Purpose of Study
In
2015, the Lee County Board of County Commissioners created the Environmental
Enhancement & Preservation Communities Overlay (Overlay) for a limited area
within the Southeast Lee County Density Reduction/Groundwater Recharge (DR/GR)
land use category along Corkscrew Road east of the Village of Estero. The Overlay represented a new strategy to
achieve the County’s goals for southeast Lee County that have existed for more
than 20 years. The
Overlay encompassed properties that were deemed critical to providing regional
benefits such as re-establishing
wetlands, flowways, hydrology and wildlife corridors within Southeast Lee County. Most of the properties had agricultural
operations or were previously mined .
The
Overlay provided an opportunity to achieve the environmental objectives, by
allowing for the possibility of higher residential density in exchange for
developer commitments to provide regional benefits such as restoring and maintaining
flowways and wildlife corridors across their properties, keeping at least 60%
of their property in open space, reducing use of groundwater, and being
responsible for contributing to infrastructure needs in the area based on their
impacts. To date, four developments have
been approved or are in the process of being approved within the Overlay area, requiring
the restoration and preservation of 3,443 acres that provide significant
flowway and wildlife corridor links between properties and surrounding preservation
lands. The four developments are
WildBlue, The Place/Corkscrew Farms, Pepperland Ranch, and Verdana.
The
anticipated infrastructure needs from
the developments within the Overlay led
the County Commission to include a comprehensive plan policy calling for a
cumulative traffic analysis of the proposed developments to understand the overall transportation needs and costs. This approach, known as the Corkscrew Road
Study (“Study”), looks at the cumulative impacts of development within the
Overlay in-lieu of an analysis on an individual case-by-case basis. The
Study will also identify: opportunities for regional environmental enhancements
in conjunction with the identified transportation improvements; costs and timing of needed
improvements; and, the proportionate fair share obligations from each
individual development within the Overlay. Lee County is working to establish the proportionate share of infrastructure-improvement costs that new development within the overlay will pay. This will be an important funding source – one of many – for the infrastructure improvements for this area.