HomeMy WebLinkAboutDocumentation_Environmental Advisory Committee_Tab 05_1/8/2025 Agenda Item #5.
Environmental Advisory Committee (EAC)
STAFF MEMO
R
Meeting: Environmental Advisory Committee (EAC) - Jan 08 2025
Staff Contact: Brad Freese Department: Community Development
State Park Preservation Act
In response to last years failed plans to convert state park lands to golf courses (and other uses),
State Senator Gayle Harrell has sponsored Senate Bill 80 for consideration this upcoming legislative
session. The bill is being branded as the "State Park Preservation Act".
Additionally, Palm Beach County recently approved a plan to place 31,000 acres of county-owned
natural areas into conservation easements, to ensure that they are never developed.
Attached is a copy of the proposed State Park Preservation Act and an article about Palm Beach
County's conservation easements.
This document and any attachments may be reproduced upon request in an alternative format by
completing our Accessibility Feedback Form, sending an e-mail to the Village Clerk or calling 561-
768-0443.
BUDGET INFORMATION:
BUDGET AMOUNT n/a AMOUNT AVAILABLE n/a EXPENDITURE AMOUNT: n/a
FUNDING SOURCES: n/a IS THIS A PIGGYBACK:
❑ Yes ❑ N/A
DID YOU OBTAIN 3 QUOTES?
❑ Yes ❑ N/A
QUOTE AMOUNT 6
QUOTE AMOUNT6
COMMENTS/EXPLANATION ON SELECTIONn/a
SB 80-State Preservation Act
County Preservation Article
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Agenda AwmiM. Senate - 2025 SB 80
By Senator Harrell
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1 A bill to be entitled
2 An act relating to state land management; providing a
3 short title; amending s . 253 . 034, F. S . ; requiring
4 public hearings for all updated conservation and
5 nonconservation land management plans; requiring the
6 Division of State Lands of the Department of
7 Environmental Protection to make available to the
8 public, within a specified timeframe, electronic
9 copies of land management plans for parcels of a
10 certain size and for parcels located in state parks;
11 making technical changes; amending s . 258 . 004, F. S . ;
12 revising the duties of the Division of Recreation and
13 Parks of the Department of Environmental Protection;
14 specifying requirements for the management of parks
15 and recreational areas held by the state; defining the
16 term "conservation-based public outdoor recreational
17 uses"; making technical changes; amending s . 258 . 007,
18 F. S . ; requiring the division to comply with specified
19 provisions when granting certain privileges, leases,
20 concessions, and permits; authorizing the division to
21 acquire, install, or permit the installation or
22 operation at state parks of camping cabins that meet
23 certain requirements; prohibiting the division from
24 authorizing certain uses or construction activities
25 within a state park; prohibiting the division from
26 acquiring, installing, or permitting the installation
27 or operation of any lodging establishment at a state
28 park; amending s . 259 . 032, F. S . ; requiring that
29 individual management plans for parcels located within
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30 state parks be developed with input from an advisory
31 group; requiring that the advisory group' s required
32 public hearings be noticed to the public within a
33 specified timeframe; requiring the department to
34 submit a report to the Governor and the Legislature by
35 a specified date; specifying requirements for the
36 report; providing an effective date .
37
38 Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida :
39
40 Section 1 . This act may be cited as the ""State Park
41 Preservation Act . "
42 Section 2 . Subsection (5) of section 253 . 034, Florida
43 Statutes, is amended to read:
44 253 . 034 State-owned lands; uses .-
45 (5) Each manager of conservation lands shall submit to the
46 Division of State Lands a land management plan at least every 10
47 years in a form and manner adopted by rule of the board of
48 trustees and in accordance with s . 259 . 032 . Each manager of
49 conservation lands shall also update a land management plan
50 whenever the manager proposes to add new facilities or make
51 substantive land use or management changes that were not
52 addressed in the approved plan, or within 1 year after the
53 addition of significant new lands . Each manager of
54 nonconservation lands shall submit to the Division of State
55 Lands a land use plan at least every 10 years in a form and
56 manner adopted by rule of the board of trustees . The division
57 shall review each plan for compliance with the requirements of
58 this subsection and the requirements of the rules adopted by the
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59 board of trustees pursuant to this section . All nonconservation
60 land use plans, whether for single-use or multiple-use
61 properties, must shall be managed to provide the greatest
62 benefit to the state . Plans for managed areas larger than 1, 000
63 acres must contain an analysis of the multiple-use
64 potential of the property which includes the potential of the
65 property to generate revenues to enhance the management of the
66 property. In addition, the plan must contain an analysis
67 of the potential use of private land managers to facilitate the
68 restoration or management of these lands and whether
69 nonconservation lands would be more appropriately transferred to
70 the county or municipality in which the land is located for the
71 purpose of providing affordable multifamily rental housing that
72 meets the criteria of s . 420 . 0004 (3) . If a newly acquired
73 property has a valid conservation plan that was developed by a
74 soil and water conservation district, such plan must shall be
75 used to guide management of the property until a formal land use
76 plan is completed.
