Sunday, October 23, 2022

"THIS AMENDMENT PROPOSES CLASSIC URBAN SPRAWL"

Friends and Supporters of Keep the Country … Country – As we all continue to recover from Ian and try to help our neighbors and community reclaim our lives, the threat of destruction of over 4,000 acres of the remaining rural lands in Sarasota County looms larger than ever. 

ATTEND THE COUNTY COMMISSION MEETING ON TUESDAY, OCTOBER 25

Lakewood Ranch SE – or Pat Neal’s lipsticked pig – has its final public hearing this Tuesday, Oct. 25th.
The County Commission meeting begins at 9 am, but the issue is No. 29 (A&B) on the agenda, which makes it unlikely to be discussed before noon. Important: Whatever time you come, please sign a speaker's card on which you state your opposition to Lakewood Ranch SE (Item #29), and hand it to the recording clerk. You can later forfeit your speaker's slot, but your opposition will still be on the record.

Like the Death Star from the Star Wars story, LWR and SMR want to destroy our rural and agricultural lands. Why? Greed. If SMR gets to develop at hugely increased densities and use “open space” for facilities required for its development, it makes more money. At the cost of environmental, stormwater and economic benefits to the entire County and region from rural lands. We will all pay for this development – through loss of our rural and agricultural lives and through increased costs to the public from this urban sprawl of 5,000 mansion behind gates (“urban sprawl”) that will add over 45,000 additional daily car trips on our road system. This county commission is about to grant SMR special status that would override the county's comprehensive plan. Residents of Old Miakka, one of Sarasota County's oldest continuous settlements, are trying to save their rural lifestyle, agriculture, and everyone's open space, wildlife habitat, and environmental assets.

Even if you can’t attend the public hearing on Tuesday, please send emails to the Commissioners. Copy and paste all or some of the points below to tell them to DENY Lakewood Ranch SE – don’t make Sarasota County an extension of Manatee County’s “Stepfordville”. With the 2050 Plan, Sarasota County residents rejected cookie cutter houses crammed together covering acres and acres of land previously providing forage and cover for wildlife, stormwater retention, open space, agriculture, dark skies, and a place where people can breath and enjoy nature and rural life. Tell the Commission to say NO.

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Please email the County Commissioners and the Planners (email addresses shown below – ask for your email to be included in the official record of the Oct. 25, 2022 public hearing on Agenda Item #29 (Lakewood Ranch SE).  PLEASE INCLUDE YOUR NAME AT THE END OF THE LETTER

 

SUBJECT:  DENY Lakewood Ranch SE (Item #29, Oct. 25, 2022) – include in official record of public hearing





SARASOTA COUNTY COMMISSIONERS

AL MAIO   amaio@scgov.net

MIKE MORAN  mmoran@scgov.net

NANCY DETERT  ncdetert@scgov.net

RON CUTSINGER  rcutsinger@scgov.net

CHRISTIAN ZIEGLER  cziegler@scgov.net

ALSO copy planner@scgov.net

Brett Harrington  bharring@scgov.net

Hannah Sowinski hsowinski@scgov.net

 

Good Day Commissioners:

 

I am opposed to Item #29 on your agenda for October 25, 2022.  Please make the following comments in opposition to CPA 2022-B and the DOCC part of the official record of the Oct. 25, 2022 public hearing.

 

STATE AGENCY REVIEW OF CPA 2022-B – Among other comments made by the Department of Economic Development (DEO), the Department's letter supports residents’ objections regarding the greenway buffers and open space. The proposed alternative greenway configurations and design criteria lack the "meaningful and predictable standards" required by §163.3177 (1), Fla. Stat. 

        Residents have objected to the reduction of open space greenbelts for their failure to provide adequate protection for native habitats and failure to ensure that the location, size, configuration, quality or other components of any preserved open space will be adequate to ensure the protection of the land's ecological functions. The Department stated that the County must "require a greenbelt minimum width that is wide enough to appropriately ensure that the greenbelt functions to clearly separate urban uses from rural uses." The Department also told the County to only allow those uses in "open space" that are consistent with the definition of open space, and that "public safety stations and community centers should not constitute open space". (DEO letter, p. 2)


DEO also found that the County and applicant have not shown that the proposed Future Land Use Map amendment does not constitute urban sprawl. It said that the County must either provide further explanation of how the allowed future land uses are not urban sprawl or modify the amendment to not constitute urban sprawl. (DEO letter, p. 2). 


