Showing posts with label medred. Show all posts
Showing posts with label medred. Show all posts

Thursday, August 24, 2017

One or four things we learned at the Celery Fields Hearing

Update: Excellent, detailed report on the Board Hearing by Rachel Hackney in the Sarasota News Leader.*

The award-winning (and quite tall) attorney hired by James Gabbert to push through his waste proposal started the August 23rd hearing by reminding us all that emotion and sign waving do not count. Only the facts count, William Merrill III said.

One man's definition of "fact" is not another's.

In arguing to approve the Gabbert proposal, Commissioner Mike Moran kept using the phrase "fact-based." 
Moran had listened to 81 presentations from a wide spectrum of county residents, many of whom brought professional expertise -- environmentalists, wildlife managers, an epidemiologist, a pulmonologist, a city planner, a land use attorney certified in air pollution -- as well as daily, lived empirical experience of the area in question, its traffic, its road conditions, and so forth. 
Commissioner Moran dismissed all of this testimony from the public as not "fact-based." He failed to mention the Findings of Fact issued by the Planning Commission after it studied Gabbert's proposal in depth. Mr. Moran curiously seemed to find only the presentations of Mr. Gabbert and Bo Medred "fact-based." 
This despite the fact that not once did the applicant adduce independent scientific documentation in support of his repeated assurances that this 16-acre, unenclosed concrete-pulverizing waste plant would be noiseless, pure, and have no impact on traffic and roads.

Identifying facts requires one to pay attention

From the fresh-squeezed brainpan of Jacob Ogles:
TST Ventures officials said the facility would be state-of-the-art and generate minimal traffic or environmental disruption.
Neither Mr. Ogles, nor Commissioner Moran, nor anyone else seemed bothered by Mr. Gabbert's statement that he would be using virtually the same spray devices on his new, proposed dump which he used on the Bee Ridge Landfill that closed in 1998. You can only squeeze facts so far. State of what art, Mr. Ogles?



Bob Wachter doesn't own a Barcalounger.

Wachter spoke near the end of the hearing as is his custom, showed a map where he owns property. I'm the nearest property to the site and I'm not worried about this industrial waste facility, he said. Fearless Bob! Commissioner Detert called him back to the podium. "Is your property commercial or residential?" She asked, adding, "Is this where you have your Barcalounger and TV?"

"I don't have a Barcalounger," said Wachter, before concede the building was not his home, but rather, an industrial warehouse.
It has been noted that if Gabbert's dump were approved, other neighboring property would also seek special exceptions for heavier industrial uses. Wachter potentially stood to gain, rather than be impaired, by the Gabbert project.

It takes a village to avert the pillage.

The extraordinary defeat of an ill-suited use of our land, despite the near total silence of county planners, land use managers, parks officials, environmental specialists, tourism counselors, business leaders, economic analysts, etc. was a close call. It came about thanks to literally thousands of hours of work on the part of multiple teams of spirited citizens loosely joined in aim and determined to "not allow this injustice to occur," as one speaker said.
It will take a great deal of work to rebalance a beaten-down local bureaucracy that has for too long been bullied into doing what it's told to do, rather than doing the work we pay them for: independently assessing the facts and all the implications of land use plans. The system has lost sight of the Big Picture, the values and legacy that once informed Sarasota.
Fortunately, those values, that legacy, continue in the people of Sarasota County.



*An unformatted version of the report can be found here.

Wednesday, August 2, 2017

Save the Date and our Celery Fields

SAVE THE DATE, AUGUST 23, 2017
August 1, 2017

The Sarasota County Commission has set aside an entire day on August 23rd to hear testimony regarding the siting of a Construction/Demolition Waste Processing Facility at Apex Rd. and Palmer Blvd. 

The issues go beyond the obvious impacts on birds, birders, recreation, traffic, air quality, water quality, nearby communities, future potentials and eco-tourism. Underlying all this is a question regarding the balance of public and private interests in land use. 

Sarasota County once had a reputation for discernment, forethought, taste, and common sense. For the past three years, one man's misguided proposal has been carefully proceeding through the paces of planning review when it never should have made it past square one. What's changed?

