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Meetings on golf in the state park no longer in Flagler of Stuart,


Meetings on golf in the state park no longer in Flagler of Stuart,

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STUART — A public meeting about plans for golf courses and hotels in Jonathan Dickinson State Park had to be postponed Tuesday due to safety concerns. A large turnout had been expected.

Stuart Main Street, operator of the Flagler of Stuart, where the 3 p.m. meeting was scheduled to take place, told TCPalm late Friday that the meeting would be held elsewhere.

“Significant safety concerns have been identified regarding the capacity of the event,” Candace Callahan, executive director of Stuart Main Street, said by email.

State officials have been notified, she said, and “they are working on an alternative plan.”

Resistance is growing

A spokesman for the Florida Environmental Protection Agency, which was set to host the meeting despite enormous public opposition, including from state, local and federal officials, did not respond to questions about a new venue.

“There will be a golf course over my dead body in Jonathan Dickinson State Park!” Republican U.S. Representative Brian Mast of Fort Pierce posted on Facebook on Thursday.

Local residents and authorities want to stop the plans, which include the construction of hotels and three golf courses as well as the demolition of the observation tower on Hobe Mountain, which is considered unsafe.

Public angry

Thousands of people have voiced their opposition through three different channels. A Facebook group called “Protect Jonathan Dickinson State Park” had over 36,000 members four days after it was created by Jessica Namath, a former member of the Tequesta Environmental Advisory Committee.

“It’s incredibly outrageous of them to think we would be OK with this,” Namath told TCPalm on Thursday. “We already have enough golf courses polluting our water with waste, and this would be just another one in critical habitat.”

Thousands of signatures on the petition were collected by Audubon of Martin County and the Florida Wildlife Federation. The groups planned to pack Tuesday’s meeting to capacity.

A petition on Change.org against the golf courses had received over 79,000 signatures by Friday afternoon.

Officials resist the onslaught

Mast also said Friday that he and U.S. Senators Rick Scott and Marco Rubio, as well as other state and local officials, had sent a letter to the Florida Department of Environmental Protection protesting the hasty development of the park.

“The communities surrounding Jonathan Dickinson State Park are entitled to a public hearing meeting with members of the Florida Department of Environmental Protection’s Acquisition and Restoration Council (ARC),” officials said in a press release.

“It is the ARC that actually votes on whether golf courses and hotels are built in our park, and the public has a right to make their voice heard,” they wrote.

Scott was the originator of a similar idea that he tried to push through in 2011.

Outrage over limited meeting time

Mast and the others also expressed their outrage at the limited time of the planned meeting.

More: Local residents fight against golf courses in Jonathan Dickinson State Park

More: The plan to build golf courses in Jonathan Dickinson State Park is not the first time

“Currently, FDEP is proposing to hold a one-hour public comment period on Tuesday, August 27, 2024, between 3 and 4 p.m.,” the press release states. “This is absolutely ridiculous, especially since not a single one of the seven voting ARC members will be present to speak to the public.”

Mast and the others also suggested that the Florida Department of Environmental Protection hold the meeting at a location that can accommodate more people. And officials suggested holding one meeting in Stuart and one in Jupiter.

Keith Burbank is TCPalm’s watchdog reporter for Martin County. He can be reached at [email protected] and at 720-288-6882.

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