Turmoil In the FDEP

DEPbldgme In: Turmoil In the FDEP | Our Santa Fe River, Inc. (OSFR) | Protecting the Santa Fe River

 

Flawed agency that it is, the Florida Department of Environmental Protection is having trouble within.  Perhaps the  people are leaving because they have a conscience.

Pure speculation.

Read the original article here in the Tampa Bay Times, via Craig Pittman’s “Florida Newsletter” in the Florida Phoenix.

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


Florida director of state lands resigns months after predecessor

The departure marks more turmoil after a year of public lands controversy.
People gather at the entrance to Honeymoon Island State Park last August to speak and demonstrate against the proposal to add golf courses, hotels, pickleball courts, and other developments to nine Florida state parks. The proposal was later withdrawn in a year of tumult in the Florida Department of Environmental Protection. The interim director of state lands with the agency submitted a resignation letter on Tuesday.
People gather at the entrance to Honeymoon Island State Park last August to speak and demonstrate against the proposal to add golf courses, hotels, pickleball courts, and other developments to nine Florida state parks. The proposal was later withdrawn in a year of tumult in the Florida Department of Environmental Protection. The interim director of state lands with the agency submitted a resignation letter on Tuesday. [ DOUGLAS R. CLIFFORD | Times (2024) ]
Published Aug. 20|Updated Aug. 20

Less than four months after Florida’s state lands director abruptly resigned amid a controversy about the state trading away a wildlife preserve, her replacement is also stepping down.

Andrew Fleener, the interim director of state lands within the Florida Department of Environmental Protection, submitted his resignation letter Tuesday.

In it, he said the decision to leave wasn’t made lightly, but it was time to “pursue different endeavors that align with my evolving aspirations.”

The department did not announce a permanent replacement yet for Fleener. Bryan Bradner, a deputy secretary for the agency, told staff in an email that two staffers would help fill the gap until officials name a new director.

Fleener’s departure comes as this year’s state budget, signed by Gov. Ron DeSantis, directed the environmental agency to prioritize the purchase of a waterfront property of less than 5 acres in Destin for up to tens of millions of dollars, Politico Florida reported. That property was added into the budget on the last day of negotiations at the request of Sen. Jay Trumbull, R-Panama City, according to Politico.

In May, the longtime state lands director, Callie DeHaven, abruptly resigned in a handwritten note as a different contentious land deal drew national attention. State officials proposed trading away 600 acres of the Guana River Wildlife Management Area in northeast Florida to a recently formed private company.

Related: Person posed as ‘60 Minutes’ producer to hunt for info on Florida land deal

Fleener’s resignation is another sign of upheaval in the Florida Department of Environmental Protection after a year of tumult. Last summer, the Tampa Bay Times revealed secret plans for the state to add golf courses, 350-room hotels and pickleball courts to nine state parks, prompting widespread protests. The state was also considering trading part of a state forest to a luxury golf developer.

In November, the leader of the environmental agency, Shawn Hamilton, announced his departure for a job in the private sector.

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The Tampa Bay Times launched the Environment Hub in 2025 to focus on some of Florida‘s most urgent and enduring challenges. You can contribute through our journalism fund by clicking here.

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