|
Chapter 5 - Recommendations
For Conserving
The St. Marks and Wakulla Rivers
Greenway
In recognizing the corridors of St.
Marks and Wakulla rivers as a greenway, the communities place a
special value in maintaining the natural functions and aesthetic
qualities of these unique areas. The citizens of Jefferson, Leon
and Wakulla should act now if the greenway is to be conserved. Governments
and citizens should work to form partnerships to conserve the greenway
to take advantage of its conservation, recreation and economic benefits.
Development will continue to occur
in the watershed affecting its water resources. Potential impacts
include creating more impervious surfaces due to paving and building,
dredge and fill activities, wetland draining, floodplain alterations,
residential, industrial, and agriculture and silviculture activities.
If development occurs without growth management and land use planning,
these activities could result in increased habitat fragmentation,
stormwater run-off, localized flooding and an overall decrease in
surface water quality. Development and alteration of river floodplains
can reduce the area for flood waters to dissipate. Development can
reduce the floodplain area and increases stormwater run-off and
as a result, flooding tends to become more frequent and severe.
The increased flood height and magnitudes resulting from improper
floodplain development may lead to increases in erosion and sediment
deposition into the rivers (Wolfe et al. 1988). A greenway conservation
effort focused on the St. Marks and Wakulla river can potentially
minimize these negative impacts from development while furthering
many conservation, recreation and community quality of life goals.
Greenway planning is not intended to prevent future development,
but rather to ensure that it occurs in a manner which minimizes
impact to the resources.
The following recommendations provide
suggestions for how to conserve and promote greenways in the St.
Marks and Wakulla rivers watershed. These recommendations have been
organized by the agency, group or individuals who may elect to take
the lead in their implementation. These recommendations can be implemented
thorough growth management, land conservation and management practices,
partnerships, and through the actions of individuals and groups.
The St. Marks and Wakulla Rivers Greenway Steering Committee is
available to help decision makers by providing recommendations and
public input concerning these recommendations and to refine how
these recommendations can be implemented.
Recommendations for the Local Governments
Local governments within the St.
Marks and Wakulla rivers watershed, with the exception of the City
of Tallahassee and Leon County, have few if any financial resources
to actively manage the greenway. These rural counties and the town
of St. Marks will need financial assistance through grants and other
sources to carry out remedial changes to their comprehensive plans
and to implement greenway programs.
Lands owned by the state and federal
governments should be integrated into community greenway conservation
plans. These lands substantially benefit the local communities and
could enhance both economic development and recreational opportunities
if properly integrated into joint cooperative programs. The local
governments should explore the recreational opportunities provided
on these public lands and develop partnerships with their managers
to attract tourists and their dollars to the watershed.Now that
the local governments have adopted comprehensive plans, it is important
for each community to review opportunities for linking the state
and federal lands within its boundaries. The recommendations suggested
below can be very helpful in assisting the local governments with
that endeavor. These public lands should be viewed as assets that
can enhance the community efforts in economic and recreational opportunities.
These lands should be considered a positive part of the process
and integrated into the community's greenway conservation effort.
One option pursuing an effective greenway conservation program in
the St. Marks and Wakulla rivers watershed would be to the local
comprehensive planning process.
Because greenways encompass many
disciplines and objectives, the most effective way of establishing
and protecting them is to create a planning process or entity that
will include many facets. Greenways could be included in practically
all elements of the comprehensive plan. The most efficient and effective
method for the local governments to incorporate greenways is to
amend their local comprehensive plans in a manner that builds upon
the existing plans and refers to those the goals, objectives and
policies that best address these issues but that would necessitate
a wholesale revision of the existing plan.
A local plan amendment is recommended
because it can focus on the multiplicity of benefits of a greenway
and can emphasize the importance of the greenway to the community
as a whole. This plan amendment could also help emphasize the economic
development and recreational benefits the community that can be
realized if the community works with the other local governments,
as well as state and federal conservation efforts. A plan amendment
to the comprehensive plan could also give visibility and cohesiveness
to the greenway while maintaining the necessary flexibility for
each local government.
