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Since October 2000, County Commission has approved 31,814 North County dwelling units to be developed in accord with Sarasota 2050 Plan guidelines
Staff provides detailed report about history of 2050 Plan and remaining options for land it governs
Since October 2000, the Sarasota County Commission has approved 31,814 dwelling units for development in 16 communities located east of Interstate 75, in accord with the establishment of the Sarasota 2050 Plan guidelines, county staff recently reported.
In South County, 4,491 dwelling units have won board approval, as shown in a graphic shown to the commissioners on June 5.
Another 11,236 potentially could be built in North County, the graphic said.
The data was part of a presentation to the commissioners during their regular meeting on June 5. It came in response to inclusion in the board’s 2024 Strategic Action Plan of a request for an analysis of “What’s Left” for the 2050 Plan.
On April 5, the county’s Planning and Development Services Department completed the formal written report for the commissioners. The June 5 agenda item was scheduled subsequent to that, Matt Osterhoudt, director of Planning and Development, noted during his presentation.
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‘We’re not gonna barbecue our way out of this’
Wild pigs, conquering all Florida counties, are now taking over the US
Wild pigs and hogs have been spotted in at least 35 states as their numbers continue to grow at a rapid pace.
By Shira Moolten South Florida Sun Sentinel
David Prendergast loved gardening at his home in the small Miramar development that borders the Everglades. Then he woke up one morning in early May to discover his grass destroyed and his plants devoured.
A family of wild hogs had visited his home, as they had those of other residents over the last several days, leaving lawns in various states of disarray and creating a sense of panic throughout the neighborhood, though Prendergast empathized with the animals.
“I guess they’re hungry,” he told the South Florida Sun Sentinel on Friday, a couple weeks after the scare had subsided. “And they’re displaced based on the development that’s going on in our area.”
Wild hogs, an invasive species first brought to Florida by Spanish settlers in the 1500s, have now appeared in at least 35 states as their numbers continue to grow at a rapid pace, leading officials to warn of a devastating population explosion called the “feral swine bomb.”
The biggest threat the pigs pose is to agriculture, rolling around in the dirt to cool off, rooting for food and eating crops, their favorite of which is corn. Still other dangers loom on the horizon: Across the ocean, wild pigs carry a deadly disease that could decimate the U.S. pork industry. Meanwhile, growing numbers of pigs combined with increasing development over once-wild lands means greater potential for ruined gardens and rare, but possible, attacks on humans.
“Unfortunately the only solution we have right now is lethal removal,” said Dr. John Mayer, a research scientist and manager at the Savannah River National Laboratory in South Carolina who has been studying wild pigs for over 40 years. “A lot of people don’t believe there’s such thing as a pig-proof fence.”
States like Florida and Texas have long borne the brunt of the feral hog problem and have struggled to manage it as the situation has grown more dire nationally. Officials have incentivized hunters by instituting few restrictions, and people have followed, by helicopter, drone, machine gun, and various combinations of the three, all year long. Yet some, including hunters themselves, question whether the approach is overkill, especially in areas where the animals are a vital food source.
“Agencies have created this scenario where they want to eliminate the wild hog,” said Bishop Wright Jr., a longtime hunter based in West Palm Beach. “It’s not managed to keep the hog, it’s managed to eliminate the wild hog and eradicate it.”
‘Praying to God’
Craig Greene rarely feared for his life when he trapped wild pigs, at least until a day in 2008 when he was sure he was going to get eaten alive.
The longtime animal trapper was baiting a trap in a cow field in the middle of rural DeSoto County. But when he opened his sour corn, the pigs ran out of the woods, taking him off guard. He had no choice but to crawl into his own trap, which was about 3 feet tall. Greene is 6-foot-2.
The cowboys had already moved through that day and Greene had told everyone else not to go out there. No one was coming to save him.
“I’m on my hands and knees, praying to God,” he told the South Florida Sun Sentinel. “I didn’t have a pocket knife or nothing to protect myself.”
Eventually, after what felt like several hours, the hogs wandered off and Greene made it home alive, though as he walked, he couldn’t be too sure they weren’t just waiting in the trees for the right moment to pounce.
“I know when they kill you, they’ll eat you while you’re screaming,” he said. “I’d rather get eaten by an alligator.”
