Concerned Friends of Fernandina                                

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                              Concerned Friends of Fernandina is a grassroots citizens group formed to inform and involve

                             residents wanting to preserve the small town  identity of Fernandina Beach and its natural beauty.

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Hotel Expansion at the Sadler /Fletcher area page:

  • 17 May 07 What's happening to our island??  Are we going mad?

City to redevelop beach corridors?

Zev Cohen & Associates shows 78 parcels make up the "Sadler node" or "corridor" and the Atlantic Avenue "node" that could be redeveloped. Zev Cohen says "76 percent of land has potential for redevelopment" along Sadler and "84 percent of land has potential for redevelopment" at Atlantic/South Fletcher. Source: City of Fernandina Beach

A proposal to develop a commercial "tourist/resort corridor" leading to the beaches from

Sadler Road, Atlantic Avenue and South Fletcher Avenue was first broached publicly Wednesday - though the public wasn't informed of it.

The city Planning Advisory Board heard a preliminary proposal from new Community Development Director Marshall McCrary that could lead to larger buildings and more dense development along Sadler, Atlantic and South Fletcher near two main city beach parks.

Lupita McClenning, former chief city planner who now works for Zev Cohen & Associates, and some property owners would like the city to fast-track traffic studies of the areas in hopes of increasing the size of buildings allowed on the properties.

The proposal was put forward as part of McCrary's staff report, not as an agenda item for planning board. Neither of the two agenda items mentioned what turned out to be an hour-long discussion of the beach corridor redevelopment.

Planning board member Bob Howat remarked that since the matter was not a formal agenda item a detailed discussion and decision "under the guise of a staff report" was not appropriate.

"We should hear from the entire population. ... The format has to be open to the entire city," Howat said.

But board Chair Mark Bennett did not stop the discussion, and attorney Valerie Faltemier - sitting in for just departed city attorney Debra Braga - did not object.

McClenning told the planning board she met previously with McCrary about the idea of expediting the traffic study. "We wanted to get direction from the board," she said.

McClenning told the board the study would involve traffic in the vicinity of 78 parcels totaling 51 acres.

A slide presentation prepared by Zev Cohen concludes that "76 percent of land has potential for redevelopment" along Sadler and "84 percent of land has potential for redevelopment" in the Atlantic/South Fletcher area.

But one limit on the intensity of development allowed is the maximum "floor area ratio," which is lower for commercial properties outside downtown Fernandina Beach. The city could change that with an overlay for the two areas.

Traffic studies are needed because the state Department of Community Affairs requires the city to demonstrate that raising the floor area ratio can be justified by a capacity to handle more traffic.

A citywide study could take months, however. "Knowing that time is of the essence ... do you want to wait until a full-blown study of the city is done?" McCrary asked the planning board, or "do you want to just look at one area or some areas of the city?"

Lowell Hall, representing the Myrtle Hall Trust, which owns the southwest corner of Sadler Road and South Fletcher Avenue, asked the board to hurry the Sadler study, even offering to pay for it. "I do have a clock ticking," Hall said.

   

Hall had plans for a hotel on his corner, but is currently restricted to a 6,033-square-foot building.

"First of all, I'm real in favor of intense development in certain areas," said planning board member David Beal. "Development needs to be grouped. . . . Let's go ahead and look at these two areas where we need to be more intense."

Beal noted there are three hotels in the Sadler Road area already, with more on the way. Marriott has plans for a hotel west of the Amelia Trace assisted living facility on the north side of Sadler Road. Another hotel is planned for property west of the Cedar River Seafood restaurant south of Sadler Road.

"Isn't it true if you just study this one little segment it would turn out more favorable?" asked board member Marilyn Williamson about the traffic study.

"Of course," replied McCrary, adding that the city's current levels of service are in the comprehensive plan. "(But) my preference would be to do the whole city."

 

"We are a whole lot more informed now than we were before," said member Eric Bartelt after the board decided that McCrary should provide it with more material and place the item on a future agenda.

"I'd prefer to come back," said McCrary. "I just wanted to get the ball rolling tonight."

McCrary was promoted to his new job last week. He has been with the city eight months, moving from senior planner to interim director after director Jeffrey Salter quit in March.

 

 

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  • 17 May 07  And now again for the fourth time!