Because there are a number of locations
within the plans that are applicable to the greenway, a plan amendment
could be located in any number of elements. However, one option
would be to use the Intergovernmental Coordination Element (ICE)
for the reasons suggested below.
First, the Environmental Lands Management
Study Committee III (ELMS III) legislation in 1993 required that
the ICE be substantially revised for all local governments. This
means that the four governments in the basin will have to go through
a thorough amendment review and adoption process prior to August
1, 1997. Including the greenway concept in the ICE at the time of
its revision would have the least disruptive impact on the local
planning process. In addition, the Evaluation and Appraisal Report
(EAR) for each local government is due approximately the same time.
To develop this report, local governments must review their plan
for compliance, effectiveness and updating. This review process
allows each local government to seek out the provisions that should
be referred to or developed for incorporating greenways into the
community.
Second, the watershed encompasses
three counties and one municipality. Most, if not all, of the proposed
greenway identified in this report either crosses governmental boundaries
or would be substantially affected by the actions of other governments.
No effective greenways management and protection plan can be established
if the governments involved do not coordinate. Placing the plan
amendment within the ICE would give the greatest support for intergovernmental
cooperation. Placing the greenway plan amendment in a substantive
element may unnecessarily color the process for particular greenways
and potentially restrict their broad application and use in the
future.
Finally, the Governor-appointed Florida
Greenways Commission is proposing that greenways be incorporated
into local government planning processes through amendments to the
local comprehensive plans. The greenway plan amendment proposed
is consistent with the Commission's recommendation to weave the
plan's goals, objectives, and policies so a greenway conservation
thread is created throughout the plan.
The plan amendment would need to
include the appropriate goals, objectives and policies that are
best suited for the establishment, protection and management of
greenways within and between each local government. It is not the
intent of this report to set out specific goals, objectives and
policies for local governments to adopt. However, the authors are
willing to assist local governments' individual needs in developing
goals, objectives, and policies at the appropriate time. The following
are some general ideas:
Goals
Each government should adopt broad
goals that express the multi-faceted benefits of the greenway to
the community. These can either be separate goals or a single overall
goal. The goal should be broad enough to cover a variety of future
needs and functions of the greenway, but narrow enough to have some
meaning. One example could be:
* Develop a plan to conserve the
St. Marks and Wakulla Rivers Greenway in to provide recreational
opportunities, conserve natural resources and improves the quality
of life within the community.
Objectives
The objectives should include the
intended dates to implement the greenways plan or plan elements
and the various types and general locations of various greenways.
There should be an objective for each proposed greenway, for example:
* By 1998, the community will establish
and conserve the St. Marks and Wakulla Rivers Greenway to provide
recreational opportunities and protect the river's water quality
as Outstanding Florida Waters.
Policies
Policies should include the methods
that will be used to accomplish the objectives as well as how the
plan will be financed. They should also include the processes for
interaction with other governments and references other applicable
comprehensive plan goals, objectives and polices. Policies under
each objective could be similar but should reflect the timing, financing
and purpose of each individual greenway project. For example:
* By 1997 the community will seek
funds and conduct a study of the economic, recreation and environmental
benefits of the St. Marks and Wakulla Rivers Greenway.
* By 1997 the community will appoint
a St. Marks and Wakulla Rivers Greenway Advisory Committee composed
of forestry interests, riverside property owners and residents,
boaters, anglers, scientists and others who have expressed an
interest in greenway development. This group will meet and make
recommendations to the local governments for the adoption of appropriate
greenway management and protection measures.
* By 1997 the community and the
committee will establish procedures for developing their recommendations
and management plans in coordination with adjacent local governments
and the Northwest Florida Water Management District.
* By 1998 the community will conserve
greenways by incorporating appropriate management and protective
measures into its local planning processes, and the community
will coordinate with adjacent local governments to incorporate
complementary measures into their planning processes.
