Sign Our Petition to the SFWMD: Deny Mirasol Permit Threatening Corkscrew's Wood Storks

Mirasol is the now-infamous development proposal that threatens to destroy wetlands crucial to Southwest Florida's Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary and its endangered Wood Stork colony. Thanks in large part to the outcry from Corkscrew supporters like you, the original Mirasol federal permit request was denied by the Army Corps of Engineers in December 2005.  However, the developer won't take "no" for an answer and has re-applied for modified state and federal permits for almost the same project.

At the time of the initial denial, Mirasol was a proposed 800-home, 36-hole golf course project on a site 90% covered in wetlands. It included a regional drainage ditch and would have resulted in almost 1000 acres of wetland impacts.  In the new proposal, the regional ditch is gone, but more than 650 acres of impending wetlands impacts remain. Despite Audubon science findings to the contrary, the South Florida Water Management District staff have concluded these impacts won't cause wetland harm or impact any endangered species. We have learned the District intends to approve this "new and improved" Mirasol project at its Governing Board meeting Thursday, October 12. 

Audubon science shows the wetlands slated for development are vital to the endangered Wood Stork rookery at Corkscrew, and their loss, coupled with similar wetlands slated for destruction by adjacent projects, would put the continued long-term survival of Wood Storks in the United States in jeopardy. Audubon science and advocacy staff, and our allies, are working with the permitting agencies to change this prospect, but this Mirasol permit must be denied now.

HOW YOU CAN HELP
(1) Sign our e-petition at right, requesting the SFWMD deny the permit threatening Corkscrew's endangered Wood Storks.
(2) Invite your friends and family to do the same!
(3) Interested in doing more? Email Audubon policy advocate Brad Cornell and let him know if you would be willing to write a letter to the editor, call or write a personal letter to the Governing Board, or even attend the upcoming Governing Board meeting in West Palm Beach!

Sample Letter for Campaign

Subject: Mirasol Project, ERP modified application #060524-2

Dear [ Decision Maker ] ,

The SFWMD board is preparing to consider a modified permit application for the Mirasol project, a proposed golf course community sited in the middle of a Collier County wetland slough.

District staff have not adequately evaluated the most recent science which demonstrates that the destruction of over 650 acres of wetlands would do great harm to endangered Wood Storks, water quality and flood protection in this region. Wood Stork annual nesting at Corkscrew Swamp has declined from 4,000-6,000 pairs in the 1960's to only 400-600 pairs currently, due almost entirely to wetland losses just like those proposed in the Mirasol application. This was not considered when the original Mirasol permit was issued in 2002.

For these reasons, we urge the South Florida Water Management District board to deny the Mirasol permit application at its meeting and instead begin a process with the landowners to permanently protect and restore these vital wetlands.

Signed by:

Campaign Launched:
September 26, 2006



Background Information

Endangered Wood Stork nesting at Corkscrew Swamp's large rookery has precipitously declined from 4,000-6,000 pairs annually in the 1960's to only 400-600 currently.  This is almost entirely due to wetland losses just like those on this Mirasol project.   These same cumulative losses throughout the Corkscrew area are causing considerable and increasing harm to water quality, flood protection and critical habitat for many species of imperiled Everglades wildlife including storks, black bears, red-cockaded woodpeckers, and Florida panthers. 

The Cocohatchee Slough has also been identified by both the Army Corps of Engineers and the District as one of the highest priority areas for restoration in the entire Southwest Florida region, for regional water, wetland and habitat reasons. Once lost, replacement or recreation of such wetland habitats is infinitely more difficult, expensive and in some cases, impossible than protecting them in the first place. The Cocohatchee Slough, and the Wood Stork rookery dependent upon it, must be saved.