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It's About Growth: Protecting Her TurfBy: Editorial StaffHer job is to save land from development, but CREW’s Ellen Lindblad says some growth can be good. |
She’s not a developer, business leader or government
official, but Ellen Lindblad stands on the front lines of Lee County’s smart
growth efforts. As the executive director for the CREW (Corkscrew Regional
Ecosystem Watershed) Land and Water Trust, Lindblad has the same mission as
other advocates of smart growth—to shape how the region grows while ensuring economicstyle="mso-spacerun: yes"> vitality, community character and
protection of natural resources.
Although her job is to acquire environmentally sensitive
land that is in jeopardy because of development, Lindblad believes that growth
will continue. “We don’t want to turn growth away, we want to keep it from
choking the area so people will still want to come here,” she explains.
CREW—the organization that protects the Corkscrew watershed,
which is comprised of 60,000 acres that straddle Lee and Collier counties—was
formed in 1989 in response to a drought. Wells were running dry and nothing was
coming out of taps in Bonita Springs.
Lands like the Corkscrew watershed are critical to the
region’s hydrology. The marshes hold waters during the rainy season, providing
natural flood control. They filter out pollutants, then drain water back into
the underground aquifers, from which we get our most affordable water. The more
the aquifers are drawn down, the deeper we must go for water—saltier water that
requires more treatment.
Around the same time as the drought, the South Florida Water
Management District found that several properties in eastern Lee and Collier
counties, which were still undeveloped, were part of a much larger picture—a
watershed that was still pretty much intact. The local population explosion was
pushing development to the north and west in Lee and Collier counties,
particularly along the coast. Not many builders were yet interested in the wet,
marshy areas farther east. Local leaders realized that the watershed needed to
be protected as one system, Lindblad says.
CREW Trust was formed to find public and private partners
who would buy and protect the Corkscrew watershed. Funding for land acquisition
came from Lee County, Big Cypress Basin in Collier County, the water management
district as well as state and federal monies. Others have become involved since
then, and about 25,000 acres have been acquired.
Nearly 15,000 of those acres have been purchased during
Lindblad’s tenure, estimates Lee County commissioner Ray Judah. “Ellen has
shown phenomenal leadership,” says Judah, who appointed Lindblad last year to
Lee County’s new smart growth committee.
Before taking the helm of CREW in 1992, Lindblad worked for
Lee County as a land acquisition agent. She and her husband moved to Southwest
Florida in 1986 from Big Pine Key in the Florida Keys, where she worked at
Newfound Harbor Marine Institute and had also worked as a real estate closer in
Key West.
A petite, energetic woman, Lindblad conveys conviction about
the land she’s protecting. “The visionary aspect of CREW was it started when
there was not much pressure or growth. It would have been easy for
commissioners to say ‘There’s nothing out there,’” she says. Instead, county
leaders helped start the acquisition process. Various public and private
entities own the protected lands, and the water management district maintains
them. Among the tracts the CREW Trust is now targeting is a north-south
corridor known as Camp Keais Strand that would link to Florida Panther National
Wildlife Refuge.
Smart growth could have a major impact on CREW Trust, and a
good one, Lindblad believes.
To many, the question of growth pits pro-growth developers
and businesses against no-growth environmental advocates. But Lindblad sees
those lines softening. Although there will always be extremists on either side,
she says, most acknowledge that growth will continue and that it must have some
direction and controls to make it sustainable. The challenge is finding the
balance that will keep the economy, environment and communities healthy, she
says. Achieving such a balance involves a spectrum of issues from open spaces
and water supplies to easing transportation.
Lindblad has protected environmentally sensitive land,
critical water supplies and habitat for wildlife such as Florida panthers and
black bears, Judah says. She’s also formed and promoted educational programs.
Her expertise in land acquisition and environmental studies helped her
establish a rapport with the South Florida Water Management District and county
officials. Lindblad currently is teaming up with the Conservancy of Southwest
Florida to lay the groundwork for a program in Collier County that would be
similar to Conservation 2020 in Lee County, in which voters agreed to a tax to
buy conservation lands.
As large tracts of lands for development become scarcer and
as growing population strains water resources, the pressures on the Corkscrew
Regional Ecosystem Watershed have increased. Because market demands and cost
efficiencies lead developers to target undeveloped lands rather than parcels in
existing communities, they’re now looking east of Interstate 75, where CREW
lands lie, Lindblad says.
One of the biggest challenges is the proposed extension of
County Road 951 as a north-south artery, possibly through environmentally
sensitive lands, although Lindblad believes that a good solution acceptable to
all sides is possible. She’s also watching additional development around
Florida Gulf Coast University, which was built on environmentally sensitive
lands amid controversy.
Organizations like CREW give Southwest Florida an edge over
other regions, Lindblad believes. For example, Florida’s east coast didn’t have
a chance to provide water connections and wildlife corridors before growth hit.
“I see CREW as being our future Central Park,” she says. “To have a large area
of green space in Southwest Florida that you don’t have on the east
coast—that’s going to keep us unique.”