Other Recommendations for Local
Governments
The following recommendations include
suggestions for further developing and promoting greenway protection
and management programs that individual local governments may have
already begun implementing. These recommendations are offered to
all local governments in order to create complementary greenway
conservation strategies along all greenway segments.
* Consider working with state agencies
to develop incentives to promote retention of silvicultural land
uses and adherence to Best Management Practices in the greenways
corridor.
* Consider establishing watershed-wide
planning partnerships to develop a general consensus on land use
goals and to improve intergovernmental coordination between the
counties and the incorporated areas to conserve the greenway.
* Consider developing plan for
the greenways to be adopted by each local government. Use the
St. Marks and Wakulla Rivers Greenway Steering Committee to assist
with planning efforts, education and public input for the planning
process.
* Consider linking the greenway
to parks, forests, other local greenways, trails and habitat areas
to other similar areas outside of the watershed.
* Consider coordinating with the
Florida Greenways Commission in order to tie into its efforts
to create a statewide network of greenways. Celebrate Florida's
150th birthday to designating the St. Marks and Wakulla Rivers
Greenway as one of Florida's 150 greenways
* Consider keeping the greenway
as intact as possible to facilitate wildlife movement and maintain
viable populations of designated species.
* Consider limitations on clearing
native vegetation in the greenway.
* Consider using this study's database
and map series to initiate and maintain a local greenway database.
* Consider sponsoring workshops
with local builders and developers to promote appropriate site
planning, design and landscaping for residential, commercial and
industrial development in the greenway.
* Consider protecting greenways
by fee-simple and less-than-fee-simple land acquisition methods.
This may include participating in multi-government land acquisition
project, creating incentives to develop and protect the greenway
through tax incentives and conservation easements.
* Consider using mitigation in
regulatory programs for use in conserving the greenway.
* Consider working with the local
school board and others to incorporate into local education programs
the importance and relationships of conserving the greenway.
* Consider working with public
land managers, historians and users in developing signs to aid
interpretation of the greenway's historic and natural sites and
to provide continuity along the greenway. Consider adopting an
architectural theme for public use facilities in the greenways.
* Consider incentives to encourage
development of businesses especially in Wakulla County, to serve
greenway users including those providing overnight accommodations,
food, recreational equipment, guide services and other hospitality
businesses,
* Consider promoting the special
natural and recreational features and historical areas of the
watershed to attract ecotourists and benefit economic development.
* Consider participating in a proposed
Apalachee Regional Ecotourism Development Council that markets
the Apalachee Region as a destination for outdoor enthusiasts.
Council members could include local chamber of commerce members,
hospitality managers, camping/outfitting retailers, guide services
and liveries, hunting and fishing organizations, and recreational
user groups.
* Consider endorsing and co-sponsoring
recreational and tourism publications such as maps and guidebooks.
* Consider investigating the need
to establish a local government land acquisition program for conservation
and recreation lands.
* Consider seeking state, federal
and private funding to improve recreational facilities and acquire
recreation and conservation lands within the greenway. Potential
sources could include the Florida Recreational Development Assistance
Program and the Land and Water Conservation Fund which are administered
by the Florida Department of Environmental Protection, and the
Florida Communities Trust which is administered by the Florida
Department of Community Affairs.
* Consider studying the need for
developing a local stormwater management plan for the urban areas
such as the Town of St. Marks to help protect greenway water quality.
* Consider forming alliances and
partnerships such as the Apalachee Land Conservancy, the Trust
for Public Land, The Nature Conservancy, 1000 Friends of Florida,
Florida Audubon, HuManatee, St. Marks Trail Association, the Florida
Trail Association, to promote and manage ecotourism use with private
interests neighborhood and home-owner associations, local businesses
and landowners, and the Chambers of Commerce.
