
The news arrived over the weekend, hours after Florida Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) cited “overwhelming interest” in announcing plans to reschedule meetings about development at state parks.
“We did not understand the local community landscape and appreciate the clarity. We will not pursue building in the beloved [park],” Tuskegee Dunes—which claimed that it was going to donate proceeds from the golf courses was supposed to “support military and first responders’ families”—told Florida Trident.
Proposals for Anastasia State Park in St. Johns County, in part, call for not just pickleball and disc golf, but a 350-room hotel. A “lodge” of the same size is proposed at the panhandle’s Topsail Hill Preserve State Park. Martin County’s Dickinson State Park was targeted for three golf courses.
But reporter Max Chesnes of the Tampa Bay Times (TBT) asked state officials if Sunday’s news meant that DEP was abandoning the idea of golf courses altogether or just involvement from Tuskegee Dunes. The state did not respond as of last night, and DEP has also not said if there are any other changes to plans at parks where “lodges,” pickleball and disc golf have been proposed.
There’s also been no update on the rescheduled meetings originally set for Tuesday, Aug. 27.
The Palm Beach Post noted that there’s not a lot of information on Tuskegee Dunes, which hasn’t even launched a website. The Post added that Ryan E. Matthews lobbies on behalf of Tuskegee Dunes Foundation, which shares an Oklahoma address with another veterans group, Folds of Honor.
Last year, Folds of Honor lobbied Florida lawmakers about building a golf course on Dickinson State Park, according to TBT.
Matthews spent four months in 2017 as interim secretary of DEP under former Gov. Rick Scott, six years after the former governor had to back down from plans to build an RV park at Honeymoon Island.
Over the weekend, activists lined the streets outside state parks, urging lawmakers to reject proposals to develop. On A1A in North Florida, a line stretched on both sides of the entrance to Anastasia State Park.
Smart, from the Florida Springs Council, was also at the Anastasia island protest where he was in awe of hundreds of people defying partisanship to protect the state park.
“Almost every car and truck that passed by was honking in support. I haven’t seen anything like it in more than a decade of environmental advocacy,” he said.
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This article appears in Aug 22-28, 2024.
