BCC Minutes 06/14/2000 S (LDC Amendments)June 14,2000
TRANSCRIPT OF THE LDC MEETING OF THE
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
Naples, Florida, June 14, 2000
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 5:05 p.m.
in SPECIAL SESSION in Building "F" of the Government Complex,
East Naples, Florida, with the following members present:
CHAIRMAN:
Timothy J. Constantine
Barbara B. Berry
James D. Carter
Pamela S. Mac'Kie
ALSO PRESENT:
Tom Olliff, County Manager
David Weigel, County Attorney
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COLLIER COUNTY
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
AGENDA
Wednesday, June 14, 2000
5:05 pm
NOTICE: ALL PERSONS WISHING TO SPEAK ON ANY AGENDA ITEM MUST REGISTER
PRIOR TO SPEAKING. SPEAKERS MUST REGISTER WITH THE COUNTYMANAGER
PRIOR TO THE PRESENTATION OF THE AGENDA ITEM TO BE ADDRESSED.
COLLIER COUNTY ORDINANCE NO. 99-22 REQUIRES THAT ALL LOBBYISTS SHALL,
BEFORE ENGAGING IN ANY LOBBYING ACTIVITIES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED
TO, ADDRESSING THE BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS), REGISTER WITH THE
CLERK TO THE BOARD AT THE BOARD MINUTES AND RECORDS DEPARTMENT.
REQUESTS TO ADDRESS THE BOARD ON SUBJECTS WHICH ARE NOT ON THIS
AGENDA MUST BE SUBMITTED IN WRITING WITH EXPLANATION TO THE COUNTY
MANAGER AT LEAST 13 DAYS PRIOR TO THE DATE OF THE MEETING AND WILL BE
HEARD UNDER "PUBLIC PETITIONS".
ANY PERSON WHO DECIDES TO APPEAL A DECISION OF THIS BOARD WILL NEED A
RECORD OF THE PROCEEDINGS PERTAINING THERETO, AND THEREFORE MAY
NEED TO ENSURE THAT A VERBATIM RECORD OF THE PROCEEDINGS IS MADE,
WHICH RECORD INCLUDES THE TESTIMONY AND EVIDENCE UPON WHICH THE
APPEAL IS TO BE BASED.
ALL REGISTERED PUBLIC SPEAKERS WILL BE LIMITED TO FIVE (5) MINUTES UNLESS
PERMISSION FOR ADDITIONAL TIME IS GRANTED BY THE CHAIRMAN.
IF YOU ARE A PERSON WITH A DISABILITY WHO NEEDS ANY ACCOMMODATION IN
ORDER TO PARTICIPATE IN THIS PROCEEDING, YOU ARE ENTITLED, AT NO COST TO
YOU, TO THE PROVISION OF CERTAIN ASSISTANCE. PLEASE CONTACT THE
COLLIER COUNTY FACILITIES MANAGEMENT DEPARTMENT LOCATED AT 3301 EAST
TAMIAMI TRAIL, NAPLES, FLORIDA, 34112, (941) 774-8380; ASSISTED LISTENING
DEVICES FOR THE HEARING IMPAIRED ARE AVAILABLE IN THE COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS' OFFICE.
PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE
AN ORDINANCE AMENDING ORDINANCE NUMBER 91-102, AS AMENDED, THE
COLLIER COUNTY LAND DEVELOPMENT CODE, WHICH INCLUDES THE
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June 14,2o00
COMPREHENSIVE ZONING REGULATIONS FOR THE UNINCORPORATED AREA OF
COLLIER COUNTY, FLORIDA, BY PROVIDING FOR: SECTION ONE, RECITALS:
SECTION TWO, FINDINGS OF FACT: SECTION THREE, ADOPTION OF
AMENDMENTS TO THE LAND DEVELOPMENT CODE, MORE SPECIFICALLY
AMENDING THE FOLLOWING: ARTICLE 1, GENERAL PROVISIONS, DIVISION 1.9.
ENFORCEMENT; ARTICLE 2, ZONING, DIVISION 2.1. GENERAL; DIVISION 2.2.
ZONING DISTRICTS, PERMITTED USES, CONDITIONAL USES, DIMENSIONAL
STANDARDS, DIVISION 2.3. OFF-STREET PARKING AND LOADING; DIVISION 2.4.
LANDSCAPING AND BUFFERING; DIVISION 2.5. SIGNS; DIVISION 2.6.
SUPPLEMENTAL DISTRICT REGULATIONS; ARTICLE 3, DIVISION 3.2.
SUBDIVISIONS; DIVISION 3.5. EXCAVATION; DIVISION 3.9. VEGETATION REMOVAL,
PROTECTION AND PRESERVATION; 3.1 1. ENDANGERED, THREATENED, OR LISTED
SPECIES PROTECTION; ARTICLE 6, DIVISION 6.3. DEFINITIONS, INCLUDING, BUT
NOT LIMITED TO THE DEFINITIONS OF DOCK FACILITY, FLOOR AREA RATIO AND
COMMERCIAL EQUIPMENT; APPENDIX D, AIRPORT ZONING; SECTION FOUR,
CONFLICT AND SEVERABILITY; SECTION FIVE, INCLUSION IN THE COLLIER
COUNTY LAND DEVELOPMENT CODE; AND SECTION SIX, EFFECTIVE DATE.