* Consider seeking planning assistance
from organizations such 1000 Friends of Florida, the Trust for
Public Land, and the Rivers, Trails and Conservation Assistance
Program of the National Park Service for conserving these greenways.
Recommendations for Regional, State
and Federal Agencies
There are many opportunities for
Federal, state and regional agencies to assist local governments
and citizens conserve the St. Marks and Wakulla Rivers Greenway.
These agencies could assist with land acquisition and facility development,
land management, planning and other technical assistance. Land acquisition
and recreational facility development by these agencies could complement
existing public and private resources to strengthen the foundation
for the greenway. These agencies ongoing management programs could
continue to provide many of the services and facilities necessary
to support public recreational use. Planning and technical assistance
from the Department of Community Affairs, the Department of Environmental
Protection and the National Park Service could complement a local
government's efforts in greenway conservation planning. Although,
this report does not assess the conservation or recreational value
of particular parcels of land that could be acquired or otherwise
conserved, specific portions of the watershed can be targeted for
conservation.
* It is recommended that the Department
of Environmental Protection and the Northwest Florida Water Management
District evaluate the upper portion of the St. Marks River north
of Natural Bridge for protection through acquisition under the
Conservation and Recreation Lands (CARL) and the Save Our Rivers
(SOR) programs. It is further recommended that the Department
of Environmental Protection proceed with the proposed CARL projects
in the Natural Bridge Area. The programs which operate under the
philosophy of acquiring lands from willing sellers, and can acquire
fee or less-than-fee interests in lands. If the owner is not interested
in any form of land acquisition, the agencies can instead enter
into management agreements to conserve the lands environmental
and recreational values.
* It is recommended that the east
bank of the river from Natural Bridge to St. Marks National Wildlife
Refuge be evaluated for conservation through the SOR or CARL programs
or by the US Fish and Wildlife Service as an addition to the St.
Marks National Wildlife Refuge. The eastern river bank is especially
important as much of it is classified as critical habitat for
fish and game by the Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission.
The eastern bank could form a natural green riparian link between
the habitat of the upper watershed and that of the St. Marks National
Wildlife Refuge surrounding the river's mouth.
* It is recommended that the silvicultural
and other large undeveloped parcels that remain along the Wakulla
River be evaluated for conservation through the CARL or SOR programs
or as additions to the St. Marks National Wildlife Refuge. The
lands provide important areas for habitats and could help protect
the greenway linkage along the Wakulla River connecting the St.
Marks National Wildlife Refuge with the Wakulla Springs State
Park and the Apalachicola National Forest.
Other Recommendations
* The Northwest Florida Water Management
District (NWFWMD) should initiate a Surface Water Improvement
and Management Plan for the St. Marks and Wakulla rivers watershed.
* The Apalachee Regional Planning
Council (ARPC) and NWFWMD should evaluate the need for establishing
special river conservation strategies through special legislation
or federal designation including a natural resource of regional
significance.
* The NWFWMD should evaluate lands
within the greenway for acquisition through the SOR program.
* The Department of Environmental
Protection, Game and Freshwater Fish Commission, the Division
of Forestry, the Department of State, and the Department of Community
Affairs should evaluate lands within the greenway for conservation
through all applicable land acquisition and recreational facility
development programs.
* The Department of Commerce, Department
of Environmental Protection, Department of Community Affairs and
the Apalachee Regional Planning Council should provide technical
assistance to local governments for greenway planning, management,
promotion, and economic development.
* The Apalachee Regional Planning
Council should establish and provide technical assistance to a
proposed St. Marks and Wakulla Rivers Greenway Advisory Committee
whose role would be to voluntarily coordinate activities Members
should include local, regional, state and Federal governments,
landowners, user groups, and other interested parties.
* The Department of Environmental
Protection should develop informational materials for river frontage
owners concerning landowner rights, public access limitations,
and liability.
* State and Federal land managers
should provide and maintain recreation user information and signs
at their recreation access sites.