77 (a) State conservation lands must be managed to
78 ensure the conservation of this state' s plant and animal species
79 and to ensure the accessibility of state lands for the benefit
80 and enjoyment of all people of this state, both present and
81 future . Each land management plan for state conservation lands
82 must provide a desired outcome, describe both short-term
83 and long-term management goals, and include measurable
84 objectives to achieve those goals . Short-term goals must shall
85 be achievable within a 2-year planning period, and long-term
86 goals must be achievable within a 10-year planning period.
87 These short-term and long-term management goals are shall be the
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88 basis for all subsequent land management activities .
89 (b) Short-term and long-term management goals for state
90 conservation lands must include measurable objectives for
91 the following, as appropriate :
92 1 . Habitat restoration and improvement .
93 2 . Public access and recreational opportunities .
94 3 . Hydrological preservation and restoration.
95 4 . Sustainable forest management .
96 5 . Exotic and invasive species maintenance and control .
97 6 . Capital facilities and infrastructure .
98 7 . Cultural and historical resources .
99 8 . Imperiled species habitat maintenance, enhancement,
100 restoration, or population restoration .
101 (c) The land management plan must at a minimum,
102 contain the following elements :
103 1 . A physical description of the land.
104 2 . A quantitative data description of the land which
105 includes an inventory of forest and other natural resources;
106 exotic and invasive plants; hydrological features;
107 infrastructure, including recreational facilities; and other
108 significant land, cultural, or historical features . The
109 inventory must sl=ia14 reflect the number of acres for each
110 resource and feature, when appropriate . The inventory must
shall-
111 be of such detail that objective measures and benchmarks can be
112 established for each tract of land and monitored during the
113 lifetime of the plan. All quantitative data collected must
114 be aggregated, standardized, collected, and presented in an
115 electronic format to allow for uniform management reporting and
116 analysis . The information collected by the Department of
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117 Environmental Protection pursuant to s . 253 . 0325 (2) must
shall-
118 be available to the land manager and his or her assignee .
119 3 . A detailed description of each short-term and long-term
120 land management goal, the associated measurable objectives, and
121 the related activities that are to be performed to meet the land
122 management objectives . Each land management objective must be
123 addressed by the land management plan, and if practicable, a
124 land management objective may not be performed to the detriment
125 of the other land management objectives .
126 4 . A schedule of land management activities which contains
127 short-term and long-term land management goals and the related
128 measurable objective and activities . The schedule must
129 include for each activity a timeline for completion,
130 quantitative measures, and detailed expense and manpower
131 budgets . The schedule must provide a management tool that
132 facilitates development of performance measures .
133 5 . A summary budget for the scheduled land management
134 activities of the land management plan . For state lands
135 containing or anticipated to contain imperiled species habitat,
136 the summary budget shall include any fees anticipated from
137 public or private entities for projects to offset adverse
138 impacts to imperiled species or such habitat, which fees must
139 shall be used solely to restore, manage, enhance, repopulate, or
140 acquire imperiled species habitat . The summary budget must
141 be prepared in such manner that it facilitates computing an
142 aggregate of land management costs for all state-managed lands
143 using the categories described in s . 259 . 037 (3) .