We do not see how the County can produce professionally acceptable data and analysis to support a claim that the development proposed by the FLUM change is not urban sprawl. In terms of modifications to the proposed amendment, based on the location and relevant facts about the property, the changes necessary to allow the proposed amendment to avoid violating the urban sprawl provisions of the statute would significantly reduce the amount of residential development and supporting uses being introduced into this special rural and agricultural area. 


COMMENTS AND STATEMENTS BY LEGAL AND PLANNING EXPERTS - Residents opposed to CPA 2022-B and the related DOCC have engaged two experts who have submitted a number of written comments and statements to the Planning Commission, the BCC, and DEO and state agencies. Legal expert Richard Grosso (hired by the Miakka Community Club) and planning expert Charles Gauthier (hired by Keep the Country, Inc.) have identified numerous significant issues and problems with the proposed CPA and DOCC. I endorse all of the comments and statements by these experts and ask that this development proposal be denied.


DANGEROUS CONDITIONS ON ROAD SYSTEM - Rex Jensen’s proposed expansion of Lakewood Ranch will consume over 4,000 acres of rural lands in northeast Sarasota County. With 5,000 dwelling units, over 45,000 additional daily car trips will be added to our road system. Among many valid arguments against this development are the dangerous and worsening conditions on our roads. Fruitville Road, a state evacuation route and primary east-west access, already operates significantly below acceptable levels of service. Commissioners seem mesmerized by vague and unenforceable deals proposed by Rex, in his blurred dual roles as head of SMR and the LWR Stewardship District, to “fix” Fruitville. Rex/SMR have not fulfilled existing legal obligations for linear wetlands on this land – why would anyone think he will fulfill unenforceable verbal proffers on Fruitville Road? The result - residents will pay the cost of worsening conditions on Fruitville Road and will pay with our taxes and public funds for development impacts. There is not enough funding to fix existing problems on Fruitville – much less to address the impacts of this and other developments. Lakewood Ranch SE must be denied.

NEGATIVE ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS AND INCOMPATIBLE DEVELOPMENT- LWR developers are asking for approval of a 2050 comp plan amendment, to once again move the Old Miakka Countryside line, amend the comp plan Hamlet allowances to high density development, to create a new high density Village Transition Zoning, (VTZ) zoning. 2022-B proposes density increases to the existing Lake Park Estates, reduces green ways and buffers from 500' to 50', with no town center or commercial planned in the entire 4100 acres. Seventeen percent (17%) of the Lakewood Ranch SE site occurs in a flood plain, which includes Gum Slough, Myakka River headwaters and Donna Bay. Development of these lands at increased density will cause degradation of water quality, increase and change the character of stormwater runoff, and cause damaging impacts to significant waterways. Amendment 2022-B is a plan to create sprawl, hopscotched to nearly the end of Fruitville Rd and Sarasota County. These lands begin across from the existing entrance to HiHat ranch, which received density increases far beyond Hamlet allowances and was approved by this board as high density village zoning.

If these 4,100 acres were developed under the current existing zoning or at allowable Hamlet densities, the number of houses could be as little as 200 houses and as many as 1,600. If the land were developed at the highest density of 1,600 houses, this would create traffic increases of 12,768 daily trips impacting our overburdened roadways. What LWR developers are proposing instead is 5,000 houses. These units won't be required to be developed on 1/2 acre lots, but the lots can be any size. This would create traffic increases to 45,000 daily trips, as opposed to the total traffic generated under the existing 1 to 5 acre zoning of 5,722 daily trips.

Developers are also proposing a reduction of the required 500' buffer to only 50' and limit the Open Space requirement to as little as 43%. The Hamlet open space requirement is 60%. The current 1 unit per 5 or 10 acres zoning requires 80% open space.

