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The History Behind this Issue
"Short hydroperiod wetlands are the type of wetlands that
have seen the greatest reduction in extent as a result of
human-induced alterations, and the greatest period of development
has occurred over the past 20 years." - Jason Lauritsen, Big
Cypress Ecosystem Science Coordinator, Audubon of Florida.
Developers, such as Mirasol, set their
sites on destroying the Cocohatchee Slough back in 2000 when
Mirasol applied for a state and federal permits to build its
residential golf course project. The original proposal to
the South Florida Water Management District and US Army Corps
of Engineers called for a regional drainage ditch.
First Mirasol Proposal in 2000 Denied
in 2005
At that time, the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency and the Cocohatchee Slough Coalition of Audubon of
Florida, Collier County Audubon Society, National Wildlife
Federation, Florida Wildlife Federation, and The Conservancy
of Southwest Florida documented that the drainage ditch had
no regional flood protection benefits. The Corps denied the
permit in 2005.
Second Mirasol Proposal Challenged
in 2006 and 2007
Mirasol’s developer reapplied shortly
thereafter to both the District and Corps, maintaining its
plans for the same golf courses and housing units (and more
then 600 acres of wetland destruction) but deleting the regional
ditch, and consequently reconfiguring the entire drainage
and stormwater system for the site. The District Governing
Board approved the revised version of the Mirasol state permit
(without the regional ditch) in October 2006.
The Cocohatchee Slough Coalition immediately
challenged this in a Chapter 120 Administrative Hearing, which
took place in April and May 2007. On July 24, 2007, Administrative
Law Judge Don Alexander issued a ruling, recommending that
the District Governing Board approve the permit on July 24,
2007. The District Governing Board has scheduled a hearing
on this Final Order for September 13, 2007 in West Palm Beach.
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