144 (d) Upon completion, the land management plan must be
145 transmitted to the Acquisition and Restoration Council for
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146 review. Within mom„ e,,unE=.; sl= , , 1=- ve 90 days after receipt of
147 the plan, the council shall -t-& review the plan and submit its
148 recommendations to the board of trustees . During the review
149 period, the land management plan may be revised if agreed to by
150 the primary land manager and the council taking into
151 consideration public input . The land management plan becomes
152 effective upon approval by the board of trustees .
153 (e) Land management plans are to be updated every 10 years
154 on a rotating basis . Each updated land management plan must
155 identify any conservation lands under the plan, in part or in
156 whole, that are no longer needed for conservation purposes and
157 could be disposed of in fee simple or with the state retaining a
158 permanent conservation easement .
159 (f) In developing or updating land management plans, at
160 least one public hearing must be held in any one affected
161 county.
162 (g) The Division of State Lands shall make available to the
163 public at least 30 days before the public hearing required by
164 paragraph (f) an electronic copy of each land management plan
165 for parcels that exceed 160 acres in size and for parcels
166 located within a state park. The division shall review each plan
167 for compliance with the requirements of this subsection, the
168 requirements of chapter 259, and the requirements of the rules
169 adopted by the board of trustees pursuant to this section . The
170 Acquisition and Restoration Council shall also consider the
171 propriety of the recommendations of the managing entity with
172 regard to the future use of the property, the protection of
173 fragile or nonrenewable resources, the potential for alternative
174 or multiple uses not recognized by the managing entity, and the
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175 possibility of disposal of the property by the board of
176 trustees . After its review, the council shall submit the plan,
177 along with its recommendations and comments, to the board of
178 trustees . The council shall specifically recommend to the board
179 of trustees whether to approve the plan as submitted, approve
180 the plan with modifications, or reject the plan. If the council
181 fails to make a recommendation for a land management plan, the
182 Secretary of Environmental Protection, Commissioner of
183 Agriculture, or executive director of the Fish and Wildlife
184 Conservation Commission or their designees must submit the
185 land management plan to the board of trustees .
186 (h) The board of trustees shall consider the land
187 management plan submitted by each entity and the recommendations
188 of the Acquisition and Restoration Council and the Division of
189 State Lands and shall approve the plan with or without
190 modification or reject such plan . The use or possession of any
191 such lands which is not in accordance with an approved land
192 management plan is subject to termination by the board of
193 trustees .
194 (i) 1 . State nonconservation lands must shall be managed to
195 provide the greatest benefit to the state . State nonconservation
196 lands may be grouped by similar land use types under one land
197 use plan . Each land use plan must , at a minimum, contain
198 the following elements :
199 a . A physical description of the land to include any
200 significant natural or cultural resources as well as management
201 strategies developed by the land manager to protect such
202 resources .
203 b . A desired development outcome .
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204 c . A schedule for achieving the desired development
205 outcome .
206 d. A description of both short-term and long-term
207 development goals .
208 e . A management and control plan for invasive nonnative
209 plants .
210 f . A management and control plan for soil erosion and soil
211 and water contamination.
212 g. Measurable objectives to achieve the goals identified in
213 the land use plan .
214 2 . Short-term goals shall be achievable within a 5-year
215 planning period and long-term goals shall be achievable within a
216 10-year planning period.
217 3 . The use or possession of any such lands that is not in
218 accordance with an approved land use plan is subject to
219 termination by the board of trustees .
220 4 . Land use plans submitted by a manager shall include
221 reference to appropriate statutory authority for such use or
222 uses and shall conform to the appropriate policies and
223 guidelines of the state land management plan .
224 Section 3 . Section 258 . 004, Florida Statutes, is amended to
225 read:
226 258 . 004 Duties of division .-
227 (1) �4c- shall lee t_he of The Division of Recreation and
--1
228 Parks of the Department of Environmental Protection shall :
229 (a) -t-& Supervise, administer, regulate, and control the
230 operation of all public parks, including all monuments,
231 memorials, sites of historic interest and value, and sites of
232 archaeological interest and value which are owned,— or may
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233 be acquired,— by the state, ,
234 .,L:=es ,rTT-, \n a nE rL-„ rtenaree et which the state may have made
235 or may make contribution or appropriation of public funds for
236 their operation, development, preservation, and maintenance .
