Great points. For further background, read my statement to accompany StAugustGreen testimony before our St. Johns County Legislative Delegation, January 10, 2025, here: https://cleanupcityofstaugustine.blogspot.com/2025/01/save-our-parks-staugustgreen-ed-slavin.html
Strengthen the State Parks Preservation Act to protect all Florida’s public lands | Opinion
Instead of repurposing public lands, Florida should focus on expanding conservation efforts and connecting existing protected lands within the Florida Wildlife Corridor — a statewide network of conservation lands critical for biodiversity, clean water and wildlife movement.
While significant progress has been made, more than 40% of the lands within the Wildlife Corridor remain unprotected and vulnerable to development. Rather than allowing new development pressures in our parks and conservation lands, the state should prioritize acquiring more land to close these gaps and strengthen Florida’s conservation network.
To provide additional long-term protections to SB 80/HB 209, lawmakers should:
- Apply protections to all conservation lands: State forests and wildlife management areas face the same risks as state parks and should receive equal safeguards.
- Clarify conservation intent: State parks and conservation lands should be explicitly designated for nature-based recreation and conservation, not altered for development.
- Remove language promoting development in “disturbed” areas: Many of these lands provide critical habitat and ecosystem benefits when restored and should not be prioritized for construction.
- Define rules for private development proposals: Loopholes in public-private partnerships allow private developers to propose projects on public lands. The bill should clarify what types of proposals are even eligible to prevent inappropriate development.
- Eliminate vague legal terms: Phrases like “to the maximum extent practicable” and “significant harm” create loopholes that could leave room for destructive activities.
- Explicitly prohibit harmful activities: Clearly listing prohibited activities will prevent misinterpretation and strengthen legal protections.
By making a good bill better, lawmakers can close loopholes, prevent future threats and ensure Florida’s public lands remain protected.
We recently helped draft a letter signed by at least 80 organizations proposing these critical improvements. You can reinforce these recommendations by contacting your state legislators today and urging them to strengthen SB 80/HB 209. Visit our website, 1000fof.org, to send a message directly to your representatives.
On Feb. 11, the Senate Environment and Natural Resources Committee unanimously voted to advance the bill during an interim committee meeting. The bill still faces two more Senate committees, a full Senate vote and action in the House before it becomes law. That means there is still time to improve it — but only if Floridians raise their voices once again.
Our public lands belong to all of us, not developers looking for new real estate opportunities. The State Park Preservation Act is a good start, but it must be stronger.
Haley Busch is communications and outreach director for 1000 Friends of Florida, a statewide not-for-profit organization that focuses on saving special places and building better communities across our rapidly growing state. To find out more, visit 1000fof.org. This opinion piece was distributed by The Invading Sea website (theinvadingsea.com), which publishes news and commentary on climate change and other environmental issues affecting Florida.

2 comments:
Protect the parks from all the Billy the Bamboozlers who want to make money off of them and establish exclusive country clubs.
The fact that Trump is president speaks to the sheer volume of mental health illness and intellectual disability in the USA. He's a symptom, and not to mention, Dementia Donaldo is delusional.💥🧠
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