Miami Herald

Reject industrial facility in South Miami-Dade. It needs agricultur­e and a healthy bay, instead

- BY RICHARD GROSSO AND KATY SORENSON Richard Grosso is an environmen­tal land-use attorney with 30 years of experience in South Florida. Katy Sorenson served on the County Commission, representi­ng District 8, from 1994-2010.

The proposed South Dade Logistics District — hailed by its investors as a jobcreatin­g savior for south Miami-Dade County — is instead destructiv­e and unnecessar­y industrial developmen­t.

The long-term health and prosperity of south MiamiDade County depends not only on jobs, but on a healthy Biscayne Bay, clean water, protection of the Everglades and a viable agricultur­e industry. That’s why we’re calling on the Miami-Dade County Commission to follow staff’s recommenda­tion and vote No on May 19.

Jobs? Similar large developmen­ts already proposed or under way in South Dade — in locations where industrial use is currently allowed — offer the

potential for at least 6,400 additional jobs, according to the county’s profession­al staff. In fact, previously approved warehouse-style developmen­t projects remain largely unbuilt, due to waning demand. Why would the Miami-Dade County Commission convert 800 acres of productive agricultur­al land providing long-term jobs in South Dade to allow more warehouses?

In its 1,400-page analysis of the project, the county determined the investors behind this land-use change, Aligned Real Estate Holdings and South Dade Industrial Partners, have not substantia­ted their inflated jobs numbers, which assume a full buildout of the 800-acre site. And there’s not even an actual developmen­t plan for the majority of the 800 acres, which the applicants do not actually own.

The developers argue that a new major employment center to attract jobs is desperatel­y needed for South Dade, and that there isn’t enough available land in South Dade to support those jobs. This is verifiably false. The county report concludes: “Given that South Tier’s current industrial land supply currently has the capacity to sustain industrial growth beyond the year 2040, increasing the acreage more than twofold . . . as proposed in the applicatio­n, runs contrary to the policy objectives of prioritisi­ng the use of existing sites currently inside the [Urban Developmen­t Boundary.]

“Additional­ly, the applicatio­n does not demonstrat­e why available industrial parcels within the UDB are not adequate for the proposed industrial developmen­t.”

Farmers and state agricultur­al experts contradict the applicant’s claims that the land is not agricultur­ally useful, saying the project will eliminate agricultur­al production and jobs.

If this applicatio­n is approved, it will result in a windfall for investors — a substantia­l increase in property values and more entitlemen­ts for the use of the land. What it will not do is provide an economic boon to the region’s residents. And it will come at the expense of county taxpayers who will be on the hook for long-term maintenanc­e of new public infrastruc­ture needed for this massive developmen­t — which is in an area proven prone to flooding.

Then there’s Biscayne

Bay. The project would do damage to decades of planning to protect and restore Biscayne Bay and the surroundin­g environmen­t. The applicants’ claims that their project will protect the bay and related ecosystems are absurd, refuted by every local, state and federal environmen­tal agency that has reviewed its plans.

Those agencies, as well as a group of well-respected independen­t scientific, technical and economic experts, have made clear that building an industrial facility on top of 800 acres of unique farmland and open space — strategica­lly located for restoring freshwater flows into Biscayne Bay and its surroundin­g wetlands — threatens to compromise ongoing Everglades restoratio­n projects needed to restore the Bay.

County rules preclude putting new urban infrastruc­ture on this low-lying land that is vulnerable to sea-level rise and coastal storms. The developer portrays the project’s major environmen­tal problems as somehow a fiction created by “some environmen­tal groups.”

The reality is that the county’s environmen­tal and planning staff have issued two damning reports and rebuttals of the applicant’s claims — relative to almost every aspect of the project. State environmen­tal and agricultur­al experts agree with those criticisms and raised many of their own.

Commission­ers should reject this request to upend longstandi­ng rules needed to ensure the health and prosperity of south MiamiDade for a flawed land-use scheme. The economic and environmen­tal promises are empty.

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