Folks can be excused for paying no attention to local government while we were all trying to keep safe and sane.  

But most people came here because they thought Martin County was a good place to live — a place that chose to be different from the rest of South Florida.  

That’s because of a comprehensive plan that has strict policies to protect our environment and existing residents and taxpayers. Those policies do not allow commissioners to ignore them whenever they feel like it.   

On Nov. 16 four members of the Martin County Commission seem determined to make some drastic changes.  

They will tell you nothing is being changed and the only opposition is coming from hysterical no-growthers.  

More:Story behind Martin County’s fight over height | Gil Smart

Palm City's John Kane protests in front of the St. Lucie Locks where water from Lake Okeechobee is released into the St. Lucie River during an Indian River Lagoon rally at Phipps Park in Tropical Farms in 2013. An estimated 5,000 people participated in the event.

Chapter 2 of the comp plan sets out the overall goals and the important objectives and policies that make it possible to attain those goals.  

  • ENHANCE AND PROTECT THE QUALITY OF LIFE FOR MARTIN COUNTY RESIDENTS  
  • ENSURE CONSERVATION OF NATURAL RESOURCES
  • PROMOTE ORDERLY AND BALANCED ECONOMIC GROWTH THAT PROTECTS THE QUALITY OF LIFE
  • PRACTICE PRUDENT FISCAL MANAGEMENT  

Those are meaningless promises without specific mandatory policies that actually achieve the goals.  

Some county commissioners want to delete all the objectives and policies in chapter 2 except the four-story height limit and the 15-unit-per-acre density limit.  

Google Martin County TV and watch the video of the Oct. 5 meeting.  

Listening to WHY all these good policies have to be deleted; it sounds like Abbott and Costello in “Who’s on First?”  

The Harborage Yacht Club condominiums along the St. Lucie River waterfront at the north end of the Roosevelt Bridge in Stuart stretch to the top of the area's height restrictions on buildings. Height limits vary based on a number of different factors, but both Martin County and the City of Stuart have a blanket restriction of four stories.

First, Commissioner Doug Smith explained soberly they have to do this because the state passed a law requiring the county to have a comp plan chapter on private property rights.  

Then staff explained the real reason for deleting policies in chapter 2 was they were redundant. They were “addressed” elsewhere in the plan. It would be easier for people to find them scattered through the other 18 chapters than to have them all together up front in chapter 2.  

It was just “good housekeeping.”  

Then the legal department chimed in and explained that the new state statute DID require removal of the policies in chapter 2. The policies were “problematic” and might result in litigation by developers because they were worded differently and were stricter than policies elsewhere in the plan.  

Oops! Who’s on first?  

They gave as an example that it was better to delete a stricter policy that required that land use changes to commercial in your residential neighborhood should have “no negative impact.” Instead, the commission could decide if it was “compatible.” 

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