        You can help by writing your objection to SJRWMD saying NO to project application 4-089-87067-2 

           (re-read below)

  • 19 Nov 06   Perpall Hotel Project on Sadler (Old Fairfield /Marriott) update 

    For the third time around now there is an attempt to build a hotel/parking lot on the south side of Sadler Rd. just west of the Cedar River Restaurant.
     
    This project has been soundly defeated twice in the past ten (10) years, twice rejected by the PAB with unanimous votes, once by the City Commission with a unanimous vote, and "withdrawn" by the Developer from a City Commission meeting when faced with certain, and probably unanimous, vote to reject.  This "withdrawal" is apparently what left the barn door open for a renewal of the project with (SJRWMD) St. Johns River Water Management .

     

    (www.sjrwmd.com). The Application No. is 4-089-87067-2 and it's labeled "Perpall/Sadler Road Project".
     
    We've been told by SJRWMD that citizens formally registering concern is the best hope of derailing this project.  The way to do this is a simple phone call to Robert Thompson, 904-448-7901 or Cara Perron at 904-448-7921 and/or an e-mail to applicationssupport@sjrwmd.com  with copy to cperron@sjrwmd .
     
    All you need say is that you're concerned about that wetland strip along Sadler Road, it is absolutely essential drainage on this barrier island of ours etc., and ask to be kept personally informed. That way you'll be put on a mailing list for anything happening. The identifying Permit No. for this parcel (3-lots) of land (300 ft.-by-400 ft.) is     4-089-87067-2.
     

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  • 25 Jan 06  Three hotels proposed near Sadler     

                                                                                                                 A rendering of The Cabanas, a 30-room hotel proposed to

                                                                                                                 replace Hall's Beach Store and the Hammerhead bar.

News-Leader

Fernandina Beach Commissioners will consider whether to approve three hotels proposed for the Sadler Road and South Fletcher Avenue area, including one where Hall's Beach Store is now and another just north of Slider's restaurant.

Proposed hotels

-- Sadler Estates Subdivision, 3.1 acres east of Drury Road and northwest of Amelia Trace Court, 150-room full-service hotel with restaurant, Paul Charles Burns, Mark and Dixie Manning, owners

-- The Cabanas, 1.11 acres off First Avenue and Sadler Road, 30-room hotel, Lamar and Nancy Corley, Sharon and Lowell Hall and Myrtle Hall, owners.

-- Seaside Lodges, 1.53 acres at 1940 South Fletcher Ave. just north of Sliders restaurant, three-lodge concept with 15 to 18 suites, Frank Kuitems of Phoenix Investments, owner.

The city's Planning Advisory Board and planning staff have recommended approval of the applications, which included requests for conditional use and special use permits and rezoning.

The planning board voted unanimously to approve a conditional use and zoning change for Sadler Estates, a 150-room full service hotel and restaurant near Amelia Trace Court. Property owners sought to combine four lots and expand a conditional use, granted for a hotel in 1996, to include all parcels.

The board voted 5-2 to recommend conditional use approval for The Cabanas, a 30-room hotel where Hall's Beach Store and the Hammerhead bar is now.

It also voted 5-2 to approve conditional and special use permits for Seaside Lodges, a 15- to 18-suite three-lodge project on the beach adjacent to Slider's.

Board Chair Mark Bennett and Vice Chair Paul Condit voted against the Cabanas and Seaside applications.

We have three applications today that revolve around hotels on Sadler, all within a one-mile circle," Condit said. "Does this create overcapacity?"

Condit asked if a market study or other data could show that more than 200 rooms are needed in the area.

Full hotel capacity is not currently used, he said, based on what he has observed at one hotel near the proposed sites.

"What happens around here is that everybody competes for the same pool. It drags people from one place to the other," Condit said. "The strip malls are doing this. They're taking people out of downtown."

If the Hampton Inn downtown is no longer able to attract guests, he said, "It would make this place a ghost town . . . So I have some real anxiety about adding 200-plus rooms in this area."

"Whether or not the marketplace can accommodate hotel rooms is really not your planning advisory job," attorney Jeffrey Tomassetti told the board.

Tomassetti represents O & S Development, potential buyer for Sadler Estates. The proposed project is a full-service "bridge between the high-end resort marketplace and the drive-in, stay the night and leave" market, with an on-site restaurant, Tomassetti said.

But the planning board's responsibility "is to understand in total what the impact of all this is on the island," Condit said.