3. ADJOURN
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June 14, 2000
AGENDA CHANGES
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS'
LDC MEETING
JUNE 14, 2000
5:05 PM
ADD: ITEM 2(A): APPROVAL OF A FAITHFUL PERFORMANCE BOND
FOR JENNIFER EDWARDS IN HER CAPACITY AS SUPERVISOR OF
ELECTIONS. (SUPERVISOR OF ELECTIONS' REQUEST).
June 14,2000
FAITHFUL PERFORMANCE BOND FOR JENNIFER EDWARDS,
SUPERVISOR OF ELECTIONS
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: Hi there. We have three?
Commissioner Mac'Kie is on the way.
We're going to take care of one other item as well. We had
the add-on item we talked about very briefly yesterday, and that
is approval of a faithful performance bond --
COMMISSIONER BERRY: Move approval.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: -- for Jennifer Edwards, who is
the new supervisor of elections until election day.
COMMISSIONER BERRY: Move approval.
COMMISSIONER CARTER: Second.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: Motion and a second. Any
discussion? Seeing none, all those in favor?
Any objection?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: Seeing none, motion carries 3-0.
Item #2
ORDINANCE 2000-43, AN ORDINANCE AMENDING ORDINANCE
NUMBER 91-102, AS AMENDED, THE COLLIER COUNTY LAND
DEVELOPMENT CODE
I understand we've got a got a couple of speakers today on
the Land Development Code items.
MR. OLLIFF: We do. We have three speakers all registered
for the gopher tortoise.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: Great. Let's go right to them.
MR. OLLIFF: Okay. The first speaker is Amanda Stein.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: And she'll be followed by?
COMMISSIONER BERRY: Do we have any environmental -- of
our environmental staff here? I didn't look. Who's --
COMMISSIONER CARTER: Yeah, Bill Lorenz is here.
COMMISSIONER BERRY: Okay. Because I have some
questions about these little guys.
MR. OLLIFF: Following Amanda would be Nancy Payton.
MS. STEIN: Good evening. I'm Amanda Stein, Collier County
Audubon Society. And I would like to once again, on behalf of
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June 14,2000
the Audubon Society, offer support for the proposed amendment,
the gopher tortoise amendment, to the Land Development Code.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: Thank you.
MS. STEIN: Thank you.
MR. OLLIFF: Following Ms. Payton would be Nicole Ryan.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: I have on my outdoorsman
attire today, by the way.
MS. PAYTON: Very nice, very nice. Nancy Payton
representing the Florida Wildlife Federation.
We're here also to support the staff's proposal, staff's
amendments for the gopher tortoise ordinance. And also again,
we'll go on the record as looking forward eagerly to working with
staff and other interested individuals in additional amendments
to this particular section of the Land Development Code, and
also working for a gopher tortoise preserve. Thank you.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: Thanks.
MR. OLLIFF: Following Ms. Ryan, you have one other
speaker registered to talk about the communication towers
issue. And that would be Doug Wilcox. CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: Hi.
MS. RYAN: Good evening. For the record, Nicole Ryan,
Conservancy of Southwest Florida. And the Conservancy would
also like to support the LDC amendment changes dealing with
gopher tortoise protection. We also look forward to working with
staff and other environmental organizations, individuals,
everyone who wants to make the amendments better.
One of our main concerns is, as Nancy pointed out, off-site
relocation assumes that there are places for the tortoises to be
relocated off-site. And in a lot of cases, it just isn't there. So we
want to make sure that there is some kind of gopher tortoise
sanctuary or preserve.
Funding could be available through land acquisitions to the
state's Incidental Take permit fees. Another avenue would be
finding a willing seller, perhaps out in the Immokalee area where
there are still some large, contiguous, tracts of land for gopher
tortoises, upland areas, perhaps scrub areas. And the money
could be gained through the land acquisition referendum, which
the Conservancy is still planning to help put on the ballot. So
that's a big issue. If you're going to relocate them, there needs
to be an appropriate place.
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June ~4,2000
But for now we do certainly support the amendments.
They're a great step in the right direction. Thank you.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: Thanks. And we had one
additional speaker on the antenna towers? MR. OLLIFF: We do. Mr. Wilcox.
MR. WILCOX: Good evening. I'm Doug Wilcox, speaking for
American Tower.
American Tower Corporation is a direct competitor of
Lodestar, which of course this ordinance is not of benefit to us.
Of course, it's quite the opposite. But it's also -- we don't see
any benefit of this ordinance to the county.
And we currently have a tower application in review with
this county that's located in close proximity to one of Lodestar's
facilities. And this amendment we feel will not encourage
co-location at all.
It was our understanding that Lodestar was to contact
American Tower to address whether or not the Department of
Transportation equipment could be located on our tower. And so
far as I know, that hasn't been addressed by Lodestar.
We feel if they were limited to government carriers, we
would not be opposed to this proposal, but they're not. They plan
to compete directly with American Tower by leasing antennae
space to commercial carriers, which is a problem.
You know, it's fine for Lodestar to have an exclusive
contract with the FDOT to build sites, develop sites on FDOT
property. We assume that they went through an open bidding
process, and that's free enterprise. We feel that's great. But if
you, as a local government, provide less restrictive requirements
for Lodestar to develop tower sites for a direct commercial
private carrier, as they are doing, we feel we all have a due
process problem with that. Thank you.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: Thank you very much.