Though rare, wild pig attacks outnumber all species of shark attack combined. Still, the potential for dangerous interactions goes up as the pig population grows and humans develop lands where the hogs once roamed free.
“They’ve been here for 200 years and now everywhere they go they’re getting pushed out,” Greene said. “They’re doing so much major construction. So now pigs are showing up in people’s yards because the gated development is butted right up against a preserve.”
Hogs love acorns, so anyone who builds a house around an oak tree can expect a visit, he added. They often aren’t scared of people.
“I’ve had phone calls like, ‘Oh my God, I’m in my car right now, this pig is slamming his head up against my truck,‘” Greene said. “‘Come help me.’ ”
One time, the police called him because a pig was on the loose in a hotel parking lot, banging itself into cars.
Recent hog sightings have worried residents across Florida, where the pigs now exist in all 67 counties. Sarasota County, where Greene lives, has some of the biggest problems, he said, along with Charlotte and DeSoto counties. The pigs prefer the inland areas in the middle of the state, from Clewiston to the sugar cane fields in Belle Glade.
“There are a number of factors that contribute to wild hog reports from the public,” an FWC spokesperson said in a text. “Seasonal food availability/mast production, year-round reproduction, and increased human population in Florida resulting in more people living in areas near ranging wild hogs are large contributors to wild hog observations and/or observed evidence of wild hog damage.”
In Flagler County, marauding wild pigs became so widespread earlier this year that officials created a feral hog dashboard for sightings, according to the Daytona Beach News-Journal.
“This quality of life has been severely dampened by the chronic anxiety, fear, anger and exasperation felt by our residents,” Nancy Crouch, a resident of the Grand Haven development in Flagler County, said during a county workshop. “… I don’t want to be in the news for, you know, not doing anything about feral hogs that are attacking humans.”
Drones, helicopters and automatic rifles spell danger for pigs
Still, when it’s a matter of life or death, humans pose a far greater threat to pigs than hogs could ever pose to humans.
In Texas, people can sign up to shoot the pigs with automatic rifles from moving helicopters. In Mississippi, legislators have proposed a bill this year that would allow the use of drones to hunt hogs. In Florida, the Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission requires no license to hunt them. There is no off-season, and most places do not have bag or size limits. Killing hogs has long been a rite of passage for young hunters in the area, as they are plentiful and make for easy, accessible prey.
In recent years, the Internet brought even more popularity to the sport: Videos of people spraying hogs with bullets from helicopters or taking them out with military-grade snipers have garnered millions of views on YouTube. Last week, a popular streamer named “Tfue” was lambasted online for livestreaming himself hunting pigs in Florida. In the video, a pig, squealing in pain, can be seen running away after he shoots it multiple times.
“I feel bad,” Tfue says, then laughs. “You want to spear him dude? I don’t want him to suffer.”
Later, to defend himself, the streamer posted on X a list of problems the hogs pose to Florida.
A hunter himself, Wright Jr. worries that killings pigs indiscriminately, along with the rise of predators like the Burmese python, could upset the natural balance in places like South Florida’s Everglades where they are a vital part of the food chain. He wishes wildlife officials could find a way to redistribute the hogs to areas where they have been overhunted.
“When I was a kid, hogs were everywhere down South Florida way,” said Wright Jr. “The panthers and the snakes have pretty much decimated the hog population. Not that the panthers or the snakes have a bag limit or a size limit.”
He added, “there’s hardly any hogs due to all three predators, man being one of them.”
Even though hunting is popular, Mayer says trapping and euthanizing is the most effective approach when it comes to actually reducing the number of pigs.
“Hunting doesn’t take enough of these animals in any given year to keep populations low,” he said. “These things just crank out too many little feet every year for hunting to be effective.”
The extent to which hunting has reduced wild pig populations in Florida is unclear. An FWC spokesperson did not respond to questions about their numbers and if they have gotten too low in certain areas.
The damage to the economy both in Florida and nationwide is real. Farmers have enlisted Greene to remove pigs from orange groves, where they knock over trees or eat the saplings. Nationally, wild hogs are estimated to cause $1.5 billion in economic damages per year, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. And while some areas may benefit from a hog or two, research has shown that they have overwhelmingly destroyed Florida ecosystems and habitats while competing with native species.