237 (b) � �Igg=L-L.L\- Z); TT; �;-1-&0-1-..�-, �� �� e-,�; �r -,r,� n-,r,T� �,-,, , Preserve,
238 manage, regulate, and protect all parks and recreational areas
239 held by the state . The Division of Recreation and Parks gel may
240 provide these services by contract or interagency agreement for
241 any water management district when the governing board of a
242 water management district designates or sets aside any park or
243 recreation area within its boundaries . All lands managed
244 pursuant to this chapter must be :
245 1 . Managed in a manner that will provide the greatest
246 combination of benefits to the public and to the land' s natural
247 resources; and
248 2 . Managed for conservation-based public outdoor
249 recreational uses; public access and related amenities,
250 including roads, parking areas, walkways, and visitor centers;
251 and scientific research, including archaeology. Such uses must
252 be managed in a manner that is compatible with and that ensures
253 the conservation of this state' s natural resources by minimizing
254 impacts to undisturbed habitat and using disturbed upland
255 regions to the maximum extent practicable . As used in this
256 subparagraph, the term "conservation-based public outdoor
257 recreational uses" includes fishing, camping, bicycling, hiking,
258 nature study, swimming, boating, canoeing, horseback riding,
259 diving, birding, sailing, jogging, and similar conservation-
260 based public recreational uses . The term does not include sports
261 that require sporting facilities, such as golf courses, tennis
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262 courts, pickleball courts, ball fields, and other similar
263 facilities .
2 64 (c) zhe- r,; TT; k; �r „� �„�,�„ ; „�, �,,l n,r,�s shall Study and
265 appraise the recreational L e, L:=,e- �; een needs of the state and
266 assemble and disseminate information relative to recreation .
267 (d) hle 1-,; TT; ..r ef- PT e e La-.-,2 ; i=fe '`'„',shall Provide
268 consultation assistance to local governing units as to the
269 protection, organization, and administration of local recreation
270 systems and the planning and design of local recreational
271 iseLe=ea areas and facilities .
272 (e) � she- r,; TT; 9; ken e f Reese tLA, ,.n an,a PaLc,emshall Assist in
273 recruiting, training, and placing recreation personnel .
274 (f) zhe n; TT; r; en e f Reei eat,--Jj-,E)n -,n,a P- iFks all Sponsor
275 and promote recreation institutes, workshops, seminars, and
276 conferences throughout this :�he state .
277 (g) T„ r,; TT; S; „r „f Re ei,:„ t; „r ne P ,=ks shall Cooperate
278 with state and federal agencies, private organizations, and
279 commercial and industrial interests in the promotion of a state
280 recreation program.
281 (2) ��r i r+_ shall lee _nfereed bby The Division of Law
282 Enforcement of the Department of Environmental Protection and
283 its officers and b-y the Division of Law Enforcement of the Fish
284 and Wildlife Conservation Commission and its officers shall
285 enforce this part .
286 Section 4 . Present subsection (5) of section 258 . 007,
287 Florida Statutes, is redesignated as subsection (7) , a new
288 subsection (5) and subsection (6) are added to that section, and
289 subsection (3) of that section is amended, to read:
290 258 . 007 Powers of division .—
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291 (3) (a) The division may, as consistent with s . 258 . 004,
292 grant privileges, leases, concessions, and permits for the use
293 of land for the accommodation of visitors in the various parks,
294 monuments, and memorials in accordance with all of the following
295 provisions :
296 1 . iereTT; F'�E' i=fel Natural curiosities or objects of interest
297 may not be granted, leased, or rented on sueh terms that
298 as shal= deny or interfere with free access to them by the
299 public . ,.•
300 2 . p,�..TT; d Such grants, leases, and permits may
301 be made and given without advertisement or securing competitive
302 bids .
303 3 . jaZr,TT; ,a d +ha: ne Such grants, leases, and
304 permits may not �V^~�� c__. _ _ m;-=am - be assigned or
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305 transferred by any grantee without consent of the division .
306 (b) Notwithstanding paragraph (a) , a f+c r H-Ha y 1 , '2 Q 1'�, the
307 division may not grant new concession agreements for the
308 accommodation of visitors in a state park that provides beach
309 access and contains less than 7, 000 feet of shoreline if the
310 type of concession is available within 1, 500 feet of the park' s
311 boundaries . This paragraph does not apply to concession
312 agreements for accommodations offered at a park on or before May
313 1 2 0 14 E-LP IRLrp a v^a n v r^arI hL a 11 a Ire e f f e r:� ?arer �h r -�e:� le e r-+r1m v ry
314 a law.