That concludes our public speakers?
MR. OLLIFF: Yes, sir.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: Thank you.
Commissioner Berry had some questions for our
environmental staff.
COMMISSIONER BERRY: I just have a question. Something
was brought to my attention, maybe you can answer the
question. Are gopher tortoises native to South Florida?
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June 14,2000
MS. BURGESON: They are native to South Florida. They're
not as common in South Florida as they are in Central Florida and
Northern Florida.
Barbara Burgeson, planning services.
COMMISSIONER BERRY: Okay. And they're usually found in
dry, sandy areas?
MS. BURGESON: Typically found on the high scrub ridges,
which would have been along, say, U.S. 41, along the Pine Ridge
area originally. Quite a bit in Immokalee. Along the shore.
There's quite a few up at Lely Barefoot Beach, the beach park up
there.
COMMISSIONER BERRY: Would you find any, say, in the
south blocks? Do you know? Are you aware?
MS. BURGESON: Not that I know of. I do know that there
are some scattered in Northern Golden Gate Estates. Not very
many. I spoke in fact with Gary Beardsley just the day before --
maybe it was yesterday, I guess, and he said that he rarely sees
gopher tortoises in the North Golden Gate Estates, but he came
across one on a piece of property recently and wanted to know
how the county wanted to address that. So that's what --
COMMISSIONER BERRY: Well, then that's a concern I have.
What about if people have property out in the Estates, and they
go to build a home and they find that they've got these little guys
out there? What's going to happen?
MS. BURGESON: The way the Land Development Code and
the Growth Management plan exists right now, the gopher
tortoises are protected. It's just that we haven't had any process
in place to address that on single-family homes, even though
there still is that responsibility for them to be protected.
So at this point what we're proposing is to design some
guidelines to basically say that if gopher tortoises are identified
on single-family homes, particularly in the Golden Gate Estates
area, that they be relocated and protected during construction;
that they contact the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation
Commission and obtain permits, if necessary. Typically that's a
very, very simple process with Florida Fish.
COMMISSIONER BERRY: Is there cost associated with it?
MS. BURGESON: A very minimal cost associated with it.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: What does minimal mean?
MS. BURGESON: With Florida Fish, it's under $100 for those
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June 14,2000
permits. For a consultant to go out and take a look at the
property for tortoises specifically -- we're not asking them to do
that, we're just saying that the property owner needs to be
aware of the possibility of them on the property. We are going to
put in some language for the builder. If they hire a consultant for
other purposes, typically they'll hire consultants to take a look at
the property for wetland issues. We would ask them to also take
a look -- it's going to be much simpler than what we ask for
developers. The developers have to put together a gopher
tortoise survey, they have to map and identify the activity of the
burrows. On the single-family homes, we just want them to
identify whether there are burrows and whether they're active,
and relocate them.
COMMISSIONER BERRY: Well -- go ahead.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: I may be heading the same way
as Commissioner Berry. While we certainly value the gopher
tortoises, if they are rare in the Estates, I don't want to add extra
time and extra money to the single family who is struggling to
build their home. And you look at the cost. We always talk
about the average cost of a home in Collier County being
$250,000. While there are $250,000 homes in the estates, that's
not the typical home. They are people who are making ends
meet and they build their $110,000, $130,000, whatever it
happens to be, and if you happen to slow that down by a few
weeks, that can be a lot of money. If you happen to require --
even if it's another 100 bucks or 500 bucks or anything else. I
would prefer to see some sort of exemption here if you have a
single-family home being built in an individual -- I'd want to craft
it so you can't have someone use it as a loophole when they're
doing a development.
But if someone is doing one single home and, you know,
they're on five acres or less or seven and a half acres or less,
whatever we think is appropriate for the Estates, that we exempt
them. Because if we start trying to make them jump through
hurdles and it's uncommon -- if you're unlikely to find them there
anyway, I don't want to make that person who's struggling to
build that house have yet another hoop to jump through.
MS. BURGESON: They already have to do that. It's just that
they don't have the guidelines in place to do that.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: What I heard you saying,
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June 14,2000
though, is there might be some guidelines to define whether or
not there are burrows, whether or not they're active.
I'd prefer to leave it as is. If it's a responsibility and they
happen to stumble across them and they do the responsible
thing, God bless. But to give them -- I mean, I wouldn't know. If
you send me out there, what's a burrow look like? So I've got to
go hire somebody that does. And that's more money to write.
Now, I happen to be able to afford that check, but a lot of
people in Golden Gate Estates building new homes, that's one
more check they don't want to have to write. So I would prefer
not to create a whole other set of guidelines there. I don't know
about the balance of the board.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Well, if I understand it right, all
we're talking about, though -- you know, a gopher tortoise hole is
just a hole. I mean, you'll trip over it. It's just a hole in the
ground. You'll catch your foot in it if you walk across it.
And all we're saying is -- if I understand correctly, all we're
saying is we're going to give people more information to be able
to tell if they tripped over a gopher tortoise hole, and if so, what
to do.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: Are we having a problem with
the way it is right now?
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: In --
MS. BURGESON: The way it is right now --
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: I'm asking Barb.
MS. BURGESON: The way it is right now, I have no
knowledge of tortoises being relocated in the Golden Gate
Estates area.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: Do you know of any problems
where they've been there and people have just blown it off and
the gopher tortoises have been harmed or injured? MS. BURGESON: No one has told me.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: So we might be creating an
issue here.
