
This is a huge win because anytime you have land committed to any kind of conservation, chances are pretty good that development will be kept out.
In Florida, however, nothing is ever safe from developers and the biased authorities who support them.
Read the original article here in Clay Today.
Comments by OSFR historian Jim Tatum.
jim.tatum@oursantaferiver.org
– A river is like a life: once taken,
it cannot be brought back © Jim Tatum
CAMP BLANDING — North Florida Land Trust was awarded a grant of up to $105,000 from the Partnership for Gulf Coast Land Conservation to support conservation efforts within the Ocala to Osceola, or O2O, wildlife corridor.
The nonprofit land conservation organization applied for funding to support conservation endeavors to protect more than 700 acres of land within the critical wildlife corridor. The funding will assist with the due diligence efforts as NFLT pursues the acquisition of two properties totaling 103 acres and a 600-acre conservation easement.
“Our team has been in conversation with the landowners who are ready and willing to move these important lands into conservation,” said Allison DeFoor, president and CEO of NFLT. “This funding will help us complete the work we must do to protect these natural spaces because it is now or never….”
The PGCLC grant will help cover various costs, including appraisals, title and legal reviews, surveys, recording fees, and environmental assessments. Each of the three properties has been identified for up to $35,000 in funding. One is 18 acres of predominantly marshes and wetlands, once part of Big and Little Lake Johnson, used as a stopover by migratory birds. Eighty-five acres are in the Keystone Heights area in the Army Compatible Use Buffer near Camp Blanding and close to NFLT’s Milam-Smith Preserve and Gold Head State Park. This property consists of upland mixed pine areas, pasture, and wetlands, which serve as wildlife habitats for turkey, deer and gopher tortoises. NFLT partners with Camp Blanding’s ACUB program, which provides funding for protecting land surrounding the Camp Blanding training center. NFLT hopes to acquire both properties through a fee-simple acquisition and plans to restore the land.
The third property consists of 600 acres that would become a conservation easement and serve as a buffer between conservation lands and increased development. This property is about three miles east of the Northeast Florida Timberlands and Watershed Reserve Florida Forever Project and about six miles west of the St. Johns River. It is also about a half mile away from the First Coast Expressway. The conservation of the land will protect the headwaters in the Lower St. Johns Watershed and keep it safe from development, which has been increasing in the area. The land provides habitat for many rare and imperiled species, including the Florida black bear, eastern indigo snake and red-cockaded woodpecker.
