Miami Herald

Miami Wilds sues, accusing Miami-Dade mayor of caving to please conservati­on voters

- BY DOUGLAS HANKS dhanks@miamiheral­d.com

Political decisions by a mayor seeking reelection killed the Miami Wilds water park, developers said in court filings as they seek damages from Miami-Dade County over the scuttled venture on the Zoo Miami campus.

“Mayor Cava made a political decision to kill the Developmen­t Agreement and appease some of the political activists who make up her base,” Miami Wilds said in court filings Monday.

The filing is the first time Miami Wilds has tried to assign motives for MiamiDade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava switching positions last year on the longstandi­ng plan to let developers build a water park on existing zoo parking lots in south Miami-Dade.

Asked about the Miami Wilds claims after Tuesday’s County Commission meeting, Levine Cava responded: “That’s ridiculous.”

In August, Levine Cava recommende­d amending the developmen­t agreement to work around problems caused by conservati­on groups blocking federal approval of the project on county land that once belonged to the National Parks Service.

But as Zoo Miami’s highprofil­e spokespers­on, Ron Magill, joined the conservati­on groups as a private citizen in publicly opposing the project in September, Levine Cava paused her support, saying she wanted to “take a deeper dive” on the matter.

Two months later, Levine Cava came out against the deal. Her administra­tion canceled the developmen­t agreement and then took Miami Wilds to court to formalize the terminatio­n after the project missed year-end constructi­on deadlines mandated in the original 2022 agreement.

The recent Miami Wilds filing is a response to that February suit in MiamiDade Circuit Court and includes a counter-claim with allegation­s against Levine Cava. As the Democratic mayor in a nonpartisa­n post seeks a second, four-year term in August, Miami Wilds alleges she terminated the project’s county lease “all to appease her base ahead of election season.”

The mayor’s spokespers­on issued a statement Tuesday rejecting the claims by Miami Wilds.

“Politics has nothing to do with her positions,” said Natalia Jaramillo, the mayor’s communicat­ions director, noting that Levine

Cava has always insisted that environmen­tal concerns be resolved by the Miami Wilds developers. “When it became clear that the hurdles with the federal government remained, the proposed project grew more challengin­g and extensions were exhausted at this point.”

Miami Wilds didn’t attach a dollar amount to the damages it wants from Miami-Dade.

A version of the Miami Wilds project has been in the mix for decades. In 2006, developers secured passage of a countywide referendum to build an entertainm­ent center on zoo property as long as the constructi­on didn’t hurt the environmen­t.

Levine Cava voted for the developmen­t deal in 2020 when she was still a commission­er and weeks away from being elected mayor. Her administra­tion also negotiated the lease on 28 acres of zoo property, an agreement that won commission approval in 2022.

The Tropical Audubon Society and other conservati­on groups sued the National Parks Service after the vote. The suit claimed the agency erred in granting approval of the project without a mandated study of potential environmen­tal harms to the land, which Magill and others argue is vital feeding grounds for endangered bats living in the adjoining forest.

The National Parks Service last year conceded the review was needed, and the court win was cited by the Levine Cava administra­tion as a reason to cancel the Miami Wilds deal. In December, the Biden administra­tion gave conservati­on groups another win when the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service said the Miami Wilds site likely contains critical bat habitat.

In its suit, Miami Wilds says the Levine Cava administra­tion refused to help launch the formal environmen­tal review needed to see whether habitat issues would actually sink the project. Miami Wilds lawyer Mitchell Jagodinski said in an interview that under the terms of the developmen­t agreement, the county was obligated to cooperate with the review.

“This is really just a self-inflicted wound by Mayor Cava,” he said.

THAT’S RIDICULOUS. Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava about the claims made by Miami Wilds developers

Douglas Hanks: 305-376-3605, @doug_hanks

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 ?? Miami Wilds ?? Miami Wilds, which had a deal with Miami-Dade to build a water park outside Zoo Miami, is suing Mayor Daniella Levine Cava over her canceling the project’s land lease.
Miami Wilds Miami Wilds, which had a deal with Miami-Dade to build a water park outside Zoo Miami, is suing Mayor Daniella Levine Cava over her canceling the project’s land lease.

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