MS. BURGESON: Well, we could create a brochure for the
single-family homeowner what would help them identify whether
there's tortoise burrows on-site without hiring a consultant.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: My point is if we haven't had
any cases where it's been a problem and we haven't had any
cases where it hasn't been a problem, are we inventing
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June t4,2000
something we don't need to?
MS. BURGESON: I couldn't tell you. I don't get involved in
single-family home review in Golden Gate Estates except for
freestanding permits.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: Why are we doing this?
MS. BURGESON: We're doing this to make sure that the
gopher tortoises are protected in single-family homes because
environmental staff doesn't do any review on those properties.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: Right.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: See, it's really just to do the
least amount possible while still doing a little bit of something.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: We're already doing the least.
Why are we adding more of them?
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Because we're not doing
anything. And just -- all we're doing now, all this proposes to do,
is an education campaign for the people in the public who might
want to do the right thing so they'll have a little bit of
information.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: That's not what I heard Ms.
Burgeson say. This isn't just an education campaign. You want
them to identify if they're there and if they're active or not. That's
not just education.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: And what if they failed to do
that?
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: That's requiring one more thing.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: What's the penalty if they fail to
do that?
MS. BURGESON: The penalty is identified at the back of
that.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: There is a penalty?
MS. BURGESON: There is a penalty.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: It is creating one more expense.
And those areas where we want to take care of gopher
tortoises and there's genuinely concern and they are honest to
God really there, we need to be doing exactly what we're doing
and creating a little stiffer ordinance. However, to create a
hardship on families in Golden Gate Estates where there has
been absolutely no identified problem I think is going too far.
COMMISSIONER CARTER: Let me ask -- if I might ask this
question. It seems if you identify one, all you're doing is asking --
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June 14, 2000
they could be moved and actually could be returned to the
property again once you complete the home.
MS. BURGESON: We're just asking that if they're within the
outline of any construction or impacts on that property, they be
dug -- removed from the burrow, moved out of harm's way during
construction, and then let go when the construction is done.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: Do we ask that already?
COMMISSIONER CARTER: No, I don't think we do.
MS. BURGESON: No, we don't have anything --
MR. NINO: For the record, Ron Nino.
I'd like to remind you, however, that this opportunity can be
used to further amend the material that's before you to exempt,
say, existing single-family plat subdivision, which is kind of what
I hear you saying. If, you know, that's a concern, then this
opportunity is available to you to do that.
COMMISSIONER CARTER: Well, I would want to be careful
here I don't eliminate single-family homes everywhere, because
they may be right in the middle of something that we don't want
done. Now, if it's in an area where there isn't any activity, then I
don't have a problem with that.
MR. NINO: Appreciate, this amendment was -- the thrust of
this amendment was dealing with substantial acreages that
came in for development review.
COMMISSIONER CARTER: Right, okay.
MR. NINO: It wasn't intended to deal with single-family
houses.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: That's my whole point. And I
have no problem whatsoever with those developments. And I
don't even want to go so far as to say platted single family.
Because you may have a development that has their plats
completed but they still have, you know, dozens of things near
each other where there could be fibered communities, and you
actually have developers still owning those properties and so on.
But when we're talking about individual single families, I
don't care how the legal mechanism works, I just don't want to
hit up those folks -- and what you've just said is that wasn't the
goal of what we were trying to achieve here anyway. We were
looking at the big development. We're not trying to hit the little
guy in the Estates.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Well, so if you're going to have to
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June 14, 2000
do something, it sounds like the safest way to go would be to
reference the Estates as an excluded area or something.
COMMISSIONER BERRY: Well, but I don't know that it's --
you know, if you've got a single lot somewhere, I'm not sure that
that's fair either, Pam.
But I think the main thing is that that wasn't the idea. But
when you again sit up here and make a policy, it's going to be
broad, and it's going to cover those areas, and until we write
something into it where there's an exemption.
And right now, and when I got to thinking about this, I
thought there's no exemption, and this is ludicrous to be doing
this.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: Let's just try to stay on what
the intent was. I mean, Ron's described that. And I think we can
achieve that without banging the little guy over the head.
Any other questions for staff?
COMMISSIONER BERRY: That's all.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: You want to make a motion?
COMMISSIONER BERRY: No.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: Somebody want to make a
motion?
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: No, not after that change.
MR. NINO: I'd like to -- for the record, Ron Nino -- remind you
that we did hand out -- we handed out three additional
corrections. We don't think any of them are of substantive
nature. The parking lot thing was the result of further
discussions with the industry. And there was some -- one minor
change there that staff is in concurrence with. It's a
replacement of a -- really, it was a map issued in error having to
do with the airport zones. And then a further refinement of the
requirement dealing with violations for early clearing in the
Estates area.
All of the amendments that you have before you have -- are --
have been approved by -- recommended for approval by the
Development Services Advisory Council, Planning Commission,
and those that were pertinent, the EAC. We think there's total
concurrence between the staff and reviewing agencies and
interested clientele.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE.' So if we don't make any changes,
we keep that kind of consensus. If we make this change on the
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June 14, 2000
gopher tortoise, we will be upsetting that apple cart just a little
bit.
