Flotilla Protests Development in Manatee County

Res­i­dents opposed to the pro­posed Long Bar Pointe devel­op­ment project gath­ered in boats on Sara­so­ta Bay to protest los­ing the last piece of unde­vel­oped shore­line in Man­a­tee Coun­ty.

Res­i­dents opposed to the pro­posed Long Bar Pointe devel­op­ment project gath­ered in boats on Sara­so­ta Bay to protest los­ing the last piece of unde­vel­oped shore­line in Man­a­tee Coun­ty.

Dozens of pro­tes­tors gath­ered on a flotil­la of boats, kayaks, pad­dle boards and jet skis in Sara­so­ta Bay Sat­ur­day after­noon.

“This is tip­ping point for Man­a­tee Coun­ty, we got to make a deci­sion which way we go,” pro­tes­tor Jaime Can­field said. “Do we want to fol­low the rest of Flori­da and devel­op the coast or do we pre­serve it.”

Can­field is opposed to an ambi­tious project that threat­ens to remove man­groves and sea grass in Sara­so­ta Bay to make way for a mari­na and five-star resort-style devel­op­ment. The project is pro­posed for an area that par­al­lels El Con­quis­ta­dor Park­way where 75th Street West inter­sects with 53rd Avenue West that has long been agri­cul­tur­al.

Cur­rent­ly a project includ­ing con­dos and sin­gle fam­i­ly homes with docks is already approved but devel­op­ers want to expand.

Devel­op­ers behind the project — Car­los Beruff of Medal­lion Home and Lar­ry Lieber­man from the Bar­ring­ton Group — how­ev­er believe the project will be a wel­come and much need­ed addi­tion to Man­a­tee Coun­ty.

The new plans call for a mixed-use devel­op­ment — sin­gle- and mul­ti-fam­i­ly units, hotel, mari­na, office and com­mer­cial space, and a con­fer­ence cen­ter — on the 463.2 acres.

How­ev­er near­ly 295 acres is with­in the Coastal High Haz­ard zone, an area prone to flood­ing dur­ing storms. Because the land is vul­ner­a­ble in a storm, devel­op­ers must get the coun­ty to amend the com­pre­hen­sive plan to allow for the more intense devel­op­ment.

Ter­ri Won­der, one of the orga­niz­ers of the protest thinks an amend­ment to the com­pre­hen­sive plan is a ter­ri­ble idea.

“We hope Car­los changes his mind now or before Aug. 6,” Won­der said. “If not, that the Man­a­tee Coun­ty Com­mis­sion will not rat­i­fy his project.”

Won­der, a Bayshore, res­i­dent said she grew up on Sies­ta Key and saw how devel­op­ment changed the island. She moved to Bayshore Gar­dens to get back some of what she had lost and because Sies­ta Key became to pricey.

Many of the pro­tes­tors includ­ing Won­der are con­cerned about the effects the pro­posed devel­op­ment will have on the bay, a breed­ing and feed­ing ground for dol­phins and man­a­tees.

The boaters gath­ered in a flotil­la and shared ban­ners and signs read­ing “Pro­tect the bay” and “Save our Shore.” They even tar­get­ed the project’s financ­ing, which is from Bain Cap­i­tal.

“We want to pre­serve what is pre­cious,” Won­der said. “Home­own­ers want to retire here and their chil­dren and grand­chil­dren want to come here.”

Won­der fears that if the project is approved, devel­op­ment will reach a point of no return and that Man­a­tee Coun­ty will no longer rep­re­sent the best of Flori­da.

“Well it’s inter­est­ing because last night we held a meet­ing at the El Con­quis­ta­dor Coun­try Club and we received a tremen­dous­ly pos­i­tive reac­tion from peo­ple that would be thrilled that there would be some place to go, eat and enjoy the water,” Lieber­man said. “They were thrilled that there would be a revi­tal­iza­tion of Man­a­tee Coun­ty.”

Liber­man says one of the project’s envi­ron­men­tal experts was at meet­ing to explain how the project intends to have zero neg­a­tive impact to the envi­ron­ment.

“I know there are a lot of peo­ple that are protest­ing, but these peo­ple have not seen the plan. They have not talked to the expert envi­ron­men­tal­ist who have guar­an­teed us that this would have a pos­i­tive envi­ron­men­tal impact on the envi­ron­ment and Sara­so­ta Bay,” Lieber­man said. “They are out there protest­ing and they don’t know the facts and that is dan­ger­ous.”

Long­time Bayshore res­i­dent Richard Nel­son looked to the Sara­so­ta side of the bay Sat­ur­day after­noon and then around him, fear­ful of the changes that could come.

“Look at this, they all want it to look like that,” Nel­son said. “That actu­al­ly looks more like the Bronx.”

Nel­son moved to Flori­da from New York City near­ly 23 years ago, and he says he hasn’t regret­ted it for a day.

“We have to try and pre­serve every­thing we got,” Nel­son said. “You have to fight for it or else they are just going to try and do what­ev­er they want.”