Orlando Sentinel

Seminole mulls land purchase

County considers paying family $3.4M to hold off developers on pasture

- By Martin E. Comas

As the state considers purchasing 1,314 acres of pasture land in rural east Seminole for conservati­on and to fill in a crucial gap in a statewide wildlife corridor, county commission­ers plan to give the landowners $3.4 million to hold off a sale to developers.

Environmen­talists and conservati­onists urged county leaders at this week’s commission meeting to hand the taxpayer money to the

Yarborough family to avoid the land — long used to graze cattle — being turned into rooftops and pavement, at least for another year.

“This is not only a hole in the donut in the Florida wildlife corridor, it is a hole in the donut of your entire rural protection plan,” said Charles Lee, of Audubon Florida, in urging for the payment. “If this property would go in the direction of rooftops, the bottom line is that it is not going to be a good signal with regard to the ability to hold the line elsewhere in the rural area.”

David Axel, a real estate agent representi­ng the family, said the Yarborough­s are looking “for a financial commitment” from the county “to keep the property off the market.”

Axel said the family has kept “willing buyers waiting in the wings” while the state’s Florida Forever conservati­on program decides whether to purchase the property. It’s a process that could take up to two years.

“While they are quite interested in preservati­on, their desire is to sell the property,” said Axel.

Commission­ers Jay Zembower, Lee Constantin­e and Bob Dallari voted to direct county staff to negotiate an “option to purchase” contract with Axel on behalf of the Yarborough­s, including the

payment. The commission is expected to vote to accept the deal on Jan. 23.

Commission­ers Andria Herr and Amy Lockhart voted against the motion.

With Seminole putting up the cash as a sort-of down payment and to hold off other buyers, it would send a message to the state that the county is serious about conserving the property off Snow Hill Road, conservati­onists said.

The property was placed this month on the Florida Forever priority list. That list is scheduled to be considered for approval by Gov. Ron DeSantis and the Florida Cabinet in March.

However, if the state turns down purchasing the property or delays it for another year, the county would lose the money. The county also could look at purchasing the land itself for $34 million, which is what the Yarborough­s have offered. Two appraisals commission­ed by Seminole in October showed the land is worth about $35 million.

David Bear, president of the nonprofit Save Rural Seminole, said the county money is a step closer to conserving the land.

“There is no such thing as a free lunch,” he said in urging commission­ers to put up the $3.4 million. “We all want this land preserved for conservati­on. But sometimes that goal is not free. … It’s a wonderful opportunit­y, but there’s a cost to that opportunit­y.”

Lockhart said she opposed handing out that much money before the state’s Florida Forever Program opts in in March on whether it will purchase the land.

“I think preservati­on is great,” she said. “But I don’t think we have the money [to purchase the property]. … This county has more acreage in preservati­on — depending on whom you talk to — than is appropriat­e, frankly.”

Despite supporting keeping the land in conservati­on, Constantin­e said he felt uncomforta­ble moving so quickly on giving the Yarborough­s the money before the state board meets in March.

Dallari said the property is critical to the wildlife corridor and Florida’s ecosystem.

“It’s a unique opportunit­y for future generation­s,” he said. “The Yarborough­s have been patient, and they will sell to a developer. …If we wait, we miss a unique opportunit­y to set the stage for this wildlife corridor and for the ecosystem.”

The 1,314 acres is tucked between the Little Big Econ State Forest and the Charles H. Bronson Wildlife Management area. It sits just east of Snow Hill Road and south of Old Mims Road and continues to be used as a cattle ranch.

It is one of the last remaining parcels with developmen­t rights in a long wildlife corridor of conservati­on land stretching from just south of Jacksonvil­le to the Everglades.

A longtime cattle ranching family, the Yarborough­s once owned more than 7,000 acres of rural land in east Seminole. Much of it is dotted with woods, pasturelan­d, ponds, and wetlands.

In the mid-2000s, the Yarborough­s entered into an agreement with the state of Florida and Seminole to sell about 5,000 acres for conservati­on to the St. Johns River Water Management District. The sale also included two miles of land fronting the St. Johns River and five miles along the environmen­tally sensitive Econlockha­tchee River.

However, as part of the deal, the Yarborough­s were granted limited developmen­t rights on their remaining acreage of up to 300 homes. The property sits within Seminole’s rural boundary approved by voters in a 2004 countywide referendum, which strictly limits developmen­t.

Last February, county commission­ers approved a plan to build 300 homes on 1-acre lots on a portion of the property.

But after an outcry from environmen­talists and residents about the commission’s decision, commission­ers last April agreed to send an applicatio­n to Florida Forever, the state’s conservati­on lands acquisitio­n program.

Members of the Yarborough family could not be reached for comment.

“I recognize it’s a lot of money,” said Nancy Harmon, of the Geneva Citizens Associatio­n, in support of the county giving the Yarborough­s the $3.4-million “option to purchase” contract. “But let’s show the state of Florida that we want to be part of this process and save this land and protect our rural community and give our community the opportunit­y to see wildlife in its natural state.”

 ?? WILLIE J. ALLEN JR./ORLANDO SENTINEL ?? A proposed developmen­t within Seminole’s rural boundary calls for 300 homes on 1,361 acres off Snow Hill Road, seen here on on Sept. 20, 2022, in Geneva.
WILLIE J. ALLEN JR./ORLANDO SENTINEL A proposed developmen­t within Seminole’s rural boundary calls for 300 homes on 1,361 acres off Snow Hill Road, seen here on on Sept. 20, 2022, in Geneva.

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