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Clearly fogged in

(1,949 posts)
Wed Feb 17, 2021, 07:35 AM Feb 2021

These are the first of 20 coming to Collier County

I believe the plan is to add about 300k residents to Collier, nearly doubling the county's population.


Written by Senior Environmental Planning Specialist April Olson
Collier Enterprises is planning for two more villages in primary panther habitat, and they want us to pay for some of it. How can this happen, you ask? Well, it can and will happen if the Collier County Board of County Commissioners approves two new 1,000-acre villages, Longwater and Bellmar, within the Rural Lands Stewardship Area (RLSA). In addition to causing devastating impacts to the endangered panther’s last remaining habitat, the developer proposes to pass on to the County many of the costs necessary for providing the new villages with the required infrastructure and services.


https://medium.com/the-policy-team-conservancy-of-southwest-florida/developer-wants-taxpayers-to-pay-for-two-new-sprawling-villages-in-primary-panther-habitat-d53b134655c1
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These are the first of 20 coming to Collier County (Original Post) Clearly fogged in Feb 2021 OP
Collier county needs the tax revenue... Screw the panthers they don't pay taxes.... mitch96 Feb 2021 #1
It goes hand in hand with this Clearly fogged in Feb 2021 #2
Speaking of panthers Clearly fogged in Feb 2021 #4
"Speaking of panthers". Years ago I was riding my motorcycle around Immokalee Fla and mitch96 Feb 2021 #5
Riding once with a coworker near Immokolee Clearly fogged in Feb 2021 #6
Biden??? FeelingBlue Feb 2021 #3

Clearly fogged in

(1,949 posts)
2. It goes hand in hand with this
Wed Feb 17, 2021, 07:58 AM
Feb 2021

This has been in the works for quite a while, I believe there are 10 affected species on tens of thousands of acres. Links to discussions from when there were 9 developments planned have been scrubbed: now there are 20.

The Legislature identified three corridors for new toll roads, with the exact routes to be determined. The longest would run between Southwest Florida and Central Florida. The shortest would connect Florida’s Turnpike to the Suncoast Parkway. The third road would extend the Suncoast Parkway to I-10 and the Georgia state line.

A year ago, the Florida Legislature conceived a program to create three new toll roads totaling 330 miles across Florida’s hinterlands — the largest toll-road project in the country.

If nothing else, the idea was ambitious. The Legislature specified that the new tollways would be planned, designed and completed in under 10 years — by 2030. It took 11 years from the passage of a 1953 bill creating Florida’s Turnpike to build the 265 miles from Miami to Wildwood, Florida’s Turnpike mainline. The new highways would increase the turnpike system mileage by 68% from its current 498 miles (“Florida’s Turnpike Enterprise,” page 90).


https://www.floridatrend.com/article/29149/floridas-plan-to-build-330-miles-of-new-toll-roads

Clearly fogged in

(1,949 posts)
4. Speaking of panthers
Wed Feb 17, 2021, 09:34 AM
Feb 2021

The Panthers have had a tough time of late. This is a good overview.


Florida’s state animal has been listed under the Endangered Species Act since the law’s inception in 1973. The panther was once so scarce that some thought it gone altogether. When scientists discovered survivors in the 1970s and ’80s, the cats were withered and gaunt. They were so inbred that they had crooked tails and faulty hearts. Some adult males even had undescended testicles. Their population had dwindled to a couple dozen hidden away in hot Florida forests.

At the time, the Florida panther was “just hanging on by a thread,” said Deborah Jansen, a National Park Service wildlife biologist who has spent decades wandering the backwoods of Big Cypress.

Jansen, who has blue eyes and a bright, tanned face, played a storied role in bringing the panther back from extinction’s edge: She tracked them, studied them, and helped save them. She even once gave CPR to a dying panther. Last winter, Jansen and I met up at Big Cypress headquarters, hopped in her truck, and headed north toward a trail that would take us into the heart of the national preserve. During the drive, Jansen reflected on the panther’s recent history: Roughly 40 years ago, scientists began studying the panthers in earnest to determine the cause of their decline. In 1995, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the country’s famed conservation agency, introduced eight pumas from Texas into the Florida panther population to fortify its failing genes. In the 2000s, the panthers’ numbers climbed and stabilized. Jansen was there through it all.

https://theintercept.com/2021/01/24/florida-panther-collier-engangered-species-act/

mitch96

(14,664 posts)
5. "Speaking of panthers". Years ago I was riding my motorcycle around Immokalee Fla and
Wed Feb 17, 2021, 10:54 AM
Feb 2021

saw what I thought was a dead dog... It wasn't.. A Panther the color of deck shoes. Almost a dark red.. I called Fish and Wildlife and they said they would come by to collect the remains...If anything was left.. Everything gets eaten in the 'glades...
m

Clearly fogged in

(1,949 posts)
6. Riding once with a coworker near Immokolee
Wed Feb 17, 2021, 11:19 AM
Feb 2021

It was time to take a break and we agreed to stop somewhere for a beer. He insisted on going to an American bar so I led him to the casino.

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