Politics
Floridians balk at DeSantis administration plan to build golf courses at state parks

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TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) — The golf course is not a threatened species in the Sunshine State — but the Florida scrub-jay is.

And advocates are warning that life for the small blue and gray birds and many other imperiled species could get much harder if Gov. Ron DeSantis’ administration follows through on a proposal to build golf courses, pickleball courts and 350-room hotels at state parks from Miami to the Panhandle.

State parks “are the last strongholds for a lot of wildlife in rapidly urbanizing communities in Florida,” said Julie Wraithmell, executive director of Audubon Florida.

“They have an outsized importance — not just to wildlife but also as places where Floridians and visitors can continue to see what Florida was like,” she said. “It’s the best of Florida.”

DeSantis has enjoyed rock solid support from the Republicans who dominate state politics. It has been rare for DeSantis to get pushback on anything from GOP lawmakers, and he has a reputation for seeking vengeance when they do.

But it appears a political line in the sand is being drawn after DeSantis’ administration announced plans this week to carve out golf courses and pickleball courts in Florida’s beloved state parks.

Unlike the issues of abortion, LGBTQ rights, race and guns that have divided voters, state parks apparently hold a place in the hearts of Floridians regardless of party. The state park system has received national recognition for years, and people are resistant to change the protected lands they enjoy.

The proposal announced by Florida’s Department of Environmental Protection to build new sports facilities, hotels and glamping sites at nine state parks across Florida has drawn a wave of opposition, not just from nature lovers and birdwatchers but also from members of DeSantis’ Cabinet, a Republican member of Congress and conservative state lawmakers. That includes outgoing Republican Senate President Kathleen Passidomo.

“Our vision (for state parks) did not contemplate the addition of golf courses and hotels, which in my view are not in-line with the peaceful and quiet enjoyment of nature,” Passidomo posted on X. “From what I know at this time, the proposal should not move forward in its current form.”

A spokesperson for DeSantis defended the plans — which are not final — and touted the administration’s investments in protecting and conserving the state’s natural resources.

“Teddy Roosevelt believed that public parks were for the benefit and enjoyment of the people, and we agree with him,” press secretary Jeremy Redfern said. “But it’s high time we made public lands more accessible to the public.”

The Department of Environmental Protection did not respond to requests for comment from The Associated Press.

All of the parks slated for development are located near heavily visited tourist destinations, including Miami, Tampa, Panama City and St. Augustine.

Florida’s state park system is a bastion of wildness in a state where vast stretches of sugar sand beaches and mangrove forests have long given way to condos, motels and strip mall souvenir shops.

Advocates say places like Topsail Hill Preserve State Park near Destin are literal beacons on a hill — the preserve is known for its 25-foot high sand dunes that tower over a stretch of the Panhandle known for its spring break destinations and military installations.

Eric Draper, a former head of the Florida Park Service, said Topsail is one of the last undeveloped stretches of Florida’s Gulf Coast.

In that part of the state, Draper said, “you can stand on the beach, you look right, you look left, and you just see a lot of condos and developments and houses. But this is one place that you can stand and look for three miles and not see any development.”

Under the new plans, Topsail would get up to four new pickleball courts, a disc golf course and a new hotel with a capacity of up to 350 rooms — a scale of development that Draper said is more in line with a conference center than a quiet beach retreat.

Another proposal is for a golf complex at Jonathan Dickinson State Park in Martin County on the state’s southeast coast north of West Palm Beach. Building the golf courses would entail removing a boardwalk and observation tower as well as relocating the residences and offices of park staff, as well as existing cabins for visitors.

A change.org petition targeting the would-be golf complex at Jonathan Dickinson had netted more than 60,000 signatures as of Thursday afternoon.

It is not the first time a Republican administration has raised the idea of leveraging more revenue from state parks by providing golf, lodging and other attractions. But past ideas were quickly dropped after public opposition.

In 2015, then-Gov. Rick Scott’s administration floated plans to allow cattle farmers to graze their herds and loggers to harvest timber from park lands.

Legendary former professional golfer Jack Nicklaus has long lobbied state officials to underwrite his push to build golf courses in state parks, efforts that fizzled following public pushback.

Wraithmell, the head of Audubon Florida, said she hopes state officials will listen to the Floridians who plan to pack public meetings next week to weigh in on the proposals.

“Absolutely there is demand for more people to enjoy state parks,” she said. “The solution is not to try to cram as many people into a park as we can …. The solution is to create more state parks.”

