eight, okay. The scope today really is -- the board is going to look at this item in all likelihood next week, but if you could try and contain your comments to the specifics of the document in front of us or the generality of whether we should participate or not, I think those are really the two areas that we are to consider today. Mr. McNees, let's call the speakers. MR. McNEES: I'll call two speakers at a time, and if the second would come forward, we'll move things along a little more quickly. The first will be Marilyn Bell followed by Brad Cornell. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Marilyn, obviously, hoping to be later in the lineup. MS. BELL: Yeah, you're right. I'm Marilyn Bell from Naples. I'm concerned that the Corps may be in violation of their oath to uphold the constitution. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Excuse me, Marilyn, could you pull that microphone down a little bit so everyone can hear you? There you go. MS. BELL: Okay. What is their grant of authority? I would like the specific citation in the USC or CFR that gives them jurisdiction to be involved in this specific project. That's number one. While EPA sets standards for the country, it is up to the local and state governments to enforce those standards. Enforcement is entirely voluntary. There is absolutely no legal obligation to enforce -- enforce EPA regulations. Since the passage of the Clean Air Act, the Supreme Court has issued a series of rulings stating definitely that federal mandates are currently unconstitutional. Such commands are fundamentally incompatible with our constitutional system of dual sovereignty. I would also like to know how many lawsuits by states and local governments and individuals have been filed against the Corps? It is my understanding that the Corps only comes into an area by request. I would like to know who asked the Corps here. It is also my understanding that the Corps must get the cooperation of the local government. Without it, that's it. The federal government provides a series of carrots to encourage states and localities to participate in and enforce federal programs. For example, the Clean Air Act specifies that states which do not participate in the EPA programs can lose up to 30 percent of their federal highway money, resulting in the states and localities continuing to kowtow to the federal government. However, in the final analysis, enforcing these federal regulations usually costs a lot more than any federal grant that may be received. Thank you. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Thank you, Ms. Bell. MR. McNEES: Mr. Cornell followed by Nancy Payton. MR. CORNELL: Good morning. I'm Brad Cornell for the record. I'm here as president of Collier County Audubon Society, and I do have a letter which I'll submit to the record, but I won't read it in the interest of time. I'm glad to hear that there are some positive feelings on the board right now. I don't really have a count yet, but I would like to just provide one more input here. Does anybody want to raise their hands? No. The problem that we are dealing with is shortsighted project by project permitting and attempts at solutions, and the principle that makes PUD zoning advantageous in urban areas is the comprehensive planning and problem solving opportunities that it affords us. Why don't we carry that principle to its logical conclusion in the comprehensive examination of all our building related problems and issues, county- and region-wide in an area so rich in natural resources that must include -- that this must include something like this present EIS, which we are considering. Wisdom and foresight also point to the consideration of all cumulative impacts of our community building so that Collier County may become its best environmentally, socially and economically. Ostensibly, that is the purpose of our Growth Management Plan, and to the extent we are not considering this big picture is the extent to which our plan fails. At a very minimum, the Collier County Audubon Society strongly urges you to sign on the Army Corps of Engineers' EIS process today. For our part, we offer our assistance today as a participating organization. Thank you very much. MR. McNEES: Ms. Payton followed by Whit Ward. MS. PAYTON: Good morning. Nancy Payton, Florida Wildlife Federation. The federation supports and has supported the EIS that's under discussion today. We are comfortable with the memorandum of understanding, and Commissioner Hancock, we agree that Item K is a very important item, and we look forward to the information that's generated by that study and feel that it will be invaluable to us as we look at development patterns in our ag. and rural areas in Collier County. Also, we will be a participating organization, have expressed interest and will again in signing on, and we look forward to seeing you at the table to discuss the EIS and the implications for our community. Thank you. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Thank you, Ms. Payton. MR. McNEES: Mr. Ward and followed by Ty Agoston. MR. WARD: Good morning, commissioners. My name is Whit Ward. I represent the Collier Building Industry Association. COMHISSIONER CONSTANTINE: And you've got the best looking necktie here today. MR. WARD: Thank you. As a matter of fact, you can thank my wife for that -- COHHISSIONER HAC'KIE: Surprise. MR. WARD: -- as for most -- exactly, as for most of my clothes. It's no secret to you if I reiterate that the Building Industry Association is opposed to this study. We have -- first, we think that the local government is the best government. Our government includes all of Collier County, the county commission does. In addition to that, we have a regional planning council, and we have a water management district that covers the entire region. There's not anything, as far as we are concerned, that the Corps can add that we can't do ourselves, and we don't have to give our authority away to a federal agency. In effect, we think we have all the help that we need from the federal government. Now, having said that, I came here today to address this particular issue, and that is the memorandum of understanding. We have been participating in discussions with EDC, with the commissioners and with the Army Corps. We do believe that we will come out of this with some of our property rights eroded. We are the citizens. We live here. This is our land. This is our property, and this is our investment. We want to protect that. One of the things that I noticed that may be missing from this last draft of the HOU is that when we started, if you recall, there were three principals, that is the two county commissions and the Army Corps of Engineers, each of them had an equal vote. That seems to be removed from this last HOU, if I understand it correctly. There's no longer an equal vote, and so we've lost that. That is a great deal of concern to me. UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER: Here, here. MR. WARD: The cooperating agencies, if I understand this right, no longer need to participate in. If that is the case, the cooperating agencies, I would suppose, being the regional planning council and the water management district and those other regulatory agencies, if they no longer have to participate, then what is to say that they are going to buy into this and which regulations are going to be made easier for us to comply with. I can't believe that once this study is completed, our -- our developers or developments are no longer going to have to make application through the regional planning council or the water management district or any other agency that we are not already making application to, and so I have a concern that if -- if the agencies do not sign off, do not commit to this, it isn't going to make our life any easier in the end. We are only going to have more regulations to comply with. The cooperating agencies and the participating organizations -- and by the way, our association, I personally have asked to be a participating organization. We want to be involved in this every step of the way because we represent the building industry and the development industry, and we of all people, we're probably going to be affected as much as anyone. However, I am a little concerned that there's a provision where cooperating agencies and organizations may be requested to fund part of the study, and I'm a little concerned as to what that might buy you or what it might not buy you, and as a matter of fact, if I heard maybe Commissioner Hancock or Mr. Hall correctly, there seemed to be -- I picked up an indication, and I hope I was wrong, that if you contribute money, then you're going to have a higher position than if you're an organization -- COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: No, that's the Clinton administration. MR. WARD: Pardon? COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: That's the Clinton administration. MR. WARD: Yes, sir, and I hope I didn't hear that, but I would like -- I would like some specific reference not to buy your way in with money. The other thing, in Item Number 1.7, reference made to a GIS, a general information system for the county and maybe for the region. I think the counties looked at that. I know we looked at it. Development services looked at it. FoCuS has looked at it. If I recall, it costs estimates were that it would cost a million seven, two million dollars to develop a general information system. I'm concerned that there is going to be some money required there, and that makes me a little concerned, and then the only final statement that I would say to you is I would encourage you, as we, to go into this program with your thumb firmly planted on the ejection seat so that if it doesn't work out, we're out. Thank you. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Thank you, Mr. Ward. MR. McNEES: Mr. Agoston followed by Glen Dunavan. MR. AGOSTON: Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. My name is Ty Agoston. I'm from a lesser attractive northern Golden Gate Estates, and I'm speaking for TAG. COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I've been to your house, Ty. It's pretty attractive. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Why do you say that? I never understand that. MR. AGOSTON: You don't understand it? COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: The lesser attractive. MR. AGOSTON: There was a discussion here in allowing water and sewer entering into northern Golden Gate Estates, and the discussion centered around whether that would make northern Golden Gate Estates more or less attractive for development. Being that the decision made by you was not to allow -- you know, I have a Hungarian logic, but it's a logic nevertheless. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I get it now. Thanks. I got it. MR. AGOSTON: I'd like to state that we at TAG, which is Taxpayers Action Group, are against this study, and we are against this study on several grounds. First, the study was invited by a noncitizen of Collier County. If he has a standing in inviting the Army Corps of Engineers, I would like to invite them to go to New York City. There is quite a bit of problems up there that's environmentally endangered. As a matter of fact, the endangered species up there seems to be taxpayers. Regarding the study, I have some detailed problems with it as well. It appears that you, Mr. Hancock, was successful in removing any mention of sustainable Southwest Florida from the document. However, you were not successful in removing the basic intent of the document because the Army Corps of Engineers was directed by Mr. Child's in his executive order that special attention shall be given to coordination with the reconnaissance study being conducted by the Army Corps of Engineers. So, obviously, this is a dovetail plan into sustainable Florida. UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER: Here, here. MR. AGOSTON: There are a couple of issues within the draft of the revision, which, by the way, I don't see any substantial difference from the first draft to this one in it still deals with a holistic analysis, and while I have seen some explanation of what holistic means, in various documentation, I don't particularly appreciate and I don't think that the average citizen would appreciate it if they got a full explanation, but this process seems to go by stealth as I attended the planning session of a visioning process for Naples, and the gentleman who was making the presentation did not mention anything about sustainable Florida either, but when I asked him whether those steniments (phonetic) that they are planning to build along 41 was the infill portion of Sustainable Florida, he said, yes. So, apparently, we are walking into something that you or I may not want to be, primarily because if this were worked based on the sustainable Florida, there was no need to pay you guys. The environmental groups will manage to run the country. No need for commissions, congress and no need for votes because one of the elements of their proposal is not -- being that you don't know what you're doing or -- I'm not talking about you. I'm talking about probably me, and people like me, we don't know what we are doing. Consequently, we need somebody better than us to make decisions for us. Finally, I have this last issue on 1.1.8 where the study will give us a -- rules as well as solutions on areas, and it ends with the needs and welfare of the people. Well, I'm not quite sure whether they know what is best for Ty Agoston or for the rest of Collier County. Thank you very much. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Thank you, Ty. MR. McNEES: Glen Dunevan followed by David Guggenheim. MR. DUNAVAN: Chairman Hancock and board members, my name is Glen Dunevan. I am amazed that Chairman Hancock is comfortable with the document before them, especially in light of the county attorney's report on the MOU. As usual, of course, Mr. Hall answered leaving really no commitments, and especially, he could not, would not answer on what would happen if the two counties objected to an article that before -- as Chairman Hancock says, on the table. I'd like to read Page 5, Paragraph 2.2, the board provides input. The Corps determines EIS scope, geographical boundaries. Corps oversees the study and final document. Now, you notice that that says input. It don't -- it don't -- this does not say the county board votes on the study, just that they have input, and I believe from what Mr. Hall said or what he didn't say when Tim Constantine asked him what would happen if they objected to an article, he didn't answer that you would vote on it. The Corps would have the final decision. Going back to the county attorney's report, Page 1, 1.2 and 1.3, the Corps could not precommit to the scope of or the geographical area of the EIS. Obviously, I didn't read the whole thing, but that was the part I was interested in. Page 8 under Appendix A(1)(1), the Corps determines the scope of the study. It goes on and on like this. The Corps determines the scope of the study. The Corps determines this. The Corps determines that. The Corps determines everything. Paragraph 1.2 on Page 3, and Page 3, Paragraph 1.3, the Corps could not pre-commit to define the geographical area or scope of the study even though the county asked for both. Also, Page A-1.6, the EIS will use these studies and ongoing studies and not duplicate local and regional studies. This opens up the use of the governor's commission on sustainable South Florida, Agenda 21, 100 other studies that's already been done and 16 counties or whatever the geographical area may be. The county wanted to use the existing land use map and comprehensive plan. The Corps said they could not pre-commit that this would happen. In other words, the Corps don't commit to anything. They want your signature, and then they will decide what will happen with your authority and backing them up. The -- the county asked not to be required to abide by certain provisions of the EIS. This was deleted. Chairman Hancock has said the Corps is going to make this study with or without the county's signature so we should be at the table in the decisions. As you can see, by being at the table does not give you voting power or any special privileges. Signing the memorandum only agrees to let the Corps decide all the issues and leads credence to the concept of sustainabilityism. I like that word. It kind of goes along with socialism, communism, same thing. If you do not sign, the county may not have to abide by EIS or the memorandum of understanding, and I would doubt that they would go ahead with EIS as they would not have the consensus of the MOU that the MOU often speaks of. The Corps is over stepping their authority. For these and other reasons, you should not sign the referendum and send the Corps packing. Thank you. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Thank you, Mr. Dunavan. MR. McNEES: Mr. Guggenheim followed by Pat Clark. MR. GUGGENHEIM: Good morning, Mr. Chairman, commissioners. For the record, David Guggenheim, president and CEO of the Conservancy of Southwest Florida. I'd like to start by thanking you for your participation in a series of open and constructive dialogues with the Army Corps leading up to this process. I would also like to thank you for your kind words earlier this morning about the Conservancy and Twin Eagles, and I want to stress that it is with precisely that same spirit that we approach this environmental impact statement and hope to sit around the table with you, the Army Corps and others in a constructive process. You've no doubt heard as we have that in the end, it really doesn't matter if local counties participate because the Corps is going to do this anyway. I'm pleased to see that I think we all believe that this is nonsense. I mean, yes, the Corps will do it without us, but it does matter. It matters a lot whether we participate or not. I've discussed with many of you individually over the last year about how our efforts here in Southwest Florida to sustain a quality environment and a quality of life, those efforts are really undermined by a lack of cooperation, by what's happening locally and by state and federal efforts. I want to quote Colonel Terry Rice who did an Everglades report card which appeared in the Miami Herald in June and looking at Everglades restoration which includes the greater Everglades ECO system, it includes us here in Southwest Florida, he gave grades to various efforts, and the only failing grade, the worst grade of the whole bunch went to urban areas and our ability to, quote, bridge the gaps between local planning decisions about growth and environmental restoration. He points out that development is continuing to sprawl into natural areas from urban areas on both coasts and the disconnect between local land use decisions and resource management and permitting efforts of the state and federal agencies seriously threaten South Florida's environment. As I've stated before, the environmental impact statement before us is a sensible participatory approach. It will provide all of us with the information we need to make the right decisions about growth as we move forward. This is a really -- this is really a landmark process. Southwest Florida is very much in the national spotlight right now on this issue. People from around the country are waiting to see the outcome of this event, and we can make the decision not to participate and perpetuate a long-standing disconnected process which will, like Twin Eagles earlier today, end up in a lose-lose situation, or we can stand united as a model of how to do it right, to stand with cooperation and vision and sit down at the table, roll up our sleeves and get to work. On behalf of our 5,000 family members, and more than 600 volunteers, I respectfully encourage you to choose the latter approach, and I hope you can make that decision today. Thank you. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Thank you, Dr. Guggenheim. MR. McNEES: Pat Clark is your next speaker followed by Alan Reynolds. MS. CLARK: I'm Pat Clark, president of the Collier County League of Women Voters, and I would like to speak in favor of the Army Corps of Engineers' proposed environmental impact statement, and at this time, I would like to recognize the commissioners' participation in this effort to develop a process. A comprehensive examination of our region using existing information contained in studies and addressing deficiencies would provide a sound basis for future land use decisions, and we would like to express our sincere appreciation for your participation and -- with the Army Corps of Engineers, all the attention and time you've given to this. We encourage your continued participation. Thank you. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Thank you, Ms. Clark. MR. McNEES: Mr. Reynolds followed by Gil Erlichman. MR. REYNOLDS: Good morning. I have been involved in this process since early spring on behalf of the Chamber/EDC coalition, and as you know, from the outset, the coalition chose not to take a position for or against the study but rather to try to work collaboratively with the county commissions and the Corps in making sure that if a study is done, it meets certain criteria. The key ones that we identified is it had to be objective. It had to be balanced. It had to be clear in its purpose and based on facts, not opinions, that it be adequately funded to ensure its timely completion and useful results, that it respect the right of property owners and permit applicants, to have as one of its goals streamlining and not further complicating an already very difficult permitting process, and perhaps most importantly, that there was assurance that the local government and our elected officials retain the full autonomy to make local land use decisions and not aggregate that responsibility or delegate to any other agency. This MOU has gone a very significant way towards all of these points, probably as far as it can go under the regulatory requirements that exist with the Corps as they have already been described. The Corps has been kind enough to allow us to participate in these discussions, in some cases for hours and hours at a time. I can describe the process as being very cooperative, always looking toward a solution that was fair and reasonable, and I'd like to compliment the Corps of Engineers for having taken that approach and for this county commission for having been willing to invest their time, particularly Chairman Hancock's time, to continue that dialogue. It's also clear in the MOU that there are certain issues and certain things that cannot be substantively addressed until a scope and process occurs, and some of these are the questions that have existed from day one. What are the boundaries? What are the specific issues? What are the -- what information will be used, and what are the deficiencies, and how are we going to fill those deficiencies, and I think equally important, what is the role of the other environmental organizations and permitting organizations in this process, in particular, the South Florida Water Management District? These things cannot be defined until we go through a scoping process. I think that we have made great progress by taking the approach of sitting at the table, communicating. We have for the first time in my recent memory had an ongoing dialogue with Lee County on an issue that affected both counties. I think both commissions, I believe, are moving toward the same conclusion in this process, and that conclusion is that if a study is done, and we believe a study will be done, the quality of that study and the outcome of that study, although it cannot be predicted, will be enhanced by the participation of our local governments, and I still remain convinced of that fact, and I think that Chairman Hancock has already articulated the appropriate step to take. There are still some final answers to some specific questions that I understand Lee County is going to direct to the Corps. I think we're nearing this first stage of the process. I would encourage this county commission to remain involved in the process and to make sure that as this study goes forward, that we pay very close attention to what's going on, that we recognize that this is still the very first step in what will be a long and involved process and to be looking very carefully at what comes out of the scoping process, and make sure that it is still in the best interest of Collier County to participate. So, I would encourage you to take that approach, and I thank you for your time. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Thank you, Mr. Reynolds. MR. McNEES: Gil Erlichman, and your final public speaker will be A1 Perkins. MR. ERLICHMAN: Good morning, commissioners. For the record, my name is Gil Erlichman. I live in East Naples, and I am a voter and a taxpayer in Collier County. At certain times, I will be speaking for TAG, and at other times I will be speaking for myself, and I will note that in my remarks. Right now, I'm going to be speaking for TAG. I'd like to refresh the commissioners', refresh their memory. Back in July -- in fact, the resolution was given to the commissioners dated July 12th from the Taxpayers' Action Group of Collier County, and I'll just read the first sentence of the resolution. It says, be it resolved that the Taxpayers' Action Group opposes the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Colonel's Rice's programmatic environmental impact statement study, PEIS, appearing before the Collier County Board of Commissioners. Well, subsequently, as noted by Commissioner -- Chairman Hancock, the word programmatic has been taken out, but still the resolution opposing the county signing on with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers still stands. We oppose it. The previous -- one of the previous speakers, Mr. Whit Ward, stated their opposition of the Collier County Builders Association very, very explicitly and very understandably to me, and as speaking for TAG, if you people or rather you commissioners sign on with this program, you will be giving up your powers as commissioners to a governmental authority. We, as voters, will lose our representation as -- of you commissioners in Collier County, and it was stated before, one of the speakers, that heck, we won't need commissioners anymore. We are going to have our decisions made by the federal government. In this -- in the executive summary, the county attorney forgot to mention in his -- in his notes that when the Corps of Engineers published -- well, when any government agency publishes anything in the Federal Register, it becomes law. In effect, it becomes law, and in the Appendix A in the executive summary, A-6.4, and it says the Corps issues notice in the Federal Register and solicits written comments from the public, and this is after months -- this is months 15, 16 and 17 according to the schedule of the -- of this draft. Anyhow, so what happens. Published in the Federal Register. Further on, in Paragraph A-7.0, months 18, that's the last month, it says, counties initiate process for review of results. Well, what good is reviewing results when you can't do anything about it once it's published in the Federal Register. So, regardless of what comments might be made by the public or what the review of the results might be makes no difference. It's a complete. It's an accomplished fact. In the attorney's notes, county attorney's notes, Page 3, Note N -- Page 5, Paragraph 2.2, it says, the board provides input but, he's underlined that, the Corps determines EIS scope and geographic boundary based upon public comment and scoping process. Corps oversees the study process and final document. There it is. Your power is negated. Mr. Hall talked about holistic, referenced holistic. Now I think that term means central planning, and central planning means socialism. Thank you very much. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Gil, you realize the headlines tomorrow will be TAG and CBIA in lockstep. I'm just teasing you. MR. HcNEES: Final speaker is A1 Perkins. MR. PERKINS: Good morning, commissioners, ladies and gentlemen. People at home pay attention to what these people have said. They have covered all of it. The people who are opposed to this thing have laid it out in front of you, and they couldn't have done a better job. Needless to say, I am not going to take and reiterate any of it. The only thing that I want to touch base on is a few things that -- that I heard this morning that I don't like. Information to the public, they said they were going to provide you information over a period of this next week so you can take and decide next Tuesday. Well, when does the general public get this information so they can decide what to tell you to do because you work for them? Not a whole lot with -- okay, hindsight. Hindsight is 20/20. Foresight is whatever you want to make it. Now, this morning in earlier conversation here or earlier testimony, two organizations surfaced as being opposed to everything in this area except their own profit-making endeavors. They don't care who it is, what it is and they don't care who they hurt. Needless to say, I've been in opposition to them for a long time, and I'm still in opposition. The university, as far as permitting goes, people, that's so important it isn't funny. Our kids are idiots as it is, and we let them do it. We've done it. It's our fault. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Speak for yourself, A1. My kid is no idiot. COMMISSIONER NORRIS: Speak for your own kids, A1. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: My kids aren't idiots. MR. PERKINS: Okay. Let me try to tell you something. COMMISSIONER NORRIS: Speak for your own kids. MR. PERKINS: You put it on a personal basis here. I'm right here trying to protect -- CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I didn't put it on a personal basis, A1. I said speak for yourself, not everyone else in this room. MR. PERKINS: Okay. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: My kids are not idiots. MR. PERKINS: I'm trying to protect your kids, okay? COMMISSIONER NORRIS: My kids are fine. You leave them alone. MR. PERKINS: Okay. You touched on funding. You touched on FAA grants, okay. The airport, the expansion, in the Army Corps fact sheet, it says the second runway of South Florida Water -- South Florida International Airport; not a taxiing, a runway. This is for landing and taking off, okay, and all the facilities that go along with it. University Village, big thing, okay. It goes on to talk about waterways, but there's a word that jumps out at me, mitigation. That's extortion. Make no mistake, it is extortion, and going back to this, the Clean Water Act, endangered species, people, we are the endangered species. Governor's commission on Southwest Sustainable Florida, with that, to save our Everglades program, in 1986, the Corps of Engineers conducted a study just like they are talking about doing it now, again, a second thing, and as far as their effectiveness goes -- as far as the Wildlife Federation and the Audubon Society goes, needless to say, I wish they would take and get their act together because when it came down to Reverend Mallory and mitigation on a ten to one ratio for a homeless center, boy, I don't buy this at all. One man and a group of people are trying to do some good for this community, and all of a sudden we've got the federal government telling us no, you're doing it wrong. We can take and do it better for you, okay. One other thing too, you're talking about how effective and how good they are. Sunday, April the 20th, Miami Herald, they went -- and they want to restore the Everglades, so they took and forced the farmers out of the frog pond, I'm not aware if you people know it, 6,400 acres of old tomato fields. They turned around twice, and all of a sudden, here we've got Brazilian Pepper and Melaleuca. They didn't know what to do with it, so they went in there with bulldozers and they pushed up a pile of dirt and got rid of all this stuff and they piled it up. Five million cubic yards of dirt, and it will take 15 years to take and get rid of it, and it will cost -- dirt -- to load a half a million dump trucks, enough to pile 75 feet deep on 23 football fields, and we are no further ahead except all we've done is we've made a bigger mess than what was there. The farmers knew what they were doing. Obviously, our government doesn't and especially when it comes down to somebody -- the people from Jacksonville, Tallahassee and Washington ought to keep their noses out of Collier County's business. Thank you. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Mr. Weigel. MR. TARRANT: Could you afford me the courtesy of speaking? I'd appreciate it if you would do that. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Yeah, Mr. Tarrant, go ahead and come forward. Can someone -- is your wife here, Fred? CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Mr. HcNees, Mr. Tarrant will be our last speaker; is that correct? MR. HcNEES: Yes, sir. MR. TARRANT: Thank you, Chairman. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Good afternoon, Councilman Tarrant. MR. TARRANT: Thank you for the courtesy, and good morning, Mr. Chairman and commissioners. As -- I'm not certainly speaking for the Naples City Council because they did not ask me to come here and speak for them, but as an elected representative in Naples, I think that whatever happens, obviously, in the county has a direct impact on the City of Naples, so I appreciate this chance to speak for a moment. I hear both sides of the concerns here. The good people who are here that would like you to go ahead without delay and approve this memorandum of understanding and the good people who are here who have apprehension that they have expressed. All I wanted to do, commissioners, on behalf of the people that I represent in the City of Naples, is ask for a reasonable compromise. There surely, as Chairman Hancock said, is nothing wrong with sitting down with people around a table and discussing issues because that way you learn what's happening, and if you don't do that, you find yourself out in the cold not knowing what's happening, but the compromise that I would suggest I think would satisfy everyone, and that would be simply to request that the Corps of Engineers provide you, as county commissioners, with a legally binding letter giving you veto power over any decision that is reached during the discussions or in the process of these discussions so that you would know going into these meetings and discussions that you were truly representing all of the people of Collier County and that you're retaining the authority that was vested in you when you were elected as county commissioners. If you require and obtain a legally binding letter giving you veto powers, then I think you would be in very good shape. Without it, I would not touch this with a ten foot pole. Thank you very much. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Thank you, Councilman Tarrant, for taking the time to be here and address the board today. I have two questions -- well, a few questions, but let me ask them first of the county attorney, and if you need to defer to Mr. Hall on the first, that would be understood. When I spoke to the Taxpayers Action Group, I had a very, very worthwhile discussion, and one of the questions that came up is the implications of listing something in the Federal Register, and we've heard at least one speaker refer to that as once it's listed in the Federal Register, it becomes law. That's not my understanding, that without action of the congress, senate or presidential authority, that listing something in the Federal Register alone creates law, through inaction or in action. Mr. Weigel, either do you know the answer to that or Mr. Hall, can you give some assurance to that? Mr. Weigel first. MR. WEIGEL: I'll just address briefly, and that is that that is not my understanding that the mere appearance of something in the Federal Register is law, although I have not researched that at all. I'm aware of it just being a general citizen that many things are placed in the Federal Register to have effect back home from a notice basis is my understanding, nothing more than that, sometimes rather salutatory to a group or support group of things of that nature, but maybe Mr. Hall has some comment on that. Mr. Hall has also indicated that he would like to address some of the comments to the board if he may also. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. Mr. Hall. MR. HALL: Okay, yes. The notices we're talking about putting in the Federal Register go in the notice section of the Federal Register, and the only purpose of those Federal Register notices is to inform the public of the scoping process, the availability of the draft environmental impact statement, to review and provide comments on, and the availability of the final environmental impact statement, to review and provide final comments on. There is no rule-making associated with this. The rule-making requirements of putting notices in the Federal Register are something entirely different. This is simply information. It goes in the notice section of the Federal Register. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. I know you had mentioned something or mentioned to Mr. Weigel some issues you wanted to address the board on. I'm -- I don't know if that's necessary. It's typical if the board has questions of you at this point -- MR. WEIGEL: Mr. Hall. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Mr. Weigel. MR. WEIGEL: No, Mr. Hall. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Yeah, I was referring to Mr. Hall. MR. HALL: Really, I don't -- I don't want to necessarily go down and respond to all of the issues that were raised. I simply wanted to take an opportunity to thank all of you to -- for the time you have afforded us in participating in developing this agreement, this draft agreement and the dialogue we've had, particularly you, Commissioner Hancock. I'd also like to thank Alan Reynolds who has given most generously of his time. Obviously, also the Lee County Commission and the staffs of both commissions. I really appreciate that. I think it's been -- it's been a very good experience for me, and so I really appreciate that opportunity, and the last thing I guess I would say is that I really -- personally, I appreciate all of the comments that have been given here today. I think it's one of the amazing things about our -- the republic that we live in that we can have an opportunity like this to have an open -- an open dialogue, and there's no fettering of individual -- individual rights, and so I respect that process and you-all giving an opportunity for that process to occur here. Thank you. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Mr. Hall, I'm going to bring up Councilman Tarrant's comment because you and I have discussed this briefly, and we discussed it in the committee about whether or not the Army Corps of Engineers can grant, as Mr. Tarrant put it, a veto power, but in essence, an element of your authority to a local body. My understanding is legally you have told me that that cannot happen. Are you telling me that the Corps simply won't do it or that there's a legal opinion that says you cannot do it? MR. HALL: I can't -- I'm not a lawyer, so I can't speak to the legal aspect. I would go back to the comments that I made earlier that -- that the one thing that the Corps is trying to maintain here is -- and this is not meant in any way to be disrespectful of any agency or your positions as county commissioners or as a county commission, but there is a process and a purpose to preparing this NEPA document, and the process we have to follow and the purpose is to have it as neutral as is possible and fairly cover the issues that we feel are relevant to our authority and responsibility. So, to sign something that -- that says if we feel an issue is important to our legal authorities and the county commission wants a binding -- a binding letter from us saying that you -- that this particular thing you would disagree with, I don't know that we could really legally sign that, but that's -- you know, that's up to -- that's up -- that's up to our attorneys. It's just like I don't think you wanted to sign, and we can certainly understand, a document that would require you to change your county comp. plans. I mean, that's your business. That's not our business. The business that we are about here involves federal law. Most of these federal laws have been on the books for a long time. The Rivers and Harbors Act which gives us one of our authorities has been on -- has been a law since 1989. The Clean Water Act has been a law, at least in it's -- roughly in its present form since 1972. These are things that have not just popped on the scene yesterday. The Endangered Species Act and the National Environment Policy Act have been on the books as federal law since the 19 -- late 1960s, early 1970s. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I think there's a big difference, and you heard it probably in the perception of some of the speakers between embracing the Endangered Species Act, which I have no intent of doing, or recognizing its presence and authority and how it may impact our community, and I think that gets to the heart of why any member on this board may or may not feel that we have a role in this discussion. Recognizing the authority that exists and wanting to be able to help direct that authority to the benefit of this community is what being an elected representative, in my opinion, is all about. To fight you on your authority basis alone, I think, would do a disservice to the community, to the people who live here, and I've always said, you have two choices in life. You can stand in front of the bus and get run over or you can get on board and help drive, and I think this is a perfect example of where the community is best served by helping steer the direction as opposed to simply opposing it. That's my personal philosophy, and that's how I approach this situation. I don't discount many of the statements made here today both for and against, but you don't have to agree with everything in total to agree that a certain direction is the best alternative of what's available to you. I think that's where I stand as far as making a decision today. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Mr. Chairman. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Commissioner Constantine first and then Commissioner -- I'm sorry, Commissioner Norris and then you. COMMISSIONER NORRIS: You really addressed in that last part in the discussion with Mr. Hall the question that I was going to ask. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Commissioner Constantine. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Just on one specific thing. I'm a little disappointed the counties won't have a vote, if that's what we want to refer to it as had been discussed previously, but -- and I need to preface my comments by saying, in general, I have a concern with federal government. You referenced that in your earlier comments with federal government involvement in regional or local issues. I understand you're trying to carry out what you see as a federal requirement, but conceptually, I strongly favor and I suspect most of the board does, less government, and I have a concern -- I don't really believe that the result of this study will end up being less government. If it does, great, but I have that concern. That said, however, with that general concern, there are times when people representing agencies, either state or federal, have come before this board and reinforced that concern. We had someone from the State DEP come here last spring who greatly reinforced that. They were less than confident in their ability to answer. All they did was re-enforce the board's concern on the issue at hand and my general concern with the state getting involved. That's not the case today. I appreciate Mr. Hall being here, first of all, but you've also shown yourself to be very competent and understand where we are going with this, and while I have my general conceptual concerns, your participation in this gives me some confidence that at least there isn't a hidden agenda or secret thing going on, and that wasn't the case with the state agency last spring. So, I appreciate that, and I agree with Mr. Erlichman and Mr. Agoston and a number of the others on some of the specific concerns, but I think what we can do here is participate without necessarily endorsing ahead of time. If we end up with a great product, then we can sign on, but I don't think anyone is suggesting that we need to sign off on the process from day one. I think Mr. Tarrant's comments and Mr. Hancock's follow-up comments are right on the button, and that is, if we participate and then respond from an informed position, that's better than complete refusal to participate and letting it go on and trying to respond from a position of ignorance, and so I think, going back to the very beginning of this discussion, we should not make any sort of agreement this week until we have all our final details, which, apparently, will be available to us next Tuesday, but I think the general direction I'd like to see us go in is, as you outlined in the beginning of the meeting, and that is heading in that direction and next week, unless something dramatically changes, agree to be a participant in the process, and I just don't see the advantage to doing the alternative, which is put our head in the sand. So, while we may agree and may disagree on some of the things as they unfold, I would much rather be a participant and be one of those drivers on that bus than just stand by and watch it drive by. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Commissioner Hac'Kie. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: I would hope that -- just to bring some closure to this for the community's sake, because we have been discussing this for several months now, that the board could -- and I would like to make a motion that we adopt the HOU that's before us today subject to discussion next week of any changes that might be requested or required as a result of the Lee County discussion. In other words, that we don't do this again next week, that we endorse today our participation and endorse our -- instruct the chairman to sign the HOU with whatever changes -- subject to whatever changes that may come out as a result of the Lee County inquiry. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I was with you on half of that, the endorse side, endorse the content of the MOU as presented today with, you know, direction to sign pending next week's changes. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I'm sorry. I wasn't very articulate because that's what I meant to say. That's my motion. COMHISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I would ask you to wait because there are a couple of fairly big issues, and I know we don't want to go through, if we can avoid it, an exercise of a two hour rehash next week, but I think this is a very, very large issue and a couple hours is a pretty minimal amount of time compared to what the end result could be. The airport, in particular, if there is some sort of impact there that we are not aware of, is a very big issue, and I just -- I would feel more comfortable -- I think we are all heading in the same direction, but I would feel more comfortable if we had that information before we made a vote, and I understand you're saying subject to, but I'd just rather make the vote once and have it be clean and crisp. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: We have a motion on the floor. Is there a second on the motion? I'm going to second the motion to get it on the floor. All those in favor, signify by saying aye. COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: Aye. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Aye. Opposed? COMHISSIONER BERRY: Aye. COMHISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Aye. COMHISSIONER NORRIS: Aye. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. Is there a substitute motion for direction? COMHISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I would just suggest for direction that we assure Mr. Hall -- I think he's probably gotten from the text of our conversation the general direction of where we would like to head. We need to have the answers to the questions that have been raised here today as well as those that have previously been raised by Lee Commission and be able to have those as part of our answer for next week, and I think the direction we are headed, it appears, is as a participant, but I'd just like to have that information available to us completely now, and please don't read that three-two as no, we are not going to participate. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I have a question. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Commissioner Mac'Kie. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Just for clarity's sake, so that maybe we could limit the further discussion, would somebody restate what are the questions that have come out of our discussion today so we know what questions have to be answered from Collier County? I still don't know, but I trust that I will eventually know, what the Lee County questions are. I'd like to know what the Collier County questions are articulated as succinctly as you can. COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: And rather than try to limit the scope of those, what I might suggest is any discussion, either from ourselves or from the public next week, be limited to new information and so we don't rehash what we've done today; if we hit the airport issues, if we hear some of the participation issues, if we hit some of the others -- some of those were answered today, the funding, I think as far as voluntarily or not, and some of those were clearly answered today, but some of those were not, and any of those that we require further information on, we have a discussion next week, but let's not open up what we've already discussed today for further rehash. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Commissioner Berry. COMMISSIONER BERRY: I think that's a good point, Commissioner Constantine. What we have heard today I don't think needs to be rehashed, but I also would like to see the comments from the Lee Commission. It may raise some questions, something that they interpreted a little bit differently or they raised a question about. I'd like to know what their discussion was on this particular document. One of my big concerns is that I do think it is important that we are going to be at the table, but don't ask me for a commitment when it's all said and done to sign off on everything that's -- that may come out in the report because I don't think that we should do that as commissioners, but I think it would be totally contrary for us to sit up here and say we should not be at the table. That would be totally hypocritical of what we said earlier this morning, and again, repeating, we chastised two groups for not coming to the table, and if we sat up here and said, no, we are not going to do this, I think that's hypocritical. So, I do agree that we need to be there, but at the same time, I'm not going to sign off on anything until we see what effect this will have on Collier County, because we still control our destiny as far as that is concerned, and we are not going to give up that right. COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: Okay. So, the questions that I heard remaining were about whether or not -- what kind of funding requirements there might be from participating organizations, whether or not there is some potential impediment to FAA funding or expansion or anything involving this international airport, and I heard one more question. COMHISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I just don't want to limit it to whatever we happen to remember right now. If there's information that's new or different than what we discussed today, we should be open to any of that, but -- COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Sure we do. COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: -- we just don't need to rehash what we've already gone through. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: We're going to arrive in the same place next week that I think, Pam, you and I were trying to do today which is that the existing MOU the way it's written, I don't have fundamental issues with that. However, I don't want to preclude discussion on changes that Lee County proposes to that document. So, we are going to get there next week. So, rather than trying to -- COMMISSIONER BERRY: It's too soon this week. COMHISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Yeah. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: -- I think it will be up to me as the chairman to try and limit that discussion to new items or the adoption of the document, you know, next week, and I will do my best to do that. I do have one other item that -- the question on listing in the Federal Register, if we could get something a little more firm on that so this board knows one way or the other whether that is an eventuality. Mr. Weigel. MR. WEIGEL: Thank you. The item that's been heard, this very item under Item 9(A) in today's agenda was a publicly advertised item and advertised Wednesday, October 15th in the Naples Daily News. I'd like to submit a copy of the notice of advertisement for the record today, and if it assists the board then, if this is to come up next Tuesday, it could be a continued item, notwithstanding that you have a consensus determination today or even a vote of a kind today, but if you would like, it could be a continued item, and the agenda package today would appear again next week or it can be a new item if you wish. We can handle it either way you like. COMHISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Mr. Chairman, for legal simplicity, I'll make a motion we continue the item for one week. COMMISSIONER BERRY: Second it. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I have a motion to continue on my right and a second from Commissioner Berry. While you were setting that one up, John beat you to the punch. Any questions on the motion? MR. WEIGEL: Yes. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Mr. Weigel. MR. WEIGEL: Are we absolutely sure that we'll have information from Lee County by our next Tuesday meeting, because they meet on Tuesday, too? CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: If we don't, we'll be looking at the document in front of us. MR. WEIGEL: Okay, fine. Thank you. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. Any discussion? Seeing none, all those in favor, signify by saying aye. Opposed? (No response). CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Motion carries five-zero. Mr. Hall, thank you for taking the time to be here today, and if someone from your office can be here next week, great. If not, we'll go from there. Thank you very much. Ladies and gentlemen, with the additional items that are going to be somewhat lengthy and the schedule of the board members, we're going to take a lunch recess at this point. We'll return at 1:30. (A recess was taken.) CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Good afternoon. I'm going to call to order the remainder of the agenda for the Board of County Commissioners meeting for October 21st, where we left off. Item #10A RESOLUTION 97-400 APPOINTING WILLIAM W. HILL AND BRENDA DEJONG TO THE ENVIRONMENTAL ADVISORY BOARD - ADOPTED ***We were at item 10-A, appointment of members to the Environmental Advisory Board. COHMISSIONER NORRIS: Mr. Chairman, I had a question on this. I thought it was our policy to ask the committees not to make their own recommendations. Ms. Filson? MS. FILSON: Only if they are quasi-judicial in nature. COHMISSIONER NORRIS: Only if they're quasi-judicial in nature. In any case, I'm not comfortable with the committees making their own recommendations as far as membership, so I'm not going to be inclined to follow the recommendation of the committee. What I would like to do is make a motion that we appoint Brenda DeJong and William Hill. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I had a Mr. John Ribes as someone I would like to see, a landscape architect in town with a good background and I think he would be beneficial. I don't know Miss DeJong or Mr. Hill, to be honest with you. But the landscape architecture background I think would be helpful on the EAB. So we have three names in the pot and two vacancies. COMMISSIONER BERRY: I do not know any of the six people that are on here. I have no feeling one way or the other. But if you want to make a motion, if one of you want to make a motion. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Commissioner Norris, can I ask for your deference on one of those recommendations of either Ms. DeJong or Mr. Hill, to put Mr. Ribes in? Unless you have a difficulty with Mr. Ribes, then that's fine. COMMISSIONER NORRIS: I've been through all of the resumes and picked the two I did off of those resumes. Do you have the resumes? CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I did likewise. I went through them COMMISSIONER BERRY: Brenda's is extensive; I'll say that. (Commissioner Constantine arrives.) COMHISSIONER NORRIS: Did you bring us any? COMHISSIONER CONSTANTINE: No. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Well, you arrived just in time. COMHISSIONER BERRY: I'll support Mr. Hill. I don't know him, but I'll support him based on his information that's been provided to us. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: The discussion, Commissioner Constantine, is Commissioner Norris has made two suggestions, Ms. Brenda DeJong and Mr. William Hill. I have made one suggestion, Mr. John Ribes, and Commissioner Berry suggested Mr. Hill. COMMISSIONER NORRIS: Actually, I made a motion. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I'm sorry. We have a motion for Ms. DeJong and Mr. Hill. I've suggested Mr. Ribes in place of one of those two. COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Is there a second for his motion, because I'll make it, only because I have Ms. DeJong marked in my -- CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. Then there's a second on the floor. Any further discussion? All those in favor signify by saying aye. COMHISSIONER NORRIS: Aye. COMHISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Aye. COMHISSIONER BERRY: Aye. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Opposed? Aye. Motion carries three-one. Ms. DeJong and Mr. Hill will be appointed to the EAB. For the Board's information, something somewhat odd happened as this came forward. The EAB made recommendations, and I think the recommendations they made is not consistent with the Board policy in the past, which is, when we have applicants that meet the minimum qualifications set forth in the ordinance they shall be considered by this Board -- or, I'm sorry -- will be considered by this Board. In addition, it came to my attention that some of the committee recommendations in the past have been made by a staff liaison making contact by telephone with members of the committee to ask what their pleasure is. In my opinion, and I expressed it to Ms. Filson, and it has gone out, I believe, to Mr. Fernandez, that unless the committee meets at a properly advertised meeting, a quorum is present and an action is taken, there is no recommendation. Consensus by telephone is not acceptable, because it does not allow for discussion at a publicly advertised meeting. So that was my direction as chairman in the future for committee recommendations. I wanted to make sure that that did not conflict with the direction the Board sees is appropriate. COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: No. Two or three years ago, we actually had a question because we were getting different recommendations back from different committees. So in other words, some staff were making recommendations and some committees were. And we set a policy and I think it was inclusive of what you suggested, is consistent with what you said. So we just need to make sure we meet that, and I'm sure you will. But, that's completely consistent with what the Board has directed in the past. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: In a case where there is one applicant and they are grossly unqualified, that's a different scenario, and we didn't have that in this case. Okay. I just wanted to make sure I wasn't acting outside the boundaries that the Board was comfortable with. Item #10B RESOLUTION 97-401 APPOINTING JOHN BOLDT, VINCE CAUTERO, ED KANT, ROBERT HULHERE, ED PERICO, KEN PINEAU, DAVID RUSSELL, HARJORIE STUDENT AND SANDRA TAYLOR TO THE DISCOVERY TASK FORCE - ADOPTED ***Item 10-B, appointment of members to the Disaster Recovery Task Force. COHMISSIONER BERRY: Mr. Chairman, I'd like to make a recommendation of Mr. Pinole on the names of the people that are mentioned here for either reappointment or appointment to the task force. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: So, that's a recommendation for all the names presented? COHMISSIONER BERRY: Uh-huh. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Second. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: We have a motion and second. Any discussion on the motion? Seeing none, all those in favor signify by saying aye. Opposed? (No response) Motion carries five-zero. PUBLIC COMMENT ON GENERAL TOPICS - AL PERKINS RE BCC AGENDA We are to public comment on general topics. Mr. McNees. ***MR. HCNEES: You have one speaker registered, A1 Perkins. MR. PERKINS: Good afternoon, commissioners, ladies and gentlemen, people at home. This morning I've heard going to the table -- A1 Perkins, Belle Heade Groups -- going to the table. I've heard just now advertised meetings and the topic is lack of the agenda being in the Naples Daily Pravda. I think it should be the duty of this Naples Daily News to put the agenda in the paper on behalf of all the citizens who purchase their paper. If not, I would recommend to the people of this community don't buy their paper. Needless to say, getting the information out, letting people know what's going on is where I'm coming from on this thing. The more information we can get out, the people have the right to choose their own feelings about the thing and how they're going to proceed that they can do anything for it, with it, or about it. And with that, I will conclude. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Thank you, Mr. Perkins. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Just on a somewhat related subject, I, you know, check the Internet site. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I was just going to ask that. This seems to be like a week behind, most of the time. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: A week behind, sometimes three weeks behind. This week it's three weeks behind on getting the agenda on the net, so if somebody could follow up on that, it would be a good idea. MR. HcNEES: I'll give that immediate attention. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Thank you, sir. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Plus, I want to ask, do we post the agenda on Channel 54? MR. HCNEES: I don't know if we-- COMMISSIONER HAC'KIE: It's a good idea. MR. HCNEES: -- scroll the actual agenda -- COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Katy's nodding yes. COHMISSIONER NORRIS: Affirmative from the rear. MR. HCNEES: We do. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Yes, ma'am. MR. HCNEES: Thanks, Katy. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Thanks, Katy. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Again, just another resource as a way to try and get out there. Okay. With that, we'll move to the advertised public hearings under 12-B, zoning amendments. Item #12B1 ORDINANCE 97-51 RE PETITION PUD-97-11, ALAN D. REYNOLDS OF WILSON, MILLER, BARTON AND PEEK, INC., AND GEORGE VARNADOE OF YOUNG, VANASSENDERP AND VARNADOE, P.A., REPRESENTING BARRON COLLIER PARTNERSHIP, REQUESTING A REZONING OF CERTAIN DEFINED PROPERTY AS HEREIN DESCRIBED FROM "I" AND "A" TO "PUD" (CREEKSIDE COMMERCE PARK PUD) FOR PROPERTY LOCATED AT THE SOUTHEAST AND SOUTHWEST INTERSECTION OF IMMOKALEE ROAD AND GOODLETTE FRANK ROAD (C.R. 851) IN SECTION 27, TOWNSHIP 48 SOUTH, RANGE 25 EAST, CONSISTING OF 108.4 ACRES - ADOPTED *** The first item is petition PUD 97-11, Alan Reynolds of Wilson, Miller, Barton and Peek, and George Varnadoe, Young, Van Assenderp and Varnadoe representing Barton Collier Partnership, requesting a fezone of property from I industrial and A agriculture to PUD, otherwise known as Creekside Commerce Park. Mr. Milk, good afternoon. MR. MILK: Good afternoon. For the record, my name is Brian Milk and I am presenting Petition PUD 97-11, Creekside Commerce Park. The district proposes to fezone the subject property from industrial -- COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Swear somebody? CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I'm sorry. Thank you, Ms. Student. I'm going to ask for everyone's attention on this. These matters are deemed quasi-judicial which means they are as close to a legal court action as you can get. Any appeals of this matter to a court will be based on the merits and the listing of the record alone without additional testimony. For that reason, we are required to swear in all individuals who wish to speak on this item. This includes our staff, members of the presenting team, any opposition or members of the public registered to speak. So I'm going to ask everyone in the room who is here on this item and wishes to speak, please stand and raise your right hand. Would the six of you still seated remain quiet? Madam Court Reporter, if you'd please swear the balance of the room in. (All speakers were sworn) CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Thank you, .and I need not remind anyone that that swearing in carries with it the same weight as in a court of law. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Mr. Chairman? CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Commissioner Hac'Kie. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Probably at the same time we ought to disclose. I've had a significant amount of conflict -- conflict -- contact -- Freudian -- significant amount of conflict, I've had that too. But what I've had on this particular matter was a significant amount of contact from all sides and just signed about 20 letters. So I wanted to disclose that before the hearing starts. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Do those letters indicate how you're going to vote? COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: They just say things in writing. COHMISSIONER NORRIS: I've had a lot of contact myself, but I'm going to base my decision on what I hear in this hearing this afternoon. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Commissioner Berry? COHMISSIONER BERRY: I have had contact from both sides, but I will base my decision on what I heard. But I believe I can also use the other information, as well. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Yes, you can. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Yes, you can. Commissioner Constantine? COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Mr. Chairman, I have had contact. However, my decision will be rendered in accordance with the laws of the State of Florida. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I discussed with both the petitioner and a representative of opposition, in addition to residents through letters and phone calls, elements of this, and will base my decision on that input plus what is presented here today. Mr. Weigel. MR. WEIGEL: Thank you. I appreciate the lengthier discussion you provided today. The letters and any correspondence you received shall be made part of the public record and should be made available during the course of the proceeding, if at all possible, as part of the public record. Beyond that, with the number of people today that will be testifying, I think it would be appropriate that they affirm at the beginning of their testimony that they have been sworn. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. And what we'll do is, I know a lot of us, because they were addressed to sometimes genetically, may have received the same letters. Let's make sure that our staff compiles those. We'll take care of that and get that entered into the record. I think with that, we are now back to Mr. Milk. Mr. Milk, hello. MR. MILK: Thank you. The petitioner proposes to fezone the subject property from industrial and agricultural to PUD in order to establish a business commerce park consisting of professional offices, commercial services, medical offices, financial institutions, light manufacturing, warehousing and wholesale distribution of goods on the subject 108 acre site. The subject property is located at the southeast and southwest intersections of Immokalee Road and Goodlette Frank Road. The area to the southeast is currently zoned industrial. It is presently undeveloped and for the most part is heavily wooded. The area to the west is approximately 69 acres in size. It has approximately a 15 or 16-acre zoned industrial site on that particular property, with the present location of the Regency Packing House. The remainder of the property is zoned agricultural, and for the most part, is engaged in active agricultural crop production. The Master Plan reveals two land use designations for the project. The B district is the business district which typically allows for professional offices, business services, retail and convenience related uses. That area typically fronts the Immokalee Road corridor and the Goodlette-Frank Road corridor. The floor area ratio for that particular district provides for 190,000 square feet of floor area to be utilized by the business district, of which 40,000 square feet can be utilized by retail type uses and 150,000 square feet can be utilized for professional offices and commercial uses. The business district provides a maximum height of 35 feet from the Pine Ridge Canal drainage easement to the west. Anything in the corridor of the one quarter mile radius of the existing North Collier Hospital is allowed to be at a height of 50 feet. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I'm sorry. Currently? MR. MILK: As proposed in the PUD Master Plan Development Regulations within a quarter mile of the existing hospital, the maximum heights are 50 feet. Anything to the west of the drainage easement is limited to 35 feet. The IC district is the industrial commerce district, which provides for light manufacturing, warehousing, distribution, corporate headquarters and business related services. There's a maximum of 610,000 square feet of floor area provided for in this area. The industrial commerce district provides a maximum height of 35 feet throughout the entire Master Plan area. What's unique about this plan is the architectural, design, landscaping, signage, and integrated site development plans for the entire project. The business district that is situated along the Immokalee Road and Goodlette-Frank Road corridors shall comply with Division 2.8 of the Land Development Code, which is our architectural and site design guidelines presently implemented by this Board. What's unique to this project is buildings that are situated to the west of the Goodlette-Frank corridor in the IC district shall not be metal at all. In other words, their facades and building materials have to be made up of a masonry, brick, block or similar combination. In other words, metal-sided buildings are prohibited on this side of Goodlette-Frank Road. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: And that's in the industrial IC district. MR. MILK: That's in the IC district, that's correct. Unique to the corridor along Goodlette-Frank Road is the ability for businesses over in the IC district, along the frontages of Goodlette-Frank Road and the internal roadway, each frontage has to be of a masonry type product. There is an exception to that. In this corridor of the Goodlette-Frank Road, there is a proposed 20-foot landscape buffer along each travel way here. In that buffer along the IC district, there's going to be a 3-foot berm. On that 3-foot berm is going to be a 5-foot hedge. On the berm itself, there's going to be trees planted 25 feet on center, 12 to 14 feet in height, with a minimum spread of 6 feet. So what you're going to have is approximately a 15-foot landscape corridor on both sides of Goodlette-Frank Road, contiguous to the IC district within the Master Plan. For these properties on the east side, if they propose a more corporate image and they want to lessen that buffering, they have to comply with the architectural guidelines provided for in our PUD document and that gets into the treatment, the intent, the style of the building, the color coordination of the building. It's not a 100 percent to the architectural design guidelines, but it's very close. If there was to be a business use that was located in this area, in the IC area, it has to comply 100 percent with the architectural and site design guidelines of 2.8. So along this corridor, if there's a business use anywhere along this area, it has to comply 100 percent. If it's in an IC area and they wish to keep the landscaping as proposed, their building fascias that are facing Goodlette and the internal roadways, have to be a masonry type product. The other sides can be corrugated steel. What else is unique about the project is there's three typical road cross-sections that provide service driveways, internal circulation throughout the project. I'd like to note that each cross-section meets our standards today on pavement thickness, sidewalks, pedestrian ways, pedestrian lighting and landscaping. So what you have on each of these corridors is a unified street lighting plan, a unified landscaping plan, a pedestrian plan and minimum aisle widths of 12 feet. That's on both the east and west side. The traffic circulation for the project aligns with the existing median cuts. The petitioner is responsible for the street lighting, is responsible for any of the median geometry configurations, the right and left turn lanes and arterial level lighting. This project, for the most part, is 100 percent consistent with the access management plan. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Can I just ask, it seems like kind of a conflicting statement, "for the most part 100 percent." Is it for the most part or is it 100 percent? MR. MILK: For the most part. I say that because of the alignment along Goodlette-Frank Road. The other corridors align 100 percent; it's just that access point closest to the intersection that doesn't quite meet that criteria, spacing criteria. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: How far away is it? What's the differential between -- MR. MILK: It's the alignment of these two -- it's the access point to these two drives, versus the distance from the intersection here. I'm not sure what that spacing criteria lacks, whether a couple hundred feet. But there is a criteria ultimately in the access management plan that says every median cut shall be 800 feet for an arterial or collector type roadway. Because of the configuration and the geometry here this is lessened somewhat. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: We're not sure how much? MR. MILK: I'm not sure how much. No, sir. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Can we find out? MR. MILK: The -- and I'll get to that. The traffic impact statement provided by the petitioner provides that there is approximately 13,500 trips that are going to be generated by the PUD and the users of that particular project. That 13,500 trips exceeds the 5 percent level of Service D design capacity for the roadways, Immokalee Road and Goodlette-Frank Road. However, because of the improvements that are designed and committed for in the radius of development influence, meaning Goodlette-Frank Road to the south is going to be four laned from Vanderbilt Beach Road south; the commitment to six-lane U.S. 41 north of Immokalee Road; the commitment to four-lane Immokalee Road from 1-75 to 951; the commitment to provide access to Bonita Beach Road from the Livingston Road extension north, and the existing levels of service today, this project will not fall below the level of Service D design capacity in the traffic circulation district. Yes, sir. MR. KANT: For the record, Edward Kant, Transportation Services. The minimum median opening spacing for full median openings is 1,320 feet and for partial median openings is 660. Just roughly scaling from this drawing, it looks like it's about 600 and change, so it's minimal, if at all. And again, we're dealing with a conceptual drawing. Typically, we're able to make minor adjustments as they come up with final site plans for various tracts. But I'm not sure that, you know, the difference, is it 640 feet, 650 feet, 660 feet, is going to be significant in this case. That's an opinion. It's not a statement of fact. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Do you believe with minor modifications it could meet our access management guidelines? MR. KANT: I believe so, yes. MR. MILK: Again on the topic of traffic, staff has looked at the trip circulation, has identified that approximately 30 percent of the trips are going to head west on Immokalee Road, 40 percent are going to head east on Immokalee Road, and 30 percent will head south on Goodlette-Frank Road. The petition was deemed consistent by the -- I'm sorry. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: The remaining 10 percent? You said 30 east on Immokalee, 30 west on Immokalee, 30 south? MR. MILK: I'm sorry. 40 east on Immokalee Road. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. Thank you. MR. MILK: 30 to the west, 30 to the south and 40 to the east. A hundred percent. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. Thank you. MR. MILK: You're welcome. Staff has reviewed the criteria in the Growth Management Plan and Future Land Use Element. This project was deemed compatible with the Future Land Use Element and GMP. We went to the Planning Commission October the 2nd. This project was approved three to two. I'd like to explain that voting, if I may. The petitioner originally submitted a PUD Master Plan very similar to this plan. This plan was introduced basically at the Planning Commission. Because of discussions from the Collier's Reserve people, the traffic circulation pattern for the proposed post office and the Tyton Corporation to be relocated on that west side. The introduction for the second Master Plan was to try to omit the truck traffic and delivery truck traffic to that area to Goodlette-Frank Road, and which would allow the pedestrian corridor to be maintained on the access to Collier's Reserve at that particular intersection. I think the three-two vote, I think everybody was in favor of the project. I think there were some misunderstandings on where Tyton and where the postal service was going to locate; how their frontages were going to be situated in the project; how their driveways were going to access these frontage roads, and where their truck loading and unloading areas were going to be by virtue of that cul de sac road to the south. I say that, because there was some misunderstandings about timing issues on the first phase of platting, introduction to that southern road, and actually the visual aid of where the post office and Tyton were going to be located by virtue of that plan. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Would you characterize that as you call a misunderstanding as a concern over the trip routes for truck traffic, in particular? MR. MILK: I would say it's a misunderstanding because the truck traffic situation is a real issue here. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Right. MR. MILK: And I think because there was no displays at the meeting, there was some concern about that. And without that being visually articulated, both folks, the two denial votes, were based on that concern. Yes, sir. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. MR. MILK: If I can offer to answer any questions, I'd be happy to do so. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. Questions for Mr. Milk. COHMISSIONER BERRY: I have a question. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Commissioner Berry? COHMISSIONER BERRY: I'm not sure you can answer this, but you mentioned about the number of trips generated. Do you know or can you give me any kind of an idea that if this were zoned for single family homes what kind of trips would be generated, given the size of the piece of property that we're looking at? MR. MILK: I personally can't. But I know that Oliver Tindale and some of the traffic experts has put together the TIS statement that can make the differences and analysis for you. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Mr. Milk, how much, total acres, is there on this project? MR. MILK: Total acres is 108 acres on the project. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: That's 432 homes, that's 4,320 trips a day for single family at 4 units an acre; using 10 trips per single family home. MR. MILK: And that's probably a little heavy, but that's about right, 8 to 9 trips a day at 4 units an acre; that's correct. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Of that 108 acres, how much is active ag right now; do you know? MR. MILK: Active ag is, I'm going to guesstimate, about 50 acres, plus or minus. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: It won't have any negative impact if we remove active agricultural from the area? MR. MILK: To my knowledge, no, sir. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Thank you. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: The section south and east of the intersection of Goodlette-Frank and Immokalee has been a concern for me since I first realized it was zoned industrial. And the reason is that, when I look -- industrial from up north means belching smoke stacks and whatnot from a lot of communities up there, and it's a very negative perception. But our industrial areas, for the most part here, aren't a heck of a lot better, things like Shirley Street, the area on the east side of Airport Road. I don't think anybody wants to live next to that. As currently zoned, is there anything to prohibit those -- I guess on that side is it something around 45 acres, plus or minus? MR. MILK: On the east side is approximately 39 acres -- CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: 39? MR. MILK: -- on the west side there's approximately 15 to 16 acres. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: They have right now, as I understand it, a full range of industrial uses with no mitigated elements. They are just zoned straight industrial; is that correct? MR. MILK: That's correct. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: So we could have, you know, some of the more noxious industrial uses locate there without any action or involvement by this Board whatsoever? MR. MILK: That's also correct. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. If you compare the uses that are allowed on that piece now with what is proposed on both sides of Goodlette-Frank Road in this proposal, how could you characterize the difference in permitted uses? MR. MILK: I think the intensity level -- if we had a light industrial district, this would be it. This is a hybrid district. It's between what I would call the permitted uses in the business park and taking out all the obnoxious uses of the industrial district. It's a hybrid from that point. So I would call it a light industrial, quasi-professional business district. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: That's why we are left, more or less, with the traffic concern as I can see it, being primary? MR. MILK: As being primary, yes. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: What would be the difference between this and C57 Because I always refer to C5 as light industrial. MR. MILK: I think the big difference from the situation, I think there is more traffic provided for in the C5 district. But I think the biggest concern would be the architectural design guidelines. If this was zoned C5, that entire project in the C5 district would have to comply with the site, architectural and site design guidelines of division 28, whereas, the industrial district would not at all. COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I guess that's not a bad thing then, if it was C5. From a usage standpoint, what's the difference? You just referenced light industrial, and I always think of C5. MR. MILK: From a usage standpoint, there is no light manufacturing that occurs in the C5 district. However, warehousing, distribution, storage, outdoor sales, is allowed in C5. It's also allowed in this PUD. What's unique about this PUD is there is elevated buffering, fencing, requirement for those type uses, if they were in an outside fashion. COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Thank you. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: That gets to my next question. You mentioned that in the IC areas, particularly those bordering Goodlette-Frank Road, that -- you did a nice job explaining the berming and buffering that is required if they use the IC uses. However, you said if they go in and use more of the business or commercial side of that, that they would have architectural standards that almost meet the county's architectural standards. Did I hear you correctly on that? MR. MILK: That's correct. There's two ways to look at it. If, in fact, it's a true IC use and they wish to establish more of a visual impact from Goodlette-Frank Road, they would have to provide an elevation motif, architectural design, that is very similar to what's available in the architectural design guidelines today, because of that visual aspect. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Have you been given any -- and this goes to the heart of one of the issues I have -- when it comes to straight industrial-- MR. MILK: Right. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: -- I don't want to see it. I mean, make it pretty or hide it, and I have been very adamant about that from the early discussions I had regarding this project. But why, what reasons have you been given for why they wouldn't just simply comply with the existing architectural standards, instead of almost comply? Because I'm concerned about what element is dropped out of that, what's missing; what's the difference? It seems to me to be an either/or. I like the berming and buffering idea to hide it, but if you're going to do something else, then it ought to comply with the standards, period. Have you had that discussion with the applicant, Brian? MR. MILK: We've had that discussion, and with that discussion, that's how we arrived at the standards there are right now, because the initial thought was, it's an industrial district, they don't have to comply. And we went and said, well, this is a corridor; we all understand that there is architectural standards out there. We'd like to see a cohesive project, a unified project, and they agreed. And they said, well, what can we do to identify corporate image along that corridor and comply to the most part with the architectural design guidelines for those frontage buildings. So that's what we came up with in that list of criteria. Now, it goes one step further. If there was a business use in that particular IC district, that use in that corridor has to comply 100 percent with the design guidelines. The only one that doesn't at this point is an IC use that wants to have some identity off that roadway, and there is criteria in here to do so. