Miami Herald (Sunday)

There are no good reasons for Miami-Dade to OK industrial complex in a flood zone. None

- BY EVE SAMPLES everglades.org Eve Samples is a Miami-Dade County native who serves as executive director of Friends of the Everglades, which was founded in 1969 by Marjory Stoneman Douglas.

Every major hurricane tests the resilience and wisdom of policymake­rs.

Hurricane Andrew illuminate­d the urgent need to implement strong building codes in Florida. Katrina laid bare the inadequacy of New Orleans’ levee-dependent floodcontr­ol system.

After Hurricane Ian’s devastatin­g storm surge in Southwest Florida, the will to strengthen coastal land-use and developmen­t policies has emerged as a major test for leaders across the state.

Since Ian made landfall in Lee County on Sept. 28, a chorus has sounded to rebuild stronger in afflicted communitie­s. That strategy will only work if county, city and state officials stop weakening growth rules to allow new constructi­on in floodprone coastal locations in the first place. It is clearer than ever that it isn’t just about how we build but, also, where.

On Tuesday, MiamiDade County commission­ers will face their first post-Ian test on this front. For more than a year, an army of consultant­s and lawyers, led by a group called Aligned Real Estate Holdings LLC, has been seeking commission approval to convert floodprone green space in Homestead to a dense industrial park.

Aspiration­ally named the “South Dade Logistics & Technology District,” the initial proposal sought approval for 9 million square feet of industrial constructi­on on about 800 acres of farmland south of Florida’s Turnpike and north of Homestead Air Reserve Base.

The land is “Coastal High Hazard Area.” The county’s own growth plan describes it as among the areas least suitable for urban developmen­t. The site also overlaps with land being considered for the Biscayne Bay component of federal Everglades restoratio­n efforts. For more than a year, the applicants insisted a viable industrial complex required nothing less than 800 acres at this specific ill-suited spot — despite the fact that there is appropriat­ely zoned industrial land available elsewhere in South Dade.

But Aligned failed to convince enough MiamiDade commission­ers to move the Urban Developmen­t Boundary in June. So it returned to the commission Sept. 22 proposing a smaller footprint, 350 acres.

That didn’t pass either. Environmen­tal advocates from across the region turned out against the project, led by the Hold the Line Coalition and including Friends of the Everglades, Tropical Audubon Society and others.

Now, Aligned is returning for yet another attempt on Tuesday, with more vague promises of making this project palatable.

The problem is, it can’t be done. Not in a Coastal High Hazard Area. Not when there’s ample land available inside the county’s Urban Developmen­t Boundary to accommodat­e logistics services and create the jobs promised by this applicant. No matter how much the acreage shrinks, it won’t change the fact that this is the wrong place.

There’s good reason Florida law requires local government­s to limit public expenditur­es that subsidize building in Coastal High Hazard Areas. The rest of us should not bear the costs of reckless developmen­t.

Tuesday’s decision needn’t be a difficult one for commission­ers. Hurricane Ian reminded us, brutally, that Florida is on the front lines of flood risks and storm surge on a warming planet. We can’t erase developmen­t that’s already been built in harm’s way — but we can stop destroying vulnerable green spaces to allow more of it.

Miami-Dade, like most Florida counties, has a comprehens­ive developmen­t plan that aims to prevent developmen­t in the areas most susceptibl­e to flooding. These policies exist for a lot of good reasons: to protect taxpayer investment­s in infrastruc­ture; to safeguard neighbors; to protect the aquifer that supplies South Florida’s drinking water; to preserve economical­ly beneficial ecosystems like Biscayne Bay.

It’s been 11 years since Florida gutted its lead growth-management agency, the Department of Community Affairs — but local elected officials still have the power to oppose bad projects.

All Miami-Dade County commission­ers need to do on Tuesday is follow their own rules.

There was never any reasonable justificat­ion for a giant industrial complex in a Coastal High Hazard Area in Homestead.

After Hurricane Ian, there are no excuses either.

Visit Everglades.org to send a message to county commission­ers, asking them to vote “No” on the South Dade industrial complex on Oct. 18.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States