Meanwhile, a disease the wild pigs spread called African Swine Fever has wrought havoc in Asia over the last few years and could devastate the U.S. pork industry if it ever crossed the ocean.
“It’s the ultimate kiss of death for pigs,” said Mayer. “If it ever got into this country the way it spread through Eurasia, it would be the death knell of U.S. pork industry. You wouldn’t be able to buy bacon anymore.”
Scientists are working on less violent solutions, like oral contraceptives, but “they haven’t really cracked that nut yet,” Mayer said, because they don’t know how that might affect the predators who eat the pigs.
Wild hog cuisine has also become more desirable, at least for some people. Greene has clients in Miami who buy his pigs to cook around Christmas or Thanksgiving, sometimes 50 at a time.
“There are a lot more wild boar dishes in restaurants now,” said Mayer. “But we’re not gonna barbecue our way out of this.”
A true pig-proof fence may not exist, but a reinforced fence has brought peace to Prendergast’s Miramar neighborhood, at least for now. Word is that the hogs, who he thinks are a mother, father and child, have wandered off to terrorize nearby communities.
Prendergast is an animal lover who spends his spare time watching the birds on the lake across from his house. He wishes there were 2 acres of wild land for every 1 acre of developed land. He doesn’t have too much ill will toward the pigs. But he’s glad they’re gone.
“Those guys, they can do damage, I’ll tell you that,” Prendergast said. “They can do damage.”
Sarasota County School Board Report Card
The League of Women Voters of Sarasota has established an Observer Corps to monitor the Sarasota County School Board meetings. The goal of the Observer Corps is to objectively evaluate meetings for ethical, legal and professional conduct on the part of the board and chairperson. This evaluation will be shared with the Board and the public following each meeting.
Meeting Date: March 19, 2024
A = Consistently B= Frequently C= Occasionally D= Rarely F= Not at All
Board follows and advances a written agenda. The published agenda was amended for two action items to accommodate concerns raised by community members about potential conflicts of interest prior to the meeting This was presented by the Superintendent and approved by the School Board. | A |
Board limits citizens’ comments only to opinions on topics that are in the Board’s purview. Most citizen comments at this meeting were repeated requests to address concerns of inclusivity, book restrictions and the charter school approval of the previous meeting. Many comments addressed the proposed legislation to allow chaplains in schools. While this may be perceived to be not in the board’s purview prior to a legislative action, it was clear that community members wanted to urge board members to refuse to allow chaplains in our schools, should the governor sign the bill. Comments urging the Board to build trust within the community continued from previous meetings. Requests for the resignation of Ms. Ziegler also continued. | B+ |
Board Chair does not allow speakers to personally attack board members or use abusive language. The board chair stopped one speaker saying her comment “touched on the private life of the board member.” It was not clear to the public how the comment related to abusive language or attacks on Board members. Chair continues to allow attacks on Ms. Ziegler (hypocrite, fascist). | C+ |
Board Chair treats speakers equitably. The Board Chair appeared to make an effort to greet and thank each speaker. She displayed less physical reaction to community speaker comments with which she appeared to disagree than in the previous meeting. However, the Chair does not treat her colleagues equitably. The chair interrupted Mr. Edwards several times as he was seeking clarification on issues raised by the public concerning conflicts of interest and other matters on the agenda. She did not, however, interrupt Ms. Ziegler when she was commenting extensively without an apparent topic. That disparity is very apparent to the public and leads to questions of motive and objectivity on the part of the Chair. | C |
Board adheres to Robert’s Rules of Order. One of the tenets of Robert’s Rules of Order is that only one speaker speaks at a time and that only urgent matters are cause for interruption of the speaker. There was a clear violation of that tenet by the Board Chair in interrupting Mr. Edwards. | D+ |
The Board Chair runs an orderly meeting. The chair did cut the mike for speakers who ran over their time. However, she cut off a colleague and the colleague expressed frustration at being unsupported by the other members of the board. |
C+ |
Board delegates operational and educational decisions to the professional staff. After one student spoke of harassment, the Chair asked the Superintendent if that was something he should follow up. Several other speakers requested follow-up on certain administrative items and they were not referred to the Superintendent. | B+ |
Board gives evidence of being responsive to public comment. Board seems dismissive and uninterested in public comment and does not clearly address them. They do however defend their positions. Mr. Enos did attempt to explain why he voted yes on the charter school in response to community concerns. Speakers often refer to never getting responses to emails sent to Board members. Several citizens were upset and concerned about Ms. Ziegler’s prior comments about Equality Florida. She never addressed that concern. Community members express feelings of being demeaned when a board member comments that the public really does not understand an issue. |
D+ |
Additional Comments:
It is apparent that individuals speaking at the Board meetings have done extensive research on topics brought before the Board. The time and effort put into that research is apparently never recognized by the collective board. In fact, it appears as though it is summarily dismissed.