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: That flexibility, just because it's an unknown MR. MILK: Flexibility, right. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: -- yes, gives me a little concern, and I'll address the applicant on that, because I'm really -- you know, these architectural standards are important to me and have been, and I'm kind of either/or on that right now, unless I hear some real good justification for why that shouldn't be the case. Mr. Hulhere? MR. HULHERE: Bob Hulhere, Current Planning Manager. I just wanted to add, in response to Commissioner Constantine's question regarding the C5 and industrial comparison. Brian mentioned that C5 allows for outdoor storage. This would not. This proposal would not allow for outside storage. I'm not sure if that was misspoken, and I wanted to clarify that. The other issue is that there would be a much wider range of retail type uses permitted in C5 that would not be permitted or is not intended to be permitted within this PUD. That's just for the record. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: One more question? CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Yes. Go ahead. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: You were describing, as it's currently zoned, the break up of what's there for industrial zoning now. And you said there's 13 acres west of Goodlette? MR. MILK: Approximately 15 to 16 acres on the west side of Goodlette that front the corridor there. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Do you know of any place else in the county, or can you cite me an example in the county where there is a developed industrial area of that size or less? MR. MILK: Of that size, no, sir. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Because when you asked the question of what could happen here, what's allowed to happen there and what would be economic or what would be economically feasible there, or a couple different things. And I just don't know that that 15 acres by itself on that kind of isolated segment is realistic. MR. MILK: Just to comment a little bit more. It's funny, because we did some research on historical zoning in that corridor. And at one point in 1972 that whole strip was zoned industrial. Instead of 15 acres it might have been 40 acres on that entire strip. I'm not sure what happened between '72 and 1984, but at that point, it was massaged -- it was a massage back to what we see today. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: In '72 this was the boonies for Collier County; this was way out. Pine Ridge was out in the country. MR. MILK: Right, and I can't attest to what happened. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: A junkyard on Radio Road was acceptable in '72. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Yeah. Mr. Milk, another question. You mentioned landscape standards for internal streets. One of my concerns is not just the external appearance, aesthetics, but the internal aesthetics. Are there architectural or design standards that apply internally to the project, because there is some things I see in the roadway network that could really be beneficial here and I want to make sure that there are internal applications. Are those in the PUD? MR. MILK: That's correct. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. I want to make sure they weren't just deed restrictions. MR. MILK: That's right. There are unified plans throughout each parcel, site specific. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: You talked about 13,500 trips. It's my understanding this intersection is also in what's called a medical activity center? MR. MILK: That's correct. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: That's within a quarter mile of the hospital. MR. MILK: That's exactly right. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Is all of this, all of what we're looking at, within that quarter mile, or a majority of it, or a percentage of it? Do you have any idea? MR. MILK: There's approximately 30,000 trips today that run east and west on that corridor. That level of service is actually at level of service B right now. So Immokalee Road is operating at level of service B, with approximately 30,000, 31,000 trips. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: What I'm asking though, is in the medical activity center. How far does it extend over west of Goodlette-Frank Road? Can you give me an idea? MR. MILK: I think a better idea is there's a radius on that particular map -- CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. I'm sorry. MR. MILK: -- with that dashed line. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Commissioner Constantine, you had mentioned a 15-acre industrial park doesn't make a lot of sense. I think if it's not in this use, medical office is probably the next reasonable use for this. The reason I bring that up is, my experience with ITE is that medical office is one of the more intensive office type uses when it comes to trip generation. MR. MILK: That is correct. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Something like 25 trips per thousand, balipark? MR. MILK: Of any standard that we have is for doctors' offices and medical related uses, it is the most intensive. That's correct. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. The reason I ask that is again, if we're looking for what could be there under existing or potential zoning, I think we need to consider the trip generation for medical office. And it would be interesting to know what that trip generation could be if it developed out as medical office versus what's being proposed. Because I don't know if the folks who live around there actually know that one, it could be medical office, and two, that it's a very high trip generation rate right during the peak hours of the day. So those are a couple of things that may factor into this. Mr. Kant, a little bit later, if you don't have it right on top of your head, if you could give me some idea what medical application -- and Mr. Milk, maybe work with him on square footage. I'm just curious if it went medical on that site, what would it be compared to what's being proposed here. Questions for Mr. Milk? Seeing none, go to the petitioner. MR. VARNADOE: Good afternoon. For the record, George Varnadoe, attorney for the applicant, of the law firm of Young, van Assenderp and Varnadoe. A couple of preliminary matters. There's a couple things I'd like to place in the record before we get started. The first is to make a public record of the Traffic Impact Statement for this project, and the second is to make, put into the record the Collier's Reserve PUD. You'll have some discussion about what's allowed there versus what's allowed here, and I would like to make that part of the record. The next item -- this is kind of housekeeping -- but it was called to my attention last week that when we have partnerships and trusts that we disclose who the beneficial owners are. I'm not sure -- I couldn't find in our application that we had done that. So let me pass those out at this time if I could, please. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I've been given enough land records to know who this one was, but thank you. MR. VARNADOE: These have been in y'all's hands for such a long time, it's probably no secret, but I thought it was good to comply with our requirements here. The last item is that we have a handout that we're going to be referring to as, basically A1 but also Bill, to discuss certain matters. And I'd like to pass those out and also make that, a copy of that, part of the public record, please. In addition to my comments, you're also going to be hearing today from Alan Reynolds with Wilson, Miller, Barton and Peek. That firm are the engineers and land planners in this project. Mr. Reynolds will address the planning aspects of the project consistency and compatibility issues, and describe the features which define this project as an up-scale master planned community for businesses. Also available to answer questions about transportation impacts is Bill Oliver, from Oliver and Associates, who did the traffic impact statement. You heard that we have redesigned the project slightly to accommodate some concerns in the internal traffic network. There is an updated TIS in your notebook there that he can also address if we need for him to. I'm also going to ask Ruth Ayres to address you just for a moment. Ruth Ayres is Director of Operations for Tyton-Hellerman. They are going to be one of the residents in our park if you approve this, and I think it would be interesting for y'all to hear what they do and how they do it. Before I start my remarks, I want to thank staff for their help in this project. They have been diligent and responsive in responding to the application, particularly Mr. Milk. Mr. Milk has been instrumental in refining the landscaping and buffer standards and other standards you find in your PUD. He has done a good job in trying to make sure we've accommodated what the county wants to see out there. As he told you, the proposal is to fezone this land to PUD for an up-scale commerce park. Let me try to describe, in layman's terms at least, what it is and what it isn't. It is a master planned community for businesses, a community with up-scale campus type setting with significant amounts of open space that will provide sites for businesses in the community. Just as for years you have, as a Board, looked at Master Plan residential communities with their typical amenities, common signage, enhanced landscaping amenities, lighting, common lighting, now we're looking at the same concepts for businesses. You've got lakes, open space, sidewalks, integrated and controlled access points, architectural design standards, and covenants and restrictions on uses, increased buffers, enhanced landscaping, carefully controlled uses, common signage, lighting and landscaping. It is a project that provides for carefully planned integration of light manufacturing, office, medical, business services, institutional and government facilities, financial services, and support retail uses in this controlled environment. It is not smoke stack industry. It is not heavy industry. It's not factories. It's not forklifts on the streets. It's not any sort of outside manufacturing. It is a project that will provide the opportunity for the economic diversification that we all know we need in this county. It's a project that will help this Board achieve its goal of economic development. I know you made one of your top priorities at your last goal setting session. It is an exciting opportunity for Collier County to create high quality business sites for businesses in an up-scale park. It will help us retain those we have that want to expand or relocate in the county and hope it will help us attract some of the high tech, low-impact business we want. Let me talk for just a minute about the background or kind of evolution of this project. The project has a pretty interesting history. You can look at this exhibit on the wall. All this property that's south of Immokalee Road and west of Goodlette-Frank, north of Pelican Harsh and east of 41, as you know, was part of the proposed Collier's Garden Hall project, also affectionately referred to by people in the area as the mega mall, that we were going through the DRI process. At the same time, the Barton Collier Corporation and Barton Collier Partnership were talking about what to do and how to develop the 39 acres that is east of Goodlette-Frank Road and south of Immokalee Road that's currently zoned industrial and has been zoned industrial, as you've heard, for 20 years or more. They were looking at how to accommodate existing businesses on that property or expand, allow people to expand that property and do it right. But what we ran into was the fact that there just wasn't enough land to do a commerce park, achieve the sense of place that you're looking for, to be able to put in the common landscaping, the common signage, do the up-scale things. There just wasn't enough physical area to get there from here, even when you added the 18 acres that's west of Goodlette-Frank Road. So we looked at expanding the park to accommodate the ability to have enough space to do that. About the same time, EDC got involved and approached Alan Reynolds and myself and said look, we don't have any place to put these kind of businesses who want to stay in the county or who want to come to the county and want to be in an up-scale commercial park, a commerce park, there is nowhere to put them. What can you do? Well, we put EDC and Barton Collier together, and the park then took on the plan that you see today before you, and what you'll hear discussed. I'm going to turn this over to Mr. Reynolds in just a moment, but before I do, there's a couple points I want to make, and I think one of them has been made, but I want to reemphasize it. I know you've heard from and you've read about some of the objections and concerns of our neighbors, primarily those in Collier's Reserve. We have not ignored those concerns; we've met with their representatives on four occasions. I'd like to tell you that we satisfied all their concerns and met all their demands, but obviously, we have not. However, we have made substantial changes to the project to respond to their concerns. As you heard Mr. Milk say, before the Planning Commission we changed the internal road network to try to alleviate some of their concerns. We reduced some of the -- eliminated some of the uses in the IC district that they might find objectionable. As late as last week, we made other changes to the PUD. There is a letter to Mr. Milk in that package I gave you that outlines those. They incorporate -- it also incorporates some of the strike-through underlined pages in the PUD that you also have that recognized these. Among the proposed changes was enhanced landscaping on Immokalee Road and the southern boundary of the project to further buffer ourselves from our neighbors; the elimination of additional uses in the IC district. In fact, we totally eliminated some 80 SIC groups and over 20 other groups we eliminated part of the uses inside those groups. You'll find those all in that letter I was telling you about. Those uses are probably going to be okay because they are in enclosed buildings. Other standards we had I think they would have made them okay but looking at them, either they were unnecessary, or when you read them, they could appear frightening on the surface, and we said just get rid of them, and we took them out. We provided performance standards for noise, odor and lighting in the park to make sure that we would not be objectionable to our neighbors, even though we had covenants, conditions and restrictions in place that would have handled that. We also provided a right of way easements or -- the necessary right-of-way or an easement, excuse me -- on the southern road to provide for interconnections to the west in the future. That was pointed out as being important to the Second District Association, among others. We also clarified the PUD to show that only the entranceways and access ways that are shown on the Master Plan could be utilized in the future, so there would be no proliferation of access points on the project, either on Goodlette Road or Immokalee Road. The second thing I want to address is the putting this project a little bit in perspective, and y'all have talked about this a little bit. It's not like we're starting with a blank slate here and coming in and saying we want to impose these uses in this area. Of the 108 acres that constitute this park, 58 acres are currently zoned industrial. As you have already talked about, those industrial zoned properties could be developed today without further input from this board. All they have to do is go get their SDP and a building permit, and off they go, without any further input from any of us; without the safeguards we've got in there, without the amenities, without the intensive landscaping, and with more intense uses than we would allow. Of the 108 acres that constitute this park, 41.6 acres are devoted to this commercial industrial district. So it's less acreage than there is there today, zoned straight industrial. Of that 41.6 approximately 8.95, if I'm right, is for the post office site. It's not a commercial or industrial use; it's a government facility and can go into any commercial zoning category in this county. 38.7 acres is devoted to open space, lakes and preserves. 19.1 acres is in the business and office park with limited retail of this project. As you know, you've heard that -- and I want to go into -- we tried to put the business uses out on Immokalee Road and Goodlette Road and therefore buffer the IC uses into internal to the district. I'm going to pass the baton to Mr. Reynolds, but we request we be granted some time to respond to questions or concerns that might come up from others who don't like our project as much as I do. I'd like to qualify Mr. Reynolds as an expert in land use planning. He's appeared before this Board many times and I don't think I need to go through his qualifications with you. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Do I have a motion to recognize Mr. Reynolds as an expert? COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE:. COMHISSIONER NORRIS: Second. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: All those in favor signify by saying aye. Opposed? (No response) CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Mr. Varnadoe, as is my track record, I don't allow rebuttals, but if the board does have questions or issues on what is raised, we'll direct those questions to you. MR. VARNADOE: All right, sir. MR. REYNOLDS: Thank you. For the record, I was duly sworn or affirmed. COMHISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Mr. Chairman, just before Mr. Reynolds comes up, quick question for our staff. Mr. Varnadoe indicated that there is nowhere else to put these type parks. Is there no other undeveloped industrial zoned property in the urban area? MR. MILK: I think what the criteria -- COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: It's a yes, no question. MR. MILK: There is undeveloped property; correct. COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Zoned industrial? MR. MILK: Zoned industrial. COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: In the urban area? MR. MILK: Yes, sir. COMHISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Thank you. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Mr. Reynolds? MR. REYNOLDS: Good afternoon. Alan Reynolds. I have been Sworn. As I go through my presentation, I'm going to be referring both to the large scale exhibits that are going to be put up over there, as well as to some of the reduced exhibits that are in your booklet. If you have any questions about which one I'm referring to, just stop me. I want to walk through very quickly the planning process that we used to create this park, because as has been previously described, this is a, I believe, a unique park design and use for Collier County, the first time we've seen a park of this type. Our first step in the process, as we do with most planning, is to look at what's around us and to design the project accordingly. And it's been mentioned that we have uses including the hospital and the medical office uses that are located north of us. We have the Collier's Reserve project across the street on Immokalee Road that has some commercial land uses that are immediately across the street from us. To the south, we have the Pelican Marsh project, which has been, was designed with the anticipation of a use similar to this -- not exactly like this, but similar -- and I want to talk a little bit about how that was incorporated. And then to the east, we have a variety of uses, including a wastewater treatment plant and some medical office uses. So this is really an in-fill type of a project and when you're designing an in-fill project, you have to look at all those adjacencies and make sure you're dealing with your land use relationships both from the standpoint of uses and buffer. The first handout in your packet that you see shows specifically those industrial zoned boundaries that you have on the property that have already been described in some detail. The first issue I'd like to deal with is consistency with the Growth Management Plan. There is a very, very detailed analysis of that issue in your staff report. I'm not going to go back and belabor that, but it's important to understand that this project has several different relationships as far as consistency. One has to do with the medical office activity center use that's allowed surrounding the hospital. The second has to do with criteria that are set forth for allowing expansion or reconfiguration of industrial uses in the county. And our industrial zoning that's in place, it's important to understand, is deemed consistent with your Comprehensive Plan. So we have multiple elements that we have to pull together as far as a consistency finding. Your staff has very definitively concluded, as we have, that there are no consistency difficulties. We are fully consistent with the Comprehensive Plan in its entirety. I do also want to identify that we know that an issue has been raised with respect to whether or not this project will be consistent with a proposed business park subdistrict that's planned for your EAR amendment cycle that you're going to be hearing next week, and you will probably recall over the summer dealing with this business park subdistrict language. I'm very familiar with it, as I was the primary author of that language, working with your staff. This project, as we sit here today, does not have to be found consistent with that subdistrict because it has not been implemented in your plan. However, I think it's important to understand that this project is designed to be consistent with the intent of that district and, in fact, will be consistent with that district. And that's something that I think it had been suggested that some reason why we are trying to move this project through quickly, is to beat, if you will, a change in the Comprehensive Plan that would preclude us from going forward next week. I can assure you, unequivocally, that that is not the case. That in fact, this project has been on an accelerated process with your staff's cooperation, specifically because we have an end user which is Tyton, that has very specific time frames that must be met. So I wanted to make sure that is very clear at the outset. It is true that the implementation of your new business park subdistrict is going to require implementing details, including Land Development Code changes, and we cannot stand here today and tell you that it is fully consistent with all the implementation details, because they haven't all been worked out yet, nor have you even adopted that subdistrict yet in your plan. But if you look in your packet and you read the Statement of Intent, and I'd like to just -- I think it's a very good description of what this business park is, and it occurs right after the handout that says Statement of Compliance. It says that the business park subdistrict is intended to provide for a mix of industrial uses and non-industrial uses, designed in an attractive park-like environment, with a low structural density, where building coverages range between 25 and 45 percent. In this case, we have a 35 percent floor area ratio. And it goes on to just describe that. I won't read the rest of it; you can look at it yourself. But it is certainly clear to me that we are completely consistent with the intent of this district. This project happens to be the model for the subdistrict. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Mr. Chairman, I have a question on that point. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Yes. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: It might be appropriate to get Mr. Milk or somebody in Long Range Planning, whoever would be the appropriate staff expert. I'd like a confirm or deny of that. That's a critical question for me. I've heard that this is a rush job to get in before the change or the proposed change is made. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Mr. Arnold, for the record. MR. ARNOLD: Wayne Arnold, Planning Services Director. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Just this tiny little technicality. Shall we recognize our own staff as experts at this point? COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Motion to approve and to recognize Mr. Arnold as an expert. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Second. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: And Mr. Milk? COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Yes. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Second. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: All those in favor signify by saying aye. Opposed? (No response) MR. ARNOLD: Thank you. With respect to the issue of fast tracking, we have been on a relatively fast track with this project, primarily because of one prospective tenant here. But also secondarily, because we have an economic plan that was adopted. We have Mr. Mihalic here, who is prepared to speak to you about some of the issues relative to our economic plan that the county's embarked on, and why it's important that we try to retain and attract high-wage employers into our community. And we have some information for you at the appropriate time to insert there, as well. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: But my question specifically is whether or not, as currently proposed, because we haven't adopted -- adopted it yet, the business park subdistrict that's proposed to be adopted in the next cycle of hearings starting in about a week, whether or not this proposal is consistent with those as they are currently drafted. MR. ARNOLD: At this point in time, I'm not trying to dance around the subject, but it's sort of a question that really can't be answered on its surface, because this document was not prepared in response to what was proposed as the Comprehensive Plan. What we're looking at today was prepared in response to the existing Comprehensive Plan that we have on the books; it's entirely consistent with that. I believe it's consistent with the intent and purpose, without a doubt, of our business park subdistrict that we're going to be presenting to the Board of County Commissioners next week. There are some elements that I believe are still subject to change and further modifications. So to tell you that it's consistent with it today, may not mean that it will be consistent next week after you've formally either adopted it or decide not to adopt it. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: But as you proposed it, because there is a draft -- MR. ARNOLD: Uh-hum, correct. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: As a draft, if we adopt it without discussion -- which won't happen -- but if we adopted your draft without discussion, would this comply? MR. ARNOLD: I think -- the only answer I think I can honestly give you is that it generally is. There are a couple of components that because of the method that this document is prepared, it's not an apples to apples comparison. For instance, there is some issues about how much retail and non-industrial space that you can have within a business park as we will be proposing next week. This PUD document, because of the consistency finding of having medical related office within a quarter mile of a hospital, having existing industrial zoning, qualifying for a certain amount of non-retail commercial business development, it's very hard to make an apples to apples comparison. But generally, it is a consistent project with what we are proposing. There are very minor nuances, but I would tell you it's very tough for me to sit here and tell you it's 100 percent consistent. But it is generally consistent with what we're proposing. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Could you, could you -- I'm sorry, you know, to be pushing you on this, but I want to get just as hard an answer as I can. I recognize you cannot give me an absolute answer, but I want as much as I can get. To the extent there are these minor nuances, like could you give me an example of one? I have a question specifically, let me ask you, and that is, would this proposal permit more or less industrial versus more or less retail? I frankly tried to look at that and see if I could understand, and can't make that analysis myself, which is why I'm asking you. MR. ARNOLD: I'm not sure that I can specifically answer that without -- I think Mr. Reynolds, maybe because he's more intimately familiar with some of the tenants, or prospective tenants here, can give you a little bit more detailed answer. Again, I think that we've already heard and we know that we net fewer industrial acres, for instance, under the proposed PUD than we have currently in place today. You end up with some additional retail opportunities that you don't have today on the ground because of the fact that they're taking advantage of the relationship to the hospital to include some medical related facilities, which include some limited retail. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Did I understand you correctly that, from your perspective then, because of the existing industrial zoning, it's not so much the industrial compliance as the retail compliance that you think there's an issue, or would be an issue of compliance from one to the other with? MR. ARNOLD: Well, I guess -- from what we're proposing in our Comprehensive Plan amendment, it has a provision that says no more than 30 percent of the business park shall be non-industrial uses. That non-industrial has yet to be defined, but we know it includes a certain amount of office space, we know it includes retail, hotel-motel, some other things. What I can't tell you is exactly how that breaks down in the Creekside Commerce Park specifically, because there is a provision that says we're going to have a maximum 40 percent of certain acreage dedicated to retail and certain non-industrial uses. But we've yet to go that next step as part of our Land Development Code amendments and fully develop what we believe will be a business park PUD district that would then start establishing which, exactly, of those uses will be permissible and which will not. COHHISSIONER HAC'KIE: Makes me understand the apples to oranges. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Commissioner Constantine? COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Just so nobody misinterprets your comments on the fast track. I don't want anybody to think the Collier family gets special treatment. I know last week I called for a small project that Mr. Hilk's working on, that the individual has going on has to go through a similar process, and he estimated it takes three or four months, by the time you start something to get it all the way to the Board of Commissioners. What's the time frame? When did this first come to our staff? MR. ARNOLD: I believe that it came in on July 21st. And we had anticipated this to come before you a couple of weeks earlier, and because of some advertising problems, we did not. But generally, it's still taken nearly about the same amount of time as it typically would for most other PUDs. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: When we hear the word fast track, I don't want anybody to misinterpret that somehow this is flying through. It's fast by government standards. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: It's scary, isn't it? COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: But it's still -- August, September, October. Three months, so --CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I do want to point out the advertising problems were solely the fault of the paper. (Laughter) COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Any chance, he'll do it. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Did you get an answer to your question? COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: I did, and I apologize for interrupting you, but that's just a critical point for me. MR. REYNOLDS: That's fine, because I know that was an important issue. I just want to specifically identify that what staff was talking about is right now, the language that is in the business park subdistrict, at the insistence of the department of community affairs up to 30 percent of the total acreage of the nonindustrial uses of the type identified below, that's your cap. We have a Business Zoning District within our PUD that provides for those uses. We have 19 acres. That's less than 20 percent of our area. So I think even with the recognition that the details of all the uses that may fall into that has not been determined, and some of the uses within the IC may fall into that category, I'm very comfortable that we're going to be consistent with this district when we finally adopt it and I will be here a week from today discussing in more detail this subdistrict, because I think it's a very important thing for Collier County. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: It sounds like the most, sorry, but negative, the most intense impacts are less in this project than are proposed in the draft language. It sounds like the most intense are less than in commerce. MR. REYNOLDS: I would agree with that. The language right now for industrial use in your proposed business park subdistrict says that if you have industrially zoned land, those uses allowed in the industrial zoning district are allowed in your PUD. And what we have done is, you've seen in the letter to Brian and the report, is we have significantly trimmed that list of uses so we have less industrial uses allowed in this PUD today than would be enabled under this business park subdistrict, in my opinion. But once again, that's all going to have to get worked out over, I don't know, the next couple of months. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I was tremendously disappointed to see boiler shops taken out. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Darn. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: There's such a demand for them. MR. REYNOLDS: There's some ones in there that I've never even seen before. I would just make an aside, I think at some point we've got to take a hard look at this SIC code methodology of allocating uses, because it is extraordinarily cumbersome, and it doesn't work well for -- COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I hate it. COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: We just had that discussion about a week ago. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Didn't we? MR. REYNOLDS: But it's what we have right now so that's what we're working with. Let me -- I know we've got a lot of people to speak, so I'm going to try to go as quickly as I can and still make my points. The commerce park design, this is really a master plan concept for business. This is a campus design. You can see on the iljustration of the plan how we have some of the same features that you have in a Master Plan community. You have lakes that are used to amenitize the parcels; you have integrated open space and preserve areas, both upland preserves, wetland preserves, green buffers. All of those things work together. They exceed the 30 percent minimum requirement that the county has today. It is a mix of uses and the uses are designed to complement each other. Master Plan communities have amenities; that's how they add value to the development tracts; the very same with this commerce park. The kind of amenities you have in a commerce park, some of them are fundamental amenities, but that you don't always get in your industrial parks: That is, underground utilities that are installed up front; a master stormwater management system; sidewalks; integrated lighting; integrated signage; integrated landscaping. Those are all amenities that businesses value and are willing to pay a premium for, frankly, to locate in a site, because it adds value to their finished buildings when they're done. There's been a lot of discussion already about architectural design guidelines. I would also like to point out and the question was asked how this PUD deals with design guidelines. There is an exhaustive section in the PUD, Section 2.18, and it goes through about two and a half pages of design guidelines that are beyond your architectural design guidelines and they speak to a lot of different kinds of requirements that are imposed on this park in its entirety. So I want to make it clear that even though our business uses comply with your commercial guidelines, as they should, the industrial and the business uses in the project all have to comply with the requirements of the PUD. And in many cases, those go beyond what your adopted design guidelines require. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Mr. Reynolds, may I interrupt you to ask a for instance. The roadway that extends from Goodlette-Frank westward to what looks like, appears to be a cul-de-sac, but to the property boundary there? MR. REYNOLDS: Yes. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I've made no secret about hoping and actually requiring, if I needed to, an interconnect at that point, so that adjacent development would be able to go through this project, instead of having to go all the way out to Immokalee Road and jam up Immokalee Road and go down to Goodlette-Frank. If that's going to be the case, and this Board eventually, I hope, has the wisdom to continue that road through the next project phases, all the way over to US 41, to create an additional route from 41 to Goodlette-Frank, without ever going on Immokalee Road. If we're going to have traffic moving up and down that street with the guidelines you're talking about, is that traffic going to be looking at open -- or looking at dumpsters, active loading docks, the real -- you know, what people think of as kind of industrial applications -- along that roadway, or do your standards address that? MR. REYNOLDS: Those standards are addressed. Those things have to be screened. And in addition, it's not only from the external public roads that you are required to have, for example, no exposed metal siding, it's the interior streets, as well. And in fact, what we did is, we said anything west of Goodlette Road cannot have exposed, you know, metal exteriors of the buildings. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Regardless of whether there's an abutting street or not? MR. REYNOLDS: That's correct. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. Since I brought up the issue of that roadway, I believe, as I read your PUD, you are agreeing to an interconnect on that roadway to the adjacent property, so that when future properties to the west come in for fezones, as they are currently zoned ag, this Board will have the option of, if they deem it necessary by traffic circulation, to require an interconnect to your project, and you have no problem with that? MR. REYNOLDS: That's correct. Let me just address one point. The access management, I know you had some discussion about access management guidelines. This project is designed to comply with your access management guidelines. We have three primary, we have three secondary access points, and if it's a matter of scaling off of the conceptual diagram, I can assure you that this project will meet your access management guidelines. The other thing to note about the plan, you see that we have a fairly extensive internal collector road system. If you look at the way that's laid out, it's designed to serve a number of functions; one, is obviously to provide access to each site from a public road. But the second is to allow the users within the park to interconnect and access each other, without having to go out on an external road. And that's an important thing to consider in the design, because it helps to reduce the impact of offsite traffic. So the plan has been carefully designed to do that. If you could put up the board that shows the landscape features, I want to spend just a minute showing you what the landscape design features are going to look like in this park. As I mentioned, we have over a third of the park in a green space land use. What you see there are details of some of the different landscape treatments that will be used in the park. What I think you can see is that the overall effect, with the low walls that have the integrated signage, the canopy trees, the low shrubs, all of those elements, the spacing of the trees, those things are designed to create a very distinctive look and that's a look that is consistent with what you find in a Master Plan community. If you could put up the next graphic. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: And these graphics, by being presented today, are committed to on the record? MR. REYNOLDS: Yes. What we have done here is, we sent one of our designers out and took photographs of what you actually see as you come out of Collier's Reserve. So the landscape features that you see looking out the windshield that are closest to you, actually are the landscape features that are within Collier's Reserve. And you're looking across Immokalee Road at the Boulevard entrance which is the westernmost access point into the park. I just want to describe what you're looking at there. You see a boulevard, with a landscaped median, you see the signage walls on either side of the entry that I had shown you in the detail before. You see a lake on the left side of the entry which if you look at your plan you can see where that lake is. And adjacent to it is the preserve area that will be retained. Bruce, could you point out the post office building on the rendering? Could you point out where Tyton would be located? MR. TYSON: All the wetlands. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Would we be able to see Tyton? MR. REYNOLDS: From that perspective, you will not be able to see Tyton. You will be able to see a little bit of the post office. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: How about the road from driving down Immokalee? MR. REYNOLDS: As you drive down Immokalee Road, you will see Tyton as you proceed to the east. And that's a good thing, because you're going to see in a minute what the rendering of the Tyton facility looks like and I think it's something that you're going to want to see. But at least, from this viewpoint, exiting Collier's Reserve, you cannot see it because of the sight lines. COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Mr. Reynolds, the landscape we see there is representative of what will be there immediately on building of those roads or that's growth after five years, or what is that? Realistically, what time frame? MR. REYNOLDS: Basically everything that you see on that rendering will be put in in the first phase. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: At that size and at that -- will it be lollipop trees that grow to that or that's what it will look like when you plant it? MR. REYNOLDS: No. In fact, our standards for the tree size, we have committed to 13 to 14 foot high trees. Your Land Development Code commits 8 to 10 foot trees going in, so we have increased the size of the trees up front. And of course, then they develop a canopy that over time is very extensive. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: So -- I'm sorry -- more important, the crown on those at 13 to 14 is about six feet in diameter, at least, as opposed to the 8 to 10s being about four feet. MR. REYNOLDS: That's correct. And they're also closer together. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: That means the width of the tree in the green part? CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Yeah, the stuff you see. COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: (Laughing) Okay. MR. REYNOLDS: Right. Typically, your requirement is 30 foot on center. In our case, we put them -- not only are they larger, but they're 25 foot on center. There's been a lot of discussion in this project about our two users that we have already identified, and that's Tyton and the post office and we have provided in your packet, and will put up a full-size exhibit of what the site plan of those two facilities looks like, because this is the first phase of the project. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: This is west of -- west of the canal, west of Goodlette-Frank Road? MR. REYNOLDS: That's correct. You see Pine Ridge Canal on the east side, Immokalee Road on the north. What you have is, you have the two access points to Immokalee Road, the western one that aligns with Collier's Reserve, and then the eastern access point. You have the lake and the preserve area. You have three business parcels and you have the two sites, one for the post office and one for Tyton. It's important to note the orientation of how those buildings have been placed on the site. First of all, they are setback from the internal roadway, they have lakes within the parcels and landscape features. Their access, their primary access comes off the internal northern road, and they have two points of access to Immokalee Road. And those are the improvements that are going to be built in the initial phase of the project. Now what I'd like to put up is the second drawing, and it's also in your packet. One of the concerns that the residents of Collier's Reserve had raised to us in requests was to provide for an interconnection for those two uses to be able to exit to Goodlette Road, rather than Immokalee Road. What you see there is the southern roadway that's been discussed in great detail now, and you see how those two site plans can accommodate and will accommodate a connection to that roadway that will provide for service vehicles, employee access, and will allow them to enter and exit the site from Goodlette Road without ever getting onto Immokalee Road. You also can see, further to the east of the canal, how the internal road system is developed to interconnect the northern and the southern road. I know we didn't get into a lot of detail on the modification to the plan that we made based on our initial meetings with Collier's Reserve, but we eliminated a north-south road along the west line that would have provided the direct point of access to the, to that southern parcel. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Mr. Reynolds? MR. REYNOLDS: Yes. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: What is the minimum distance, linear, from Immokalee Road to the entrance to the post office? I'm thinking of April 14th, 11:59 p.m. I know there are two accesses getting in. I assume the predominant one would be at a proposed light at the intersection of Collier's Reserve. I'm just curious what that distance is. Do we know? MR. REYNOLDS: In excess of 400 feet; is that correct, Bruce? CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Mr. Tyson, we need you on the microphone over there so the court reporter can pick it up. MR. TYSON: My name is Bruce Tyson, and for the record, I was swor~. And I'm a registered landscape architect in Florida, member of the ASLA and member of the SEP. Your question is interesting from the standpoint of a visibility issue that you look at across here, which winds up being somewhere in the neighborhood of 500 feet. But the reality of anybody who's traveling, has to come all the way in around, go through the parking lot and back over. And just looking at that distance, I'm sure it's very much in the neighborhood of a little over a thousand feet, if not 1,200 feet, almost a quarter of a mile. Stacking, I'm not sure how that works, but that's a lot of cars. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. But the internal circulation, again, I know it's only one day out of the year, but we all know what tax day does to the post office. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Christmas. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: And Christmas, too. But that internal circulation, there is also a way that you could force that traffic back out to Goodlette-Frank and not back up onto Immokalee; is that correct, assuming Phase II is completed? MR. TYSON: That is correct. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. But that really can't -- moving it through Goodlette really can't occur until the Phase Two is done? MR. TYSON: That is correct. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: I have a question that's similar, only about Tyton, and maybe it's appropriate to ask when the Tyton reps are here. But not knowing enough about their operations and how they distribute their product, and whether, you know, what kind of traffic there is associated with the distribution of the manufacturing at Tyton. Are you going to talk about that or? MR. REYNOLDS: Well, I think I can answer that question, and they will correct me if I'm wrong. They have two tractor-trailer deliveries a day. And they have, I believe, one UPS in and out per day. That's it. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Is there a time of day? MR. REYNOLDS: I think, why don't I let them answer that, because I'm not sure. It's between 7 a.m. and 7 p.m., but it's -- compared to certainly any stretch of what kind of tractor-trailer truck traffic you have on Immokalee Road, it is an imperceptible amount of traffic. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Well, that's one of the things, when I spoke to the Second District Association, one of the things that they were the most fussy about and that I've corresponded with some of our staff about, is the truck traffic on that road, and whether or not it's appropriate. So that's a factor. MR. REYNOLDS: Yes. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: And the importance of it to me is that the existing industrial would not have been adding to traffic on Immokalee. It would have been adding to traffic on Goodlette, but conceivably would have gone from 1-75 down Goodlette, you know, Immokalee to Goodlette and then turned, and back, and never would have gotten along that congested stretch of Immokalee. That's where my thoughts are going. MR. REYNOLDS: Our design of the plan has been so that when we look at this project when it is built, we've got fantastic access because we've got access to two arterial roads. We can distribute trips in either of those two directions. I think the only issue that I had heard on that is the question of when do you have to build that southern road. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Right. MR. REYNOLDS: We can get into that in a minute. But I will tell you when you do a master plan community of any type, you phase your infrastructure based on the development of the site. And that's the exact same thing that we'll be doing here. And what we have said from the outset is that that southern road would be built when that southern parcel needs to be accessed, because that is the primary access to that southern parcel. So you stage your infrastructure. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I will want to come back to that to discuss that. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: You know. MR. REYNOLDS: Right. Let me walk through now a couple things on development standards and compatibility. The simple question is this. How do you make a park that has nonresidential uses of the variety that we have compatible in the setting where you've got the wide variety of things that we are adjacent to, ranging from wastewater treatment plants to golf course communities. The way you do that is very simple: You deal with uses and you deal with development standards. The uses, I think, have been covered in some detail. But if you'll note in your booklet, there are some 11 pages of SIC categories of uses that are presently permitted in your industrial zoning that have been purged from this park. And I think it's fair to say that we went beyond just trying to take out things that are potentially obnoxious, we even took out things that sounded obnoxious and obvious things that we're never going to do in Collier County, anyway. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I particularly appreciated you taking out the wholesale cats, wholesale distribution of cats. (Laughter) CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: That's what we were laughing up here about, is one of the uses in the SIC Code is cats, wholesale, worms, wholesale. MR. REYNOLDS: I read that one last night and laughed, as you did. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Yeah, because we're really concerned about the wholesale cat business in Collier County. MR. REYNOLDS: Yeah. Nuclear tie rods manufacturing is another one that we don't have a lot of, so. But I just want to let you know the extent to which we have gone through now is, last count I had, four different times, trying to purge SIC codes out of this thing that we don't need and don't want. But it's a cumbersome process because of the way those things are set up, I can tell you. Let me talk quickly about development standards. And if you'll turn to the booklet, there's a little chart that says, "Comparison to Development Standards and Landscape Buffers, Requirements Along Immokalee Road." And very quickly, I'll walk through those. What we have done is we have compared our business district to the commercial district in the Collier's Reserve PUD. That is our closest neighbor across Immokalee Road that allows commercial uses. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: That's the commercial on both sides of the entrance to Collier's Reserve? MR. REYNOLDS: Yes. COHHISSIONER HAC'KIE: The red. MR. REYNOLDS: This is the commercial C.O. district in Collier's Reserve PUD, and this is the HO district, which is the medical commercial district. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: What's the green? MR. REYNOLDS: This is the preserve area. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. MR. REYNOLDS: Yeah. I want to make sure I'm clear. This is not to suggest that Collier's Reserve doesn't have very high standards, because we all know it does. It's a beautiful project and very well planned. If you compare though, the development standards between the two projects, you'll see that our business commercial building height is 35 feet. In Collier's Reserve it's allowed to be 50 feet. If you look at the medical buildings, that we are permitted 50 feet, which is only east of Goodlette Road, and their medical district west of Goodlette Road, that is 80 feet. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Say that number again? MR. REYNOLDS: 80 feet. There is actually a handout in your booklet that goes through these. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: I was trying to write it down. Found it. Thank you. MR. REYNOLDS: Okay. I won't touch on them all, just a couple that I think are significant. The building setback from Immokalee Road is twice what's required in the Collier's Reserve PUD. We have a floor area ratio in the Creekside Commerce Park. There is not one in Collier's Reserve. The width of the landscape buffer is five feet wider. I mentioned previously the height of the trees installed going in is significantly different, as is the spacing of the trees; 25 feet versus 30 feet. And then finally and probably the most important issue as far as compatibility is how close is a residential home from the use. And what you'll see is that in Collier's Reserve, the closest home -- and I'll point out the one that we measured from. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: The Thomas house? MR. REYNOLDS: I'm not sure who lives here. Maybe they're here and they'll tell me. But it's this house right here. And this house is, by our calculations, the closest house to their commercial district, and it also happens to be the closest house to both our business district, and the closest house to the Tyton facility. And what you can see, the distance is 385 feet, which is a combination of setbacks and other uses. Within Collier's Reserve it's 1,050 feet to our closest business use. And I'm going to show you a cross-section in a minute that relates that to the Tyton facility, which is even further away. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Alan, what about Pelican Marsh? MR. REYNOLDS: Pelican Marsh. Their closest residential property is this right here, and that is 300 feet away from the closest structure within the Creekside Commerce Park. And as you probably know if you've seen it, there's a very tall, extensive landscaped berm and a golf course that separates those two. And we have included also some very detailed supplemental landscape plantings for this berm, as well as a height limitation of 35 feet, which is the same height as they are allowed to have here. So the bottom line of that is it's not visible from that residential home. COHHISSIONER HAC'KIE: And not much farther than Collier's Reserve's internal, anyway? MR. REYNOLDS: That's correct. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Okay. MR. REYNOLDS: If I can, I'll just go through the rest of the handouts very quickly. You'll see a photograph of the post office. This is an artist's rendering of the facility that's going to be built, but it's almost identical to the one that's up in Bonita right now that you can see. It's a very attractive building. I don't believe it meets all of your architectural -- commercial architectural design guidelines, but certainly is an attractive building, and one that we would be happy to be able to see. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Can we make them comply, the feds? CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I was going to ask, is that the reason that in your IC district you did not mirror the architectural standards in the either/or option is because of the post office? MR. REYNOLDS: Well, that's not the only reason. Generally, manufacturing and governmental buildings have different bulk issues to deal with. So what we try to do is incorporate the facade treatments, and those kinds of elements, that create the architectural definition without getting into all of the standards that you require for your retail buildings. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I can look at Tyton and I can look at the post office, and I can say this is something the community is or is not willing to live with. I can't look at the big block south of that south road. That's a concern to me, as to what faces that internal roadway, as well as some of the other -- the two other pieces on the other side. MR. REYNOLDS: Right. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: That's where I just have some concern. MR. REYNOLDS: That's why we put in supplemental standards, because we're the most -- actually, our tenants are the most impacted from whatever designs those are and it's important that the quality of the park be kept up. If I could put the cross-section up -- and I know I may be dwelling on this, but I just want to make sure it's very clear the relationship that we have between this park and Collier's Reserve in terms of distances and separations. And there's a reduced copy of this handout in your packet. What we have done is taken that same residential home and we have gone in a straight line distance at the top to the nearest Collier's Reserve commercial tract. You can see that there's a rear yard setback, there's golf and lake, there's internal right-of-way and then there's the rear yard landscape requirements to the building that's allowed to be 50 feet tall. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: The box you've shown on here, though, is only 35? MR. REYNOLDS: On the top it's 50 feet, because that's what is permitted in the Collier's Reserve district. These are actual scale drawings. We did not accent the horizontal or the vertical, so that's a 50 scale drawing. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: So regardless of this project, that scenario at the top is permitted and can pull a building permit tomorrow? MR. REYNOLDS: That's the existing condition, correct, in Collier's Reserve, to their commercial districts. And frankly, it's adequate. I think it's fine. I mean, we've got lots of examples. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: We have situations elsewhere that look better. MR. REYNOLDS: Well, yeah, and I mean, it's a good design because it's provided the golf courses, the buffer; you've got the internal road, you've got the landscaping, so it functions very adequately, as far as a buffer. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Mr. Reynolds, can you help me, because you're a visual thinker and I'm not. How does this, like the Collier's Reserve, how does that compare to maybe the internal commercial at Pelican Bay to -- MR. REYNOLDS: I'm thinking that the closest residential to the commercial at Pelican Bay is probably maybe the Bridge Way. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Bridge Way is what I would guess. MR. REYNOLDS: Yeah, yeah. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: That's pretty darn close, because it's just a street. MR. REYNOLDS: That's probably closer than that. I would say it's -- CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Something I visualized was the back of, is it The Crossroads in Vineyards? COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Yes. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: You have some condominium projects. Right across the street, there's a lake and the back of a shopping center right there. And that separation, my guess, is somewhere around three or 400 feet. It's about a football field. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Thank you. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I was doing the same thing. I was trying to find a real world example of that. The difference here is there's a nice golf course and a natural vegetative buffer, pine trees, and so forth, which is, you know, better. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: That's the Collier's Reserve example, now. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Right. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I'm sorry to interrupt again because you're going to tell us about the other. MR. REYNOLDS: Well, that's fine. Let me just show you what I'm going to show on the exhibit as we're going from that house again in a straight line to Tyton, being the closest IC use to the nearest residence of Collier's Reserve. You have a 20-foot rear yard setback, you have 230 feet of open space and lake. You have a hundred feet of internal right-of-way in Collier's Reserve, which, in that location, I believe is a boulevard with landscaping. You have a preserve area that's heavily vegetated; that's 400 feet wide, that is completely opaque. You have 150 feet of Immokalee Road right-of-way that's got a nice landscaped median. You have a landscaped buffer of 20 feet along our project that has enhanced landscape standards from what your LDC requires; an additional front yard setback requirement. Then you have your business district parcel, then you have an internal right-of-way; you have another landscape buffer and front yard setback, with a hundred feet back to the corner, northwest corner of the Tyton building. That's 1,410 feet with one, two, three roads, a heavy preserve, and probably four or five landscape buffers. I'd suggest to you that it would be very difficult for anything that would occur in that building or any other building in our project to have any impact whatsoever on the residents in Collier's Reserve. The Pelican Marsh compatibility -- I think I've addressed that adequately -- and we have worked closely with the WCI people and put the required standards in there. They also suggested that performance standards be put in that deal with the odor and the noise issues, and that was included in a letter that you saw to Brian Milk; those all get incorporated. And those apply throughout the park. Those do not just apply to our adjacency with Pelican Harsh. The other thing that I would point out is that actually, some of the uses in the Collier's Reserve commercial tract I would suggest may be of greater impact than some of the commercial uses, any of the commercial uses, frankly, that are permitted in our project. We did include a list of some of those uses that we did not allow in our business district. Once again, I think it's -- it will reinforce that there is a need for some good landscape buffering, but that applies equally to what they are going to have to do. I'd like to close right now. I know you've got a lot of speakers. I do want to say that the significance of this project, I think, goes beyond this PUD request. You have established economic diversification as an important goal in this county. Job creation is important. It's one of your highest priorities and you do require a public and, in fact, embrace, a public-private partnership for economic development. You do need to have high quality sites. There are some sites available in Collier County but they are very few. I would say Collier Park of Commerce probably has the closest comparable sites available in our project, and that site is, as you know, is very rapidly building out. If you think about the kinds of siting criteria that you would want for a park like this: Access to two arterial roadways; land that already has industrial zoning or a designation; all the necessary infrastructure in place to the site, so that all you have to do is extend your mains; well-buffered by well-planned communities, because they were buffering themselves from external uses and from external roadways; and an owner that's willing to commit the substantial up front investment that's necessary to do this. I've thought long and hard about where else you could put a park of this quality that meets all those standards, and I tell you I couldn't think of another one. I think this is the right location to have a park that you can point to as your new standard for a commerce park in Collier County. We are competing to attract and retain businesses like Tyton. They have other options available to them, many are outside of this county and most of the counties lure these kind of businesses with economic incentives. We don't have economic incentives today to put on the plate. What we do have is, we have private sector support and a willingness to build the kind of park that they would like to locate in. And I think it's important to support that, and it's important to do it in a way that we have set a high standard for what we're going to get. And I would suggest to you that this park is the highest standard for its type of use that has been proposed in Collier County. So I would obviously encourage you to support our request. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: One more question. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Just -- I'm not going to make a speech about that, although it's tempting. I want to ask you a question about you referred me to something in your handout about permitted uses in Collier's Reserve; commercial, medical districts not allowed in Creekside Business District. And I don't understand that, because the last one listed there is U.S. Post Office, as if that's permitted in Collier's Reserve and not in Creekside. And I think you're probably telling me that it's permitted in the Creekside industrial, but not business? MR. REYNOLDS: That's correct. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: But I want to know overall, which, you know, without that fine line distinction, which of these are permitted? Are there any of these that are not permitted in your industrial? I just think it's a more fair apples to apples comparison that way. MR. REYNOLDS: Yes. Building supply? No, none of these are allowed in our IC district. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: None of these are allowed. Well, the post office is? MR. REYNOLDS: Except for the post office. Yeah, I'm sorry. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: So none of these except post office are allowed in yours at all. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Which page is that? COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Well, they're not numbered, but it's -- COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Right after the blue page. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: There are about 30 blue pages. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: While that is going on, my discussions really have been with Mr. Varnadoe, because the two main issues that kept coming out of the residents in Collier's Reserve that I was trying to deal with, is one, a perception issue of an industrial park. We all know what industrial parks look like in this community. With the exception of Collier Park of Commerce, the rest of them are nothing to brag about and nothing anyone would really want to live next to or around. So that perception issue can only be addressed through aesthetic controls, architectural controls, landscaping, and so forth. So that's one issue. The second issue is one always of transportation, one of how do people get in and out of this, what is the trip generation, what does that mean to someone who lives in Collier's Reserve and has to deal with that traffic on a daily basis. We've talked about numbers, and so forth, but what I have asked and hopefully, maybe after public comment we can refine it, is I'm going to want some particulars on when that Phase II roadway, if this project moves forward, is to be built. So between you folks and your clients know that I'm going to be looking for a commitment in that area, and we have discussed several types of triggers in the past. Please, you know, think about that. Because if this project is to move ahead, I think it can only be done if the residents in Collier's Reserve know full well when they can expect the truck trips and the traffic to the rear of, at least Tyton and the post office, are going to be using Goodlette-Frank Road, instead of everyone using that light entrance at Immokalee. So if you would please work on that. I'm going to want to address that sometime during this hearing. The next question is for Mr. Kant. Mr. Kant, the industrial section as it currently exists, both on the east and west side of the roadway, do not extend as far over as the entrance to Collier's Reserve. This project adds enough acreage that they do get over that far, and thus a connection to Collier's Reserve. I guess my question is this. As the corridor between Goodlette-Frank and U.S. 41 builds out, regardless of whether it's industrial, retail, commercial, whatnot, would you anticipate, through our access management plan that eventually there would be an access at the entrance to Collier's Reserve, whether it's commercial or industrial, or anything else? MR. KANT: For the record, my name is Edward Kant. I have been sworn. I had given some prior testimony and I wanted to get that on the record. I'm a member of the County Commission staff, I'm a Registered Professional Engineer with a specialization in civil engineering and transportation. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Motion to tender as an expert. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Second. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: All those in favor signify by saying aye. MR. KANT: Thank you. Short answer: Yes. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: There's going to be commercial activity on one side, and so forth, and I think that was the intent of the entrance to Collier's Reserve being there. MR. KANT: Using the petitioner's exhibit of the detail of the industrial park, the one to the right, he's got a little what looks like a little pink dot at the entrance, which I believe is meant to depict a future traffic signal. And that would be the location, the logical location for a traffic signal. Typically, we would request that any adjacent roadway entrances, whether they be like shopping center driveways, or in this case a public road, would be lined up so as to take advantage of that traffic signal. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: That's kind of an interesting problem for me, because I like the access to the south, where they can get to Goodlette-Frank Road. But let's say the corner were to be a large scale commercial development. If it connects that close to Immokalee Road, I think we'd have to look at the volume of traffic and the throat length to determine whether that's an appropriate connection, wouldn't we? MR. KANT: Yes, and typically we have in our existing ordinances, specifically in Ordinance 93-64, which is our work within the right-of-way ordinance, we specify minimum throat distances for shopping centers, or actually, I believe -- I believe the wording refers to commercial uses in excess of certain square footages, as opposed to merely shopping centers. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: What's a throat on a road? MR. KANT: That would be the distance between -- if we were looking at a driveway, for example, the distance between the edge of the travel lanes on the main road and the first opportunity, as you drive down that driveway from leaving the main road, the first opportunity to turn off. So you have some stacking distance for cars trying to get in or out. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Okay, I got it. MR. KANT: My purpose -- aside from answering that question -- my purpose in returning was to try to answer your earlier question, also. I made -- I took the applicant's original traffic impact statement and just very quickly, without benefit of any reference material, so I want the commission to understand that these numbers, I believe they are good numbers, but whether it's 495 or 500 is -- I'm not trying to cut it that fine. And I took the proposal as set forth in the petitioner's traffic statement where they propose so many square feet of retail, so many square feet of medical, so many square feet of general office -- I should say medical office -- general office, and so many square feet of business park. And looking at the way they have proposed the various uses, they have a total of 40,000 square feet of retail, 100,000 square feet of medical and 50,000 square feet of general office, and 620,000 square feet of business park. Taking the numbers that they've generated and kind of working backwards, we come up with some rough average trip generation rates per thousand square feet. And again, making the assumption that if we took the 50,000 square feet of general office that they are proposing, and said, well, what if all that went to medical office -- because I believe that was one of the Chairman's main concerns -- what would that do, how much traffic would that add. And interestingly enough, it's relatively little. It's about 445 cars, using those numbers. That represents an increase of about two and a half percent of the total traffic generated by this proposal at build-out, but it only represents about 1.3 percent of the existing traffic on County Road 846, Immokalee Road. So it's not a significant number, given those square footages. Now if they decided to take X square feet of the business park, say, and convert that into medical office, or X square feet of the retail, we could work on those numbers. I might point out that the retail in this case comes up with the highest trip generation rate per thousand square feet, followed by the medical office, followed by the general office, followed by the business park. There are a number of different ways of estimating trip generation. I'm not going to get into those, except to say that where there is good and sufficient data, the ITE, that is the Institutes of Transportation Engineers has developed equations which can be solved for specific square foot sizes. In other areas, we tend to use average numbers. So the numbers may vary slightly. But typically, they are in the ballpark. For example, on this particular number of square feet, if we use the equation, we might come up within one or two tenths of a trip. The other piece of information I want to give you, again, just so you have this information in front of you, is that with respect to the total estimate based on the traffic statement that was provided by the petitioner, after factoring in the, what's called the bypass trip reduction, they're showing approximately 15,200 cars at build-out to be generated by this development. Based on our -- I called my office to double-check this -- and based on our recent trip generation counts -- I'm sorry, not trip generation, but travel counts -- as of 1996, we show a volume on Immokalee Road between U.S. 41 and Goodlette-Frank Road of approximately 32,500 cars. The level of service D, which is the minimum standard, would be 38,200 for a four-lane divided facility. If we go to a six-lane divided facility, we are well in excess of that. It begins to approach the 50, 60,000 mark, which would indicate that, again, depending on the build-out schedule and what other development is taking place in the area, we may be looking at, you know, future widening, that is, to six lanes. I believe that that is called for in the 2020 Plan, is a six-lane facility. So the bottom line of the information I'm presenting to you here is that, based on the numbers that are presented and based on what I believe to be a reasonable engineering approach to this, I don't think that the conversion of that other 50,000 feet from general office to medical office would have a significant effect. But again, that's based on a very quick analysis. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: It wouldn't increase it dramatically, but it would hold approximately the same level? MR. KANT: That's correct. Yes, sir. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Mr. Weigel, it's official that the engineers take longer to say no than the lawyers do. (Laughter) MR. KANT: Thank you. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: You're welcome. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Mr. Reynolds? MR. REYNOLDS: Mr. Chairman, I'm going to introduce Ruth Ayres, and Ruth Ayres is -- CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I was about to suggest, I try every hour and a half to two hours to give the court reporter a few minutes to rest her weary hands. So why don't we take a five minute recess, and -- COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: A question, Mr. Chairman? CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Yes. COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: So we can get some idea as we plan to come back, do we have any idea how much longer the presentation's going to be? MR. REYNOLDS: This is our last speaker. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: How many registered speakers do we have? MR. MCNEES: 28. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK Okay. Let's go ahead and take a five minute recess and return. (A recess was taken.) CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. Let's reconvene the Board meeting. If I could ask everyone to have a seat, and we'll proceed. At this point we have, as of now -- I'm sorry. Last name, your speaker? MR. REYNOLDS: Ruth Ayres. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Ayres, that's what I thought. Is Ms. Ayres included in those 28 total speakers? MR. MCNEES: I don't think so. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. Make that 29, then. At this point, as a matter of course, after we have had -- excuse me, folks. After we have had the presentation from our staff, the presentation from the petitioner, we go to public comment. Public comment is afforded at five minutes per speaker. At 29 speakers, that's roughly 145 minutes of comment. Now, we will be here as long as it takes to hear everyone who has something to say on this project, but each speaker from here on out is afforded five minutes. There will be a timer on the podium up here. Green means go, yellow means you have 30 seconds, and red means it's over. So that is the manner in which we are going to be proceeding from here. Since she was not a part of your presentation team, I'm going to include Ms. Ayres as a public speaker on this matter, so we'll need you to fill out a slip when you're done, if you would, for the record. And if you like, we'll go ahead and start there and then we'll move through the balance of the public comment from Mr. HcNees calling the speakers in order. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: And you guys get to decide how long we talk about this. If you all take your five minutes, that's about two and a half hours. So it's up to you. MR. REYNOLDS: Ruth Ayres is the Director of Operations for Tyton Hellerman, and she's going to give you a very brief discussion about the Tyton facility here in Collier County. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Thank you. MS. AYRES: Thank you. My name again is Ruth Ayres and I have been sworn in. Tyton-Hellerman, I am the Director of Operations. Tyton-Hellerman has been in Naples for approximately seven years now, a little over seven years. We are based out of our corporate headquarters in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. We are Bullthorpe PLC. They own approximately 80 companies worldwide. Tyton is just one of them. We are a light manufacturer of plastic components. We make fasteners, cable ties, hose clamps, ducts and raceway tracking. We make our products for the aerospace industry, the automotive industry, the electrical market, the telecommunications market. Some of our major customers are Boeing Aircraft, Ford, General Motors, Chrysler, Saturn, Hercedes, AT&T, GTE. We started this facility down here in one building in 1990. We had 10 employees when we started that. We now have seven buildings we lease in the industrial park. We are spread out over a three and a half to four mile radius of the building we started out with. We have 128 employees now. We have a lot of duplication of labor because of these seven facilities. It is very inefficient. We are looking to build a 110,000 square foot facility. As you can see here in the picture, it will be a totally enclosed concrete structure building, totally air conditioned. Hopefully, we'll have 164 employees when we move into the facility. We work 24 hour work days, seven days a week. Our shifts run from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m., a 12-hour shift. All of our raw materials come in in truckloads. We receive approximately two truckloads a month of product. All of our materials -- COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Hay I interrupt you? Somebody earlier said you have two semis a day, I thought. MS. AYRES: Okay. He was talking about shipments going out. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: I'm sorry. MS. AYRES: All of our raw materials come in pellet form. They are processed. All of our by-product, our scrap off of our product, is reground and reprocessed back through on a closed loop system, so there isn't any waste. We -- our shipments, as you referred to, are, we have he said two. That's an average. We could have one -- we make shipments. We have a distribution center in Chicago, Hinsdale, and we ship out to them twice a week, out of our one molding facility. So there's a possibility of having more than two, but it averages two. And then we have also UPS shipments that come and pick up to go. Our work force that we have here, they are very concerned with where the location of the facility is going to be. We have had tours come through our facility over the last two to three years, touring our facility to see who we are and what we do. When we were at the Planning Commission there was a concern as to who we are, and a lot of people had a misconception of who we were. So we opened up our facility to anyone who was concerned, any concerned parties, to come through the facility and take a look at what we do, see who we are, where we are going, where we came from, and ask questions for those concerns. We did have seven or eight people from the Collier's Reserve called, came through our facility and asked those questions. 95 percent of our work force live in the Golden Gate area. We want to stay in Collier County. That is our preference. Our options are very, very limited at this time of where we can go. We want to build an up-scale building in a nice park, and like I said, our options are very limited. Thank you. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Thank you, Ms. Ayres. Mr. Reynolds, you had mentioned to me that a copy of that painting would be entered into the record? MR. REYNOLDS: Yes. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. Mr. McNees, let's go to speakers. MR. MCNEES: Your first is Susan Pareigis, followed by Dennis Plesha. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Ms. Pareigis, knowing your role, you understand that the decision before us today is a land use petition. MS. PAREIGIS: I do understand. My name is Susan Pareigis, for the record. I'm the Executive Director of the Economic Development Council of Collier County. I have been duly sworn. I just want to say to you very briefly we have worked for Tyton Corporation for a very long time, approximately 18 months. The client has driven the decision, as it should be, as to where this should be located. Again, I want to say the client has driven this decision. 95 percent of the work force comes from Golden Gate. We want to keep them in Collier County. We hope today that you will approve of this petition and variance, and we want to get them productive as soon as possible. I would love to answer any questions you may have. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: First of all, you said the word "variance", which is taboo. MS. PAREIGIS: You're right. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: No variance associated. Either that, or I missed something gross in the application. MS. PAREIGIS: That would be -- CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Questions of Ms. Pareigis? Seeing none, thank you. MS. PAREIGIS: Thank you very much. MR. MCNEES: Mr. Piesha, followed by Diane Ebben. MR. PLESHA: I've been sworn in. Mr. Chairman, ladies and gentlemen, my name is Dennis Plesha, and I'm the President of Tyton Corporation and I also represent today Bullthorpe PLC, which is our parent company located in Crawley, Sussex, England. Our parent now owns 97 companies worldwide, Ruth, and there are 25 companies in the U.S. Of those 25 companies, Tyton in Milwaukee has four facilities, Naples being one, Toronto, Canada, Chicago, Illinois, and now Los Angeles, California. We have had an excellent experience in Naples, in Collier County. We want to maintain our relationship with Collier County. We have about 130 employees here now. It's a family type organization and we employ young people -- no idiots, I might add. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Obviously, somebody has been here all day. (Laughter) MR. PLESHA: At any rate, we also employ some retired people. We have a good cross-section. And the experience we've had here in the Naples area has been just outstanding. When I talk to my counterparts from all across the country, I realize what a great experience we've had here because it's so difficult to hire outstanding personnel like we have. And we just feel very fortunate to be here. We want to expand, we want to take the seven facilities that we currently have and put them under one roof in the industrial park that's been proposed. Thank you very much. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I have one question for you. MR. PLESHA: Yes? COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: How many hours a day does the plant operate? MR. PLESHA: 24 hours a day. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Seven days a week? MR. PLESHA: That's correct. MR. HcNEES: Diane Ebben, followed by Sally Barker. MS. EBBEN: My name is Diane Ebben, and I live in Collier's Reserve and I'd like to have Mr. Garlick speak before I do. Is that possible? CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: No. MS. EBBEN: No? CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: No. It's your turn. MS. EBBEN: Okay. Well, I'm here to tell you -- CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I'm sorry. Could you say for the record whether you were sworn in or not? MS. EBBEN: I was sworn in, yes. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Thank you. MS. EBBEN: And I'm here to voice my objection to the planned park in the area. The area is a residential area. We've got Collier's on one side, we've got the Bay Colony Club and Pelican Harsh on the other, and to put an industrial park in the middle of all of us, I just, I mean, it just isn't right. We feel that, you know, we have come and invested in Collier County and the City of Naples. And now that? We hope you will vote against it. Thank you. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Thank you. MR. HCNEES: Mrs. Barker will be followed by Terri Tragesser. MS. BARKER: Good afternoon, Commissioners. For the record, my name is Sally Barker and I have been sworn. And I am here this afternoon representing the Second District Association. We have had several meetings with representatives of the Barton Collier Corporation and one with Collier's Reserve, and as a result of those meetings, we appointed a committee to review the proposed PUD and develop some recommendations. I will give you a general overview of our feelings on this matter, and Ms. Tragesser will go into more of the specifics after me. We are trying to keep this as short as possible. As are you, we in the Second District Association are very sensitive to the position of the nearby residents, particularly concerning such issues as traffic, noise and pollution. At the same time, we are also mindful of the fact, as was previously pointed out, that some kind of industrial park can be built at that site tomorrow, without the additional 40 acres of active agricultural that's currently under review for this PUD, and without the protection of a PUD. However, such an industrial park probably would not be much of an asset to our community. We are pleased that the Barton Collier Corporation has taken steps to address some of the more worrisome issues connected with an industrial park and to ameliorate the worst of this potential scenario by buffering Immokalee Road with commercial buildings that will meet the county's new design guidelines. As for the traffic impact at the intersection across from Collier's Reserve, we feel this area needs some additional thought. While we believe the traffic impact, while probably less than that generated by the original mega mall proposal, we would like to see some additional safeguards put in place. The southernmost internal roadway seen on the current site plan came and went over the summer, and we are heartened to see that the southern roadway is back again as part of the PUD proposal, creating eventually a major entryway to the project on Goodlette-Frank Road. In addition to this Goodlette-Frank entryway, we would like to see the Barton Collier Corporation make a firm commitment to eventually extend the southern roadway all the way across to US 41, especially since the adjacent land is under the same ownership. We are aware the county cannot require the county to extend the roadway at this time, but we feel that a commitment by the company to do so when the activity center is developed, will go a long way toward easing our concerns about traffic and offset the deterioration of the level of service on Immokalee Road. A southern route, particularly to the post office facility, would divert much of the traffic that otherwise would be using the Immokalee Road entrance. As for our concerns about design guidelines and landscaping for the light industrial section of the park, Mrs. Tragesser will address those. Thank you. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Thank you, Ms. Barker. MR. MCNEES: The next speaker is Terri Tragesser, followed by Thomas McElroy. MS. TRAGESSER: For the record, my name is Terri Tragesser. I am in a sworn state, not to be confused with a hypnotic trance. It's late. The Second District did look at this closely and we have some very targeted, specific comments on the project. We would like to request that the entire project comply with the architectural design standards found in 2.8 of the LDC. That would mean both business and IC district. Request a commitment from the petitioner for conversion of the southern internal roadway shown on PUD documents to a full access east-west public collector, which would extend from Goodlette Road to US 41. The road's extension would be consistent with the beginning of construction on the activity center commercial at the southeast intersection of US 41 and Immokalee. We'd also like to see some enhancements of the proposed landscape plan for the IC district to a level more appropriately reflecting the character of the high end corridor. We'd like to request deletion of silos and storage tanks of heights above which successful opaque buffering can be realistically achieved. The PUD documents make mention of silos and storage tanks that could go as high as 50 feet. When our Board reviewed the permitted uses in the PUD, there were some that we just sort of red lined because of the very sound of them, and I know there was some mention made of some deletions and strikeouts. So we do list a few that sounded rather ominous, so I'll read those. Building contractors, fabricated metal products, industrial and commercial machinery, industrial inorganic chemicals, motor freight transportation, warehousing and storage. Those sound like those uses would produce a lot of large semi truck type traffic. In the petitioner's presentation to us over the course of time, they have stressed their objective to bring a standard of commerce park to Collier County not currently offered. We are confident that the petitioner is sincere in their efforts to execute such a standard. However, the petitioner's submitted PUD documents are vague to the subject of level of design and landscape enhancement on the IC portion of the project. They have business district, IC district, and then their deeds and covenants, the latter of which is not enforceable by this county. Maybe if you put them altogether they will touch all the bases, but we can only deal with, as a county, those that are in the PUD document. So I see a level of exposure there for the county. We therefore respectfully request that the items listed above be effectively addressed and protective language be incorporated into the project's PUD document. Thank you. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Thank you, Ms. Tragesser. MR. MCNEES: Mr. McElroy, followed by Martin Altman, I believe. MR. MCELROY: Good afternoon. I have been sworn in. My name is Tom McElroy, I'm vice-president of Allen Systems Group. I'm here on behalf of the company and Art Allen, individually. As you are aware, we are currently completing the construction of our new 60,000 square foot corporate headquarters off Goodlette Road south, which is going to add a minimum of 61 new high wage jobs to the local economy, as well as the nine million plus which we actually put into the project. Were it not for the foresight of Mr. Allen to purchase that piece of property in conjunction with Mr. Stoneburner some seven or eight years ago, we really would not have a place to locate, and in fact, we would have been forced to look outside of Collier County. So that is why we're here today to support this measure. As a trusted member of the Economic Development Council, we are supportive of the development of more local property for the purpose of commercial parks. We believe that growth in the area is inevitable and should be managed properly. The best way we have found to manage growth is to encourage high wage, clean technology companies. It is impossible to do this without adequate available space. The Creekside Commerce Park can go a long way to helping alleviate this problem. And on a personal note, I'm a lifelong resident of the Naples area and one of the reasons that I actually had to leave after school was that there were no high wage jobs available. In the last year or so, Collier County, in conjunction with the City of Naples, has really taken an aggressive attitude towards getting some of these high wage jobs here. It would seem to me to coincide with that, that you would approve these types of projects, or else it does no good to give lip service to high wage jobs. Thank you. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Thank you, Hr. HcElroy. HR. HCNEES: Hr. Altman, followed by Tuck Tyler. MR. ALTHAN: Yes. My name is Martin Altman. I'm a resident of Collier's Reserve, and I ask that you deny the application for the PUD project as applied for. I feel that the project -- CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Excuse me, Mr. Altman, were you sworn in? MR. ALTHAN: Yes, I was. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Thank you. MR. ALTHAN: Thank you. I believe the project would be detrimental to the quality of life, to the environment, as well as the property values within the area. I also believe that the intended usage, particularly the PUD that would allow the industrial use of the property is not suitable or compatible with other uses that are currently existing in the area. Furthermore, it appears to me, despite the fact that certain people have said that they haven't rushed to bring this application before the Board of Commissioners, that it would be more propitious and more sensitive to the voters of this county to wait solely one more week until the long-term prospects for this type of PUD process and business parks would be further substantiated, so that there is no confusion as exactly what might occur. It seems the only expediting factor to this is the application of one company that currently employs perhaps 128 people to expedite this and not allow the process to take its due course in the interest of all citizens of this county. Thank you. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Thank you, sir. MR. HCNEES: Mr. Tyler, followed by Jane Cooper. MR. TYLER: My name is Tuck Tyler, I have been sworn in. SIC codes hold cats as a euphemism for pate. (Laughter) Anyway, I'd like to raise my concerns -- CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: You really wanted to start on that note? MR. TYLER: Well, either end on it or start on it, but at least, I got your attention. To that end, I'd like to bring up a subject that is near and dear to my heart and that is children. I have a 16-year-old daughter who drives to school every day, and exiting Collier's Reserve onto Immokalee Road is already a challenge, as it is. I'm not even sure traffic lights are the solution, when you have heavy trucks barreling down a road like Immokalee. We also have a school bus that comes into the entrance of Collier's Reserve every day to pick up children and exit. And I'm just terribly concerned over that entrance that was shown going into the industrial park from Collier's Reserve. Other than that, I support what the gentleman before me said, as well. Thank you very much. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Thank you. MR. HCNEES: Ms. Cooper, followed by I believe it's Rollie Comstock. MR. VARNADOE: If I could indulge just one minute, sir. I think that they have a leader, I mean, an attorney, and it might make it go faster and more smoothly if you let Mr. Garlick go, and get those out of the way. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: We usually do that. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I was curious why that wasn't the lineup already. Mr. Garlick would you prefer to go at this point? MR. GARLICK: Yes, sir, I would. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. Let's go ahead, if that's okay with you, mawam? MS. COOPER: Absolutely. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I wasn't sure if there had been a change in plans, or whatnot. Mr. Garlick, again, the time limits do still apply. I understand you have a team of people here, so let's try and conform to those limits as much as it's possible to. MR. GARLICK: Yes, sir, I appreciate it. I apologize. We didn't fill out the slips. We were told that as soon as the proponents were finished, that we would have an opportunity to speak. So I apologize for that. For the record, my name is Tom Garlick. I live in Collier's Reserve; I'm a resident there, and I'm here today representing the Collier's Reserve Owners Association as their attorney. And I have with me two expert witnesses, they are both from the Tampa Bay area. I would appreciate the consideration of the Board in allowing them to follow me. The first gentleman is named Bruce Kaschyk. He's with Tampa Bay Engineering. He holds a B.S. degree in urban planning and design from the University of Cincinnati and he has personally been involved in the design of over 20 industrial parks in the State of Florida. And I'd like to submit his resume for the record. The second person is Jay Calhoun. Mr. Kaschyk is with Tampa Bay Engineering. Mr. Calhoun is with an organization also in Tampa called Sylla. He's the Vice President for Transportation. He holds a Bachelor of Science in civil engineering, a Haster's in business administration and a Master of Arts in planning from the University of Virginia. And he is here to testify today about traffic and traffic impacts, and I submit, some information and data which this commission should find very compelling and very relevant. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Mr. Chairman, consistent with what we did earlier in the hearing, I make a motion we recognize each of them as experts. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Second. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: We have a motion and second. All those in favor signify by saying aye. Opposed? (No response) MR. GARLICK: Thank you. I want to come back to and I want to talk about the issue here today and what it really is. The issue here today is not whether Tyton is a good company; sure sounds like a good company to me. The issue here is not whether or not this park, this industrial park in its concept and design is a good industrial park. It seems like a good industrial park to me. The issue is not whether or not the Barton Collier Corporation is a good developer; we think they are. It's not whether Alan Reynolds is a good planner; we think he is. The issue is a legal issue. This is a zoning matter; I want to come back to it. The zoning issue is, is this intended use in rezoning compatible with and complementary to surrounding land use. Simply that's it, it's a zoning matter. It is not also, this is not a test as to whether or not this commission is going to support economic development in Collier County. Certainly, it is. It's done it. It's granted $250,000 toward the support of economic development in Collier County. The issue is whether or not the flip side of that is going to apply, that regardless of the support for economic development, will it be done rationally, will it be done carefully, will it be done taking into consideration the law and zoning issues, and taking into consideration the homeowners in surrounding areas. Basically, that's what we're talking about. Collier's Reserve is not anti-development, we're not anti-business; we support EDC and we support EDC's mission statement. And I'll read it to you. "To be an effective force in improving the quality of life for all people in Collier County by promoting economic development initiatives." And it goes on to specify. We agree with that mission statement. I myself am a former chairman of EDC. I think this is the right kind of project for Collier County, but it doesn't meet the necessary zoning criteria under the law to be existing where it is. Why doesn't it? Well, this is an urban mixed use district. It is an urban residential district. It's intended in the Comprehensive Plan to be residential, and the only reason it's not residential, the only reason we're looking at industrial zoning today, is because there's 57 acres east of Goodlette Road that is currently zoned industrial. That happened this way. Goodlette Road was the Coastline Railroad. Goodlette Road had industrial zoning, railway zoning, railway industrial side car zoning, on either side of it in 1972. It's on the Land Map 74. In 1982, the zoning was changed. All industrial zoning was eliminated to the west side of that old railroad right-of-way which was Goodlette Road, except for that small piece up at the intersection on the southwest corner of Goodlette, including the piece that is the tomato packing plant, or was a tomato packing plant, used to take tomatoes off all those fields. But back at that time, from 41 east, were tomato fields. That's why that little industrial piece is there. So it was not something that was intended to develop commercially or industrial in this area. It just was an agricultural anomaly that happened. May I have a little more time? CHAIRMAN HANCOCK Actually, the one problem we have is that the reason the petitioner is given an extended period of time to explain it is because we're not going to listen to every member of their company come up here and praise the project. So Mr. Garlick, with the number of speakers we've got, I think it's more than prudent to offer you a few more minutes -- ladies and gentlemen, sit down, please. Sit down, please. MR. GARLICK: May I respectfully suggest -- CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I'm going to ask that you maintain some decorum in the meeting, please. I know you appear before this Board regularly, Mr. Garlick. I think it's prudent to offer you a few more minutes to try and get the points that you're trying to make in incompatibility on the record. I think that's key, and I'd like the Board's indulgence in doing that. COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: I have just -- I support that and wanted to ask a question of the County Attorney, because frankly, this has occurred to me a couple times. And that is, when we are in these quasi-judicial kinds of hearings where the appeal is on the record instead of a de novo hearing, is it a reasonable regulation to allow the opponent only five minutes to respond to over an hour long presentation? Are we complying with the law? MR. WEIGEL: I think there's considerable deference given to the Chair, and the procedure is set from the Chair in this regard, because the procedures are known ahead of time, you know, week in, week out, things of that nature. But there may be several opponents, not just one opponent. I mean, we must think in the plural when we talk about changing the rules. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: What I'm asking Mr. Garlick, is that we stick to the elements that are either consistent or inconsistent with this request, as opposed to -- I greatly appreciate the history lesson, but I already know it and it really doesn't factor into the land use decision today. So if we can limit it to that, I think that can narrow the scope down to the point where we're getting the pertinent points on the record. MR. GARLIC: Hay I respectfully state, Mr. Chairman, for the record, that it is necessary for me, in representing these people appropriately in this matter, to create a record. And if I am limited in creating a record, I will have to respectfully object to that. But I will go on now and I would like to propose a series of compromises, if I might, that I might speak for the homeowners, some 28 or so who have signed up, and I believe that, you know, you need to hear that, you need to hear this traffic engineer, you need to hear this land planning expert. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: To me, that meets my criteria, because it's kind of the double whammy. If you're representing them and you speak for them and then they speak for them, who are we listening to. I'm just trying to get a concise presentation here, sticking to the merits or demerits of the proposal in front of us today. If we can stick to that, I'll be more than happy to grant you leeway. MR. GARLICK: Okay, sir. And I'll try to stay within that guideline and I'll try to move quickly. On the other hand, you know, I do have concerns about limitation in a matter this serious with an issue this extensive. In any event, going on from there, I will skip -- I will talk just for a moment about the -- let me just state it. That there is available in Collier County other industrial park sites. We don't have to be here or the world ends. It's here, it's available. I offer into the record the Industrial Park Guide of the Economic Development Council. There is some thousand acres undeveloped cited in this document alone, including seven industrial parks in North Naples. On the zoning issue, you know and you've heard it before, and I know you understand it, but I need to say it for the record and I want you to listen, that you know that on next week, on October 28th, there's going to be an amendment to the Comprehensive Plan which is coming before this council for final reference to the DCA for final approval. That under that plan, this industrial zoning today could not happen because it eliminates the ability to spread industrial zoning to another adjacent location. You cannot do it under that new law; okay. There is a legal principle called zoning in progress. Zoning in progress is probably most demonstrated in the Second DCA by a case named Smith against the City of Clearwater. I know Harjorie Student is probably familiar with it. I'm not going to say anything more than that, than say that I believe, in this proceeding, that zoning in progress applies. And the principle is simple: That where a party knows that there's zoning, that it's pending, they have knowledge of it, it's going along in accordance with normal governmental procedures, they are bound by and can be bound by that zoning. The best we can show here today is that the proponent says that there is an intention to comply with the new zoning, specifically an industrial park subdistrict under that zoning. I just, I simply point that out. I want to talk about -- COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Mr. Garlick? MR. GARLICK: Yes. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: I'm sorry to interrupt, but I have to ask what's probably for you Wayne, a question, because that was the critical issue for me that I discussed with Mr. Reynolds in his presentation, and that is, I think there might be two ways to get here. One was through an expansion of industrial, and that appears will be eliminated in the next cycle. But then there is another way to get here, and that is a business park district. And I just want to be sure, Mr. Arnold, that you're of the opinion that the business park district is compatible with what we are discussing today. And that the elimination of the ability to expand industrial uses wouldn't prohibit the Creekside Park of Commerce. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Ms. Student? MS. STUDENT: Mr. Chairman, there's one thing I need to put on the record. Just because we adopt Comp Plan amendments next week, they are not legally effective, as they once were, upon adoption. They are not legally effective until the DCA issues a notice of intent finding us in compliance. If there's litigation over the element it may be years before that, the Future Land Use Element, is effective. Now, what we've done in this amendment cycle is to have separate ordinances for each element, so that if there's a problem with one element, it doesn't hold up the entire Comp Plan. It's impossible to predict at this juncture what DCA may do. But I just wanted to put on the record that the Comp Plan is not effective, and each element is not effective, until such time as at least the DCA finds us in compliance. And if there's litigation, it could be years. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Thank you. Mr. Arnold, Commissioner Hac'Kie's question was, and we discussed it previously -- COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Can elimination of the ability to expand industrial prohibit this kind of a commerce park. MR. ARNOLD: No, I don't think it does. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: In addition, Mr. Garlick, you state it as if it were fact and you know, sitting in my office, that I disagreed with you then and I have to disagree with you now. The reason we requested the change in industrial was not to eliminate the potential spread of existing industrial, but to allow for site specific location criteria to be established for appropriate locations for certain types of industrial. Mr. Arnold, since you are the folks that crafted that language, I believe the Board's direction was, let's stop -- was not let's stop the ability to expand existing industrial. The criteria was to remove that, because that limited the ability to request industrial land in Collier County, and we wanted to open that up a little bit more. That's my recollection. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: That was my intent. MR. ARNOLD: I think that's in part true. The other thing, and that's where we open up the whole issue of business parks to be permitted by right throughout our urban area, if you will. There are other -- when you see the subdistrict language and all of its specifics next week, you'll find that there are also provisions for dealing with existing zoning scenarios, and how you deal with the situation as you would on a Creekside, where part of the land is already designated and zoned industrial, for which they have a certain right to develop it at that intensity today. And I think what you see Creekside doing is trying to reallocate some of that industrial zoning, better locate it, if you will, for the PUD. Just as we do under any PUD zoning district, you have a reallocation and repositioning of zoning. But you end up netting fewer industrial acres under the PUD scenario than you have today under a straight zoning industrial scenario. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: The specific discussion we had was that the EDC said you don't have the right kind of places for the right kind of industrial, and we wanted to give the opportunity to promote that, not to eliminate expansion of future industrial. So that is my recollection. Mr. Mulhere, or Mr. Arnold, also, so I thought that was important, since Mr. Garlick had raised that point on the record. MR. GARLICK: Yes. Thank you very much. It does, it is intended to eliminate piecemeal zoning. I think that's what David Week's quote was in the newspaper. But it does, in effect, eliminate the ability to add on to industrial. That was simply my point. Simply my point although I agree with Ms. Student that it does not become law until it's adopted and enacted. It is quote, zoning in progress, as that legal term exists. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay, I'm going to introduce a little idea here. This is not a court of law; we're not going to have a statement and rebuttal between the attorneys. You both have stated your points on the record. Let's get to the issues of the fezone. MR. GARLICK: Thank you. I'm simply, and that's all I'm simply trying to do is to do my job and to make my record. I'm going to move through this hopefully very quickly. I want to talk just for a second about uses. And the uses, it's true, have been eliminated, have been pared down. And the thing that is surprising to me when it's said that this is a very thoughtfully, well thought of, carefully planned park, that we have as recently as Friday and as recently as Monday, changes being made to this PUD document which would be called minor and I think are fairly significant, with significant elimination of uses was for the first time incorporating elements that have to do with odor and lighting and noise levels and things of that type, which simply add county standards. And it also is interesting that at the time this was submitted to the Planning Commission, there was one Site Plan, and when we got to the Planning Commission, there was another Site Plan. Although it's been said we're trying to comply with the requirements of the people in Collier's Reserve, we suggest to you that the plan is not sufficient and hasn't done that. I won't say any more about the plan. I do have a planning expert here and I do have a traffic engineer here, who I believe will tell you that the traffic impacts are significantly more than was considered by the county, and the reasons for that and his opinions for why that happened. Other than that, I simply want to -- lastly, and I will stop, although I do feel inhibited here -- as a matter of record, I'd like to also introduce the overview of Industrial Land Use Study prepared for Collier County dated February, '93, in the record. I also wish to submit into the record the Collier County Growth Management Plan Future Land Use Elements, Proposed Amendment, so that it does become part of the record. And having said that, I simply say that the paper this morning said, you know, you're not going to solve all the problems with industrial and commercial projects with this development, and that's true. And I say that I know that the business infrastructure of this community supports this development. I don't disagree with that. It simply does not fit in this location. This is a residential golf course community. I don't need to name them all for you, and it doesn't meet the criteria under the Comprehensive Plan for this. So, you know, this is the real issue. And although it's difficult and it's hard to make difficult decisions, I think the decision has to be one that complies with zoning and that complies with other considerations that, although very important, don't fit here. In other words, don't try to grab on this. It's not the first or the last one that's going to come along as the right kind of a thing, to make an economic development decision when it's not necessary to do that to foster and develop economic growth. Make a decision that works for the good and overall quality of life for the people of North Naples and is complementary to and consistent with the Comprehensive Plan. Thank you. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Thank you, Mr. Garlick. And we have your two individuals tendered as experts to follow you, and again, we're going to ask that you contain your remarks to the proposal before the Board today. We need to change court reporters, so let's just take one minute. (A recess was taken.) CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I'd like to thank everyone for your indulgence there. We have a new court reporter. Are these on? We have a new court reporter to beat up on and a very grateful one who's leaving now. I apologize for the interruption. Please proceed. MR. KASCHYK: Good afternoon, my name is Bruce Kaschyk and I am the director of planning and real estate services for Tampa Bay Engineering. Thank you for this opportunity to be here. While I was sitting here in spirit of the conversation that just occurred, I was sitting here just slashing my presentation by about half, but I still hopefully -- CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Make your point. MR. KASCHYK: -- focusing on the point of major concern here. When Tom Garlick's office had called me -- and I've worked with his firm on a number of occasions up in the Tampa area related to industrial park designs and getting them approved -- the question that came to me was there was proposed industrial park in the midst of established residential communities. That was a little bit unusual for me to be involved in trying to look at a project that way, but I said I'd be happy to come down, take a look at it and give him my opinion. And I guess my first opinions related to that were when you drive down of course Immokalee Road to the site to where the proposed project site is, it is a very well established residential area. You have of course the activity center of Airport and Pulling Road, which is established on the land use plan, but primarily it's been designated urban residential on the land use plans. Of course you've got the Collier Hospital and the health park there and the activity center at Immokalee and 41, not necessarily an area that I would so normally associate as an industrial park for a -- especially one that would potentially generate a lot of high truck traffic. And so the first thing I started doing was reviewing the staff report related to this project. And the staff report concludes with, it is the opinion of the comprehensive planning staff that the Creekside Commerce Park can be deemed consistent if the P.U.D. is found to be compatible. They're not coming out embracing that it is compatible. And so what I started doing was looking at some of the policies that are referenced. Staff is referring to policies 5.9 and 5.11 of object five of the future land use elements, which are really dealing with the vested rights issues of the zoning that has been in question, but really don't address the policies that deal with compatibility. 5.2 specifically deals with compatibility issues. Further reinforced with 5.4, which further deals with compatibility with surrounding land uses. Neither of these policies are referenced by staff in their analysis of this project. Did the same comparison to the proposed developments -- or the proposed land use plan, which of course you're going to be doing your vote on next week on for consideration for submittal to D.C.A. These policies are still in the plan and in fact are really enforced. 5.9 is substantially modified, and in essence 5.11, which is referenced, is pretty much eliminated. We feel that based upon that, and as you've heard previously, that the most really appropriate way to review this project is to look at it under the new comprehensive plan, which is a business park subdistrict. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Except for you need to be careful not to call it that, because it doesn't exist yet, okay? MR. KASCHYK: I understand that. But we feel that that criteria is appropriate for consideration for this kind of project, and it should go through that kind of analysis related to any proposed development for the Creekside Commerce Park. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Just so I understand you correctly, are you about to compare what's proposed with a subdistrict that this board has not reviewed or voted on yet? MR. KASCHYK: No. What I am suggesting is based upon the draft that I have reviewed, which does include the most recent revisions as to be presented to the commission next week -- COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: That we have not reviewed. MR. KASCHYK: Which -- correct. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: As viewed. MR. KASCHYK: Appears to be more consistent with the criteria that is being requested with this application, we feel that that request, though, also requires a much more due diligence review related to the proposed impacts of a project and requires a longer time frame associated with the comprehensive plan and amendment to allow for that, which gives the opportunity to truly take and comprehend the potential impacts of a business park subdistrict. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I need to ask. I know you wanted less lawyering, but I need to ask Marjorie Student a question, please. MS. STUDENT: Mr. Garlick's argument is well taken, but it's distinguishable that he talks about zoning issues. COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I'm sorry, I missed the question. MS. STUDENT: These are planning issues. We have a state statute that says any development order must be consistent with our comp. plan. Not a future comp. plan, not a comp. plan that may not be legally effective for two years, but a comp. plan right here and now. COMMISSIONER BERRY: It's what the rules are today. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: And we can't look at what we might adopt. We can't look at this in light of what we might adopt. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I think if you go back one slide on the issue of compatibility, that in fact we do have a responsibility today to ensure that the decision we're making today is indeed compatible with our comp. plan and our staff's recommendation that if it's deemed compatible with adjacent land uses, we then are consistent with the comp. plan. I think that's a valid point to make. But based on our county attorney's advice to sit here and compare this proposal with something yet to be adopted is outside of state law. MR. KASCHYK: What I was trying to just comprehend -- I'll put this to rest real quickly -- was that -- was I was trying to understand the staff's opinion related to defining compatibility to this project when they're not referencing the compatibility policies that are outlined in the existing code -- or in the existing plan. So I was trying to figure out are there some other areas that they're using for compatibility purposes, and that's where I was using -- okay, maybe the business park subdistrict is partially the part of the compatibility that they were relying upon for this, and I would support that if that was truly the case. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: If our staff is using yet to be adopted comp. plan amendments to deem -- COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: That would be bad. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: -- compatibility issues in an application today, we would have a serious problem with that. So Mr. Mulhere, is that the case at all? MR. MULHERE: No, that's not the case. I just wanted to add for the record, because I think it's very important that we get this on the record, that the existing industrial zoned property is found to be consistent through the zoning teevaluation process -- was found consistent through the zoning teevaluation process. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Industrial land. MR. MULHERE: That's correct. So that is deemed consistent. And, in fact, the number of acres that's actually been reduced in this project and what was found to be consistent, so -- CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay, thank you, Mr. Mulhere. I'm sorry, please proceed. MR. KASCHYK: The next part of what I -- after looking at the land use plan in the comprehensive plan policy was to take a look at the applications of the various sections of the land development code for Collier County related to P.U.D.'s, and specifically the opening section says all applications for P.U.D.'s shall be in full compliance with the future land use element, and the goals, objectives and policies of all elements. But yet at this point I would deem that not all the policies have been met related to policies 5.2 and 5.4. In follow-up to that, there are design criteria related to the P.U.D.'s. One of them, boundaries must be transitional. There's been quite a bit of discussion related to the business versus industrial, retail versus medical. One of the issues that we'll begin talking a little bit further with Mr. Calhoun and will be following up on is the fact that there's quite a bit of flexibility related to the proposed uses within this project. We're not really sure which is the transitional. The ability to have convenience store with gas pumps across from the entrance of Collier Reserve, because that's a part of the business criteria, is that really considered a transitional use. Direct access to any arterial street with an internal circulation system. We've noticed that there of course have been revised plans submitted related to this project related to the internal circulation system. We agree that this is an appropriate policy. We don't feel they're necessarily fully complying with it because in addition to the main entrances, the plans have been showing the secondary driveways for each of the parcels coming in off of Immokalee and Goodlette-Frank. We don't feel that that's consistent with that policy, that criteria. We feel that every parcel should not have direct access to the major roads, but they should be having direct access to the internal circulation road. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: It doesn't. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Yeah. I'm confused. MR. KASCHYK: If I could change microphones. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I mean, it's a good point if it's in there, but I believe the P.U.D. requires internal connection to the roadway with the exception of one, two, three, four -- MR. KASCHYK: In the various exhibits that have been presented and that we have reviewed as part of the homeowner's association, I now see in this particular exhibit, this arrow has been eliminated, which in the exhibit that had been given to me last week had not been eliminated. There's still, of course, at these other entrance points off of Goodlette-Frank, as well as to the south here, in theory -- not in theory -- in practicality, each of these parcels can have independent direct access to Immokalee and Goodlette-Frank without ever having to tie into the internal road system. We feel that the benefit of the internal road system is to make sure from a compatibility point of view that the buffering along those major corridors be protected, which when every time you add more driveways to a buffer -- within a buffer area just breaks it up and opens up visual lines and sound lines and so forth. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I think we finally agree with you. But I believe the requirement, with the exception of the arrows shown there, is internal connection in the P.U.D. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: And it's there. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: That will be verified. Because that's something that I -- was a big point for me. Thank you. COHMISSIONER BERRY: Mr. Chairman, hasn't one of our concerns been that we were -- we've talked about other activity centers, if you want to refer to this as such. But being able to move within this area without having to go out onto a road, such as Immokalee Road. In other words, to go from within this area, whether it be on either side of Goodlette-Frank Road, in this case, that's always been a big concern of ours. They've addressed that problem without having to go out onto Immokalee Road. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: That was the good news, as I've looked at this plan. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay, obviously that -- again, your statement's on the record, and we'll need to verify that because the internal connection is key to the compatibility issue. MR. KASCHYK: We agree with that. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. MR. KASCHYK: As part of -- continuing on with the criteria, there is issues related to no light, noise and odor. The applicant has, in recent submittal, addressed some of these issues, and one of them is the compatibility of 65 decibels, I believe it was, at the property line. That does not deal with truck traffic. With the potential traffic generation of trucks related to this project, it's not uncommon from an I.T.E. perspective to have in a particular use of this kind probably in the -- 12, 15 percent of the total traffic can be truck traffic. We ran what's considered -- what's called a stamina model by which is a noise model by the Federal Highway Administration approved for the potential truck traffic for this, and there's going to definitely be an increase of truck noise along Immokalee Road which will need to be considered. It's not at the property line, it's beyond the property line. The other point of the truck traffic as far as compatibility is the landscape medians that I've enjoyed as I was driving down there are going to be impacted. To be able to provide the turn lanes and so forth to be able to fit the truck turning movements and car stacking, those medians will probably have to be eliminated. The outside storage and display -- CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Not in my lifetime. COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: This is not going to happen. MR. KASCHYK: The outside -- COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: Welcome to Naples, but that's just not going to happen. COMMISSIONER NORRIS: You know, it's not going to serve any useful purpose for you to come up and make statements like that. It really isn't. COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: That's just not going to happen. COMMISSIONER NORRIS: We're not going to eliminate any medians on Immokalee Road. MR. KASCHYK: I'm just providing my observations related to planning -- they're concerns that I would have. COMMISSIONER NORRIS: Well, your observations need to be couched in some form of reality. We're not going to eliminate any medians on Immokalee Road. MR. KASCHYK: Wonderful to hear that, thank you. Currently the proposal -- the P.U.D. is proposing outdoor storage and display. We've heard that it's possibly not going to be, but currently the application as submitted by the applicant does indicate outdoor storage and display, and the P.U.D. standards of course do not encourage that or do not permit it. The concern there is -- from a compatibility issue is they are proposing a seven-foot wall around these outdoor storage and display areas, but of course we've talked about some of the uses that are still being proposed related to silos and demolition contractors and so forth, and stacking of pallets, a seven-foot fence might not necessarily be a sufficient buffer for outdoor sales areas. A couple -- just a couple more slides and I'll be completed. The first of the proposed timing of the location and sequence of phasing. And these are additional criteria that's established in your code. There's been a little bit of confusion. I think it's been clarified through this discussion today as to what's happening, because the original application indicated a one-phase project, five years, but one phase. But yet we're now talking of sequences of phasing of infrastructure. I think there needs to be some commitment related to that phasing of what those infrastructural improvements are. Environmental impact analysis. But really what I want to focus on is proposed land uses. In the application currently supplied by the applicant, they are providing -- as you saw on that listing yesterday -- they have eliminated a number of uses, but they still are proposing a number of uses for both the industrial and the business. As we discussed earlier and I think the staff had also commented on, business uses can go in the industrial area. So offices and retail can go into the industrial area. In fact, they are requesting 40 percent conversion of industrial space for retail. They want to have the ability to have accessory uses supporting the principal use to be retail. So that would mean in essence 100,000 square foot user comes in, he could have a 40,000 square foot shop, selling his goods out of his front door. In essence becomes much more of a retail oriented as compared to a business park. Those types of uses and flexibility are proposed throughout this project. Which the concern there is, is really what is the impacts of this project. Because we're offering that kind of flexibility, we're talking about one set of ranges of concerns and conditions and impacts, when we really have a wide range open to us. And, for example, I just developed three different scenarios related to what is being proposed, or what could be potentially impacted or be developed under the proposed use scenario as per this -- as submitted. The blue, which is A, is pretty much consistent with what is being requested by the applicant. The only thing that I've added in here is the U.S. Postal criteria for square footage. But under the conversion, it's very well possible to have under the red more retail and less business park and have less medical office space or vice versa. You can have more general and medical office under that. Those all have traffic impact generation implications. And at that point I'd like to have Jay Calhoun discuss further what those impacts are. MR. CALHOUN: Hi. For the record, I'm Jay Calhoun, vice president of Sylla, and a traffic engineer. I want to talk a little bit about the -- CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Excuse me, were you sworn? MR. CALHOUN: I was sworn at, yes sir -- sworn in. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Since the interruption, let me ask -- CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Is that a precursor to your presentation, or HR. CALHOUN: Yes. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Now that we had a brief interruption there, the question I'm going to have for staff, I think maybe it's the exact same question you've already asked, but I want to ask it again from the traffic guys -- I don't see him. There he is -- is I need to know the traffic impact analysis based on maximum conversion to the maximum intense traffic uses. You don't have to tell me right this second, unless you know it, but -- MR. KANT: For the record, Edward Kant, transportation services. Commissioner, I'm afraid that what you're asking me would take much more time and analysis than I'm prepared to present to you today. COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: Okay. Alan, have you got somebody? COMHISSIONER CONSTANTINE: But I'll help you out. MR. KANT: I might also add that it's always been my position, at least my personal and professional position as a member of your staff, not to be an advocate for a project or against a project. COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: Good. MR. KANT: I've tried wherever possible to prevent whatever fact -- prevent; mine's showing too -- present factual data whenever possible. And so it was not my intent at all in this hearing to either try to referee between two opposing sides, but simply to try to answer the questions factually. I will try to get you that information, if you want it, but I cannot do that today. COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: Then let me ask this question: The traffic analysis that you've given us is based on what assumptions? MR. KANT: The information that I presented earlier, as I stated during that presentation, and I want to restate it for the record, I used the traffic impact statement presented by the petitioner for convenience. In that traffic impact statement, in appendix B, page B-1 dated July 21st, 1997, the petitioner presents a proposed planning level analysis of proposed land uses: Retail, medical office, general office, business park. The question that was posed at that time was -- at least as I understood it -- was if all of the office were to be medical office, rather than a mix of medical and general, what would that do? I used the petitioner's numbers to come up with an average of so many trips per thousand square feet, compared the medical office to the general office, and came to the conclusion that it would add approximately 445 trips if the 50,000 square feet of general were converted to medical. Again, that's not a rigorous analysis, that's not -- I'm not trying to represent to you or to the public that those numbers are absolute or that they're even correct. What they are is merely an estimate of what the different impacts would be. And I have no idea what these gentlemen are going to present, and I have no desire to refute it. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Did you provide a copy of your information to our staff at any given time? MR. CALHOUN: No, I have not. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: So no one on the county staff, no one -- MR. CALHOUN: No. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: -- within the county has seen your information? How about the traffic engineer for the petitioner, have they seen your information? MR. CALHOUN: No, I just finished it yesterday morning, as a matter of fact, so -- COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: Well, my question, I guess, for the petitioner then is going to be a better understanding of appendix B to your traffic impact statement to have some -- I need to know what the assumptions were that were made there about the mix of uses and how that translates to what might be the actual mix of uses, and how that affects the potential traffic. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I think we hold those cards on what the mixed uses can be. But let's go ahead and hear this presentation, and I think we'll probably have a discussion on the traffic. MR. CALHOUN: Okay. Well, first of all, what I did was I looked at the petitioner's traffic impact statement. And it was done with generally accepted procedures, and it, you know, was fine. In fact, the methodology was accepted by the county, and that's the methodology that I essentially used in the capacity analysis, the traffic analysis that I'm going to discuss with you briefly this afternoon. This table, first off, talks about total number of trips that can be generated by the project. And number one, the traffic study, that is the petitioner's study. Those are the numbers. He showed 40,000 square feet of retail, 100,000 square feet of medical office, 50,000 square feet of general office, and 620,000 foot business park. The trips then -- these are daily trips, total daily trips, generated by those land uses. I don't want to go too fast, because I know there's a lot of information that's going to come out of this. And our number basically agrees with his number. Not surprisingly. We used the same source, Institute of Transportation Engineers Trip Generation Manual, so we both came up with the same answer. Now, what we did with number two is basically took a look at what are some uses that we know of that are already in the park or could be in the park, given the uses that they're looking for. And we broke that 40,000 square feet of retail then into a convenience store with gas pumps, a couple of sit-down restaurants along Immokalee Road, some specialty retail, and then also put the post office that's known to be coming into the park, we put that down into the business park, and that -- and then ran new trip generation numbers daily -- again, total daily trip generation numbers, and came up with 20,962. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Can I ask you a question as we go? What was the basis for your decision to assume a convenience store with ten gas pumps, two sit-down restaurants? MR. CALHOUN: It's uses that can fit under what's allowed there currently -- or what the petitioner is asking for. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: So those are probably the worst traffic you could come up with. MR. CALHOUN: Those are allowable uses, yeah, no doubt about it. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: I know they're allowable. I'm not questioning that. Just I'm trying to get the parameters. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: But in the range of the business district, a convenience store with ten gas pumps is higher than wholesale calves, or whatever else you put in there. MR. CALHOUN: That's correct, for sure. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: It's at the high end. MR. CALHOUN: It's a use, that's right. It is at the high end. COHMISSIONER NORRIS: It sounds like it goes toward the question that he wasn't prepared to answer. MR. CALHOUN: That's where we're heading, right. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Thanks. MR. CALHOUN: Okay, then we took a look at -- and these were -- again, these sort of fit the scenarios that Mr. Kaschyk showed you previously with his chart of different colors. The next one then was if we converted -- if we did go to the 40 percent of retail that's allowed for each of the uses, what would that do to the number of trips that are generated? And again, I just -- I, you know, ran numbers on taking those land uses, that amount of land use, running the numbers for the different uses, and we come up then with 29,000. Again, this is total daily trips generated by the project. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: What percentage did you convert there? MR. CALHOUN: This is the maximum. This would be the 40 percent that's allowed at each of the uses. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Converted from what to what? MR. CALHOUN: Well, for example, the medical office, I guess we went to 30 -- excuse me, 30 percent of that went to retail. From the -- the hundred thousand square feet of what was medical office -- COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: I understand that. MR. CALHOUN: -- now became medical offices. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Fifty became 40, 10, the -- MR. CALHOUN: That's correct. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: And the business park, am I reading 206,000 square feet -- MR. CALHOUN: Almost 206,000 square feet of retail. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Okay, now here I go with needing a picture again. Somebody give me a picture of 206,000 square feet of retail. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Well, a Publix -- COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: A quarter of the mall. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: A Publix supermarket is about 65,000 square feet, so it would be like having three of those. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Or about a quarter of Coastland Hall? CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Yes. MR. CALHOUN: If you wish, if the -- typically we have a couple of Wal-Harts here in town that are in the 150,000 square foot range. The Home Depot, with their expansion, is in the 170, 180,000 square foot -- COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: So you'd have to have a Home Depot there. MR. CALHOUN: Correct. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Okay, thanks. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: And just so I understand the contrast there, that's 29-6 versus 17. MR. CALHOUN: Yeah. And I'll go back through that in a second. And then finally, just looking at the office space, doing the same thing, converting the business park essentially to office, to the allowable -- maximum allowable office space, and again, ran the numbers, and we're at about 26,500 for that use. And that's what you were asking. There's just a chart that shows what the total trips is then by each of these scenarios. And I guess the real thing that we're saying is, it could be any one of those scenarios. It could also be anything in between. There's a wide variation. The 17,800 trips that we started with could possibly go to 29,600, it could fall again anywhere in that range. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: So then, Mr. Kant, what does that do -- again, this is just discussion, but it's good to understand the best and worst case scenarios. Could you put that back up, the 29 something? The percentage -- in their worst case traffic scenario, what does that do as a percentage? How does that affect the five percent threshold? MR. KANT: Significantly. It's well over five percent. Right now the 17, 18,000. Something that again, I wasn't aware we were going to get into a seminar on traffic engineering here, but -- CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: We're not. MR. KANT: Well, I don't intend to. But we basically are presenting raw -- what Mr. Calhoun is presenting is raw numbers without factoring in bypass. The 17,882 trips that were presented in their traffic study after the -- what's called the bypass or capture is accounted for, it drops down to about 12,000. So there's also a drop down on each of these others. I don't dispute Mr. Calhoun's methodology, just from what I see him presenting, but I would submit that that's -- when we're looking at specific uses like a sit-down restaurant versus a bank versus what -- we're looking at more of a site plan analysis and a planning level analysis. The idea, as I understand it -- and I'll defer to my friends in the planning department. But as I understand it, the planning level analysis is for us to get an idea of if we were to permit this type of land use in this location, would we have to make other accommodations; would there have to be mitigation for that traffic? I don't think it was ever the intention of the planning level traffic analysis to define to the vehicle how many cars were going to be generated. I think that we have controls in place. It's my understanding further that if we get to a certain point, and if in fact they are generating more traffic, and if in fact we have concurrency issues, if we have capacity issues, if we have operational safety issues, we have other controls that will control whether or not new building permits are issued. So I don't think that this foray into what the numbers could be is as significant as it may appear on the surface, from my point of view. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Commissioner Norris? MR. CALHOUN: Can I make one statement first? CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Commissioner Norris has a question. MR. CALHOUN: Okay, sorry. COHMISSIONER NORRIS: The concern of the residents of Collier's Reserve is traffic right at that intersection at the entrance of Collier's Reserve. Given that a third of the completed park will be east of Goodlette Road, and there'll be several entrances in and out of the park on Goodlette Road when the thing is completed, what percentage of these numbers will actually cross the intersection at the entrance to Collier's Reserve? MR. CALHOUN: I'm not sure that I can answer that question, to be honest with you. One of the concerns that we have of course is the project as we understand it is being phased, as you say, so that originally the first phase is all essentially west of the canal. that we're going to have an impact, because the road to Goodlette is not going to be out there in the first phase as they showed it. all the traffic -- COHMISSIONER NORRIS: Well, we're going to talk about that. MR. CALHOUN: Okay. I did have one point that I wanted to make. Mr. Kant talked about the trips that I was showing, the 17,882 going down. That's correct. Again, the applicant did reduce them, and according to his study, that 17,000 dropped to 15,197. I want to take this then a step further just to show you what the impact of this kind of traffic is on the road. And I did the same thing. What the applicant did was they took retail uses and basically said 52 percent of the retail traffic will come from traffic that's already on the road. So you can take that number out of this total number before you throw the project traffic out on the roadway. I did the same thing, in fact, in this -- CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: When you use terms like capture rate and stuff, basically it's going to a shopping center and making two or three stops instead of one. MR. CALHOUN: Or if somebody from the post office goes to the convenience store on the way out, yes, that's exactly the concept. There's a lot of information on this chart, and it's kind of hard to read. I want to go through it sort of slow, because it is very difficult. And there's two ways to look at this chart: One of them is sort of going up and down, and the other one is going across, so I want to work through each one of these. I'll work through the first scenario with you, and that's Immokalee Road west of Goodlette-Frank. That's the bar chart essentially on the left side of that diagram. What I've shown is a 1997 volume that we were able to get out on Immokalee Road in that area. Of 28,061 cars, that was based upon a count that was done in July of this year -- excuse me, in April of this year. The capacity for that roadway, for Immokalee Road, is indicated by the heavy line, the 38,200. So what I'm doing then is building up. I took and looked at -- yeah, if you can help me, Bruce. I took the 1997 volumes and I increased them by three percent a year out there. The staff's report talked about increasing background traffic by three to six percent a year. In Tampa we would -- you know, three percent would be good. Down here, three percent is probably pretty conservative. But three percent is within the range that the staff used, and so I used that. It's a conservative number. And that bumps then the 2,003 volume up to about 33,500. So that's working up the chart. Then what I've got is four little subsegments, if you will, going across. And those are the four scenarios that I just discussed with you. And the first bar, the one to the left, where it says 38,442, that would be taking the same distribution that the applicant used. In other words, that -- essentially, I think 32 and a half percent or 31 percent, whatever the number is, of traffic coming out of this project would be traveling on that segment of road, or traveling west on Immokalee Road out of the site. So that would be that element of the roadway. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: What's the significance of the 38, the dark line, again, the 38? MR. CALHOUN: That's your level of service D, daily capacity. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: That's D. MR. CALHOUN: That's level of service D, daily capacity. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Commissioner Mac'Kie, I need to state this. Because we have allowed this, which is a little different than the way we normally do things, the petitioner is in all likelihood going to put their -- turn around and put their traffic engineering expert right back on the record, and we get to go through this all over again. So some of these questions may be answered in their presentation, since we're going to have to listen to it now anyway. So let's go ahead and try -- MR. CALHOUN: I appreciate your indulgence. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Procedural question there. MR. CALHOUN: Sure. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Did -- the petitioner had their opportunity to present their entire case. And you yourself said we don't usually allow rebuttal. They had every opportunity to present their traffic numbers. I'm not sure why we would change the rules now and suddenly allow rebuttal. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Mr. Varnadoe indicated to me before the hearing that he had a traffic engineer here to answer questions, and that if it was the Board's -- COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: I'm going to have some. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: -- if it was the Board's pleasure, he would not put that person on unless it was required by someone else making a presentation. That I think was an effort on his part to try and save some time in the presentation, so I have a tough time penalizing him for that. Please continue. MR. CALHOUN: Thank you. Again, then what I did was I took the next scenario, which was basically putting in -- dividing up the 40,000 square feet of retail, putting in the post office, and that's the second piece here. The numbers I don't think are particularly significant. What is significant is that in every case, given three percent growth on Immokalee Road between now and 2003, putting project traffic out there, again, as -- using the distribution that the applicant used, and using basically trip rates that are straight out of I.T.E., the roadway is going to exceed level of service D capacity in that year 2003. I did the same thing with the piece of Immokalee Road then east of Goodlette-Frank, again using the same numbers, the same procedures, and we come up with the same thing. There, I think the interesting thing is that if you take the 1996 volume that was just given to me by county staff last week, that the roadway is going to fail on its own if it grows at three percent anyway, because just the background traffic will grow over the roadway capacity. Now, the last one, which is Goodlette-Frank -- MR. KANT: Excuse me, Commissioners, if I may interrupt Mr. Calhoun just one second. I have a question, only because I may be called upon to answer some other questions. And I -- I did promise you I wouldn't get into my engineer can beat up your engineer, but I have to ask: Did you factor splits into that, or is that assuming 100 percent of the traffic hits Immokalee Road? MR. CALHOUN: That's using the distribution. That's the 31, 32, 35. MR. KANT: Okay, So you did split it? MR. CALHOUN: Yes. MR. KANT: Thank you, Commissioners, for indulging me. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: The issue in front of us is with the petition came the traffic impact statement. If I understand your testimony, you're saying that traffic impact statement is hogwash and that the roadway will be deficient in a given year based on your information. In a nutshell, is that what you're telling us? MR. CALHOUN: Hogwash is a little strong. What I'm saying is that they looked at it in a different way, and we looked at it using daily. They looked at it using peak hour. There is a difference in fluctuations through peak hours through the day. What I'm saying is taking the numbers and using the same distribution, given the land uses that you could approve or that could be built on this development, that you could have trouble with the roadway out there. That's exactly what I'm saying is that the roadway is going to exceed its capacity. Now, I looked at this -- COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Question, please, because that's -- you just made me understand one -- you did peak and they did average daily? CHAI~ HANCOCK: The other way. MR. CALHOUN: No, I did an average day. The applicant did peak hour and the county did average day. That's why I stayed with the average day. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: What's the county's rules say we're supposed to use? MR. KANT: Typically when we -- not typically, but in the requirements for traffic impact statements we deal with peak hour. COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: But in this case we used average daily? MR. KANT: No, in this case they used peak hour. The number -- COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: This is average daily. MR. KANT: That's what Mr. Calhoun is representing. COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: This is apples and oranges. MR. KANT: The number that I gave you earlier, as -- MR. CALHOUN: No, I did this -- MR. KANT: -- I said were not an analysis. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: One at a time. MR. CALHOUN: I did the daily because that was what the staff report was based on, so I was trying to compare it -- COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: But he just said it wasn't. MR. CALHOUN: No, he said the applicant's wasn't. MR. KANT: Ma'am, I did not do the staff report. I'm just telling you that -- COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: Who did? I want to know what it was based on so I know if I've got apples and apples. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay, I'll tell you what: I'm going to ask this gentleman, Mr. Calhoun, to finish his presentation -- COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: Okay, then somebody can answer that. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: -- uninterrupted. And then we're going to get the questions. MR. CALHOUN: Okay, just one other quick point. On the Immokalee Road -- excuse me, Goodlette-Frank section looks good. That was based upon -- the capacity that's shown there is 29,500 level service D, and that was based upon a statement in staff's report that Goodlette-Frank Road is going to be widened up to Immokalee Road. My understanding, from this morning's discussion, is that that's not the case. That's not what the applicant used, in fact. The applicant said it would be from Vanderbilt Beach Road south. I saw a statement in a report that said it would be widened all the way to Immokalee. So there's some confusion. I did have the number, and I've probably lost it. It's about 23-8. So Goodlette-Frank would still be okay as a two-lane. I did want to point that out, that the capacity might be a little bit different there. And that really is the sum of my report. COMHISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Bottom line is that the one number they have is a possible number, but depending on how the uses within this park if approved as is shift, that number can shift as high as about 83 percent; according to your number, higher. It will likely be somewhere between those two numbers. MR. CALHOUN: I think that's a fair conclusion. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Or it could be lower, if the uses are limited or changed. I mean, let's not forget that the A.D.T. is that, it's an average. You can be lower. Just because I used to write these things. COMHISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Call me crazy, but I suspect the petitioner has probably given us as close as they can to a best case scenario. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: That would be my guess also, but the point is we had the opportunity to limit the activity that drives that traffic number. COMHISSIONER NORRIS: And call me crazy, but I think that the consultants hired by -- COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: You're crazy. MR. CALHOUN: The opponents are going to give us the worst case scenario. Call me crazy on that one, too. COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I think they did. And that's why I said my points were finished by saying I think realistically the number probably falls somewhere between the two. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: No offense intended, but dueling engineers is like drawing blood to me. You know, we get this all the time. We get land use attorneys that absolutely disagree on a policy, we get engineers that absolutely disagree on numbers. What it comes to is the only neutral party in this room is really our staff and this board. And when it comes to competing information such as this, I'm looking for an evaluation from our professional staff as to how to make sure we do not enter into any situation which creates a roadway deficiency. So I'm going to ask you to complete your presentation. You've had the time to review the petitioner's traffic impact statement. MR. KANT: The petitioner's, yes, sir. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: We'll go to you after that, and if the petitioner feels the need, or anyone has a question for the petitioner, we'll go that way, and then we'll be done with traffic for DOW. MR. CALHOUN: My conclusion is just that I want to offer the graphics into evidence. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. Thank you. Before going to Mr. Kant, are there any further questions for Mr. Carlson? (sic.) Mr. Kant, in a nutshell, we've got dueling engineers here. The way the county's policies are set up on trip generation -- I guess there are two questions. The first is which of these is most correct, or can we count on, because that's going to be key. One says we exceed level of service, one says we don't. That's important. And the second question is how do we ensure, if we count on one of those, that that's the scenario that will develop. Did that fairly get everyone's concerns on traffic? MR. KANT: Before I give you -- first of all, I'm not really sure either of those questions can get a simple yes or no answer, but I do want again for the record, because the issue of the dueling engineers has come up, I think it's important to recognize that prior to the submission of their traffic impact statement, the applicants sat down with both the planning staff and me and my staff and we have what's called a methodology conference. During that conference, we discussed what were the ends they were trying to achieve in terms of this is an industrial site, a business park, we anticipate such and such uses, we anticipate so many square feet. How shall we go about examining what the traffic impacts are. We met on two occasions: One was a rather informal, one was a little more formal. That was followed up by a letter from the applicant's engineer, outlining their understanding of what our requirements were. We then sent them back a letter clarifying and agreeing to that methodology. Subsequent to that, and I can't tell you the time frame, but it had to be a month, perhaps two, they submitted their traffic impact statement. We reviewed that impact statement. We did not disagree with their findings -- their conclusions, I should say. We took no objection to them or no exception to them. And that then -- we reviewed the site plan for the layout in terms of access points, what have you. That was our -- the extent of the transportation department's involvement. All of those comments and all of those meetings, results, were transmitted to the planning department for inclusion in the final staff report. I think it's important to recognize because a question of peak hour versus daily came up. And this is, again, a very technical issue. We require peak hour, they did a peak hour analysis, we reviewed a peak hour analysis. The daily trip numbers that were shown up in the final staff report were an augmentation to that; they were not meant to substitute for it, as I understand. Subsequent to all of this taking place and having the staff review, it came up before the planning commission, and this so-called plan B was presented. We have had about two days to review the results of the plan B analysis from the petitioner's consultant. We have had no contact -- I did get a contact from the -- from Mr. Calhoun, who wanted to know if I had any objection to them reviewing the petitioner's work. I said I certainly didn't have an objection. And so be it. So the answer -- that's the long answer. And I apologize for taking all your time. However, the short answer is I don't think there's a single answer that says this is what traffic will be generated, because nobody yet knows what's going to be out there. We do believe there will be a post office of some 30 odd thousand square feet. We do believe Tyton will be there. We could go back and check what their traffic is and come up with a little bit better approximation perhaps than what the books have. We could take proposed uses and again, look at what we have for similar uses here. But that's rather intensive work. The second question you asked is what can we do to ensure that we do not fail; that is, in terms of the roadway capacities. We already have -- it is my opinion we already have those mechanisms in place in terms of our concurrency requirements, in terms of our adequate public facilities ordinance, in terms of our permitting requirements. So if they ever get to the point where the next permit is going to cause a deficiency, either in capacity or in operational or safety problem, the club, if you will, that we have is the nonissuance of that permit. That, Commissioners, is about the best answer I can give you. I know you wanted some absolutes. I have no absolute for you. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: That's pretty absolute. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Commissioner Constantine? COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Mr. Kant, You couldn't answer before Commissioner Hac'Kie's question about what the change in use on those floating uses could have for an impact on change in traffic. Mr. Calhoun has made some representations of what that -- I'm not asking you to verify the exact nature of those, I know that's not fair, but do they look wildly unreliable, do they look like they're in the balipark? MR. KANT: Again, based on the information that I see presented here for the first time, no. I think if you take that analysis, and if again, I'm going to make the assumptions that the basic data that he presents is accurate, then sure, they're reasonable for those scenarios. But again, which scenario do you like? I can probably come up with six of my own. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: No, I know. I think we just have to look at both extremes and know that probably some are in the middle, as well. MR. KANT: Yeah. And I think that that was a fair statement that he made, that somewhere between the -- and again, after we factor and capture somewhere between the 15,000 and probably the 20 some odd thousand, 22 or so, is probably the real number. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I think what we're looking at, we've looked at a situation like this before, for traffic where they had questions on spectrums, and what we've done is we've placed triggers that said at this point in development of the project, you must submit an updated traffic impact statement showing the existing uses, the traffic generation, and determine what remaining capacity exists before entering another phase of development. And that may be. When I have, you know, a 50 percent differential between one and the other, that may be the only way we can attempt to protect the level of traffic on the roadways, which is the whole intent of this. MR. KANT: What we have done, and again, just as an example, there are times when we require, for example, turn lanes for certain types of development. And many times the petitioner will say, well, you know, when we start out, we're not going to generate near that traffic. And what we'll do is we'll say fine, at phase one you'll do this, at phase two, or when you get to a certain point in traffic then you have to put in a right turn lane, then you have to put in a left turn lane, and we can phase it in. You may have other controls at your disposal as you look through this proposal where you may decide, you know, whether it's square footage, whether it's a number of buildings, whether it's particular parcels that you may wish to put certain controls on. We do that, as I say, typically at the staff level, and we recognize that we are dealing with operational safety concerns sometimes, too. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Commissioner Constantine? COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Just kind of a question that comes out of that. This might be for Mr. Arnold or Mr. Mulhere. Would the shifting, the potential shifting, of retail uses or various commercial uses -- can any of those numbers get high enough to trigger a D.R.I. requirement? Do any -- if those float around, has anybody looked at that? And if so, how does that impact what we're doing? MR. MILK: I think I can answer that. For the record, Brian Milk. The P.U.D. is currently limited to 40,000 square feet retail uses for permitted principal uses. On the other hand, in the industrial district, if there's a manufacturer that wanted to provide accessibility to their products, they could have 40 percent of that area being utilized as floor, showroom or retail use areas. That threshold would not impact or be cause for a D.R.I. COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: There's no scenario under that shifting that will be cause for a D.R.I.? MR. MILK: That's correct. COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Thank you. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: What I would like to do, Mr. Garlick, since I see no one else chomping at the bit, does that conclude the presentation for your team? MR. GARLICK: If you're saying that, you know -- CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I need you on the microphone. Excuse me. MR. GARLICK: Sir, if you would like to conclude the hearing in view of the late hour, we certainly would understand that. There are Collier's Reserve residents who have been here since 9:00 in the morning. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Right. MR. GARLICK: I'm sure they'd like to speak. I'm sure that it would be the normal process, but if that's, you know, the decision of the -- CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. MR. GARLICK: -- commission, I -- CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I have every intention of calling each registered speaker and asking that if you have either additional information or a statement to make, please come up and do it. One of the reasons, Mr. Garlick, we gave your team what turns out to be about equal time to that of the petitioner was because you represented a good number of people in the room. So I'll just ask, if anyone who wishes to speak, to recognize that and remember that in any comments you have to make. MR. GARLICK: Yes, I certainly would encourage anybody to be brief, and if the Chairman wants to conclude the session, we would consent to it. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I'm not going to conclude the session without giving everyone who's registered at least the opportunity to speak. I think that's important. If you wish to waive it or if what you wish to speak has already been addressed by Mr. Garlick and his team, that's fine, too. You can just indicate that you waive. MR. GARLICK: Thank you, sir, very much. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Thank you, Mr. Garlick. Mr. HcNees? MR. HcNEES: Once again, we have Jane Cooper, followed by Rollie Comstock. MS. COOPER: Thank you very much for the opportunity to speak. My name is Jane Cooper and I'm duly sworn. Much of what I had to say I'm sure has already been said. One thing that had not been clear to me until I asked staff was there's a lot of discussion about nonindustrial land, nonindustrial purposes. And it averaged out 30 to 35 percent of this project. Well, that leaves 65 to 70 to 75 percent which is industrial. Therefore, it's not a business park and it's not a commercial park. It's an industrial park. Call it what you will, it is an industrial park. That I think is where the compatibility issue comes home to rest. An industrial park doesn't fit next to Naples Park or Collier's Reserve or Bay Colony or anyplace else you want to think about around our neighborhood. An industrial park is what you're talking about, 70 percent of the use. And I think that that's inappropriate and I think -- I urge you not to permit that to take place. I also urge you not to rush to judgment. You just got an inch of paper today that you had never seen before. Our lawyers brought in paper that you've also not seen. You can't possibly assimilate it all. I think you're probably not paid nearly enough money for what you're trying to do this afternoon. COHMISSIONER NORRIS: I like that. MS. COOPER: If I was in your shoes, I would be tearing my hair out now. COHMISSIONER NORRIS: I did that last week. MS. COOPER: So go home, have a drink, settle down -- COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: John did that already. MS. COOPER: -- think about it. I will. And thank you again. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Thank you. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Mr. Comstock will be followed by Norma Ericson. MR. COMSTOCK: My name is Rollie Comstock. I have been sworn. If you like my tie, it's for sale. Everything I want to say has been said, and I urge you to reject the application. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Thank you, Mr. Comstock. MR. HcNEES: Norma Ericson. Roger Ericson. Here she comes. MS. ERICSON: My name is Norma Ericson, and I'd like to say that I've been duly sworn in. Ladies and gentlemen, many years ago we used to have a place here in Naples. We've always loved Naples. We have come back to Naples in our retirement, and we have been living in Collier's Reserve for a year. I -- all the people have said exactly what I would like to say, that we think that it's an incompatible -- and we hope that you would have the judgment and have an open mind to reject the proposal of the Commerce Park. Thank you. MR. HcNEES: Roger Ericson will be followed by Diane Fall. MR. ERICSON: Good afternoon. My name is Roger Ericson, I have been sworn. I was the general counsel and member of a six-person management committee of a Fortune 200 company. We had large manufacturing operations, and we had parameters for everything. One of them was for locating a plant. And one of our parameters was we would never be right next to a residential community. There are hazards with the manufacturing process that can happen. We had state-of-the-art facilities, but in manufacturing operations there can be problems. And you can set limits as to the emissions, noise, it can still happen. And what happens then? We live next door to it. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: You understand you live next door to it now? There's industrial -- MR. ERICSON: We live next door to a tomato farm right now. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay, you're talking immediately across the street. But if you're talking about hazardous materials, I don't think a couple hundred yards makes that big a difference, does it? COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Because there's already industrial zoning right down the road, and this will make for less intense -- MR. ERICSON: But this is going to expand the industrial zoning. It's going to make it even more so. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: More acreage -- well, actually less acreage and much less intense uses. That's what's triggering for me. I'm sorry. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Well, for the property on the west side of Goodlette it's going to be considerably more acreage, industrial right now. Right now it's 15 or 16, we were told. MS. ERICSON: Well, that was the impression that I'm laboring under, that it is more industrial west of Goodlette Road. Is that wrong? COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: You're correct. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Total net industrial it's less. Depends on what you're measuring. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I suspect he cares less about right next door to the sewer plant than right across the street from '- MS. ERICSON: All I'm asking is that if it's zoned that way and that's what it is, go there. But don't expand a bad condition. And that's what I'm afraid you're going to do if you vote in favor of what the petitioner is requesting here. Thank you. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Thank you. MR. McNEES: Diane Fall will be followed by Rick Fall. MS. FALL: Diane Fall, resident of Collier's Reserve. COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: And sworn? MS. FALL: And I'm sworn. I'm against the proposed development, not necessarily because I think it's bad, but I am truly concerned about the inflexibility of the developer to work with us when we initially requested that they put in that southern entrance and not put all of the traffic on Immokalee Road. And what they are telling us is yeah, we're going to do it, but they will not tell us when. And the only thing we've heard is four to five years, maybe. So unless they can commit, then I think you have an obligation to say no. Thank you. MR. McNEES: Rick Fall, followed by Homer King. MR. FALL: I'm Rick Fall, I'm duly sworn, and proud of that well-spoken lady. We spent two years traveling around the country because we wanted to find a community at a sea level altitude to settle for private health reasons. And we selected very carefully Naples for a lot of reasons. I come from a real estate background, I'm in favor of real estate development, growth, and all that it brings. And I certainly see in Collier County a lot of the similar kinds of things that I saw in the area where I made my living, Vail, Colorado: High end residential development, people coming there to escape the kinds of things that were going on in the metropolitan areas from which they were moving, families of various ages with various kinds of business involvements all the way from heavily involved in corporations that they could telecommunicate to, to people nearing the age of retirement. But all of those decisions are weighed very, very carefully, and the investments at least from our family's viewpoint were quite significant when we chose this community. And so I look to you, our commissioners, with a huge amount of responsibility to weigh these decisions, not only as they affect one particular company, one particular developer or a certain number of jobs, but how it affects the whole area, and how you make those decisions impact on all of the community. Because certainly, were I to have perceived this to be a county where someone could arbitrarily, or at least without what I thought was due process and long and considered thought make decisions of such far-reaching ramifications as to put an industrial park next to what I perceive as one of the more attractive and higher end residential areas of the county, I would have been very, very reluctant to make the commitment to this county. And I think others will be in the future if they perceive that. And I'm not saying this is the case necessarily, because I'm not privy to all of the information you're weighing, which is sort of too bad, but I'm saying you're making a decision that will impact far beyond this particular situation in this particular park. It will impact the decisions of many, many people in the future, values throughout the community; and, therefore, I urge you to not worry about so many of these laws, county rules and consulting with the various attorneys and people involved with the regulations, but to consider the one rule I think we've all got to be guided by, and that's the Golden Rule. Weigh your decision carefully. And I thank you. MR. McNEES: Homer King, followed by Nicole Lindsay. MR. KING: My name is Homer King, and I've been sworn in and probably at. I've shortened this down to this, simply because most of the things that I want to say as a resident of Collier's have already been said, except for one point, and that simply being that we feel that the area in question, the industrial park, if that's what you want to call it, should be comparable to the surrounding land use which is primarily residential. And something that we're familiar with that will work and probably be a lot more productive from a tax standpoint to Collier County if it was zoned as a residential area, period. A brief close: Quality of life, not traffic, and potential economic growth should be our major concern, not how many trucks go by, not how many factories we can put into an area. That really does, as the gentleman before me said, destroy the vision of what Collier County in the northern end is supposed to be like. Thank you. MR. HcNEES: Nicole Lindsay, followed by Jack Lindsay. MS. LINDSAY: My name is Nicole Lindsay, and I've been sworn. What I wanted to say is my husband and I have worked hard and long to build our dream home in what we thought was -- and we still think -- is a dream community and environment. Now we're facing an industrial park across the road. All I ask you, ladies and gentlemen, how would you feel if that was taking place in your neighborhood? Thank you. MR. HcNEES: Mr. Lindsay, followed by Jean Hinkes. MR. LINDSAY: My name is Jack Lindsay, and I'm sworn. It occurs to me that the real issue here is not jobs, it's not tax revenue, it's not diversity, it's the ability of a big developer to run rough shod over individual homeowners. It's my hope and expectation that this Board, as elected officials of this community, will respond and give us a level playing field with the presentation of the petitioner. Thank you. MR. HcNEES: Jean Hinkes, followed by Sylvester Hinkes. MS. HINKES: Good afternoon, my name is Jean Hinkes, I have been sworn. I'm a resident of Collier's Reserve. My husband and I chose Collier's because we thought it was a wonderful community. We believe it's a wonderful community. We love Naples. We sold our home up north. We are permanent residents. We have no other commitment anywhere but to Naples. And it is so sad to think that in this beautiful residential community that you're thinking about putting factories in. I mean, I'm sure that they're wonderful people, but it just doesn't belong there. Please, don't do this. Thank you. MR. HcNEES: Mr. Hinkes, followed by Robert Tews. MR. HINKES: My name is Sylvester Hinkes, and I've been sworn. I'm a permanent resident of Naples, registered voter, paying our taxes here. We think this is a beautiful place to live. We live in Collier's Reserve, as my wife just mentioned, love it there very much. We think that the proposal to zone what is called Creekside Commerce Park into an industrial park is inappropriate, is going to have a negative impact on the character of the residential community, and going to have a negative impact on our home values also. Please do not support this rezoning proposal. Thank you. MR. HcNEES: Robert Tews, followed by Ted Nering. MR. TEWS: My name is Robert Tews, and I too have been sworn in. I served on the Collier's Reserve ad hoc committee, was involved in the discussions with the Barton Collier Company, as to their project; I also visited Tryton. (sic.) And I will say, I was very impressed with the Tryton plan and the Tryton people. However, I too feel it ludicrous to put this development between two residential areas. However, if you do see fit to put this here, I would say that the Barton Collier Company -- you should make them complete the infrastructure west of Goodlette-Frank in phase one. If you do not, they're going to dump all of their traffic in Collier's Reserve entrance. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: We need you on the record for the court reporter. Thank you. MS. TEWS: I've lived in Collier's Reserve for a couple of years, and I know now, without a light there and without the industrial park, how tough the traffic is. Also, I would request that you have them build the same buffer on the north side of this industrial complex as they've built on the south side of the complex. It's a beautiful buffer. And we'd like that on the north side. Thank you. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Thank you. MR. HcNEES: Mr. Nering, followed by William Ebben. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: And how many speakers do we have remaining? MR. HcNEES: Looks like about ten. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: You really did a lot in -- Mr. Carlick, your presentation really did a lot in cutting back that, didn't it? COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Not a lot of waiving happening here. MR. NERING: My name is Ted Nering, and I was sworn at the beginning. And I'm one of the newest residents of Naples. I'm from Indiana. My wife died in April, and I sold our home and relocated to Naples. And it was only a few days later that I was called to a meeting September 11 where the Barton Collier Company informed us that they wanted to build an industrial park across the street from us. you can imagine that I've gone from one shock to another to another. I've been here since 9:00 this morning, and I've noted the irony of the original discussion about the P.U.D. development that was approved and then the Court's suit was filed, and then the developer came into you this morning -- I don't remember the name of the development -- asking for the P.U.D. to be canceled. And it was because the Audubon Society and another group were unwilling to negotiate, were unwilling even to sit down. And I want you to know that that is not our case. We were wanting to sit down, we were wanting to talk from the very first that we heard about this on September 11, and we had no meetings of negotiation except one. All the others were presentations of what they wanted to do and why we should go along with it. And at the one meeting that we did have where we proposed some ideas, I want you also to know that even their planner proposed some ideas that we said well, that would be going in the right direction, that's at least responsive to what we're talking about. And the business decision was no, we can't do that, they shouldn't have said that, we've already cut our deal with the post office and with Tryton, it's too costly, we can't do it. It's a situation of no negotiation, no honest good faith effort to resolve. Puts us in the position of having, if this approval is given, the three to five years of fighting in the courts, fighting in the court of public opinion, having to organize to do that. It's the very last reason in the world that I moved to Naples, Florida, to get embroiled in the political brouhaha of organizing the 64 golf courses so we've got those names of those members and can contact them. And the 70 resident communities. I mean, it's just horrifying the three to five-year ordeal that's been placed in front of us because we can't negotiate and we can't even have reasonable discussions. The next comment I'd like to make is I found the comments made by the second district association, Sally Barker and Ms. Tragesser, to be informative and helpful for me. It's the first time that I had heard their presentation. And so I went out and spoke to them in the hallway. And one other thing that I learned from them that I think would be helpful as you make your deliberations -- and I've written this down to make sure that I say it accurately -- there are voids in the P.U.D. document to bring consistency with the best stated intentions of the developer, and there's a real need here for a continuance of a decision and for an opportunity to sit down with them and work out the details so that the words on the paper are clarified and so that they include the kind of comments that they're making here in a meeting but are not in the document itself. Amazingly, we were able to anticipate the same question that Commissioner Constantine made earlier about a development of regional impact, and we have made contact and only moments ago received a fax that the department will monitor this proposed development for its consistency with the local comprehensive plan and the applicability of development of regional impact D.R.I. criteria. And so, you know, we're beginning a process of that three to five-year battle. We're beginning to get that information. And because this is on State of Florida stationery, perhaps you would accept the facts into your record of that activity. So my final comment would be, obviously we would hope that this would not be approved, but if there is a zeal to approve what is so shocking to us, a factory in a residence community, then at the very least, there needs to be a meaningful sit-down session to work out details that have so far even been unable to be realistically considered by the developer. Thank you. MR. McNEES: Mr. Ebben, to be followed by Jean -- someone that I can't decipher -- 825 Barcamil. MR. EBBEN: They were here since 9:00 a.m., and they had to catch a plane. COHMISSIONER NORRIS: I've been here since 8:00. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: We get paid, though. MR. EBBEN: My name is William Ebben. I have been sworn. What I have to say might be slightly disjointed. I've never received a piece of paper or any of the information that's been circulated either before this moment or today, but I did take nine notes. And I won't go through all of them, but one of them deals with the jocular remark that was made just a minute ago about discouraging people from talking and waving. I checked this noontime, since I do live in Collier -- I am sworn, by the way -- I live in Collier's Reserve. I found out that there have been 91 certificate of occupancies issued. 31 of those people have spent the bulk of today here. And the reason why I believe so few people are asking to be waived is I think that gauges the seriousness by which these folks take this proposal. I made a number of notes, as I indicated. Mr. Milk this morning was talking about what's unique about the project. And I headed my notes by just saying what's unique about this project -- because I think it's a great project -- is it's simply in the wrong place. And the only other note that I made here that I don't think has been addressed is in the petitioner's presentation, there was 10 or 15 minutes of comparisons, Creekside versus Collier's Reserve; measurements of how far from this house to there, to some of the features of their proposal. The one thing that I think sticks out -- at least in my mind, and I hope in your mind -- to the contrary, there is no industrial in Collier's Reserve. There is only business. It seems to me that the designation of industrial zoning that was given to the tomato plant -- and I did not know that Goodlette Road was once a railroad -- was because of the definition required in those times of what industrial is. And the notion of extending industrial zoning further west into the area that has been in question seems to me to be not the best use of this land. So I urge you to consider that in your judgment. I appreciate your time. Certainly, if you do approve this project, I certainly go along with what appears to be what some of you are thinking, and the comments that have been made here, we need to deal with the infrastructure roads because we can't stand any more traffic, any more congestion, any more anything out there on Immokalee Road. I imagine -- and this is just my idea, I haven't talked to anybody else -- but I will try to talk this -- if this gets approved, I would try to recommend -- I don't know what we'd have to do this -- to move the main entrance of Collier's Reserve to the east to get away from this corner and take the permanent entrance out, say, where the construction entrance is now, just to get away from the awfulness that would be there, especially at Christmastime and at IRS time. I predict that there will be people lined up to get into the post office out past Route 41 coming from the west. I can't imagine it to be otherwise, just based on my trying to get in the post office down here on Goodlette Road today. So with that, again, I thank you for your time. I urge your consideration in denial of this proposal. Thank you. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Sir, since you referred to my remark as jocular, let me explain that your representative, Mr. Garlick and his team was afforded, in my three years on this Board, an unprecedented amount of time to respond to the petitioner's element, and that in my opinion was in response to the number of people that have maintained throughout the day here. So I did my best to try and afford that. So please don't take that remark as jocular. I know you're not familiar with this process. MR. NERING: Could I make a comment back to that? You have us two hours and 20 minutes. I don't know -- I believe when you add 20 -- multiply 28 times five, I think that in totality of everything, we will not use anywhere near two hours and 20 minutes, but maybe you're keeping time for that. That's all I'd like to say. MR. McNEES: Jutta Lopez, followed by Robert Ochs. UNIDENTIFIED PERSON: Jutta Lopez is gone. MR. McNEES: Robert Ochs will then be followed by Kurt Augustin. MR. OCHS: Thank you. My name is Robert Ochs and I've been sworn And I'm a member of the ad hoc committee that was sworn by Collier's Reserve, and I'm soon to be a resident here. At least I hope soon. And I'll limit my remarks. For 35 years I've represented two of the largest corporations in this country, indeed two of the largest corporations in the world, and so I've attended many of these rezoning and expansions and industrial siting hearings and rezoning efforts. In today's atmosphere, companies approach this -- these matters wholly different than Barton Collier Company has done. They do it on a pro-active manner, in an open forum, in a forum that allows everybody's concerns to be vented and addressed. I think were Barton Collier alive, and given the history of his company, he would be embarrassed with the approach that we have seen with this project. It's a stealth project. Collier's Reserve got its first written information on it I think September -- early September. And I think we had our first meeting September llth. Here we are in the middle of -- a little past late October, and we're at a rezoning hearing, with very little information submitted to the aggrieved parties. Today this Board was furnished with voluminous information, which it's never seen before, and couldn't possibly evaluate without additional study and come to a rational, reasonable conclusion. So I would urge you on that basis, and on the basis of being fair in affording us really the due process to which we're entitled. To delay any final decision until this additional information can be assimilated, maybe additional hearings can be held and additional questions addressed to the experts so that a truly informed decision can be reached, and that there's a record that's made that is understandable if this matter is appealed forward. On the note of a record, I just wanted to correct the record. I believe Mr. Milk stated something to the effect that the vote of the Planning Commission was confused, I believe was his word. And I was at that meeting which lasted many hours, not quite as long as this one, and in my opinion, in my view, there was no confusion on the part of Planning Commissioners. They knew, they understood the project, and they voted the way they did. So I just think for the record purposes that needs to be corrected. Thank you for your time. MR. McNEES: Curt Augustin followed by Mary Ann Augustin. MR. AUGUSTIN: Good afternoon. I'm a Collier Reserve resident and taxpayer. I urge the commissioners to vote against the requested Creekside Industrial Park development for two reasons that are very important to me: Number one, it will create monumental traffic problems for Collier Reserve residents, the North Naples Hospital, especially, and the adjoining communities. Number two, the proposed major industrial occupant will be a manufacturer of plastic components, Tyton-Hellerman. According to a Tyton spokesman, their process would be conducted in a completely enclosed environment; i.e., no open doors, windows, no exhaust fans. However, this is contrary to the material safety data sheets issued by the suppliers of raw materials used in Tyton's products. I'd like to give you an example of one of these data sheets. I quote, "A continuous supply of fresh air into the workplace, together with removal of processing fume through exhaust systems is recommended. Processing fumes condensate, may be a fire hazard, toxic, remove periodically from exhaust, ductwork and other surfaces using appropriate personal protection." Perhaps Tyton possesses a magical formula for safety compliance within a total enclosed environment. I'm doubtful this can be accomplished. In conclusion, I believe that approval of the Creekside Industrial Park without further investigation would constitute a decision to be regretted down the road. Thank you very much. MR. McNEES: Mary Ann Augustin, followed by Norman Kluger. MS. AUGUSTIN: Mary Ann Augustin. I have been sworn in. As a Collier County taxpayer and voter, I strongly oppose the development of Creekside Commerce Park. I would like to remind the commissioners that although the developers tout Creekside as an upscale Commerce Park, it will evolve primarily as an industrial campus with concomitant heavy traffic, round-the-clock manufacturing and noise, as well as the future potential for air pollution and fire hazards. No matter how pleasingly the Commerce Park is packaged, beneath the wrappers what remains is plain unadulterated industry, misplaced in a residential commercial neighborhood. Industry has not been known to enhance a neighborhood; it promotes its decline. While the need for the creation of higher paying industrial jobs in Collier County is commendable and undisputed, the intelligent placement of industry within the community requires careful scrutiny and reflection in order to maintain the highest quality of life for all residents, as well as to ensure the continued attraction of Naples as a tourist destination. As appointed monitors of appropriate local land use from a practical, legal, aesthetic and environmental viewpoint, the Board is charged with rendering decisions for the future. Hopefully, your sole desire today will be to render a decision that will not only address the needs of Naples today, but will also favorably impact future generations of Neapolitans. Approval of Creekside would represent a blatant disregard for appropriate land use. Thank you for your time. MR. HcNEES: Mr. Kluger, followed by Michael Fleisher. MR. KLUGER: I'm Norman Kluger, I'm duly sworn, and I'm a resident of Collier's Reserve. I was a member of the ad hoc committee, I still am a member, and there were some things that were said, I believe at the -- one comment was made at the very first meeting on September llth by this gentleman, Mark, right? When I asked him why this industrial plan couldn't have been located at another site somewhere in the county, his answer was we don't own any land in another part of the county. Subsequent to that, I went to the Planning Commission meeting, and the young man sitting at the end there -- and I don't recall his name -- made the presentation. He said when Tyton-Hellerman came to them, we had no place to put them. Well, that isn't a developer's problem, that's your planning problem. There should be an upscale park someplace, but it should be in a space that has access to 1-75, that doesn't take big trucks through neighborhoods where kids are going to school, that isn't in the middle of two prestigious residential communities. Someone should take the ball. Developers probably wouldn't. In Pennsylvania, when we had all that 20 percent unemployment, the county condemned land, created bind issues, created the infrastructure, and made the land available, and subsidized the industry on top of that. We have a two percent employment rate, we don't need to go to that extreme, but there should be an upscale park. And finding a site for it should be their task, not negotiating with the lawyers to zone a piece that has an obvious better intended use. Thank you very much. MR. HcNEES: Mr. Fleisher, and your final registered speaker, Roger Williams. MR. FLEISHER: Good afternoon, my name is Michael Fleisher and I have been sworn. Residences and industry don't mix. They don't go well together. The future doesn't bode well for it. I urge you to turn this down. MR. HcNEES: And Mr. Williams. MR. WILLIAMS: My name is Roger Williams. I have been sworn. I started visiting Naples in 1954, and I think at that time they had one stop light at Fifth Avenue and 41. And what struck me then was the ambience and just it was a very delightful place. Through the years my wife and I have returned, we are now permanent residents, we live here year round, and are here for all the reasons that have been discussed. I kind of think what we have is a situation where the tail is wagging the dog. The tail is the economic development council and one plant. We seem to be bending over backwards -- and that's fine, this is a democracy -- but we seem to be bending over backwards to try to force an issue and bring in a facility right now; one plant that says if you don't put us in, we're going to go someplace else. I highly suspect that that's true, but let's assume that's the case. You have more people living in one highrise in Pelican Bay than you have in all of the employment rolls here. If this economic development commission -- and I have nothing against them personally, they've got a job to do, I think they're well focused, but perhaps ill informed -- if they were here 20 years ago, we wouldn't have Pelican Bay, we wouldn't have Bay Colony, we probably wouldn't have some of the other golf course communities here. I'd hate to think that where the Philharmonic is we'd have a plastics plant, or the Ritz Carlton or the Registry or Waterside. I just can't see that -- we're regressing back. If we wanted to take Barron-Collier's concept and his dreams for this place -- and he started out saying I want a place where my friends can come down, enjoy the weather, play golf, go fishing, go sailing, and enjoy. I think he'd turn over in his grave if he saw what we were doing by putting an industrial park in next door to Pelican Bay, which is great, and hopefully we're an extension of that. I don't think anybody's considered the number of people involved. This is democracy. You have a lot more people who are down here who are residents, and you've seen a number of Collier Reserve's folks today. We don't have horns, we don't have tails. We're honest citizens. We pay our taxes. We support the Philharmonic. Perhaps none of us even vote for the County Commissioners, I don't know. The point is, you have a large number of people here who are pleading with you to consider your actions. If you took a survey of all the people who live here year round and say there were 10,000 people and you asked them how many of them came down here to Naples to be close to an upscale industrial park or a factory, I don't know how many responses you would get to say that's why they moved here. And yet, what we're doing is this tail and the dog situation. We're bending over backwards to try to force an issue. Somebody by accident of birth has a piece of land, you've got a piece of land that's great, and I think that there are better uses. Thank you very much. MR. McNEES: You have no more speakers. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. With that, I'm going to ask the board if they have any questions of our staff, of the petitioner or of Mr. Garlick's team before I close the public hearing and we begin deliberations on the decision before us today. I'm going to start off with a couple of issues that I need to know in order to make a decision today. One is -- I guess a couple are transportation related. Mr. Varnadoe, the concern from the residents regarding transportation is one that I think is -- holds a lot of merit, particularly since the time they moved in to now, there's been absolutely nothing across the street. Division of anything, much less something with a perceived or real intensity, stands to scare the dickens out of a lot of people. I understand that phase one includes the I.C. portion that will have the post office and Tyton-Hellerman on it, plus what looks to be two or possibly three business tracks between the internal road and Immokalee Road. Is that the extent of phase one? MR. VARNADOE: Yes, if we can, we'll put the exhibit up and it will be a lot easier for us all to see. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay, and that's also in our packet. So that is the extent of phase one. All of those trips, if this project is approved, will be put on those two accesses to Immokalee Road. The concern from the residents and -- I think is twofold: One is those people that want to access Goodlette-Frank Road in or out can't in this phase. And the future development to the south may somehow connect to this roadway without again accessing Goodlette-Frank Road. This was something that you and I discussed previously, because it has been a concern of mine. And what I am looking for, if this project moves ahead today, is a specific commitment of time or triggers that places the roadway just south of the post office and Tyton there on the common property line between them and the adjacent parcel. Puts that road connecting through to Goodlette-Frank. And I'm looking for a very specific time frame on that, that regardless of what happens financially with the park, that that will happen, and that the truck traffic from Tyton and from the post office will then use that roadway. MR. VARNADOE: Put the site plan back up. You're talking about the road that comes from Goodlette-Frank and cul-de-sacs to the west? CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Correct, because that's the only road that would allow the dispersion of traffic to Goodlette-Frank and not put it all on Immokalee. MR. VARNADOE: And we're -- I have prepared a handout on that. I want to say something about that. We are ready to make commitments on it, we do have triggers. You know, some of us have been here a little bit longer, and I guess we did come down here with the hopes there'd be some industry and some economic development and not just golf courses and retirement homes, even though I do enjoy golf. And if I live long enough, I'll probably enjoy our retirement home. I was involved in the zoning of Pelican Bay. When we started Pelican Bay -- and I can't tell you how many units we built with one entrance on U.S. 41. And you've got a situation just like -- it's very comparable to this entire project right down the street on north and south Horseshoe Drive. It's approximately 110 acres. It's a quote, park at Commerce. How many access points does it have? CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Two that I know of. MR. VARNADOE: Two that I know of, and they both are on the same road. So when we start talking about traffic and traffic dispersion, I've got two main roads and we're putting six, you know, points of access on it. So this will be a lot better situation than that. But what I'm saying is, the first phase traffic is not a real problem. But let me address your specific concerns, sir, because I know that you have concerns. And I put it in writing, because that way I don't have to try to remember or don't get it confused. And if somebody want to put it in a motion, then we have it on the record here. We're talking about now the southern road west of Goodlette-Frank Road. And the commitment is to complete construction, not start construction, because I didn't want to get into some comment how long it would take us to build it and we'd start it and never finish it. Excuse me, Mr. Milk. When the following occurs: The issuance of a Certificate of Occupancy for any use on that southern parcel. So point it out for me, Bruce, please. So any use on that southern parcel before there's a C.O., that road will be completed. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Not the entirety of the parcel, any part of it. MR. VARNADOE: Any part of it. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: One. MR. VARNADOE: Any use. Second, the issuance of a Certificate of Occupancy on the second business parcel to be developed west of the Pine Ridge canal. West of the Pine Ridge canal. Bruce? Bruce? COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: West. It's been a long day. MR. VARNADOE: A long day. There are actually three parcels that are west of the Pine Ridge canal that are allowed for business uses. Those ostensibly would put us more traffic on one of those two intersections. So before the second one of those is developed and our C.O. is issued, that road will be complete and Tyton and the post office will have agreed, both have agreed -- and that's in that letter I sent you -- that they would hook up their service entrances to that southern route. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Are these in the alternative or cumulative? MR. VARNADOE: This is the first to occur. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: The first to occur of the following events. MR. VARNADOE: Yeah. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: You described two. MR. VARNADOE: The third one is within three years of approval of this P.U.D. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: That's the one that really catches my eye, because to put it on the development side, one gentleman said about how the finances just don't work. And although that may be true for the Collier family, if you're a resident, you know, banking on the potential development of a parcel, is something not really attractive. So this is saying that the roadway will be complete, assuming this s approved today, within three years of that approval, regardless of economic factors. MR. VARNADOE: We're taking the risk on that, yes, sir. And the fourth one is that the -- as you know, we've been looking for obtaining some funding from another source for construction of the road -- whether it's Enterprise, Florida, or some other loan -- within nine months of obtaining that financing, I don't want to hold out the date as -- you know, that I have financing lined up, but that's just another trigger, if you would. It'd probably take six to seven months to build the road, and nine months gives us the leeway that it will be completed within nine months of obtaining that financing. So that is our commitment on that subject, sir. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. Any other questions on that area? COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I didn't exactly understand the second condition. The first one is the issuance of a C.O. for the southern parcel. Which is -- I wish we could identify it a little better. Are those parcels numbered, or -- you know, because there's a lot of southern on that. COMMISSIONER BERRY: It's the one closest to Pelican Marsh. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Okay, there you go, the southwest or -- MR. VARNADOE: Well, if you read this on -- if you actually read it, it says to the parcel herein called the southern parcel that is west of Goodlette Road and abuts Pelican Marsh, so I think it is identified -- COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Yes, thank you. MR. VARNADOE: -- in the written statement. I just didn't bother to go into -- COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: Okay. Okay. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: On the other issue of -- MR. VARNADOE: She had a question on -- COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: My question was really about the second one, the issue of a C.O. on the second business parcel to be developed west of the canal. The business parcels are the pink ones as opposed to the orange ones. MR. VARNADOE: Right. And there's actually -- those -- see, those three business parcels are in the first phase. COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: I have trouble not seeing -- I can only see two business parcels. MR. VARNADOE: Well, you see two pink blocks, but there's actually three sites in there. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: If you look at the phasing plan in your document, it shows I think the one -- the larger pink one divided into two lots. MR. VARNADOE: Yes. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Each one approximately plus or minus an acre and a half. MR. McNEES: Okay. I understand now. Thank you. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: My second question on the transportation side goes to the traffic impact statement that you presented to our staff. What we have heard today from opposition and from our staff is that based on a couple of elements in the P.U.D., we could see some substantial fluctuation from what was presented to what could actually occur. And part of that is because of the ability to put showroom space or whatnot that has a retail element to it in the I.C. zoning district. My concern is, and it's always on T.I.S.'s: I know their averages, but we seem to have difficulty holding people to what the T.I.S. says will actually happen. And if you tell us there's going to be 17,000 trips generated, I understand that's not an exact science, but 29,000 would far exceed what I would be willing to consider. So I need some -- again, I need some triggers that we are not putting 30,000 trips on the adjacent roadway, because I simply couldn't support that. MR. VARNADOE: Neither would we propose that. I need to get on the record -- and I'm going to let Mr. Reynolds do that, because he can combine the amount of conversion with the traffic summary, and I'll -- so it will make it much shorter. But we do not object to going with a phased updated traffic T.I.S. as we go through this project. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: That T.I.S. would eventually -- if you brought uses in that were in the high end of the range -- would limit your uses down the road, because you had to comply with what is -- MR. VARNADOE: We'd be back before you telling you we got to do something differently, or you're going to have to approve more or do something not supported by T.I.S., yes. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: How many phases do you have on this project? MR. VARNADOE: Well, you don't know. What I would suggest we do is that when we come in for each subdivision plat, we simply would do an updated T.I.S. at that time. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I would like to see also at the time of site development plan -- because you could very well plat this in two phases, and we may not have substantive traffic in the first place to make a reasonable decision in the second. MR. VARNADOE: That's fine, because we don't envision that. We envision in probably three phases west of Goodlette and perhaps one east, but we don't have any objection to that. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: So that would be at S.D.P. instead of -- in other words, you have to basically provide the -- fill in the cumulative trip generation once the uses are known to make sure that what has presented by your T.I.S. is what ballpark actually happens so the residents can count on that. MR. VARNADOE: Yes, sir. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. Other questions for Mr. Varnadoe? Has outdoor storage and display been permitted, and all the I.C., or just east of Goodlette-Frank Road? MR. VARNADOE: I'll let Mr. Reynolds deal with that planning issue. I don't think -- I think it's outside storage if it's buffered from the street, but I don't think there's any outside display, is what I'm -- CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: That's what caught my eye. MR. VARNADOE: I'm going to let Mr. Reynolds talk to it. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. Any further questions for Mr. Varnadoe? (No response.) CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I have a question then for Mr. Reynolds on the storage and display. My concern is that what we are being asked to look at is an upscale Commerce Park. But when I think of outside storage and display, the word upscale doesn't seem to apply. Because of the existing industrial zoning on the east side of Goodlette-Frank, that doesn't create as much concern for me because the screening and buffering requirement from Goodlette-Frank would apply. My concern is the internal roadways that eventually, if all goes well, would become public roads, that we don't have outside storage and display visible from those roadways. That's my predominant concern. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: From the internal roadways, because they're already buffered from the external. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Right. But the internal roadways -- somebody had mentioned stacking of pallets. And you can have a seven-foot fence and stack pallets 20 feet, and the fence does you no good. So I need to know that outside storage and display is not permitted, not just from an external view but internal roadways also. MR. REYNOLDS: The way the provision is written in the P.U.D. -- and we're going to find the specific language -- is that any outside storage or display must have the seven-foot high opaque screen. That's the way it's written. Regardless of where it can be viewed from. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: But if it's a 20-foot high stack of pallets, a seven-foot fence doesn't matter. COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: Not going to mean anything. COMHISSIONER CONSTANTINE: John Deere equipment. MR. REYNOLDS: What we're saying is that it will not be -- we'll reword it, if we have to, so it's not visible from any public roadway. Is that satisfactory? CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: That's what I'm looking for. MR. VARNADOE: I think that and limit the height of that stockpile or stacking in that area. And to the rear yard. We could also do that. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Are all the internal roadways shown on here to be public roadways? MR. VARNADOE: Yes. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I had a note here to cap the amount of retail and square footage, but it seems to me -- COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: Traffic, uh-huh. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: -- the determining factor there is the trip generation. I want to make sure we're ballparked at what's being presented here today that we don't approve something with an 18,000 or 17,000 number and end up with 30,000. So if that's going to govern, then I don't think that cap is necessary. I guess I need to -- MR. REYNOLDS: Mr. Chairman? CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Yes. MR. REYNOLDS: Can I make just one comment on that? Because I think it's important just to clarify the record, and I think Brian clarified part of that. The 40 percent retail area that was described by the opposition's transportation consultant is only an accessory use to principal uses of industrial only in the I.C. district. It is not allowed as a principal use. The way that it was presented to you in these worst case scenarios was treating that as converting to a freestanding retail use. That's simply not allowed. And what we have done is when we did -- when we selected the I.T.E. category to use for modeling the transportation, we did not take the best case or the worst case. In fact, what we took was the business park category out of I.T.E. which has a 14.37 A.D.T. per thousand square foot rate, generation rate. That compares to less than seven for light industrial use. So we did not -- COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: The two numbers again, seven and? CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Fourteen. COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: Fourteen. MR. REYNOLDS: It's less than seven four light industrial. It's 14.37 for business park. So that already accommodates the understanding that in a business park district, you do have some of those ancillary and accessory retail functions, but they are not permitted to be principal uses. And let me just put that discussion in the context of what -- a comparison to the first phase. If you take our first phase two uses, Tyton generates five per thousand. Our T.I.S. used 14.37 per thousand for that allocation in the park. Post office is higher. But when you average the two, the combined traffic, actual traffic out of the post office in Tryton is less than what we used when we used our T.I.S. So it is not an unreasonable -- in fact, it's a very reasonable representation of what the traffic would be expected to be. And I just wanted to make sure that was clear on the record. COHHISSIONER HAC'KIE: I have a question before we leave that. I want to be sure I understood the conversion issue. And I apologize, because I am getting sort of dull. But conversion can only be for accessory uses. MR. REYNOLDS: Right. There is no ability to convert our I.C. uses to retail uses. The I.C. use has an allowance that the floor area within a building, 40 percent of that can be allocated to display areas, which are treated as a retail type of a use. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Okay. MR. REYNOLDS: But it's only an accessory use. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Only accessory. MR. REYNOLDS: So you cannot convert the square footage to a freestanding retail use -- CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I visited one of those in Railhead. It's where they make marble tubs. MR. REYNOLDS: Right. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: And when you walk in the front door, there's a reception area with -- COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: It's the pretty part. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Yes. And then the manufacturing is behind it in an enclosed building. MR. REYNOLDS: Correct. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Is that what we're talking about here? MR. REYNOLDS: That's what we're talking about. So it's not reasonable to treat that as being converted to freestanding retail uses and then present a scenario of -- COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: That's extremely significant in those traffic numbers. Because I was scared to death with those traffic numbers, because if we were converting industrial to actual freestanding retail, then those worst case scenarios have more validity. But they have very little validity in an accessory use as opposed to principal. That's big time. MR. REYNOLDS: That's very true. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: If someone is manufacturing widgets and in the front office they begin selling things not associated with their product, they in fact will have a zoning violation in the manner in which the document is drafted; is that correct? MR. REYNOLDS: That's correct. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay, this is not a deed restriction that will be a zoning violation, which this Board would then enforce? MR. REYNOLDS: That's correct. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: That's great. MR. REYNOLDS: Brian described that the cap on our principal use for retail is 40,000 square feet. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Period. MR. REYNOLDS: That's a very small amount of square footage for retail use. And that -- we used all of that as retail in our T.I.S. So it's a very balanced T.I.S. It was not trying to paint an unrealistic picture. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Realizing the likelihood of actually -- of everybody using 40 percent of their spaces -- CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: That's pretty small. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: -- if they did, what's the total square footage including that? MR. REYNOLDS: We are allowed approximately in the I.C. district 600 -- 620,000 square feet. So every user in there at 40 percent of their building area allocated to retail display, it would be 40 percent of that or 240,000 square feet. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: It's 240,000. HR. HILK: And that's used for display area, show rooms, conferences -- COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Only accessory to the -- MR. MILK: Permitted principals. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: -- principal use of manufacturing, not -- they can't sell somebody else's widget. MR. MILK: That's a whole different animal. In other words, they can't sell somebody else's widget. That's a big difference. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: That's a good example. The clothing shop with a lumber store would be very obvious. MR. REYNOLDS: We would have to take Tyton and the post office out of that, because they're not using that -- COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Right. MR. REYNOLDS: -- feature. And we wouldn't expect all of the users to use that. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: No purchasing of plastic ties from Tyton in the front shop? COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Darn. MR. REYNOLDS: The other point I just want to make clear on the record, because it was discussed -- I'm not sure anybody put it on the record -- is that there are no additional access points allowed other than those that are shown on the P.U.D. master plan that was presented to you. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Getting to my next transportation point. You show an access point east of Goodlette-Frank Road, south of what is shown as a lake on the master plan. That is -- I understand what you're doing there, that you may be separating the two parcels for individual use. You know, I'd love to see that accessed internally, if that's possible. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: That one? CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Yeah. Just because of the proximity of the stoplight to the north. I know it exceeds access management guidelines, but if that's going to occur, I'm going to suggest that it be a ride-in, ride-out only, that it not be a median cut at that location. Because I don't want another full median opening with what's going on to the north. That just doesn't seem to make sense to me. MR. REYNOLDS: We could agree right now that that would be restricted to a ride-in and ride-out use. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. MR. REYNOLDS: That was the intent. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I didn't have any more transportation questions. I had some land use questions. Commissioner Norris? COHMISSIONER NORRIS: Yeah, I've got -- the second district association had a note here about requesting deletion of silos and storage tanks. Are we going to allow silage here? MR. REYNOLDS: What we'd like to do is agree that those cannot be any higher than the height of the principal structure, which is 35 feet. Because you may need to have that use, but if it's integrated into the height of the building, we'd like to be able to retain that as a use. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Off the top of your head, can you give me an example of who would use a silo or storage tank? MR. REYNOLDS: Well, a long time ago, I was -- I worked in a manufacturing operation, and the packing material that they use to put in the boxes, the Styrofoam pellets, typically have these things, and I guess you could call it a silo if it's integrated into the roof. You know, sometimes those extend above the roof line. So, I mean, that's the best example I can give. COHMISSIONER NORRIS: Just to clarify, is it already in your P.U.D. proposal that those are limited to the height of the building? MR. REYNOLDS: Right now, the way the P.U.D. was written is we were limited to -- I believe it was 40 feet west of Goodlette Road and 50 feet east of Goodlette Road. And what I'm saying is that we would be willing to, if -- we'd like to keep the use because we think it's an important use, but we will make the height the same as the principal structure so it doesn't extend -- CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: In thinking of silos and storage tanks, there's no provision here, as I read it, for any type of bulk petroleum product or -- when I think of storage tanks, I'm going back to my days in the Coast Guard and oil fires, and -- you know. So we're not talking about anything in that area, because those have been prohibited uses, if I've read this correctly. MR. REYNOLDS: Yes, those are prohibited uses. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Thank you, Mr. Milk. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Is that then that there are no structures higher than the principal structures? MR. REYNOLDS: Yeah, that's the net result, because that was the only use I think we had that was an exclusion to that. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: So that's really no restriction whatsoever. I mean, are you restricted to that height anyway? MR. REYNOLDS: No. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: No. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: They weren't allowed 50 feet. MR. REYNOLDS: No, the way the P.U.D. was written -- in fact, the way I believe your zoning code was written is, there are certain kinds of uses that can extend beyond the height of the building. So what we're doing is, we're capping it at the height of the principal structure, 35 feet. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Further questions for Mr. Reynolds? Any questions by any member of the Board to staff and the petitioner? (No response.) I'll close the public -- MR. MILK: Excuse me, Commissioner, can I just back up a couple of paces here? CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay, Mr. Milk. MR. MILK: In regards to the T.I.S. with each site development plan, that site development plan process is an administrative process. The board will not have a chance to look at or review that. That's a function of traffic engineer staff, engineering. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Correct. But understanding that it's based on the original T.I.S. submitted. Because again, what we're doing is saying that, you know, within, you know, a thousand trips that what was proposed is what needs to happen there. And, you know, we don't want the extremes that were shown by Mr. Garlick's folks from happening. That's my concern. MR. KANT: Mr. Chairman, we agreed -- Mr. Varnadoe approached me, and we've agreed to do it both at S.D.P. and P.S.P., so you've got every shot at it, which will alleviate Mr. Milk's concern. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. So then it does come before us and also as an administrative function. Because my concern was they could -- if you go and plat the whole thing at once, then we're done. So I'd like the S.D.P. -- MR. MILK: And the other point was the fencing storages allowed in both the I.C. E district and the business district. Was the thought here that we were going to limit the storage to the rear yard, the front yard. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Not to be visible from public roadways, either internal or external, period. That was my intention. COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: Mine too. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Further questions? Seeing none, I'm going to close the public hearing. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I've kept a list here. I'm going to try to make a motion. It's motion for approval subject to the conditions. There are one, two, three, four, five of them that I've noted, and there may be more, so I'm open to additions to the motion. But the first condition is the written submittal from the petitioner about complete construction of the southerly internal roadway. Yes, what Mr. Norris just held in his hand, and will be submitted for the record, so I'll reread that to you, that condition. The best one of that being that within three years of approval of the P.U.D., the road's got to be in under any circumstance. The second one is that the -- that at preliminary subdivision plan and site development plan process, that there be cumulative trip generations, ongoing traffic impact statements, so that we can monitor the cumulative traffic impacts with the understanding that if they exceed the expected -- or the T.I.S. that we have by more than ten percent, it's a significant problem. The third one is that there be no outdoor storage or display visible from any public roadway, whether internal or external. Fourth, that the most southeasterly I.C. parcel access point be limited to ride-in, ride-out only, and that no structure be higher than the principal structure. That was directed toward the silos. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Okay. We have a motion on the floor. Is there a second on the motion? COMHISSIONER NORRIS: Second. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Motion and second. Is there a discussion on the motion? Commissioner Constantine? COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Mr. Chairman, I'm not going to support the motion. And I know you-all have been trying to work on making this as good as you can. But I don't think it fits here for a number of reasons, and I ask you to bear with me as I go through these, because I think we have some very serious questions as to whether or not it's appropriate. The first deals with compatibility in the future land use element. We had a couple of our experts raise 5.2 and 5.4 of that. But in our own packet, it goes into an explanation. And if you go look back at the history of this property and how it came to have some industrial zoning anyway, it raises the issue of whether or not industrial is compatible at all. Our packet reads that during implementation of the county zoning teevaluation program, about seven years ago, the industrial zoning portions of the site were determined to be, quote, improved property, end quote, or were granted a compatibility exception. And that phrase is very important, compatibility exception. They recognized it was not compatible, but granted an exception because the packing house was seen as improved property. So clearly, as part of that process, they raised a red flag as to whether it was compatible or not. But due to property rights issues having to do with the packing house, and that being that it was indeed improved property, they granted an exception and let that go through. I would say that if anything, it has become less compatible in the last seven years, certainly not more compatible. If that question was raised during that process, it certainly is more intense at this point. We had a number of traffic issues raised as well. I think there are some very real questions raised by Mr. Calhoun. Level of service D issues really give me concern to pause. But the area I want to get into the most and that is in our packet we have fezone findings for petition. And there are 17 different questions in there, and every single fezone we have has these. And no particular question by itself necessarily knocks out -- if it doesn't answer verbally will absolutely knock out a petition. But they are each kind of red flags. And as I go through the 17 questions, nine of the 17 have answers that I'm not comfortable with or appropriate for us to move ahead. If it were one or two, perhaps we could address them. But -- a couple of them I'll just read. Three or four of them I want to get into specifically. The existing land use pattern I think is a valid question. It's already been raised by some of the homeowners, as well as Mr. Garlick, so I won't get into detail. And the possible creation of an isolated district, unrelated to adjacent and nearby districts. I think that's valid. Whether changed or changing conditions make the passage of the proposed amendment necessary. Now, frankly, I would say the conditions as they are changing or as they have changed if anything make this less appropriate for the area. Item number six on these questions, whether the proposed change will adversely influence living conditions in the neighborhood. And I think we've heard very clearly from both the experts and the residents that it will adversely affect their area. I thought it ironic that Mr. Varnadoe brought up Collier Park of Commerce on Airport Road and used that as an example. He said well, gosh, there's only two entrances there, and it was a traffic issue. But if you look at what is directly across the road from those entrances, it's another industrial park. And if you look at what's directly across the road here, it's one of the highest level residential communities in the county. It's just -- it's not appropriate. Number seven -- and this really goes hand-in-hand with that -- is whether the proposed changes will create or excessively increase traffic congestion, or create types of traffic deemed incompatible. And as we look at the types of traffic, particularly, we'll see the increase -- and we can have the argument, and I appreciate you trying to put the trigger mechanisms in there for congestion -- but the type of traffic I think is every bit as much of a concern as the volume, because the type of traffic going into an industrial park is very different than others. You have heavy truck traffic, you have U.S. Postal Service. You're going to have an unusually high volume going in there. But you have trucks, you have larger vehicles, vehicles that are not traditionally compatible with people coming and going from their neighborhood. Item ten is whether the proposed changes will adversely affect property values. And again, we go back to what the neighbors have shared with us today. They have a very real concern there. Number 13, whether there are substantial reasons why the property cannot be used in accordance with existing zoning. Frankly, no. I don't understand why it can't be used with existing zoning. And that goes hand in hand with item 15, is whether it is impossible to find other adequate sites in the county for the proposed use in districts already permitted. We have the Industrial Park Guide, which the county in concert with the E.D.C. has put out, and it shows 15 industrial parks that are appropriate for this within the urban area. So clearly the answer -- and I'm not sure if it was Mr. Varnadoe or who, but at the beginning of the hearing I had raised the question whether or not there was anywhere else you could have this. There's not just anywhere else, there's more than a dozen other locations that are already zoned that way, including the industrial property that already exists on the east side of Goodlette. So I just -- as I look at all of those, I think the issue fails to meet over half of the questions that we commonly address on every single one of our petitions having to do with the land development code. And when you cite all those, along with the future land use element and the compatibility issue, I just -- I can't support the motion. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Some of the bases for your argument I find myself disagreeing with. This is probably one of the hardest decisions for me, because I think I'm faced with what my gut is telling me in the long-term interest of this community as a need. And it's a need to develop places for quality companies to come to employ the children we raise here, to bring jobs and sustainability of commerce in this community. It's something this board, until two years ago, and previous boards, never applied themselves to. We are in the first year of applying local tax dollars to an economic development effort, making this a priority; making all the issues I just stated a priority. So as much as Mr. Garlick said to us that those are not considerations, in half he was right. He's right in that we cannot fezone a piece of property based on economic development initiatives. That doesn't hold the legal litmus test. However, if doing something appropriate carries with it those additional reasons, I think that's icing on the cake. I think that's well worth considering. The issues you raised about compatibility are the -- is the single issue that drives me to consider this. These sites that you state as where Tyton Hellerman could go? With all due respect to the property owners, I did the fezone on one of these when I was in the private sector. And a quality company who wants to build a nice-looking development will only go places where their neighbors will do the same thing. And what happens is the first one in sets the pace. And as you look at all of these that have development, the first ones in set a pace that feeds the concern of industrial areas in this community. The first one in was an asphalt batch plant, or the first one in was a -- you know, an automotive repair shop or a tire retreading service. And you're not going to get companies like Allan Systems or Tyton-Hellerman to go in next to a tire retreading operation. The truth is, there is one place that has right now quality land available for those types of businesses, and it's the Collier Park of Commerce on Airport Tyton Road. The reason I cite that is because that project was approved and developed with Coconut River Estates, a high quality, single-family community, less than a third the distance away than Collier's Reserve. Not only do the property values there not fall, they have increased over time even with the increased traffic on Airport Road. In addition, the Collier Enterprises then constructed single-family homes immediately adjacent to their park of commerce. And the reason is, there is a difference between a park of commerce and an industrial park. And if what we were looking at today was placing an industrial park this close to Collier's Reserve, I would find myself in absolute agreement with you, Commissioner Constantine, but I don't think that's what we're being asked to do. I think we're being asked to look at what can become a part of the landscape and whether it in itself is compatible through mitigation of impacts, whether they be through buffering, through location criteria, through roadway impacts, to make it compatible. What works against the incompatibility argument is simply that people who bought in Collier's Reserve bought about 300 yards from a piece of land zoned right now for uses such as upholstery repair shops, automobile exhaust system repair, tire retreading, transmission repair, major communication towers, manufacturing with electric motors and power generators. All of these things right now can happen within a few hundred yards of the entrance to your community. None of those things can happen in what's being proposed here. And although the immediate reaction is simply not going to be favorable -- and I don't expect it to be. I expect the long-term reaction to be one of compatibility. And for that reason, I find myself in a position to support the motion by Commissioner Mac'Kie and seconded by Commissioner Norris, knowing that what I'm doing is not politically popular. But what I'm doing is what I committed to do when I took this job, which is to look beyond the years of my term of office and try and plan for a balanced diverse community that serves everyone. And that's simply what I see as my charge. Questions or comments? COMMISSIONER NORRIS: Well, Mr. Chairman, you made a good point about locating -- if we were being asked to locate an industrial park next to Collier's Reserve and Pelican Marsh, I wouldn't do it either. But, in fact, we're doing just the opposite. We're taking away an industrial park that's already zoned, it's already there, could be built on tomorrow without ever coming before this Board for a public hearing. We're taking that potential away, and what we're doing is guaranteeing that there will be more compatible and far less intensive uses on this property than are today possible. So you're right. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Commissioner Berry? COMHISSIONER BERRY: Well, I'm going to support this motion basically because of the use of the land. I guess I'm one of these long-timers here in Collier County as well. And had we made some choices a long time ago, many of you wouldn't even be here. But I will tell you that this piece of land, you may be looking at a tomato field today, but for economic reasons it's not really economically feasible to go ahead and continue growing tomatoes on this piece of land. That's the decision by the owner of this property. The alternative, and there was a lot of havoc raised about that, was a mega mall. You didn't like that idea, either. And so consequently, when this came forward -- and I certainly saw the particular description of what this Commerce Park was going to look like -- I also availed myself to go to Tyton, and I also went to another company that's down off of Horseshoe Drive called Arthrex. And if any one of you are familiar with that particular operation, you'll know the design of that particular building. I would not be unfavorable to have that building next door to me. And I would hope that this would be the kind of thing, and this is what I'm hoping that this park is going to be. And I believe that we have tried to write enough things into this. And I can't imagine that the Collier family wants to build something in Collier County to screw it up. Because they've got too much at stake in this whole county. And so I'm going to go along with this and support this motion, because I think it's a good project, I think it's an upscale project, and I think this is one level above what most of the industrial parks have been in the area. And I think this is an opportunity to set something out as a standard above and beyond what other communities do. And I believe we can prove with this park -- and there's a lot of burden on you guys out there that are going to do this -- that this park has got to be absolutely superb and the best neighbors possible to the Collier Reserve group or to the Pelican Marsh group, or, frankly, to anyone in that entire area. So you have a lot of burden and a lot of responsibility on your back to make this project top notch. So I'm counting on that and I'm supporting the motion. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: One last thing I just want to say, and then I'll stop too, is that I hope that the people who have been watching us talk about our lofty goals about economic diversification will see that today is put your money where your mouth is for the Collier County Board of County Commissioners. Because no question that it's politically unpopular to make this choice. I hope, though, that it sends a message that we are serious about economic diversification, even though we recognize that it's going to be politically unpopular and cause some headaches. So I hope that that message is received. COMHISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I certainly hope that's not suggesting that because I oppose it -- COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: No. COMHISSIONER CONSTANTINE: -- I'm not all in favor of economic development -- COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: Certainly not. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Strictly referring to district. COMHISSIONER CONSTANTINE: God bless you all. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: With that I'll call the question. All those in favor, signify by saying aye. COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: Aye. COMHISSIONER BERRY: Aye. COMHISSIONER NORRIS: Aye. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Aye. Opposed? COMHISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Aye. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Motion carries four-one. I know we have a lot of people exiting. Let's just take about two minutes, let them get out, and we'll continue with the agenda. (A recess was taken.) Item #12C1 ORDINANCE 97-52 CREATING THE RADIO ROAD BEAUTIFICAITON ADVISORY COHMITTEE; PROVIDING FOR APPOINTMENT AND COMPOSITION; SETTING FORTH TERMS OF OFFICE; PROVIDING FOR REMOVAL FROM OFFICE; FAILURE TO ATTEND MEETINGS; PROVIDING FOR OFFICERS, QUORUM, RULES OF PROCEDURE; PROVIDING FOR REIMBURSEMENT OF EXPENSES; SETTING FORTH THE FUNCTIONS; POWERS AND DUTIES OF THE COHMITTEE; SETTING FORTHE THE DUTIES OF THE COUNTY ADMINISTRATOR OR HIS DESIGNEE; PROVIDING A REVIEW PROCESS; PROVIDING FOR CONFLICT AND SEVERABILITY; PROVIDING FOR INCLUSION IN THE CODE OF LAWS AND ORDINANCES; AND PROVIDING AN EFFECTIVE DATE - ADOPTED CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I call to order the Board of County Commissioners meeting for October 21st. We are to item 12(C)1. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Mr. Chairman, it is an absolutely no brainer, if you'd close the public hearing, I'll be happy to make a motion. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Any registered speakers, Mr. HcNees? MR. HcNEES: No sir. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Mr. Weigel, apparently you're going to slow this train down a little bit. MR. WEIGEL: And I dearly wish I didn't have to, but we're in the -- as you know, under the process of getting all the advisory board ordinances that are already existing to conform with our 86-21 as amended, our general advisory board ordinance. Particularly in regard to vacancies, absences and things of that nature. And I would suggest that what is called paragraph B on page four of the agenda item, which talks about failure to attend two meetings, that that be -- that I be given the prerogative to -- and with your endorsement -- to make that meld with 86-41 as amended, because that's really what we're attempting to do here, and not have some automatic vacancies created. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Is the public hearing closed? CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: I will now close the public hearing. COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Mr. Chairman, I make a motion to move staff recommendation, inclusive of Mr. Weigel's comments. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Second. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: (No response.) CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: saying aye. Opposed? (No response.) Motion to second. Any discussion? Seeing none, all those in favor signify by Item #12C2 RESOLUTION 97-402 RE PETITION AV-97-015 TO VACATE, RENOUNCE AND DISCLAIM THE COUNTY'S AND THE PUBLIC'S RIGHTS AND INTERESTS IN ALL OF WATERWAY DRIVE AND TO VACATE, RENOUNCE AND DISCLAIM THE COUNTY'S AND THE PUBLIC'S RIGHTS AND INTERESTS IN THE 20' WIDE DRAINAGE EASEMENT BETWEEN LOTS 1 AND 2 AND TO VACATE, RENOUNCE AND DISCLAIM THE COUNTY'S AND THE PUBLIC'S RIGHTS AND INTERESTS IN THE 20' WIDE DRAINAGE EASEMENT BETWEEN LOTS 6 AND 7, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT OF "A REPLAT OF TRACT 'L' MARCO BEACH UNIT SIX" AS RECORDED IN PLAT BOOK 12, PAGES 55 AND 56, PUBLIC RECORDS OF COLLIER COUNTY, FLORIDA - ADOPTED CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Now, we are to item 12(C)2, the -- COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I have just got to feel bad for these folks. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Well, in addition to everything else, this is a quasi judicial matter for what -- anyway, I'm going to swear everyone in now. Would staff and the petitioners please stand and raise your right hand. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Anybody that's going to speak. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Anyone that's going to speak on this matter. (Witness duly sworn.) COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Before we go too far, Mr. Chairman I think it's very important we point out Mr. Hulhere's tie perhaps beats out Whit Ward's tie as the best tie in -- COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Cool. THE WITNESS: It is for sale. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Mr. Mulhere, is this another no brainer as you brought to us so many times? MR. MULHERE: Yes, sir. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: You're a good man. I assume that all provisions for proper drainage have been made, now that these easements are potential being vacated so that no property owner will be adversely affected by this action? MR. MULHERE: Correct. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Good answer. Any question of the petitioner or staff? (No response.) I close the public hearing. COMMISSIONER NORRIS: Motion to approve. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Seconded. COMMISSIONER BERRY: Second. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Third. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: All those in favor, signify by saying aye. Opposed? (No response.) Motion carries five-zero. Mr. Mulhere, once again, a fine presentation. Thank you for spending your afternoon with us. MR. MULHERE: I won another case. COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Stellar presentation. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I just hope you were paid by the hour, sir. MR. HULHERE: I'm the attorney for the Southwest Planning Council. I just wanted one more property case. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: You just needed one more. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Folks, we are to staff communications. Mr. Weigel. MR. WEIGEL: Nothing, thank you. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Mr. HcNees is already shaking the head no. We're to BCC communications. Commissioner Hac'Kie, you mentioned you have something under this item. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: It's so funny that I thought I had an announcement that would be meaningful at the time. That is that at 7:00 this evening -- if you get in your car now, you can make it -- there is the very first public meeting with the outside consultant on the Gateway Triangle, the Davis triangle redevelopment program, and we are very seriously hoping that people will show up. Apparently it's been very well attended so far today. There have been meetings with people in the public. Like 50 business owners showed up this morning. And I don't know from there whether it's less -- CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: And rumor has it, if anybody has a tiara, Commissioner Hac'Kie is accepting. COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: I have a whole collection of tiaras. I will be wearing them at different functions around the county in my role as queen. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Mr. Norris? COMMISSIONER NORRIS: Nothing to add. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Commissioner Berry? COMMISSIONER BERRY: I hate to compete with you, Pam, but I'm the queen of everything. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Okay, fine. COMMISSIONER BERRY: I have a shirt that denotes that. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: You know, what? I'm not going to compete with you on being the queen of anything. COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I'm no queen. COMMISSIONER BERRY: I hope not. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Commissioner Constantine? COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Just one item. We, on about three occasions, have given staff direction on the items coming back to us on dealing with growth issue, and we asked them to look at various alternatives with densities and so on. Perhaps we can limit the ultimate build-out number in some way. And they're going to be coming back to us shortly with that. Ironically, one of the proposals I have heard rumored, fairly accurately I'm told, is increasing densities. So just so you're kind of prepped for that for -- I think it's coming at us next week. And I just thought it kind of funny that we're looking to decrease the number of people ultimately of build-out, and somehow that's been twisted around that increasing densities will do that, so -- CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: You just don't let as many people live in each house. COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Yeah, yeah. They do that in China, I think. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Just so you know, I'll have something put together for you. I've been working with a group from our planning staff to try and really get our arms around this issue a little bit more. When we hear their presentation, I think I'm going to be able to offer to the Board a direction that is going to do something that's never been done before, which is to stop dealing with potential build-out population and mirror the potential build-out to the infrastructure desires of our community. COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: There you go. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: And it's kind of a different way of doing things, but I've been doing a lot of work on it. And I think once you hear it, it will take some of the Band Aid approaches that we're looking at and put them all together into one comprehensive approach, so -- COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I will respectfully offer some very specific suggestions next week, too. And I first suggested this in October of 1995, and -- COMMISSIONER NORRIS: Was that two years ago? COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Yeah, roughly two years ago. And only in government would we be getting our report back two years later, but -- so I appreciate the fact, and perhaps -- CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Because of the lateness of tonight's meeting, I'm sure you won't mind, let's go ahead and have the goal-setting workshop now. And -- okay, there's no support for that by the Board. Okay. COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: My goal is to get out of here by 6:38. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: So done. COMMISSIONER NORRIS: Ms. Filson has some things she wants to talk to us about. MS. FILSON: I have nothing. CHAIRMAN HANCOCK: Thank you very much. ***** Commissioner Norris moved, seconded by Commissioner Constantine, and carried unanimously, that the following items under the Consent Agenda be approved and/or adopted: Item #16A1 FINAL PLAT OF "LONGSHORE LAKE, UNIT 5D" - WITH CONSTRUCTION AND MAINTENANCE AGREEMENT & STIPULATIONS Item #16A2 FINAL PLAT OF "QUAIL WALK, PHASE FOUR" - WITH CONSTRUCTION AND MAINTENANCE AGREEMENT & STIPULATIONS Item #16A3 RESOLUTION 97-396 GRANTING FINAL ACCEPTANCE OF THE ROADWAY, DRAINAGE, WATER AND SEWER IMPROVEMENTS FOR THE FINAL PLAT OF "SAVANNA" Item #16A4 CONTRACT GC526 WITH THE FLORIDA DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION (FDEP) TO CONTINUE TO PERFORM PETROLEUM STORAGE FACILITY ASSESSMENTS WITHIN THE COUNTY Item #16A5 FINAL PLAT OF "COURTHOUSE SHADOWS" - WITH STIPULATIONS Item #16B1 AMENDMENT #2 TO WORK ORDER ABB-FT96-3 FOR REPAIR OF THREE SCRWTF PROCESS TANKS, PROJECT 70023 Item #1682 CONTRACT FOR BID NO. 97-2731 AWARDED TO MID-CONTINENT ELECTRIC, INC., FOR SITE ELECTRICAL IMPROVEMENTS FOR SUGDEN PARK, PROJECT NO. 80081 - IN THE AMOUNT OF $162,900.00 Item #1683 - This item moved to Item #SB1 Item #1684 CONTRACT RENEWAL WITH THE FLORIDA DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION; RESOLUTION 97-397 FOR HIGHWAY SWEEPING AND RESOLUTION 97-398 FOR HIGHWAY MOWING Item #1685 AMENDMENT TO THE AGREEMENT WITH GEORGE BOTNER, ASLA FOR THE DAVIS BOULEVARD LANDSCAPE BEAUTIFICATION AND STREETSCAPE MASTERPLAN, PROJECT 60013 - IN THE A_MOUNT OF $28,875.00 Item #1686 - This item has been deleted Item #1687 RECLAIMED WATER USE AGREEMENT WITH LAKEWOOD COHMUNITY SERVICES ASSOCIATION Item #1688 CHANGE ORDER NO. 2 TO SOUTH COUNTY REGIONAL WASTEWATER TREATMENT FACILITY UPGRADE CONTRACT 1, BID 96-2509, PROJECT NO. 73916 Item #16B9 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES AGREEMENT WITH JOHNSON ENGINEERING, INC., IN THE AMOUNT OF $665,182.00, FOR DESIGN AND PERMITTING OF GOODLETTE FRANK ROAD FOUR LANING IMPROVEMENTS, CIE PROJECT NO. 065 (RFP NO. 96-2599) Item #16C1 BUDGET AMENDMENT APPROPRIATING REVENUE RECEIVED AT VINEYARDS COHMUNITY PARK AT THE END OF FY 97 - IN THE AMOUNT OF $9,939.00 Item #16C2 BUDGET AMENDMENT APPROPRIATING FUNDS FOR IMPROVEMENTS AT THE IHMOKALEE SPORTS COMPLEX/FITNESS CENTER - IN THE AMOUNT OF $22,400.00 Item #16C3 THE SUGDEN REGIONAL PARK SPECIAL EVENT USAGE POLICY Item #16C4 - This item moved to Item #8C1 Item #16D1 BUDGET AMENDMENT FOR THE REPAIR OF PLANT MATERIAL ALONG U.S. 41 AT THE MAIN GOVERNMENT COMPLEX DUE TO CONSTRUCTION - IN THE AMOUNT OF $20,000.00 Item #16D2 RESOLUTION 97-399 RE FIRST AMENDMENT TO LEASE AGREEMENT BETWEEN COLLIER COUNTY AND CONGRESSMAN PORTER GOSS Item #16D3 CONTRACTUAL AGREEHENT WITH GOLDEN GATE FIRE CONTROL AND RESCUE DISTRICT FOR FIRE AND RESCUE PROTECTION SERVICES WITH THE COLLIER COUNTY FIRE CONTROL DISTRICT Item #16D4 - This item has been deleted Item #16D5 AWARD BID #97-2736 TO EVERGREEN LANDSCAPING OF COLLIER, IN THE ANNUAL AMOUNT OF $58,080.00, FOR GROUNDS MAINTENANCE AT SATELLITE FACILITIES Item #16El BUDGET AMENDMENT NOS. 97-503 AND 98-009 Item #16G1 SATISFACTION OF LIEN FOR SERVICES OF THE PUBLIC DEFENDER Item #1662 MISCELLANEOUS CORRESPONDENCE - FILED AND/OR REFERRED The following miscellaneous correspondence as presented by the Board of County Commissioners has been filed and/or directed to the various departments as indicated on the miscellaneous correspondence. Item #16H1 ACCEPTANCE DOCUMENT FOR THE $2,025,000 COPS UNIVERSAL HIRING SUPPLEMENTAL GRANT #95CCWX0265 There being no further business for the good of the County, the meeting was adjourned by order of the Chair at 6:20 p.m. BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS/EX OFFICIO GOVERNING BOARD(S) OF SPECIAL DISTRICTS UNDER ITS CONTROL TIMOTHY L. HANCOCK, CHAIRMAN ATTEST: DWIGHT E. BROCK, CLERK These minutes approved by the Board on , as presented or as corrected TRANSCRIPT PREPARED ON BEHALF OF GREGORY COURT REPORTING SERVICE, INC. BY DAWN M. BREEHNE, KAYE GRAY, RPR, AND CHERI LEONE, RPR