Politics tamfitronics ___

This story was first published on Aug. 22, 2024. It was updated on Aug. 23, 2024, to correct that there are nine state parks included in the proposal, not eight.

___ Associated Press reporter Brendan Farrington in Tallahassee contributed to this story.

Politics tamfitronics ___

Kate Payne is a corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues.

Top Stories
Newsweek: Gov. Ron DeSantis Raises Eyebrows With New Bear-Killing Law

Top Stories Tamfitronics

What’s next for Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis? First, he passed a law banning people from saying “gay” in the state, and now he’s for killing bears? Newsweek thought it was newsworthy to pick up the story of this eyebrow-raising legislation coming out of the governor’s office.

Ron DeSantis signing new law about killing bears raises eyebrows https://t.co/umTGLUK7yw pic.twitter.com/9pNWDhGaRs

— Newsweek (@Newsweek) June 23, 2024

Adeola Adeosun reports:

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis signed a controversial bill into law on Friday that allows residents to shoot bears if they perceive a threat, sparking debate and concern among wildlife advocates and others.

The legislation, known as HB 87, was signed by DeSantis on Friday without public comment. The new law, which goes into effect on July 1, permits individuals to use lethal force against bears if they believe there is an “imminent threat of death or serious bodily injury” to a person, pet, or substantial damage to a dwelling.

Defenders of Wildlife previously urged DeSantis to veto the bill and protect bears in the state. A message on its website said that the bill would legalize a “shoot first, ask questions later” approach to interacting with Florida black bears. A Change petition started by OneProtest in 2023 also demanded the bill be vetoed, claiming it “promotes a false narrative that bears are overpopulating and threaten human safety.”

A Change.org petition? It’s not like anybody can just make one up. Still, the petition has garnered 38,788 signatories.

Did @peta write this headline?

— Brendon Leslie (@BrendonLeslie) June 24, 2024

So you think it’s controversial that the law allows killing bears if they are attacking you or your children?

Did you read the law or were you just told to put out a hit piece on @GovRonDeSantis & dutifully cranked out your activist garbage?

— JW (@C130GuyBNA) June 24, 2024

Recommended

Newsweek: If a bear wants to attack you, you should not be able to defend yourself.

— Ham (@zedidutch) June 24, 2024

You don’t hate journalists enough

— MJG (@cynicalgenxdad) June 24, 2024

Really? Defending yourself from being attacked by a bear is raising eyebrows? And you wonder why corporate media is failing

— jaded tourist (@jaded_tourist) June 23, 2024

I just love how he does things to cause liberal melt-downs.

— Walt the Typicalfloridaman (@GrunchyWalt) June 23, 2024

The @Newsweek e(D)itors who write headlines didn’t think it was worth mentioning the law only permits killing a bear if in “imminent threat of death or serious bodily injury.” https://t.co/MQhpICpQ2f

— Bryan Griffin (@BryanDGriffin) June 24, 2024

Do they still employ editors? It doesn’t seem like it.

— 🐊🇺🇸Kate 🇺🇸🐊 (@KateW1970) June 24, 2024

They make it sound like he’s encouraging everyone to go out and slaughter Winnie the Pooh.

— 𝐀𝐦𝐞𝐫𝐢𝐜𝐚𝐧 𝐆𝐮𝐲 🇺🇲⚓ (@YankReb69) June 24, 2024

You know a politician is doing a great job when the best salacious headline includes them “killing bears”🤣

— American Ivan (@Am3ricanIvan) June 24, 2024

Remember back during the campaign when John Kerry asked in Ohio, “Can I get me a hunting license here?”

***

Politics
DeSantis is prepping for a wave of Haitian migrants. Advocates recount he’s grandstanding

Politics tamfitronics

DeSantis is prepping for a wave of Haitian migrants. Advocates recount he’s grandstanding

A picket migrant boat lies grounded on a reef alongside mangroves, at Harry Harris Park in Tavernier, Fla., closing one year. The U.S. Fly Guard says that since October, has it intercepted and returned about 130 migrants to Haiti. Rebecca Blackwell/AP cloak caption

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Rebecca Blackwell/AP

A picket migrant boat lies grounded on a reef alongside mangroves, at Harry Harris Park in Tavernier, Fla., closing one year. The U.S. Fly Guard says that since October, has it intercepted and returned about 130 migrants to Haiti.

Rebecca Blackwell/AP

Officials in Florida are shy the chaos and violence in Haiti will trigger a surge in migrants attempting to come support to the U.S. by boat. to this level, the Fly Guard says it has no longer considered an impress bigger in the sequence of Haitians attempting the unsafe crossing.

However Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis says he needs to be ready. He’s sending more than 250 officers and Nationwide and Voice Guard troops to the southern fragment of the remark. Some Haitian-American leaders agree with it be more about politics than preparedness.

Bigger than a half of million Haitians are residing in Florida. For a few years, the remark has been a foremost bolt spot for folk fleeing political turmoil and financial hardship on the island. Florida’s colossal Haitian-American community is carefully monitoring the crisis. Tessa Petit. who changed into as soon as born and raised in Haiti now directs the Florida Immigrant Coalitionan advocacy community. She’s been in contact with members on the island and says, “Of us in Haiti dwell in total fright. Supermarkets haven’t got meals. Persons are running out of meals. There would possibly be no electricity. Verbal exchange is extremely hard. And members dwell in dismay.”

DeSantis says the Guard troops he’s sending, along with remark legislation enforcement officers will wait on intercept any migrants who attempt to come support from Haiti to the U.S. by boat after which flip them over to the Fly Guard. “Given the yelp that is going on in Haiti,” he says, “some brutal reports which are going on, we determine to impress obvious we’re holding Floridians.”

DeSantis changed into as soon as speaking at a data conference where he signed measures to crack down on undocumented immigrants in Florida. Later that day, in an interview on Fox Info, he again spoke of the aptitude menace to Florida posed by any surge of migrants from Haiti. “We determine to be ready,” he acknowledged. “I changed into as soon as requested as of late at our press conference, ‘Why are you doing this when there has no longer if reality be told yet been an enormous influx?’ I acknowledged, ‘What are you supposed to enact, wait for it to happen?’ So, we’re inserting our resources in position so that you just can defend the remark.”

The Fly Guard says it has intercepted and returned about 130 migrants to Haiti since October. And it has no longer considered a upward thrust in interdictions for the reason that most modern violence began there.

Petit says she’s been upset by the model DeSantis and other Republicans are framing a humanitarian crisis for one of many U.S.’s closest neighbors.

“The story now is that immigrants are the enemy,” she says. “We’re the criminals. We’re the thieves. We’re the drug dealers. It is miles unlucky and sad to gaze that the remark that has the biggest Haitian community, that is how our governor is responding to it.”

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis says he’s sending legislation enforcement officers and Guard troops as a result of “given the yelp that is going on in Haiti, some brutal reports which are going on, we determine to impress obvious we’re holding Floridians.” Phil Sears/AP cloak caption

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Phil Sears/AP

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis says he’s sending legislation enforcement officers and Guard troops as a result of “given the yelp that is going on in Haiti, some brutal reports which are going on, we determine to impress obvious we’re holding Floridians.”

Phil Sears/AP

Other Republican officials are also elevating alarms relating to the menace they suspect relating to the Haitian crisis poses for Floridians. U.S. Web. Matt Gaetz and three other Republican members of Congress from Florida settle on President Biden to present an “anticipated mass migration of aliens.” Florida Sens. Rick Scott and Marco Rubio despatched President Biden a letter pointing out, “Floridians and the remainder of the American public will no longer tolerate your administration again opening the floodgates for endless, unvetted international nationals.”

Voice Web. Dotie Joseph changed into as soon as born in Haiti and represents a district in North Miami that is home to many from the island. She calls DeSantis’ focus on “being ready” for a wave of migrants “political grandstanding.” She’s one of a series of Haitian-American leaders calling on the governor to wait on end the pipeline of weapons from Florida that is serving to arm gangs on the island. A U.N. chronicle closing one year stumbled on the foremost source of firearms and ammunition in Haiti is the U.S., particularly Florida.

“If [DeSantis] wanted to send legislation enforcement to enact one thing productive as against for prove,” Joseph says, “then he would work with our federal partners to substantiate they’re serving to display hide no longer merely at our ports, however at quite so much of the private locations along the Miami River, where we know this stuff are coming from.”

And if there could be a surge in migration, Joseph says, the U.S. must take care of Haitians humanely. She’s pondering about plans outlined by a U.S. defense force legit closing week to presumably dwelling Haitian migrants intercepted at sea on the naval position in Guantanamo, Cuba. “Looking out for asylum or refugee rep is no longer one thing that is prison,” Joseph says. “It be merely. And treating members like criminals with these form of detention insurance policies, be they at Guantanamo or in numerous locations is awfully frankly, unacceptable.”

Even DeSantis acknowledges that a wave of migrants in boats would possibly presumably well no longer materialize. In most modern years, vastly more Haitians win come to the U.S. over the Southern border than by making the unsafe boat crossing to Florida.