I've been covering this story since 2006, when I exposed this outrage in The Collective Press.
Here are the Record's 96 words, followed by the full story with online comments:
- Commissioners moved a few ordinances to second reading that will assign land use, zoning and archaeological zone designations to the former Whispering Creek proposed development on Lewis Speedway north of St. Augustine High School. The site includes Native American artifacts. The development did not come to fruition and is now in the hands of a bank. The agreements provide for protection of the artifacts and an updated study of the site to see if more protection is needed – an archaeological investigation was finished in 2003. The ordinances will come back to the commission for further review.
City of St. Augustine notebook: Commissioners start plan to repair Municipal Marina
By Sheldon Gardner
Posted Feb 15, 2018 at 7:24 PM
Updated Feb 16, 2018 at 6:42 AM
St. Augustine commissioners moved ahead on several initiatives this week.
Commissioners supported developing a plan to spend about $3.5 million to repair the St. Augustine Municipal Marina from hurricane damage and also strengthen it to withstand up to a Category 2 hurricane. The plan will come back to the commission for further consideration. City officials expect to get Federal Emergency Management Agency reimbursement for some of the cost. The marina will be able to pay for the debt itself because it creates revenue through fees for things like dockage and mooring, officials said No tax dollars are spent on the marina because of the revenue it makes, said Jim Piggott, general services director.
Commissioners moved a few ordinances to second reading that will assign land use, zoning and archaeological zone designations to the former Whispering Creek proposed development on Lewis Speedway north of St. Augustine High School. The site includes Native American artifacts. The development did not come to fruition and is now in the hands of a bank. The agreements provide for protection of the artifacts and an updated study of the site to see if more protection is needed – an archaeological investigation was finished in 2003. The ordinances will come back to the commission for further review.
The city plans to spend $25,000 to bring the Urban Land Institute into the city to have a panel study its wastewater treatment facility and how to deal with vulnerabilities like sea level rise.
The city also authorized selling property for $2,300 to the Florida Department of Transportation for a sidewalk to be built along the west side of U.S. 1 from the city to north of the St. Johns County offices. It could be two or more years before the sidewalk is finished.
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