Noise and traffic near the roundabout "is extreme," said Lynn Williams, a resident of South Fletcher Avenue. "I certainly think that you can look at it from the standpoint of what the impact of traffic is," he said, adding, "Three hotels, down in that corner, all funneling in and out of the roundabout, will make a mess."

According to the planning staff reports, none of the proposed projects will "create or excessively increase traffic congestion or otherwise affect public safety."

Nassau County's latest traffic concurrency spreadsheet indicates the projects have enough evening peak hour trips remaining "before falling below its adopted level of service," the report said.

"Downstream" the pattern of converting hotels into condominium hotels or entirely into condominiums, "might well hold here," Williams said.

Because the Sadler Estates property is not in the coastal high hazard area, there is no need "to have worries about residential development," Tomassetti said. "This is a genuine hotel with a restaurant . . . with no intention to convert to anything."

"We look to the future 20 and 30 years out and we have that responsibility to do that," board member Bill Conger said.

"You put three lodging arrangements within a couple hundred yards of each other. Does that have a tendency to all of a sudden start getting to be like Ocean City, Md., . . . or Virginia Beach?" he said.

"We have the responsibility for the health, welfare and safety of the citizens of . . . the city, which is certainly half of the island," Conger said. "We need not just look at today. We have to look down the line."

The proposals for The Cabanas and Seaside Lodges were presented by Lupita McClenning of Zev Cohen & Associates, a planning firm hired by the owners. McClenning is an alternate member of the city planning board. She did not vote on the proposals.
 


gjenkins@fbnewsleader.com

 

 

  • 17 Jan 06 Fairfield /Marriott update 
Good news, at least in the case of the Sadler Road Fairfield Inn proposal for permitting construction of a three (3) story hotel on Sadler Road just West of the Cedar River Restaurant . The project entailed getting a "Conditional Use" on property zoned C-1. The PAB had voted 7-0 against the project which was never heard by the City Commission due to last-minute "withdrawal" by the developer.
 
The St. John's River Water Management District on Jan. 13 voted an "Administrative Denial" to the still pending request. If the SJRWMD had voted otherwise, I "suspect" that the developer would have simply renewed their request with the City. 
 
One lesson learned is that citizens must formally register "interest" in pending projects with both the SJRWMD, and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, in order to be kept informed. Both entities were very good with us on this.  It also means that we'll be able to keep some trees on Sadler.  Cheerfully,

 Tom Martin, Fernandina Beach

 

  • 19 Dec 05  Update

In opposing that Pepall/Sadler Road request for a "conditional use" hotel construction on the south-side of Sadler Rd., just west of the Cedar River Restaurant, the process continues with the St. Johns River Water Management District  ( www.sjrwmd.com)  only now, belatedly (?), recommending an "Administrative Denial" of the permitting request with a Public Hearing for the denial being held  by the "District Governing Board" scheduled in Palatka on Jan. 10  at 1 P.m. at the SJRWMD Executive Building.  Any further background that might interest CFOF, and allies, can probably be gotten from their website (www.sjrmwd.com). ( I remind you that this, and an earlier similar proposal, were denied by both the City PAB , and the City Commission, unanimously , after lengthy hearings with vigorous citizen participation). BUT, it still "ain't over".
 
I was officially informed by SJRWMD that  " . . .there is a possibility that the project may be pulled from the agenda and the review process resumed"
 
Tom Martin, Fernandina Beach

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  • 17 Jun 05

New hotel on Sadler Road is still a bad idea
 

For seven months now I have been worried that the proposal to build yet another three-story hotel on Sadler Road might somehow, against all reason and common sense, get the green light by our city representatives.

I was worried in January when it first appeared on the Planning Advisory Board's (PAB) schedule, but the city removed the matter from that meeting. It seems they had not sent out notification letters to residents affected by the proposed project, as they were required to do.

I was also worried the following month, when it was listed as one of the matters to be discussed at February's PAB meeting. At that meeting, a large contingency of concerned citizens was turned away two hours into the process when the developer was allowed to "table" his application at literally the last minute (it would appear the applicant didn't like the "lay of the land" at that meeting).

My worries continued in March when the Sadler hotel project was once again scheduled to go before the PAB. One day before the scheduled meeting the developer "withdrew" his application. The city staff report, which is prepared by the Planning Department and is available to the public on the city's web site, had recommended to the PAB that they disapprove the applicant's request. It would seem that since once again things weren't going his way, the applicant withdrew his application and the matter was removed from the schedule for the third time.