At stake on August 23 is public judgement and public vision. Here are a couple of links regarding planning and public interest, and some background on why this is coming to a head:


Sierra Club Response to compromises to the 2050 Comp Plan

In this email we have included:
  • important upcoming dates, we hope you will join us
  • County Commissioners' email addresses so you may contact them to voice opposition to this proposal
  • a Donate Now link for expenses that are accruing in order to fight the dump proposal. Any donation is appreciated and will be used wisely to stop the development of this dump via marketing and legal fees.

We hope you can join us on August 23 and if you can't, please continue emailing the County Commissioners' voicing your opposition to the proposed location of this dump.  Your testimony is needed and appreciated.

Respectfully,

Friends of Save Our Celery Fields

Rally, August 23, 2017 @ 8AM

A peaceful protest will begin at 8 p.m. in front of the BOCC building on the Ringling Boulevard sidewalk.

Please bring signs, we will have some signs on hand but colorful signage is encouraged.

PARKING: Public parking may be found behind the County Building, we encourage carpooling.
1660 Ringling Boulevard, Sarasota, FL 34236
County Commission Meeting 
August 23, 2017 @ 9AM
The Board of County Commission Meeting begins at 9 a.m., located in the Commissioners’ Chambers.

Mr. Medred will present the TST Recycling Dump project to the BOCC for the following:
Proposed Land Use Change for: Critical Area Plan Amendment Rezone Petition No. 17-01 to Rezone approximately 16 acres from ILW (Industrial Light Manufacturing/ and Warehousing) with Stipulations and OUR (Open Use Rural, 1 Unit to 10 Acres) to ILW with Amended Stipulations, and Special Exceptions No. 1765 to Allow a Recycling Facility in ILW Zone District.

We will have a three (3) minute opportunity to speak during public comments to the board.
If you wish to speak, look for speakers' cards. The cards are available on either side of the chamber as you walk in. Fill out the card fully, then take the card and leave it with the clerk seated to the right of the dais.

If you are interested in speaking and are unsure about what you wish to say, please view some topics for consideration below.

QUALITY OF LIFE:
  1. traffic congestion with introduction of new truck traffic to dump
  2. diminished air quality
  3. impact to home values
  4. road safety
  5. impact to Tatum Ridge Elementary children commuting by bus or by parent
  6. impact to local neighborhood traffic commute times

ENVIRONMENT:
  1. pollution will harm threatened and endangered birds, fauna, insects, fish and wildlife of park will be in harm's way with location of dump
  2. integrity of Celery Fields Regional Stormwater Facility will be impacted by additional burden of "filtering" fugitive airborne concrete particulate and leaching of dump materials
  3. birds listed as threatened or endangered remain fragile in numbers
  4. noise pollution will mask bird calls, birds use their calls to find mates

COUNTY GOVERNMENT:
  1. County failure to recognize changes to the area using antiquated zoning and land use designations going back one quarter of a century
  2. failure to recognize value of Celery Field's eco-tourism as a growing and sustainable revenue tax base for the county
  3. failure to protect the investment of county dollars ($30 Million +) invested to build the Celery Fields Regional Stormwater Facility, observation mound, bird walks, park trails and preserve area
  4. failure to adhere to Sarasota's Zoning Mission Statement that Zoning's fundamental purpose is to protect a community's health, safety and welfare.
Email the Planning Commission
  SAVE THE DATES &
JOIN US ON FACEBOOK:

AUGUST 19 @ 10AM - 12PM
Save the Celery Fields Community Protest 
Corner of Apex Road & Palmer Boulevard

AUGUST 23 @ 8AM
Save the Celery Fields Rally -
Pre-Meeting/All Day Table Outside
1660 RINGLING BLVD., SRQ, FL 34236

AUGUST 23 @ 9AM 
COUNTY COMMISSION
PUBLIC HEARING MEETING
1660 RINGLING BLVD., SRQ, FL 34236


Your Donation is Needed
to Save The Celery Fields


The Palmer East Group has been working exhaustively since January, 2017 as a group (and individually, some of us began working much earlier) to stop the threats to the Celery Fields.

The Palmer East Group has established a legal defense fund under the management of the Meadow Walk and Enclave homeowners associations. An attorney and a professional land use planner have been retained to defeat the waste site proposal. Donations have ranged from $50 to $1,000, and come from businesses, homeowners associations, and individuals. Your investment of $25, $50, $100, or more is much-needed ammunition in this fight.