And based on that, what I'd like to do is to move approval of
the package as proposed by staff and agreed to by all of the
many, many agencies and people who have participated today.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: Is there a second?
COMMISSIONER CARTER: I'll second that.
And I would like to keep in reserve the one on gopher turtle,
and see if we can't reach some conclusion here, where we can
get the rest of it approved.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: I think the motion is saying not
change that, as we discussed just a couple of minutes ago.
Commissioner Mac'Kie would like to keep it so that even the
little guy gets hit over the head.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: So that everybody who's worked
on this has got -- it's the first time we've gotten 100 percent
consensus from every group, from the environmental groups,
from the developers, from anybody.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: And I don't want anybody to
take away from this that we are in any way gutting that. This is
a tiny little part that even the environmental folks like Gary
Beardsley are saying you don't find these in the Estates, so it's
not going to --
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: But he is saying that when you
do find them, you should protect them.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: And so are we. We're just
saying it shouldn't be an extra expense for every single person
who happens to be struggling to build their first home out there.
COMMISSIONER CARTER: Well, can we find some language
that would say what we want to do is educate the individual
homeowner so that they're aware? And I don't want to penalize
them, but if they do discover it, we show them there's a very
easy way to remove that tortoise during the construction of that
home.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE:
for single-family homeowners?
COMMISSIONER CARTER:
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE:
stays in place.
COMMISSIONER CARTER:
What if we eliminate the penalty
No penalty, but just --
No penalty, but everything else
We just say, here's what we
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June 14,2000
would like to you look for. There's no penalty if you don't do it,
but there's a lot of citizens that, I think, and homeowners and
builders, and people would say well, yeah, I didn't know that, but
I will. And first there's only a few, and within that few, if you get
a couple that don't do it, I would bet you, you would probably get
90 percent that would do it.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I'll amend my motion to that
effect.
COMMISSIONER CARTER: And I will amend my second to
that effect.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: I'm not going to support it
because two things: One, I think a penalty will slide its way
back in there. But two, I think most people are law abiding, and
regardless whether there's a penalty or not, will go and incur
that expense and for some people, that's going to put them over
the top again. It's going to be several hundred dollars to get
somebody on-site to tell them what they can or can't do. And if
you're out there trying to build $100,000 home, several hundred
dollars is going to make a difference in whether or not they can
do it.
COMMISSIONER CARTER: Well, let me ask this question:
What if there's a brochure, and I don't know anything about this,
but I discover one on my property, is there any way that we, the
county, the Department of Natural Resources, can go out there
and remove this turtle, and no expense to the homeowner, but
we do it as a service to take it off the property?
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: That's a nice idea.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: If we do it there, though, we're
going to have a hard time explaining why we're not doing it for
everybody else, for the big developer, and --
COMMISSIONER CARTER: Well, no, no.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: No.
COMMISSIONER CARTER: This is only the single -- we're
talking about protecting the small homeowner in an area to keep
it affordable. And that's the way I would construe that language
to mean so that we don't open the door to the big developers.
Now, I'm not saying that. I'm just -- I'm with you. I want to make
sure that individual has an opportunity to be aware.
Because I will tell you, in properties that I've had, I didn't
know a gopher tortoise from anything, and I saw these burrows
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June 14,2000
and I didn't even know what they were. But if someone would
have told me all you have to do is dig them up and move them,
fine. I just didn't know.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: I'll tell you what, we need four
votes, I'm not going to support it. So we can talk about it from
now until 7:00 and it ain't going to pass.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: You're the one with the radio
show that goes to dead air.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: That's fine. I have a higher
responsibility to the county, and I'm not going to hit up the little
guy so I can hustle back to a radio show.
COMMISSIONER CARTER: Well, and I don't want to hit the
little guy, Commissioner. What I'm just saying is that there's a
workable solution here --
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: I understand.
COMMISSIONER CARTER: -- that they're not penalized.
They're not penalized. All we're saying is, if we educate you,
Department of Environmental Resources, to remove it, how can it
hurt it?
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: What's wrong with that?
COMMISSIONER CARTER: How can it hurt it?
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: We'll remove it for you if it's
discovered. And again, it's going to be so few times, because it's
not going to happen a lot out in the Estates.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: I. et's call the question. All
those in favor, say aye.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Aye.
COMMISSIONER CARTER: Aye.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: All those opposed?
COMMISSIONER BERRY: Aye.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: Aye.
Motion fails, 2-2.
Is there a substitute motion?
COMMISSIONER CARTER: What you want to do is eliminate
the single-family homeowner in Golden Gate Estates?
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: Yeah. If somebody is -- if it's a
single-family individual and they have 7.5 acres or less, it doesn't
even have to be limited to the Estates -- COMMISSIONER BERRY: Right.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: -- if it's a single family, if they've
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June ~4,2000
got a lot somewhere else in the county, and that's -- they
shouldn't be hit up with that extra thing.
You know, the idea, and as Mr. Nino described it, the whole
intent of this thing we are still meeting and that is, when you do
a development, when you're --
COMMISSIONER BERRY: Right, you have to look at --
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: -- altering a big piece of land --
COMMISSIONER BERRY: -- all the environmental concerns.
So I'm just -- I would agree to just forget the single-family -- MR. NINO: And appreciate--
COMMISSIONER BERRY: -- single-family homesite.
MR. NINO: -- a lot of those developments will end up being
single-family homes --
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Thank you.