Also while most board members state publicly that they want to keep politics out of the Board room, at least two of the board members at this meeting proposed the appointment of district committee members that gave the public the impression of political placements. Whether valid or not, the mistrust grows.
Mr. Edwards made it clear in the board member comments at the end of the meeting that he does not feel support by his fellow colleagues. He also said he felt the board attorney did not support him. This is a concern.
Recommendations:
If the Board truly wants to keep politics out of the board room, the board individually and collectively need to be aligned around being non-partisan in its decisions and act accordingly. Seeding mistrust with direct actions that initiate public skepticism is keeping the district from moving forward.
The board needs to find a way to address the concerns raise in public comment, even if it’s only to say they will give the issue further study or to thank them for the research the public has done on various issues.
If at all possible, Ms. Ziegler should remain in her seat during board meetings. She has left in the past two meetings which might give the impression that the public comments are unimportant.
Submitted by: Sarasota League of Women Voters School Board Observer Corps.
Another good SCAN meeting on March 21st brought out many concerned about the Celery Fields, as well as others whose neighborhoods are under duress from developer proposals, including Heritage Oaks and the North Venice Neighborhood Alliance, Siesta Village, Sylvan Lea, Old Miakka, and more.
At this meeting, Susan Schoettle presented an overview of the planning process -- we'll have a .pdf file of her power point presentation that all will have access to. And engineer Steve Suau spoke of the new flood maps that will be made public March 27. Many who will hear from their banks that they must purchase flood insurance -- but the maps will in many cases be inaccurate. Homeowners will need to do a map amendment to correct the errors.
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Rob Wright speaking at the Nature Center 3.21.24 |
Siesta Key:
Many attended an online neighborhood workshop regarding a proposed mega-hotel from Gary Kompothecras near the south Siesta Key bridge on Wednesday, March 20. Many on the call asked penetrating questions showing they have closely studied the plan, the proposed parking, the site, the height of the proposed hotel and much more.
Two new stories from the News Leader:
Benderson revises proposed Comprehensive Plan amendments crafted to permit high-rise hotels on Siesta Sarasota News Leader
County Commission agrees to pay Ramirez $170,000 and second set of litigants $101,278.20 to wrap up hotel lawsuits filed in 2021 Sarasota News Leader
Hotel proposals seek reversal of Siesta Key legal victories after two-year court battle Herald Tribune
Celery Fields:
Letter to Parks Director Nicole Rissler
Old Miakka
At the March 21 SCAN meeting at the Audubon Nature Center, Mike Hutchinson said he and Eileen Fitzgerald will appeal the latest court ruling that did not find a problem with Rex Jensen and Pat Neal paving the rural heritage area of East Sarasota County.
Letter to the County Commission concerning the history of Old Miakka from Becky Ayech.
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Old Miakka Schoolhouse |
And in the city:
CityPac will hold a candidate forum for city commission candidates. City residents are also concerned with overdevelopment, strange planning, and insider dealing. The forum at Selby Library is open to all. It's on Thursday, March 28 at 5 pm.
CityPac invites City of Sarasota Commission candidates to appear at Selby Forum.
Will they?
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l to r: Debby Trice, Mayor Liz Alpert, Erik Arroyo, Kyle Battie, Jen Ahern Koch |
March 28, 2024
City Commission Candidate Forum
CityPAC is hosting a “job interview” with candidates who have filed to run for a seat on the Sarasota City Commission in the 2024 general election.
The candidate forum will be held at the