An urgent threat looms as James Gabbert—via his company, TST Ventures, LLC—has petitioned Sarasota County to allow the construction of a 15-acre construction- & demolition-debris processing facility on Celery Fields lands.  Mr. Gabbert has invested "hundreds of thousands" to ensure his dump will be developed, we appreciate any amount to help with expenses to fight this horrific threat to the Celery Fields and local neighborhoods and businesses. 
EMAIL THE SARASOTA COUNTY COMMISSIONER: and let them know you oppose the sale and development of county owned lands next to the Celery Field, especially the proposed dump.

Emails to the Sarasota Planning Commission:
Michael Moran - mmoran@scgov.net
Paul Caragiulo - pcaragiulo@scgov.net 
Nancy Detert - ncdetert@scgov.net
Al Maio - amaio@scgov.net
Charles Hines - chines@scgov.net 
 If you have received this email, it is because:

1) you signed up to receive Celery Field information
2) you are a friend of one of the activists who contributed to this email
3) you signed a Celery Field petition.

If you no longer wish to receive email from Save Our Celery Field, simply respond with "Delete Me" in the subject line. 
Adrien Lucas|  941-539-9044 | SaveOurCeleryField@gmail.coml | 
STAY CONNECTED
Facebook
Adrien Lucas | Celery Fields6893 Palmer BoulevardSarasota, FL 34240 9415399044

Tuesday, June 6, 2017

The Gabbert Hearing: What's next?


The Planning Commission voted unanimously to deny all three elements of the Gabbert / Medred Proposal for a Waste Processing Plant at the Celery Fields Preserve and Bird Sanctuary. The proposal now presumably will go on for final decision by the Board of Sarasota County Commissioners.

A full transcript of the hearing is now available.

Video of the June 1, 2017 Planning Commission Hearing is here.

For more background on this issue: Tale of a Timeline: Bo Medred, Sarasota, and "Dirty Things"


CONA logo graphic
Sarasota County Council of 
Neighborhood Associations - CONA
   




    
       - monthly meeting -
  
  
       MondayJune 122017 at 7 p.m.
    



 Celery Fields  
 
-

assessment of June 1
planning commission hearing  
and - next steps

  On Monday, June 12, please join CONA for an assessment by Adrien Lucas and Tom Matrullo of the recent meeting of the planning commission, entertaining an application that would put lands considered a community treasure in danger, perhaps irreversibly. 
    
  The application arose due to a current offer to sell public lands adjacent to the Celery Fields for a construction waste processing facility, which has drawn the objections of adjacent neighborhoods, environmental groups, conservationists, and many concerned individuals in neighborhoods throughout the region. 
      
  Owners of nearby businesses, even in industrial parks, also have expressed concerns about the introduction of heavy industry near them. Allowing this type of development could disrupt every aspect of the area, provoking a massive downward spiral. 
    
  Current sale policies, devoid of county commission and public participation, as well as this application for rezoning, will be examined in the assessment. 
     
  Although the planning commissioners unanimously recommended denial of the application, the county commissioners make the final determination and they are not bound by the recommendations of their advisory board. 
     
  So the assessment will be followed by discussion of the next steps that must be taken by citizens to prepare for consideration by the county commission, when public input will be crucial for success.
     
  The issues will be examined to determine what should drive decisions about public lands and how policies may be changed to assure protection of our community treasures while making appropriate decisions about development and preservation. 
     
   Q&A will follow.

     

  See www.conasarasota.org/meetings.html for more about CONA.
            
social 6:30 p.m. -  meeting 7:00 p.m.
at the Sarasota Garden Club

neighbors helping neighbors since 1961
    

 
CONA meetings are free and open to the public as well as members of the more than seventy associations the organization represents and its individual members. Unless otherwise noted, the meetings are held at the Sarasota Garden Club, 1131 Boulevard of the Arts in Sarasota, which is at the intersection of Tamiami Trail, south of the Municipal Auditorium. Parking and the entrance are reached from Van Wezel Way. Socials precede the meetings at 6:30 p.m., the meetings begin at 7:00 p.m.  
                   
For additional information about CONA and our schedule of upcoming meetings, 
please see the CONA web site

copyright © 2016 Sarasota County Council of Neighborhood Associations 
all rights reserved