MR. NINO: -- but they will have been addressed up --
COMMISSIONER BERRY: Exactly.
MR. NINO: -- front by the developers.
COMMISSIONER BERRY: Right. Thank you.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: Thank you.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: How will you -- how will you avoid
if right now -- I have clients who right now have platted
subdivisions with hundreds of single-family platted lots that they
are going to sell to individuals tomorrow, and those individuals
are going to go build houses on them. Now, you tell me how
that's addressed.
MR. NINO: Well, I'm not aware if there's hundreds of lots out
there.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Pebblebrooke Lakes, that's my
client. Pebblebrooke Lakes and Indigo Lakes. I just didn't vote
on that plat on Tuesday.
MR. NINO: The gopher tortoise issues were addressed up
front on both of those developments.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: It's already done.
MR. NINO: It's already done. And the vast majority of lots,
your Pelican Marshes, your Pelican Bays your -- all of your
developments have been addressed up front, the gopher tortoise
issue. So we're dealing -- basically we're dealing with Pioneer --
Pine Ridge, which is an old single-family subdivision, which no
doubt probably does have them, tortoises throughout, because
it's a sandy ridge. But those are the older subdivisions that --
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June 14,2000
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: So we're talking about -- when
did the law come into effect that you had to handle this up front
if you were platting? How old does a subdivision have to be for it
not to matter? Ten years? Five years?
MR. NINO: 1990 when the Land Development Code was
adopted.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: So anything that was approved
before 1990 is what we'd have to worry about?
MR. NINO: I suspect that that's the issue. Largely the
issue.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: But there are not a lot of PUDs.
And those -- anything that's just been hanging out there come
back under the Sunset provision anyway at this point. You have
an opportunity to review it.
MR. NINO: If you were to add an exemption for existing
subdivisions, I don't think the impacts would be all that
significant.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE'- It's just opens a silly loophole.
COMMISSIONER CARTER: Well, would we have to exempt
them? Well, I would like to see this passed. I would like to
exempt the single-family homeowner that has 5 acres or 7.5
acres out here in Golden Gate Estates where the probability of a
gopher tortoise being there may be one who is a maverick,
versus where they formally end up being.
But at the same time, I don't want some guy that was
grandfathered under some subdivision way back in '85 to get
away with it and say I don't have to do anything. Is there any
way to loop that back in and say if you're a subdivision and you
were a PUD or you were a planned development, I don't care who
you are, this applies. But if you're the person who bought 5 or
7.5 acres, we're going to exempt you, no matter where you are.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: But if it was platted 20 years
ago, they weren't responsible to do it then anyway.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Right.
MR. NINO: But I think the issue--
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: So they need to do it now.
MR. NINO: -- has some merit in the context that you're still
responsible to obtain approval of the respective Florida
regulatory agency, the --
COMMISSIONER BERRY: Florida Wildlife?
Page 15
June 14, 2000
MR. NINO.' -- Florida Wildlife.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Whatever they're called this
week.
MR. NINO: Whatever it is.
You just can't walk away from it. And to that extent, the
suggestion is that our office does in fact prepare an educational
brochure which can be distributed to those types of property
owners so that they're at least aware of their responsibilities.
COMMISSIONER BERRY: Okay.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: So we ask them to do it, but we
don't penalize them if they don't do it.
COMMISSIONER BERRY: May I make a motion, Mr.
Chairman?
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: Commissioner Berry.
COMMISSIONER BERRY: I'd like to make a motion that we
accept the Land Development Code with the exception of the
gopher tortoise section in here stating that it would be
applicable for everything over seven and a half acres for lots --
for a lot over seven and a half acres.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: Speaking only of single-family
homes --
COMMISSIONER BERRY: Of single-family homes.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: --and individual lots.
COMMISSIONER BERRY: Single-family -- individual
single-family homes.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I'm not going to support that.
COMMISSIONER BERRY: Well, it's going to be a long night
then.
COMMISSIONER CARTER: Well, let me tell you what my
concern is. I think that if we don't do it -- let's look at if we don't
it. We continue to do what we've been doing, and that's not
where we want to be. We're destroying a species.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: Hold on right there. That's not
accurate. The only limitation we're putting on is primarily aimed
toward Golden Gate Estates, where we are not destroying a
species.
COMMISSIONER CARTER: Wait, hear me out. If we don't do
anything tonight, we have -- there is really loopholes for people
not to do anything. And that means the bigger developments can
just go in and do what they've been doing.
Page 16
June 14, 2000
What I want to do is get that covered so that doesn't
happen.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE:
than seven and a half acres.
COMMISSIONER CARTER:
So give me something better
Could someone tell me what
percentage of single-family homes that we've got out there in
some of these areas? We look at all the development in this
county; are we talking 10 percent?
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: We've got a lot. And here's why.
And what Tim keeps saying --
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: No, we're not.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Now, let me just say this
because I really think that --
COMMISSIONER CARTER: Well, maybe Mr. Mulhere or Mr.
Nino can tell me.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: -- about something a minute ago.
The fact is we're not talking about PUDs that come back in under
monitoring. We're talking about old subdivisions like Pine Ridge
that won't come back under monitoring, but where houses will be
demolished and new single-family homes will be built. And that's
going to happen forever and ever and ever, and that's going to
continue to happen. I'd like for those single-family lots to have
to comply.