315 (5) The division may acquire, install, or permit the
316 installation or operation at state parks of camping cabins that
317 have a maximum occupancy of six guests . The installation and
318 operation of camping cabins must be compatible with the state
319 park' s land management plan and must be approved pursuant to s .
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320 253 . 034 (5) . Camping cabins must, to the maximum extent
321 practicable, be sited to avoid impacts to a state park' s
322 critical habitat and natural and historical resources .
323 (6) The division may not authorize uses or construction
324 activities, including the building or alteration of structures,
325 within a state park which may cause significant harm to the
326 resources of the state park. Any use or any construction
327 activity must, to the maximum extent practicable, be conducted
328 in a manner that avoids impacts to a state park' s critical
329 habitat and natural and historical resources . The division may
330 not acquire, install, or permit the installation or operation at
331 state parks of any lodging establishment as defined in s .
332 509 . 242 .
333 Section 5 . Paragraph (b) of subsection (8) of section
334 259 . 032, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
335 259 . 032 Conservation and recreation lands .-
336 (8)
337 (b) Individual management plans required by s . 253 . 034 (5) ,
338 for parcels over 160 acres and for parcels located within a
339 state park, must shall be developed with input from an advisory
340 group .
341 1 . Members of the �� advisory group shall include, at a
342 minimum, representatives of the lead land managing agency,
343 comanaging entities, local private property owners, the
344 appropriate soil and water conservation district, a local
345 conservation organization, and a local elected official . If
346 habitat or potentially restorable habitat for imperiled species
347 is located on state lands, the Fish and Wildlife Conservation
348 Commission and the Department of Agriculture and Consumer
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349 Services must be included on any advisory group required
350 under chapter 253, and the short-term and long-term management
351 goals required under chapter 253 must advance the goals and
352 objectives of imperiled species management without restricting
353 other uses identified in the management plan .
354 2 . The advisory group shall conduct at least one public
355 hearing within the county in which the parcel or project is
356 located. For those parcels or projects within more than
357 one county, at least one areawide public hearing is shall ble
358 acceptable and the lead managing agency shall invite a local
359 elected official from each county. The areawide public hearing
360 must shall be held in the county in which the core parcels are
361 located. At least 30 days before the public hearing, notice of
362 the s„ch p„le� ; e hearing must be posted on the parcel or
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363 project designated for management, advertised in a paper of
364 general circulation, and announced at a scheduled meeting of the
365 local governing body before the actual public hearing.
366 3 . The management prospectus required pursuant to paragraph
367 (7) (b) must be available to the public for a period of 30
368 days before the public hearing.
369 4 . By July 1 of each year, each governmental agency and
370 each private entity designated to manage lands shall report to
371 the Secretary of Environmental Protection on the progress of
372 funding, staffing, and resource management of every project for
373 which the agency or entity is responsible .
374 Section 6 . By December 1, 2025, the Department of
375 Environmental Protection shall submit a report to the Governor,
376 the President of the Senate, and the Speaker of the House of
377 Representatives which includes all of the following information
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378 regarding the state park system:
379 (1) The number of state parks with amenities or areas that
380 have limited use or are temporarily closed due to needed repairs
381 or inadequate infrastructure necessary to support conservation-
382 based public recreation uses .
383 (2) The system' s estimated budget allocation expenditures
384 for the 2023-2024 fiscal year, broken down by salaries and
385 benefits, equipment costs, and contracting costs for the
386 following categories : operations, maintenance and repair, park
387 improvement, and administrative overhead.
388 (3) The estimated costs associated with the facility
389 maintenance backlog by each state park, including a plan to
390 reduce or eliminate the facility maintenance backlog for the
391 state park system by July 1, 2035, to ensure access to and the
392 safe enjoyment of such public lands for the residents of this
393 state and its visitors .
394 Section 7 . This act shall take effect July 1, 2025 .
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Agenda Item #5.