The requested density increase from 1 unit per acre to 2 units per acre with the proposed VTZ designation, is not a transitional zone, but urban sprawl on top of Rural Heritage zoning of 1 unit per 5 or 10 acres. The 4,100 acres is within the boundaries as defined in the Old Miakka Neighborhood Plan. These are historic rural and agricultural lands that were guaranteed protection under the 2050 Plan and the county approved, Countryside Line.

This amendment is not compatible with 5 acre homesteads in Old Miakka. CPA 2022-B is nothing more than a plan to create urban sprawl in a remote rural location of Sarasota County. Calling it a Village Transitional Zone (VTZ) doesn't change the fact that it's urban sprawl proposed right over the top of the Countryside Line and the historic Rural Heritage community of Old Miakka.

The proposal is devoid of wildlife corridor locations and appears to be planned with home sites from district line to line. Protected species must be identified by an independent consultant and wildlife underpasses must be planned with all the new roads. These are details that would be addressed during the construction plan review, but it's important to note that the concept plan does not contemplate ribbons of green space throughout the site, to provide interconnected corridors for threatened and protected species. How can the public believe that interconnected corridors are planned and of sufficient size to protect the threatened and endangered species that inhabit the area?

This amendment proposes classic urban sprawl, the exact opposite of what the 2050 Plan was created and approved to do, by the Board of County Commissioners, landowners and developers and this community.

PLEASE DENY CPA 2022-B and related DOCC. I and many other residents are strongly opposed to this proposed urban sprawl.


Tuesday, October 18, 2022

Attorney: "Both Amendments should be a NO Vote"

Citizens for Sarasota County asked Susan Schoettle-Gumm, a former assistant County Attorney, to review the two items added by the Board of Sarasota County Commissioners to the November Ballot. Her answer:

"In my opinion, these two proposed charter amendments – individually and definitely in combination – would effectively block future citizen-initiated charter amendments in Sarasota County.  

If the amendments proposed for the November 2022 ballot are approved, Sarasota County would have the most stringent and difficult requirements in the state for citizen-initiated county charter amendment petitions.  

Both amendments should be a NO Vote."

Below is a comparison of Sarasota's Charter Amendment provisions with those of other counties in Florida:

Commissioner Al Maio
Sarasota County already has the shortest time period for collection of signatures among all charter counties in Florida (the 90-91 days from January 1 to April 1, with possible additional 30 days for signatures added to required number already submitted) and a high signature requirement.  Fifty-five percent (55%) of charter counties allow 180 days for signature collection (some with an additional 30 days if signatures are rejected) and some counties allow even longer time periods for collection.  Half of Florida’s charter counties require signatures from only 5% - 8% of registered electors. Only one charter county in the State currently imposes a substantive legal review of a petition prior to allowing it to be on the ballot (Orange County, which uses a board of 3 independent attorneys hired annually to make the determination).  If these 2022 proposed amendments had been in the Charter in 2018, the petition for single-member districts would have been rejected and never on the ballot.



Question 1 changes would apply only to citizen-initiated amendments and would require:  

A) the signatures of 10% of registered electors to be collected as 10% within each county commission district (rather than county-wide), and, 

B) after collection of 1% of required signatures and submittal to the County, the following are required: County review/approval of the form of the petition, County review/approval of the legal sufficiency of the petition (terms not defined), a fiscal impact analysis (terms not defined) by the County, and a presentation of the petition to the Charter Review Board, if it has a meeting during the relevant time period.

Comments:  This makes the high 10% signature requirement even more difficult as 10% within each commission district would be required.  So use of centralized petition collection points will be more difficult.  Less urbanized districts may be very difficult to efficiently obtain signatures. When the requirement of 10% signatures from each district is added to the already very short signature collection period, collection of the necessary signatures would be nearly impossible.  

  • Review of petition format is widely required in other county charters but does not appear to be a significant problem – but it would depend on what requirements are included in the County ordinance proscribing the form.  
  • Three charter counties currently require a fiscal/economic impact analysis, so this is not widely adopted.  
  • Requiring a determination of “legal sufficiency” and that it be decided by the County is like having the fox guard the hen house when the hen house has no door.  
  • The combination of the legal review and signature requirement by district are very damaging and unacceptable provisions.