COMMISSIONER BERRY: But Pam, do you think that -- how
many houses do you know or lots in Pine Ridge that have houses
on them today, how many of those have gopher tortoises running
around on them?
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: They easily could in Pine Ridge.
COMMISSIONER BERRY: Well, they could. I mean, you
could have, you know, the moon fall out of the sky, too.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: But that's a prime habitat.
COMMISSIONER BERRY: But I want to know how many in
that area, Pam, do you really think there are?
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: That's a real -- a likely habitat in
Pine Ridge because it's sandy soil, it's hot.
COMMISSIONER BERRY: It's likely, but I'd say it's very
unlikely with the population of people up there right now.
COMMISSIONER CARTER: Well, let me just take that for a
second. Let's say that it's vacant land and somebody does it. I
think that's one issue. But if somebody goes in and does a
Page17
June 14,2000
retrofit, then maybe that's something that has to be put in there.
If it's a retrofit on existing property, that's part of your
commitment to retrofitting the property, tearing it down and
building a bigger house.
COMMISSIONER BERRY: But maybe they're liking those
gopher tortoises. If they're living there now, the house -- the
footprint of the house is probably already there and those
tortoises certainly aren't under the house.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: But they're going to build bigger
houses, then they tear those little old houses down.
COMMISSIONER BERRY: I doubt that the tortoises are
around there. I'd like -- if somebody could find me one in Pine
Ridge, I'd sure like to go take a look at it.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: Mr. Nino, are you aware of any
individual cases where we've had to relocate tortoises from Pine
Ridge?
MR. NINO: I don't know. I don't know the gopher tortoise
population in Pine Ridge. I mean, I don't go around counting
gopher tortoises.
COMMISSIONER CARTER: And I guess most of the people in
Pine Ridge would be pretty empathetic towards them anyhow.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: They would want to do the right
thing, if they knew what it was.
MS. BURGESON: Yeah, I'd say that the property in Pine
Ridge is pretty close to prime habitat for gopher tortoises.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Thank you.
MS. BURGESON: I don't know how many are there. I would
assume that there's a fair number of them in Pine Ridge.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: That's the same place where
there's human and homes.
MS. BURGESON: Yeah, they do fine.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: Fascinating.
MS. BURGESON: We just have to protect them and move
them out of harms way.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: And again, we're protecting them
during the construction process and then we put them right back
and let them have their little burrows again, if that's where they
want to live. Nobody's --
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: Mr. Nino, can you repeat for me
what the intent of this ordinance was as we started out?
Page 18
June t4, 2000
MR. NINO: Yes, the intent of this ordinance, which got a lot
of its impetus from something called Palm Isle, over in the Palm
River area, was to preserve viable gopher tortoise populations in
land that's undeveloped, currently undeveloped, for which we
would expect development applications to be made to this body.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: And where was that stated, Ron,
that that was the purpose of it? You know, I mean, I'm trying to
have a little bit of calm here but -- MR. NINO: Well, the--
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Excuse me, let me finish asking
my question.
Because, you know, I'm afraid that what you're giving us
here is your personal opinion about what is the best thing to do
instead of -- I happen to get a zillion E-mails a day from a guy on
gopher tortoises, and it ain't his intention to merely protect them
on undeveloped land. So I don't know where you get the idea
that that was the impetus for this, except for that you know
that's the answer Mr. Constantine is looking for.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: I'm sure Mr. Nino is only trying
to please one commissioner. Commissioner Mac'Kie, come on,
let's not beat up staff. They're here to do a job --
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: That's just not true.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: -- they're here to represent all of
us and all of the public, and to beat them up doesn't serve any
purpose whatsoever.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: But Tim, that answer isn't true.
I've been involved with this gopher tortoise, you have to, from
the way back, and that wasn't the purpose.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: And because Mr. Julian would
like to see it as restrictive as possible, you think any builder, any
individual homeowner, should have to pay a few hundred dollars
more in Golden Gate Estates.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Nope, nope.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: That's what I heard you just say
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: But the answer --
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: -- is that you got a million
E-mails from one guy.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: The answer to your question --
COMMISSIONER BERRY: As we all have. As he has insulted
Page 19
June 14,2000
us, and certainly insulted me in his E-mail.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: The answer to your question is
not as Mr. Nino answered it. And that's what bothered me about
that. Ron knows I have the highest respect for him
professionally, but I disagree with that answer.
MR. NINO: I'm sorry if I gave --
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: Well, you can --
MR. NINO: -- you the impression that --
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: -- excuse me just a minute.
You can disagree with him professionally, but don't make an
insult at the podium suggesting because it's only the answer
another commissioner wants to hear. That's not okay. You can
disagree with him, don't insult him.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: He's right about that. I apologize
for the remark about trying to please Mr. Constantine.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: I'm going to make a motion that
we approve all parts of the LDC, with the exception of the gopher
tortoise part so that we can get that part through, and then we'll
deal with the gopher tortoise on our own. We'll deal with that
individually.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: You mean separately this
evening?
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: This evening.
COMMISSIONER BERRY: I'll second that.
MR. NINO: Let me remind you that a large part of the
impetus for the gopher tortoise preservation effort also comes
from our recent dealings with DCA, which says we have to pick
up our socks, basically, to protect --
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: I understand. I'm not
suggesting -- don't anybody misunderstand, I'm not suggesting
that we don't do this tonight. I'm just saying let's get the
balance of the LDC done so that everybody who is here for things
other than gopher tortoise will be free to go. And then we can
hash that out on our own.