We then have a dry spell for two months (no worries) in which there was no sign of the developer or his application. Was it possible that the developer had finally gone away? Hardly. The developer seems to have been diligently working behind the scenes, since he and his hotel proposal are now back. Incredibly the Sadler Hotel issue showed up yet again on the PAB's June 8 scheduled meeting.

There's a twist this time though. The city Planning Department has now decided this is a great idea and is recommending to the PAB that the developer be allowed to go forward with the construction of his hotel.

As previous letters and articles appearing in the News-Leader have pointed out, the hotel would be built on wetlands located on Sadler Road. If you read the latest city staff report prepared by the Planning Department, this reversal of opinion seems to be largely based on the fact that a private company, hired by the developer, has told the city that the wetlands are "of no significant functional value."

At first I was worried all over again. Especially since the St. Johns Water Management District and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the state and federal agencies that actually designated these lots as wetlands, and repeatedly requested information on the properties and plans for a hotel from the developer, never received the information. But then I thought hey, the city Planning Department knows what it's doing, right?

Well, maybe not. The city canceled the PAB hearing yet again (fourth time), one day prior to the meeting. It seems the city Planning Department had neglected to arrange posting of the properties with notices of the meeting, as required.

There are many reasons why the Sadler Road hotel project is a bad idea, and the wetlands issue is one of the biggest. But it seems to me that other, equally important issues are at play here. We all (city staff included) need to look at the developers' dubious actions in pursuing this project, the adverse effects this proposal would have on the residential communities that adjoin or are in close proximity to these lots and the precedent that would be set in allowing a developer to get around in-place, protective C-1 zoning in order to maximize his profits.

In 1995 there was an attempt to put a hotel on this very same site. That proposal was met with a recommendation of disapproval by the PAB and unanimously rejected by the city commissioners. The following comments were put forward by the commission in their decision and are a matter of public record:

-- The proposed use will create a drainage problem.

-- The proposed use will adversely affect property values.

-- We find that it would not be advantageous to the community or the neighborhood.

-- It is a violation of the land development regulations and the comprehensive plan.

This is the same type of project on the exact same spot. Given those facts it is hard to fathom why the Planning Department would put forth an opinion to the PAB that this is a good idea. I can only hope that when the PAB and the city commissioners finally meet on this matter, they will do the right thing for the community, as did previous commissioners, and reject this proposal.

The city has rescheduled the matter of the Sadler Road Hotel (again) to go before the PAB on Wednesday at 6 p.m. It seems that some developers count on delay and inconvenience to wear down opposition to their proposals. Please try to attend Wednesday night and voice your opinions and concerns, if any, on this proposal.

 

  • 17 Jun 05

The 1995 City Commission hearings on this matter  were exhaustive, and definitive, rejecting the proposal unanimously  (in part) for reasons stated below:
 
-  "The proposed use will adversely affect property values"
 
-  "We find that it will not be advantageous to the community and the neighborhood"
 
-  "It is a violation of the LDR and the Comp Plan"
 
 _ " . . .granting a conditional use will adversely affect the public interest of health, safety and  welfare .     (and) that property values would be adversely impacted ".
(Sept. 13, 1995; Minutes available at City Hall)
 
Commissioners were Bob Rogers, Charles Albert, Greg Roland,  Ron Sapp, and A.J. Smith (R.I.P.)  We hope to get them involved , even A.J., maybe!, in defending their original decision which the City Planning Dept. will be asking the PAB to reverse at their meeting on June 22nd, a week  from Wednesday.
 
On the basis of evidence, and this solid precedent,  along with strong citizen support, we feel we can "turn this worm"
Former City Commissioners Charles Albert, Bob Rogers, Ron Sapp, and Greg Roland, have all gallantly, and affirmatively, stepped forward to publicly oppose this proposal. A new twist, no ?
  •  13 Jun 05
Attorney Clyde Davis has already served a formal "Request for Judicial Notice" on the City, that was distributed to the PAB today, that cites not only the wetlands question but, also, the matter of its impact on housing values, the adverse affect this proposed hotel might have on housing values, and that "The proposed use would be a violation of the land development regulations (LDR) and the City's Comprehensive Land Use Land Use Plan.'
 