Question 2 would add the requirement that any proposed amendment, whether proposed by the Charter Review Board, the County, or by citizen petition “shall not conflict with the Florida Constitution, general law, or the Charter.”  

Comments: Charter provisions, whether proposed or already adopted, must already not conflict with the Florida Constitution and general law.  So this change is really focused on prohibiting any major changes to the Charter.  Any proposed change that could not coexist with existing charter provisions would be prohibited.  And presumably the County would make this determination for citizen petitions as part of its “legal sufficiency” review under Question 1.  For example, if this provision had been in the County Charter in 2018, the question to change county commission elections from at-large to single-member districts would not have made it on the ballot.  Presumably, provisions in a new subject area, such as ethics, might not “conflict” with the Charter, but again, with the County making this determination, the fox guarding the hen house would be choosing which chickens might live or die.

I believe that the proposed amendments are terrible intrusions into the authority that remains with the citizens of Sarasota County under home rule.  

The County has not granted the power of amendment by petition to the citizens – rather the citizens have retained this power to themselves.  We cannot give up more of our power to the County.  In fact, we should consider a citizen petition to amend the Charter to allow the proposal, amendment and recission of ordinances by citizen initiative – as is authorized in at least 75% of Florida’s charter counties.  

I hope this information is helpful to you.  We need to get this out to the public in any and all ways possible. 


The message must be to Vote NO on the Sarasota County Charter Amendments.


Monday, October 10, 2022

Regressive Sarasota invites citizens to diminish their own Charter Amendment Power


Since We the People voted for Single Member Districts, the Board of Sarasota County Commissioners has tried and tried to repeal our vote.

  • Then they held a special election to repeal our Charter Amendment, and again they were defeated.
  • They kicked the issue to the Charter Review Board, which heard from dozens of citizens, and in the end told the Commission to take a hike.
  • In the upcoming election they're trying to diminish citizen power to amend the Charter. Page 3 of your ballot has the nerve to invite you to vote to make it more difficult for private citizens to amend the Charter.
The Board's public policy is totally REGRESSIVE, and wants your help to continue. Send them a resounding NO on both County Charter Amendments (p. 3 of your ballot).






#singlememberdistrictvoting #ballot #charteramendments #progressive #regressive

Saturday, October 8, 2022

Sarasota County Disaster Assistance Resources

Disaster Assistance available in Sarasota County 

Please see a list of disaster recovery resources available to Sarasota County:

Shannon Staub Library is serving as a Disaster Recovery Center (DRC) from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., daily.

DRCs provide information from Florida state agencies, FEMA, U.S. Small Business Administration, and other available resources for individuals, families and business owners. DRCs also assist federal assistance applications and disaster loans and updating in-progress applications.

It is not necessary to visit a center to apply for assistance, visit disasterassistance.gov, use the FEMA mobile app or call 800-621-3362.

Shannon Staub Library is located at 4675 Career Lane, North Port.

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FEMA/USACE Blue Roof Program

Sarasota County homeowners who suffered damage to their roofs from Hurricane Ian may now be eligible for Operation Blue Roof, a federal program that provides fiber-reinforced sheeting to cover roofs until arrangements can be made for permanent repairs. Operation Blue Roof is a priority mission managed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers for the Federal Emergency Management Agency. This is a free service to homeowners.

Residents can begin the application process at disasterassistance.gov or by downloading the FEMA app online. If you don't have access to internet, you can also apply by phone: 1-800-621-3362 or TTY 800-462-7585.

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Nokomis Community Park is serving as a Volunteer Reception Center (VRC) from 7:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., daily.

The VRC is now open for individuals who would like to offer their skills to help other with disaster response. Individuals should bring their equipment and should be ready to be assigned to a larger organized to be dispatched into the community.

Sign up to volunteer here: https://app.smartsheet.com/b/form/8972daff4bf44b1694cba5b9cb6512dd

Find other ways to help here: https://www.scgov.net/government/emergency-services/how-you-can-help

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Crisis Cleanup is available for those needing assistance by calling 800-451-1954.