COMMISSIONER BERRY: I made a second to your motion.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: Discussion?
All those in favor, please state aye.
(Unanimous votes of ayes.)
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: Motion carries 4-0.
COMMISSIONER CARTER: Now we can come back and deal
Page 20
June 14,2000
with the tortoises.
COMMISSIONER BERRY: You want to talk about the gopher
tortoise?
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: If anybody's got a reasonable
suggestion, I mean, I'm--
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: We're not going to open this up
-- I mean, we're not going to open up, because then everybody--
if we do this for you, George, everybody's who's got opinions are
going to want to get up. We had public speakers, we have a
sign-up process for that.
MR. OLLIFF: The only suggestion I'd make is that, frankly,
just -- I can count to four and it looks like the only support there
is this evening for anything that relates to the gopher tortoise is
for the exemption for single-family home sections, which at least
provides you the opportunity to deal with the large developments
that do come in after this Land Development Code amendment
gets approved.
Now, if the board at some point wants to go back and
re-look at that other section as part of the Land Development
Code at some later date, they can do that. But for this evening,
that looks like the only thing that I can see that's going to get
any consensus on the board.
COMMISSIONER CARTER: May I propose this? And I agree
with you, Tom, is that if we can do it and then by the next LDC
cycle come back with a little statistical evidence about what's
going on in some of these areas, is there any way that we can
get a little more information so we know what we're talking
about? I really hate to lose the impact that we can make with
the bigger developments. And particularly, I know I've got one
coming up in my district, and if I don't do something, I've got a
real problem in trying to protect the species. And I would rather
defer and exempt a very small piece of this to get to the bigger
picture.
MR. OLLIFF: That's the point I'm trying to make. But I do
want to tell you that it is going to be difficult to get you specific
type information. We can get you some broad categorical kind of
information, but from single-family individual permits, there's just
simply not a lot of information to be gathered.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: What we might be able to point
out, though, is whether it's a red herring to suggest that there
Page 21
June 14,2000
are all these giant developments out there that are going to slip
through. Because I don't think that's the case, but I bet we can
find out factually.
And the only correction I'd make, Commission Carter, is I
don't think this is a small piece. I think this is 95 percent of it.
MR. OLLIFF: And--
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: We are only leaving behind a
small piece.
COMMISSIONER CARTER: I'm sorry, that's what I meant.
We're only leaving behind a very small piece. I want to get to the
big picture that encompasses -- I agree, we're probably talking
95 percent of what we've got to do here.
MR. OLLIFF: And the only reason I'm suggesting that is I
know in Commissioner Carter's case, there is a very large
development coming on board that I think would fall under
subject to this Land Development Code amendment now if it's
approved and wouldn't if it's not approved. So I think there's
some opportunities here.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: What is the next cycle of
amendments?
COMMISSIONER CARTER: December.
MR. NINO: Next December. Would begin about the latter
part of August. That would start taking --
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: Moving on.
MR. NINO: -- making reviews.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I know. That's what I'm
checking on.
And you'll have that -- you'll bring this issue back to us in the
next cycle?
MR. NINO: We certainly will when bring back the
single-family issue. I think staff would prefer that you adopt the
regulations that are before you and that we rethink the
single-family component. Because we think there is the
possibility that in the interim, we might lose something from a
large parcel of land that comes before us.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I think that's what Commissioner
Carter --
COMMISSIONER CARTER: Right.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: -- is proposing and I'm going to
go along with to get something --
Page 22
June 14,2000
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: Commissioner Carter, you want
to put it in the form of a motion?
COMMISSIONER CARTER: I would like to move that we
accept the gopher tortoise Land Development Code, and exclude
single-family homes construction at this point.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: Individual owners under seven
and a half acres.
COMMISSIONER CARTER: Under seven and a half acres,
whatever the criteria is.
MR. NINO: You mean platted single-family? Because there's
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: Yes.
MR. NINO: Seven and a half acres, metes and bounds parcel
of land, that's really no different than -- MR. OLLIFF: Platted.
MR. NINO: -- the person who owns 25 acres of unplatted
land.
COMMISSIONER CARTER: Okay, platted. Let me add that
language, platted.
COMMISSIONER BERRY: I'll second it.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE: Motion and a second. Further
discussion? Seeing none, all those in favor, please state aye.
(Unanimous votes of ayes.)
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE:
Anything else, Mr. Olliff?
MR. OLLIFF: No, sir.
CHAIRMAN CONSTANTINE:
Motion carries 4-0.
Thank you.
Page 23
June 14,2000
There being no further business for the good of the County,
the meeting was adjourned by order of the Chair at 5:40 p.m.
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS/EX
OFFICIO GOVERNING BOARD(S) OF
SPECIAL~TS UNDER ITS CONTROL
TI M~/~ R--M-~
,,, ..... ATTEST:
/,"i,~,,,~.:~,~i,D~W.!GHT E. BROCK, CLERK
'~ ........ TH~Se minu~s approved by the Board on
presented ~ or as corrected
, as
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TRANSCRIPT PREPARED ON BEHALF OF GREGORY COURT
REPORTING SERVICE, INC., BY CHERIE' R. LEONE, NOTARY
PUBLIC
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