"Granting a Conditional Use (for a hotel on the site) would adversely affect the public interest and would adversely affect affect property values of adjacent areas. It would not be advantageous to the community and the neighborhood"
  •  8 Jun 05  (Meeting cancelled at last minute)   Now shows on the Jun. 22nd meeting agenda
  • 8 Jun 05  PAB Hearing              

 

Yet another Planning Advisory Board (PAB) Public Hearing scheduled (Jun 8th., 6 P.M. at City Hall) to measure citizen response to a recurring developer request to construct a Hotel on Sadler Road, just West of Dairy Queen.

A similar request was unanimously rejected in 1997 by both the PAB and the City Commission.  It was on the PAB Agenda for January this year and then postponed by the City due to lack of public notification.  At the February PAB meeting it was unilaterally “tabled” at the request of the developer some two hours into the meeting.  In March it was “withdrawn” from the Agenda at the request of the developer.  Please note the “last-minute” timing.  A tactic to discourage public interest and participation ???

It’s necessary to demonstrate to the PAB, and to the City Commissioners that, even in the face of these tactics, we mere citizens do care about the impact of a hotel on the South side of Sadler Road, and the impact it will have on our communities, on our home values, on our flood protection and insurance rates, on our everyday lives.

Consider for yourself the impact of a three story neon-lit 83-room hotel with standard 45-ft. parking lot lighting, not to even mention the environmental concerns such as drainage and wetlands. Previous plans showed the parking lot to be at a higher elevation than the surrounding community. Our natural drainage system, from south-to-north, resists running uphill.

Unfortunately, a non-participating public is chalked-off as an assenting public . . . . .

 

PLEASE try to attend this PAB Public Hearing on Wednesday, June 8 – your attendance will make a difference.

 

Tom Martin

261-7029

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  • 9 Feb 05 PAB Hearing

ZONING ALERT!

 

Say NO to:

 

* Another big hotel on Sadler Road

* More drainage problems for streets and homes islandwide

* High-intensity parking lot lighting (directly impacting residents of First Avenue, Forest Ridge, Amelia Landings, Ocean Landing, Pirates Bay, and Lakewood)

 

 

Attend the City Planning Advisory Board (PAB) meeting Wednesday, Tabled to Mar. 9!

 

HEAR THE DETAILS before it’s too late.

 

Time:   6:00 pm

City Hall, 204 Ash Street

 

FACTS:   

 A developer wants to build a three-story, 83-room Fairfield Marriott Hotel on the Sadler, next to the Cedar River Restaurant.             

 Current zoning does not allow this; the developer seeks a zoning exception.  The PAB and the City Commission both overwhelmingly denied an identical request in 1995.

 

ENVIRONMENTAL CONCERNS:

§         The hotel would sit astride a natural creek and lake, part of the vital Egan's Creek drainage system. (The developer is calling the creek a “ditch.")

§         Permission is being asked to destroy these wetlands and “mitigate” the damage to our island by preserving wetlands elsewhere -- not on Amelia Island.

§         Hotel parking lot would be at 11 feet elevation. Many residential homes nearby are well below that level. 

§         U.S. Corps of Engineers and St. John's River Water Management District both have asked the developer for more details. Longstanding requests remain unanswered. 

 

 

A large group at the PAB, and again at the City Commission meeting can get the message across to City Government to stand firm against this threat.

 

Feb. 9 at City Hall -- your presence will make a difference!

 

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  • 17 Dec 04  Changing the Rules  (Viewpoint from News-Leader)

I would like to bring to the attention of your readers yet another attempt by local developers to set aside current zoning regulations and land designations for their financial gain. The affected properties consist of three undeveloped pieces of land, part of which are designated as "wetlands," and are located toward the eastern end of Sadler Road.

The developers currently have applications on file with both the St. Johns Water Management District and the U. S. Army Corps of Engineers seeking permission to fill in the wetlands. They also have a hearing date of Jan. 12 before our city Planning Advisory Board. The purpose of the hearing is to begin the process of altering the permitted uses for the properties. This will be the initial step to convince the city to allow construction of a three-story 83-room hotel.

