Concerned Friends of Fernandina |
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Opinion page:VIEW POINT
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I think we need to pin down some realities such as: 1 No more roads can be built due to geography, topography, and finances; 2 No roads can be widened without huge property acquisition costs and damage to trees and ambiance; 3 Road densities must be realistic relative to trip times, accident rates, road rage; 4 Parking must not consume undue time to find places; 5 Impact of dwelling construction on traffic must be measured island wide and all of it must take A1A into account, with no artificial 1.5 mile radius nonsense; 6 Hurricane evacuation times must not exceed 72 hours under any circumstances and should not exceed 48 hours; 7 Current hurricane evacuation times posted by the county are false due to developer influence and must be corrected publicly; 8 The intersection of A1A and the Parkway will become one of the most dangerous in NE Florida when the shopping center is built across from the Hess station because the traffic patterns will be conflicting and confusing; 9 The streets cannot be forced to take more traffic unless they are made one way end to end or traffic is required to drive close together at speeds less than 15 mph; 10 The addition of traffic stop signs and traffic lights will cause people to race from light to light and sign to sign causing the accident rates to skyrocket; 11 As traffic densities increase and delays grow, road rage will grow exponentially and accidents and incidents will skyrocket; 12 The need for additional emergency vehicles will grow; 13 A1A cannot be widened because too many properties have been constructed too close to the road and acquisition of that land would break the bank; 14 A1A could be widened in some places by using the median strip and jersey barriers, which would be ugly as hell and ruin the appearance of the approaches to east Nassau County; 15 Widened roads will result in additional accidents from vehicles changing lanes suddenly to make right or left turns; 16 Tuscany traffic will cause a very dangerous situation on the west end of the bridge as people seek to go west from Tuscany; 17 A traffic light at Tuscany will cause problems with trucks stopping and starting, with many of them ignoring the traffic signals altogether; 18 Continued construction of townhouses and condos without more roads will cause traffic gridlock such that trips that now take 15 minutes will take 45 minutes or more, causing road rage and accidents; 19 The response times by emergency vehicles will become so long that loss of life and property damage will cause insurance problems, lawsuits, and voter rage; 20 Widening Buccaneer trail to connect Plantation South with Plantation North will cause destruction of a treasured canopy road just north of Fletcher/Gerbing roads; 21 Roundabouts for four lane roads will cause a huge increase in traffic accidents as people turn from the wrong lanes; 22 The construction of a marina on Crane Island at the end of a runway will create a potential fire hazard of monumental proportions since an aircraft crash into the marina would cause a fire that would take every fire truck for 50 miles around to put out, especially with townhouses built within just a few feet of the edge of the marina; 23 Crane Island holds the seeds of some very imaginative lawsuits against the city; 24 Crane Island impact on insurance rates could be catastrophic for the island; 25 The Plantation Corporation will certainly create the circumstances whereby the airport becomes thousands of dwelling units, including hotels, clubs, condos, and townhouses, and add perhaps hundreds of cars to the roads, causing the Plantation to demand the widening of the Parkway and Buccaneer Trail, with fatal results for the ambiance of both; 26 Impact fees charged to developers are a fraud because they are insufficient to contribute anything to road construction and thus allow the commissioners to go ape with the money for frivolous projects; 27 Nassau and Florida are broke, as is the Federal Government, so pipe dreams that the public will fund the ancillaries for developers must disappear; 28 When the roads fill up to sensible standards of density, all dwelling construction must stop, period, no matter the threat of lawsuits; 29 When the traffic limit is reached, the developers must get the word that no more dwelling construction will be permitted, period; 30 No more roads mean no more dwelling construction when the roads fill up; 31 Definitions of traffic densities must be publicly controlled and publicized so that the BOCCs cannot circumvent them with constantly changing definitions to suit developer demands. I suspect east Nassau has about 10 years before it is sent to hell by the developers and the corrupt commissioners and their corrupt staffs. So far it seems to me the people of Nassau don’t give a rat’s a-- about what is happening to their quality of life. So, they are going to get it right in the a--.
Don Jones, Fernandina Beach _____________**______________
Casting aside all the personal
aspersions and innuendo that only served to take focus
away from the real issues confronting the Egans Creek
Greenway, I wanted to respond to Joe Palmer's piece
that appeared in the May 4th
News-Leader and correct some of the
misinformation it contained. As far as the allegations of
Concerned Friends of Fernandina and the Nassau County
chapter of the Sierra Club "browbeating a timid FDOT,,
speaking for Concerned Friends, I could only wish that
we had that power and level of control. I can assure you
that if we did, the original salt marsh restoration
project would never have been expanded outside the 25
acres that was originally proposed.
Talk to Mr. Spence and see if he shares Mr.
Palmer's characterization of a timid FDOT as they have
threatened to take his property through eminent domain
if he didn't sign their agreement about fixing the
erosion in his back yard. Mr. Kavanaugh has made his
preference quite well known that the entire Egans Creek
estuary be converted to a salt marsh.
Fortunately, his view is in the isolated minority
as evidenced by the comments at the March FDOT workshop
to gauge community input where more than 80 citizens
attended and not a single person spoke in favor of a
salt marsh. Mr.
Kavanaugh also made his views known at the April city
commission meeting where he was the only person to speak
in favor of a salt marsh. It was the city commission,
not Concerned Friends or the Sierra Club, that passed
Resolution 2007-66.1 that directed FDOT to immediately
work to stop further damage as well as to develop a
permanent plan to restore the area south of Jasmine to
the forested wetland that existed prior to the salt
marsh project. It was in response to this first
directive that FDOT sought a permit from St. Johns River
Water Management District to place a back-flow device on
the Jasmine pipes to stop any further saltwater
intrusion. It is a disappointment that rather than
accept the fact that his position did not prevail and
the city's leadership has given clear direction of its
goal for the area, Mr. Kavanaugh
acted within his lawful rights and filed an objection
during the permit application process that will result
in a minimum delay of two months before the FDOT can put
the back-flow devices in place to stop any further
damage. We are confident that
SJRMWD will approve this permit at their June meeting.
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"cfof" are residents of Fernandina Beach, Florida.
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