After state push to bumild i n parks,
Palm Beach County moves to
protect sensitive land
Palm Beach County will give a nonprofit conservation easements controlling 38
sites, hoping to block any state or federal proposal to build on them.
Mike Diamond
Palm Beach Post
Palm Beach County commissioners have approved a plan to add an extra layer of
protection to nearly 32,000 acres of county-owned environmentally sensitive land.
The move in part is a response to the state's now-scraped "Great Outdoors
Initiative" that would have put 45 holes of golf as well as pickleball courts in nearby
Jonathan Dickinson State Park. The plan even called for hotels and disc golf to be
built at other state parks. Public outcry quickly caused state officials to scuttle the
plan.
Commissioners recently approved an ordinance prepared by the county's
Environmental Resources Management Department (ERM) to ensure that 38 sites are
never developed.
Page 31 of 37
Agenda Item #5.
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Concerns about tidal flooding:Palm Beach County wants to save Boynton-area park
The county has entered into a partnership with the nonprofit Conservation Florida to
place conservation easements on the parcels. These easements are voluntary
agreements that limit how the land will be used. They will prevent development on
these parcels as long as they remain in place.
Who is Conservation Florida and what powers will it
have?
Page 32 of 37
Agenda Item #5.
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Conservation Florida is a land conservancy that protects Florida's water and wildlife.
On its website, the nonprofit says it has saved ecosystems from the Panhandle to the
Everglades.
Only Conservation Florida could lift those easements, and future county commissions
could not force them to do so.
The reason for the added protection? In their presentation, county environmental
resource planners referred to the state Department of Environmental Protection (DEP)
proposal to clear close to 1,000 acres of globally imperiled scrub land at Jonathan
Dickinson. They also noted that the state proposed "incompatible uses" at eight other
parks, such as lodges.
"In the face of increasing development pressures, the county"s current protections may
not be sufficient to guarantee the perpetual preservation of these unique native lands,"
the county staff wrote in a report to the commission.
Page 33 of 37
Agenda Item #5.
Surfside tragedy one year later:How safe are Palm Beach County's high-rise
condos?
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On its website, Conservation Florida hailed the partnership as a way to "not only
ensure the protection of these critical lands for current Palm Beach County residents
but also for future residents and governing bodies."
County commissioners must approve each easement proposed for the 38 parcels.
ERM director Deborah Drum said the partnership guarantees these lands will remain
natural havens for both wildlife and people for years to come.
Future Palm Beach County commissions cannot
remove easements without nonp rofit's OK
The 38 parcels. are scattered throughout the county. They contain diverse ecosystems
that include freshwater and estuarine wetlands, forests, grassy areas, dunes and
Page 34 of 37
Agenda Item #5.
beaches. Environmental resource planners said these areas contribute to flood control,
air quality, and water quality and quantity.
County Mayor Maria Marino said it was important to add this extra layer of
protection. She was an outspoken critic of the state plan to develop its parks.
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"We would be remiss to not allow this to happen," she said at the commission
meeting.
The nonprofit will assume the cost of placing the easements on the county land.
Page 35 of 37
Agenda Item #5.
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Many of the parcels were acquired through donations and through bond referendums
in 1991 and 1999. It is unlikely that they would ever be developed, but Drum said the
partnership with Conservation Florida will reaffirm that these natural area lands
cannot be used for nonenvironmental purposes.
They include Winding Waters Natural Area near West Palm Beach, a 548-acre
preserve with hiking trails and abundant birdlife.
Another is Cypress Creek in Jupiter that spans both sides of Indiantown Road. The
2,000-acre parcel is home to more than 500 species of plants and 217 species of
animals.
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Agenda Item #5.
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And in southern Palm Beach County, there is the 14-acre Leon M. Weekes
Environmental Preserve, near Dixie Highway and the FEC Railroad tracks in Delray
Beach. It is a remnant of coastal scrub once common in South Florida but now largely
gone except for a few scattered tracts.
Lisa Interlandi, the policy director of the Everglades Law Center, urged the
commission to approve the partnership, noting that no one ever expected the state
parks proposal.
"People were shocked and taken aback. That showed we can't predict what is going to
happen in the future," Interlandi said. "Development pressures will only increase. You
can't get any more of these natural areas."
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