* The Florida Department of Environmental
Protection should develop a public, hand-launch boat access near
the St. Marks rise if lands appropriate for such access are acquired.
* The USDA Forest Service should
consider working with the Florida Trail Association and the Department
of Environmental Protection to acquire land so the Florida Trail
can be moved from the US Highway 98 right-of-way making it eligible
for designation as part of the Florida National Scenic Trail.
Recommendations for Individuals,
Landowners, Private Interests and Users
The following recommendations include
suggestions that individuals, landowners , private interest and
users of the greenways may wish to voluntarily follow to conserve
the St. Marks and Wakulla Rivers Greenway. Many individuals and
landowners already show their stewardship for the greenways by voluntarily
practicing many of these suggestions.
* Consider establishing a privately-owned
and operated canoe livery which would provide access to the St.
Marks River in the vicinity of the river rise. The livery could
also provide canoe pick-up and shuttle service to and from the
Town of St. Marks or the US 98 bridge.
* Since there is no regularly scheduled
pick-up or shuttle available, consider initiating a regularly
scheduled canoe pick-up and shuttle service for the Wakulla River
operating from Wakulla Springs State Park and the Town of St.
Marks.
* Homeowners along the greenway
should consider the following: maintaining and using native vegetation;
limiting the amount of vegetation removed near the river; accessing
the river using boardwalks instead of paths; limiting the use
of fertilizers and pesticides; and removing or not constructing
bulkheads, seawalls and riprap for bank stabilization.
* Consider adopting sections of
the rivers for cleanups or establishing river clean up days with
the local school children, university students, neighborhood groups
and social and service organizations.
* Consider starting a voluntary
river watch program that would monitor water quality and provide
laboratory testing facilities.
* Consider forming a voluntary
river interpreter group to educate river users concerning river
stewardship.
* Consider acting as a river steward
through properly disposing of litter and waste, acting courteous
to fellow river users, observing no-wake zones, and educating
neighbors and users how to be stewards of the rivers.
Issues and Concerns Identified by
the St. Marks and Wakulla Rivers Greenway Steering Committee
The Florida Greenways Program of
1000 Friends of Florida and the Northwest Florida Water Management
District organized the St. Marks Greenway Steering Committee for
the purposes of sharing information, receiving input on the project
and gaining an understanding of the concerns of the citizens, local
officials and landowners in the watershed. The following comments
and concerns were provided by the members of the Steering Committee.
It is recommended that these concerns and issues be considered as
plans are developed for conserving the St. Marks and Wakulla Rivers
Greenways. These are not listed in any particular order of importance.
* Threats to the natural and cultural
resources from existing and potential increases in recreational
use. Prevent the greenway from being loved to death;
* Threats to manatees by collisions
with boats;
* Establish signs and enforce no-wake
zones ;
* Problems with litter from recreational
uses, boaters and fishermen ;
* Sanitary and recreation access
facilities should be maintained and improved to support increase
tourism;
* Insufficient emergency management
personnel and infrastructure to accommodate additional tourists;
* On site waste water treatment
systems impacts on water quality;
* Potential restrictions on use
of private property within the greenway;
* Oil and gas contamination of
the river and its sediments;
* Management of the increased number
of tourists;
* Lack of education about the proper
use of the outdoors and boating etiquette;
* Lackof funds to upgrade and manage
local park facilities;
* Potential impacts of boating
on the rivers;
* Lack of good user or tourist
information such as maps and guide books;
* Exotic vegetation both aquatic
and terrestrial and impacts on the greenway;
* Protecting cultural and historic
resources from vandalism;
* Improperly operating septic tanks
along the rivers;
* Hunting deer and other game from
boats along the greenway near homes, appropriate (compatible)
uses of the rivers in general. Examine use of personal water craft,
hunting and excessive boat speeds;
* Need regulatory signage and enforcement
of laws. User education concerning regulations, responsibilities
and use of the rivers, and
* Promote compatible uses, promote
guide books and guide service.
BACK
NEXT
|