I have watched in dismay as more and more island land is cleared and developed in a manner that puts profit and greed first, concern for our ecology and quality of life a distant second. This particular proposal has literally "hit me where I live." My property and home back up to the proposed hotel site. I have been in this home for nearly eight years and have enjoyed the relative solitude that these woods and wetlands have provided, as well as the wildlife that inhabit them. Raccoons, rabbits, red-tailed hawks, herons, possum, armadillo and other wildlife currently inhabit this land. They will all be gone if the developer gets his way. Gone too will be the quality of life that my neighbors and I have enjoyed in our residential development. Along with the loss of woods, wetlands and wildlife, we can look forward to increased traffic and noise, drainage problems and 24-hour high-intensity lights to illuminate parking lots.

I knew when I purchased my house that the properties in question were designated C-1 commercial and that at least part of this land would surely be developed someday, especially the tracts not designated as wetlands. I have no problem with responsible development. The problem I have is when developers seek to change the rules in the middle of the game. Just as I knew when I purchased my property what could and could not be done on these tracts, so did the developer. One of the commercial ventures that is expressly not permitted on these properties is the construction of a hotel.

A number of years ago, developers attempted to put a hotel at this same site. That attempt was soundly rejected by the residents of Amelia Island and by our city officials. What has changed since then that would make it desirable to allow such a project now? If anything, it would seem it has become even more imperative that we nip plans for this type of overdevelopment in the bud. Do we need another mega-hotel on the island at the expense of our island's ever-diminishing natural habitat and quality of life?

If you would like to voice opposition to this project you may e-mail St. Johns Water Management District (application #4-089-87067) and the US Army Corps of Engineers (application #2003-9595) through their respective web sites, reference the pertinent application number and ask to be registered as an objector. The city Planning Advisory Board hearing on Jan. 12 is open to the public .                                                                                                                                                      

                                                                                                  USACE Contact:  Beverlee.A.Lawrence@saj02.usace.army.mil

                                             SJRWMD  Contact: Cara Perron  (904) 448- 7902   

                                                                                       

                                                                  _____________**_____________

  • 30 Nov 04   Proposed Fairfield/Marriot on Sadler   (excepted from  Sierra Club website)
DEVELOPER WANTS A CONDITIONAL USE FOR AN 83 ROOM HOTEL IN A C-1 ZONE Most affected would be First Avenue, Ocean Landings, Amelia Landings Residents, Pirates Bay and Lakewood.  

It was confirmed on Thursday (Nov. 17) that this matter of a 3-story, 83 room, Fairfield/Marriott Hotel will be heard by the City Planning Advisory Board (PAB) on Wednesday, Jan. 12. It was also confirmed that this PAB Hearing has been scheduled prior to any approvals by the U.S. Corps of Engineers, or the St. John's River Water Management District, an optional, but highly dubious & questionable, practice on the part of the City.

Silence on the part of the community will be read either as assent, or indifference. We urge you to call the following agencies to register your interest, and to ask that you, be kept informed as an interested party as a singular concerned citizen/taxpayer.

1. The St. John's Water Management District has a pending application (#4-089-87067) for the study of potential drainage/flooding problems You can tract this at www.sjrwmd.com or by more simply telephoning (904) 448-7902/730-6270, a Cara Perron being the responsible engineer.

This department is involved with drainage/flooding problems that the project might cause. Most of us see this as "considerable", just look at your flood insurance rate.

2. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (www.saj.usace.army.mil) project listed as File #2003-9595 with a Bev Lawrence as project officer, TEL: (904) 232-2517. They have been "reviewing" the matter since March and are primarily concerned with "environmental" matters. particularly the suggested exchange of wetlands from somewhere up along the St. Mary's River for the wetlands on Sadler Rd. REMEMBER THIS WETLAND IS ON A BARRIER ISLAND; HOW CAN PRESERVING OR CREATING WETLANDS OFF ISLAND BENEFIT OUR NATURAL ISLAND ENVIRONMENT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Any zoning exception (i.e. conditional use) is a barn door opening that, in reality, is a firm legal "precedent", and there goes that totality of a C-1 zoning barrier for the communities south of Sadler.

The hotel developer currently has property rights on three lots that include 17-specific development options, i.e "Permitted Usages", that are community friendly. We are not making an intrusion on his property rights; he's making an intrusion on our property rights by attempting to change established zoning despite serious flood/drainage/environmental/building height  and other concerns.

Please take the time to make the calls and to involve yourself.

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Last updated: May 14, 2008.