Thursday, May 01, 2025

ANNALS OF DeSANTISTAN: Florida Senate approves bill protecting state parks from development, but it’s not a done deal yet. (Mitch Perry, Florida Phoenix, April 30, 2025)

We are all proud of our Florida House and Senate for standing up too our former Congressman from St. Johns County, Florida Boy Governor RONALD DION DeSANTIS (R-KOCH INDUSTRIES) and his Pearl Harbor style sneak attack on our state parks.  Inspiring!  We, the People, united will not be defeated. Read my January 10, 2025 Statement of our St. Johns County Legislative Delegation in support of the legislation, here: https://cleanupcityofstaugustine.blogspot.com/2025/01/save-our-parks-staugustgreen-ed-slavin.html

Florida Senate approves bill protecting state parks from development, but it’s not a done deal yet

‘This is democracy’ at work,’ said Senate sponsor Gayle Harrell.

BY:  - APRIL 30, 2025 6:59 PM

 Dunedin City Commissioner Jeff Gow (left) during a protest at Honeymoon Island in Dunedin on August 27, 2025. (Photo by Mitch Perry/Florida Phoenix)

A measure that would prevent development in state parks was passed unanimously in the Florida Senate on Wednesday, 37-0. However, the measure now must go back to the House for one more vote before it can arrive on Gov. DeSantis’ desk to be signed into law.

The State Park Preservation Act (HB 209) was filed last year by Southeast Republican Sen. Gayle Harrell following a statewide public backlash to the Department of Environmental Protection’s “Great Outdoor Initiative.”

That plan called for building lodges, golf courses, pickleball courts, and disc golf courses in nine state parks.

“This is democracy at work,” Harrell said before the Senate passed the measure.

“This was really a grassroots endeavor that came up and the participation of so many people across the aisle, every socioeconomic group, every group that you could talk to, this was the issue of the summer. I can tell you that all the demonstrations out in the hot August sun in Florida to get out there and do that to let people know that our parks are the core of who we are.”

The Florida House unanimously passed its version of the bill last week, but its Senate companion (SB 80) had not been scheduled for a vote until Wednesday, drawing concern from environmentalists that the measure wouldn’t be addressed before the legislative session was scheduled to end later this week.

(The session is expected to go beyond this week, however, with the two chambers at odds over the state budget).

Those concerns increased earlier this week when Miami-Dade Republican Sen. Alexis Calatayud added an amendment that the Sierra Club claimed in a press release was “an obvious attempt to run out the clock.”

However, Harrell gladly accepted Calatayud’s amendment on Wednesday, which included language prohibiting construction of specified sporting facilities and public lodging in state parks — listing  golf courses, tennis courts, pickleball courts, ball fields, or other sporting facilities that “may not be constructed within the boundaries of state parks.”

But her amendment also says that the state can continue to maintain or repair of “any such sporting facilities, or other facilities, existing with a state park.”

The bill requires the DEP to  report to the governor and Legislature regarding the status and operation of state parks. Additionally, the bill revises notice requirements for public meetings.

It requires individual land management plans with parcels within a state park to be developed with the input of an advisory committee. It also says that the Division of State Lands shall make available to the public an electronic copy of each land management plan at least 30 days before the public hearing required for parcels that exceed 160 acres in size and for parcels located within a state park.

Panhandle Republican Sen. Don Gaetz asked Harrell whether she could assure him that there is no “weasel word” in the bill that would “allow any kind of commercialization of our state parks now or in the future, or in any land that would be required contiguous to our state parks?”

“There’s no wiggle room for golf courses or things of that sort for that to be built within our existing state parks,” Harrell replied.

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Mitch Perry
MITCH PERRY

Mitch Perry has covered politics and government in Florida for more than two decades. Most recently he is the former politics reporter for Bay News 9. He has also worked at Florida Politics, Creative Loafing and WMNF Radio in Tampa. He was also part of the original staff when the Florida Phoenix was created in 2018.

Florida Phoenix is part of States Newsroom, the nation’s largest state-focused nonprofit news organization.

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