Free assistance is available for cutting fallen trees, tarping roofs, mold mitigation, drywall, flooring and appliance removal.

Remember, the following library locations are open and offer internet services:


📖 Selby Public Library

📖 Betty J. Johnson North Sarasota Public Library

📖 Fruitville Public Library

📖 Gulf Gate Public Library

📖 Osprey Public Library


 

How much are Sarasota Commissioners worth?

Maio continues to lead the way in net worth among Sarasota County commissioners, latest state Commission on Ethics filings show

Sour

Source: Sarasota News Leader, November 25, 2021 by Rachel Brown Hackney, Editor & Publisher

Cutsinger in second place, with Detert reporting smallest figure

Sarasota County Commission Chair Alan Maio continues to outpace his board colleagues in terms of net worth, the latest Florida Commission on Ethics financial disclosure filings indicate.

However, Maio reported a smaller figure for 2020 than he did for 2019, his latest report showed.

As of June 17, Maio wrote that his net worth was $3,082,300. In June 2019, he noted that the figure was $3,252,097.

In second place, Commissioner Ron E. Cutsinger of Englewood reported that his net worth as of July 1 was $1,589,314 — slightly more than half of Maio’s total.

Commissioner Michael Moran narrowly edged out Commissioner Christian Ziegler for third place. Moran reported that his net worth as of April 30 was $927,150.25. That compared to $620,716.38 as of May 1, 2020.

On Dec. 31, 2020, Ziegler noted, his net worth was $876,233.25. That was more than three times the amount he listed as of Dec. 31, 2018: $206,324.83.

Ziegler won his District 2 seat during the November 2018 General Election.

Rounding out the board members, Commissioner Nancy Detert attested that her net worth as of Dec. 31, 2020 was $392,213. That was up slightly from her Dec. 31, 2019 total of $322,206.

More detail here

Brunch for the Bay Update

Brunch for the Bay is on!  

Join Suncoast Waterkeeper on October 15 to mark the 50th Anniversary of the Clean Water Act with an afternoon filled with food, fun, friends, and great information.  All Details here



Suncoast Waterkeeper will direct a portion of its proceeds raised at Brunch for the Bay on October 15 to Hurricane Ian environmental recovery efforts.  We are working with community partners to ensure our resources bolster environmental recovery that lends to increased resiliency.

There is still time to purchase tickets.

Thank you, together, we can protect the Suncoast.

1. Volunteer Clean-Up

Join Amaryllis Park Neighborhood Association, one of Suncoast Waterkeeper's Environmental Working Group partners in north Sarasota, to assist the elderly through a community clean up on Saturday, October 22, at 9 AM.  Bring water, gardening gloves, and rakes (if you have one); we will remove debris.  Please meet us at Bay First Bank at 1782 MLK Way, Sarasota, FL 34234.

2. Contribute

When we lost power, we also lost all the food stored in our refrigerators and freezers.  Amaryllis Park Neighborhood Association is working to take the sting out of that loss by collecting gift cards from any grocery store (Publix, Walmart, etc.) and water (because of boil water notices) to distribute to neighbors. Please consider donating to Amaryllis Park Neighborhood Association.  If you are interested in donating, please contact the Association President, Mary Butler, at mary40butler@....

3. Assist Local Food Producers 

I attended Manatee County Extension's Water School this week, where I learned that many local farmers and ranchers experienced heavy losses.  Manatee County Extension noted the importance of eating local and contributing to the relief efforts for food producers in our area.  You can help with this effort by donating to the Farm Bureau's Hurricane Ian Relief Fund.

If you have a need, please let us know.  We are working with community partners to aid recovery.  

Finally, remember to be careful in our local waters as they work to recover from the unprecedented amount of pollution that entered from Hurricane Ian.  Suncoast Waterkeeper will be back out sampling early next week to report the conditions of local waters on our website and social media.

Sincerely,

Abbey Tyrna

Executive Director & Waterkeeper

Suncoast Waterkeeper

http://www.suncoastwaterkeeper.org/

Suncoast Waterkeeper · PO Box 1028, Sarasota, FL 34230, United States