Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Cape Coral Golf Club eagles likely laid eggs

Could complicate efforts to build on property

By JACOB OGLES
jogles@news-press.com
Originally posted on November 28, 2007

Eagles near The Golf Club property have likely laid eggs, according to Cape Coral officials.

“That means more eagles are coming,” said Councilwoman Dolores Bertolini. “It complicates the issue of The Golf Club and its owner’s plans.”

Rick Sosnowski, the comprehensive planning team coordinator who handles development restrictions involving bald eagles, said city officials have now seen a pair of bald eagles on an unused cell phone tower on more than one occasion, and on Monday saw the birds in what may have been an “incubating posture.”

“That means they may have laid eggs there,” he said.

The presence of the eagles could complicate efforts to build. If the eagles are proven to be nesting, developers would need to draft an Eagle Nest Management Plan for the 1,100-foot radius around the nest. Construction would be allowed only seasonally, built around eagle nesting season from October through May, and the area would have to be managed to provide optimum protection for the eagles. That protection zone encompasses a central chunk of the golf course property that includes where the clubhouse once stood.

Officials cannot climb to the nest and check on eggs for fear of harassing the birds and disrupting a nest, he said. The posture of the birds is how biologists determine if the eagles have eggs.

“When you have a new nest, it is particularly hard to determine if its an incubating posture,” Sosnowski said. “You don't know how deep it is, and you don't know just how it would appear if it were just in the nest from ground level.”

Community Development Director Hector Rivera wrote in a memo to a City Council member that a pair of bald eagles were first spotted on Nov. 8 on an unused Embarq telecommunications tower adjacent to the 177-acre property which once housed the Cape Coral Country Club.

Florida Gulf Ventures, the current owners of the property, are trying to sell the 125-acre tract. The best appraisal for the land is about $28 million, according to planning consultant William Nolan. The property was first developed as a golf course by Gulf American Land Corp. during the initial development of Cape Coral. The property is surrounded by one of Cape Coral’s most-established neighborhoods and high-valued properties.

Nolan said the property is not economically viable as a golf course, but said any plans for redevelopment of the site have not been finalized.

“At this point, our plans are incomplete,” he said.

But other property owners in the area are happy to see new neighbors soar in.

“They look so wonderful sitting there,” said John K. Pierog, who has taken pictures of the eagles flying near the nest.

Pierog said he doesn’t want anything besides a golf course on The Golf Club property and hopes the birds also help preserve his neighborhood. He bought a home near the golf course four years ago, and said he played at The Golf Club four or five times a month when it was open. Pierog lives in Cape Coral six months a year, and spends the rest of his time in Michigan.

“They should have been making money,” Pierog said of The Golf Club management.

“It was a historic place, too, the social center of Cape Coral at one time. It could have been that again if they had promoted it that way.”

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Eagles may be nesting near Cape development

By JACOB OGLES
jogles@news-press.com
Originally posted on November 27, 2007

Cape Coral officials say eagles nested near The Golf Club property may be nesting.

Rick Sosnowski, the comprehensive planning team coordinator who handles development restrictions involving bald eagles, said the city has now seen a pair of bald eagles on an unused cell phone tower on more than one occasion.

On Monday, city officials saw the birds in what may have been an “incubating posture.”

“That means they may have laid eggs there,” he said.

Officials cannot climb to the nest and check out of fear of harassing the birds and disrupting a nest, he said. The postures of the birds are how biologists determine if the eagles have eggs.

“When you have a new nest, it is particularly hard to determine if its an incubating posture,” Sosnowski said. “You don’t know how deep it is, and you don’t know just how it would appear if it were just in the nest from ground level.”

Community Development Director Hector Rivera wrote in a memo to a city council member that the eagles were first officially spotted by city officials on Nov. 8, though numerous reports from citizens had been received before then.

The presence of the eagles could affect any prospective development on The Golf Club, as construction has certain restrictions if within 1,100 feet of an eagle’s nest.

Saturday, November 17, 2007

The Golf Club site of double eagle

Birds may hinder development plans

By Jacob Ogles
jogles@news-press.com
Originally posted on November 17, 2007

The Golf Club has seen many a birdie during its storied past.

Now new eagles have been spotted, but they are the type more likely to lower sales prices than scores.

A pair of bald eagles apparently are calling the now-vacant property home.

City officials say bald eagles have nested on a cellular phone tower adjacent to The Golf Club, a public golf course and former social destination that closed in July 2006.

“I guess the golf course has new residents,” said District 4 Councilwoman Dolores Bertolini.

But the eagles bring with them complications about the property’s future. If eagles are nesting on the site, or even nearby, development on the 177-acre site is restricted by city laws protecting eagle nests.

Owners at the golf course want verification before putting plans on hold to rezone the land.

“The city has a picture of an eagle sitting on that pole,” said William Nolan, planning consultant for owners Florida Gulf Ventures. “There is no question there is a nest on that cell tower. Whether that is his nest or not, I don’t know.”

But city officials for years have received reports eagles may have taken over an abandoned osprey nest near the course. A picture was snapped by city officials this week that appeared to show an eagle, and Friday, The News-Press also was able to capture an eagle on film by the nest.

The defunct golf course has become a catalyst for debate in southeast Cape Coral. The land was not only the site of an 18-hole golf course, but also a large clubhouse that was host to popular social events and, for a short time, a hotel, since the 1960s.

Before becoming The Golf Club, it was developed by Gulf American Land Corp. as the Cape Coral Country Club and used as a marketing engine to attract new residents to the area.

But Nolan said the property is no longer viable as a golf course.

“Financially, it just does not work,” he said. “The previous owners spent a lot of money and lost a lot of money trying to run it as a golf course.”

The land is surrounded by some of Cape Coral’s oldest and most established neighborhoods, much of it high-priced property, Nolan said. Property owners’ best appraisal for The Golf Club is $28 million.

An application to rezone the golf course for mixed-use development was filed earlier this year. Neighboring homeowners were informed of the possibility for redevelopment in April. They have launched their own campaigns to keep it a golf course.

City officials have expressed interest in buying the property and developing parkland. Bertolini wonders if arrival of eagles will change the asking price
"This presents a new issue,” she said. “I think any new movement of residents to the area will be animals.”

And city ordinances provide security to these newcomers.

If the nest is proven to be a bald eagle nest, developers would need to draft an Eagle Nest Management Plan for the 1,100-foot radius around the nest. Construction would be allowed only seasonally, and the area would have to be managed to provide optimum protection for the eagles.

That protection zone encompasses a central chunk of the golf course property that includes where the clubhouse once stood.

Other possibilities, such as relocation of the wildlife or exchange of properties for environmental use, may end up on the negotiating table.

But possibility of the birds adds more headaches to potential development plans, and so far, no buyer has publicly expressed an interest in the site.

Nolan said there are plans for development in the works, but details cannot be disclosed at this time.

But some city officials are skeptical.

“As far as I can tell nobody is willing to do anything with the property except let it sit there and become a blighted area,” said District 1 Councilman-elect Jim Burch.

The property right now has been cited by city code enforcement for failing to mow grass and allowing overgrowth of the greens since the course’s closure.

Bertolini would like to see the property turned into parkland if possible.

“I know developers would like to develop it commercially because that is where they can make the most money,” she said. “But why not use the land as a central park in that part of the city.”

Another soon-to-be council member has a different take.

“I don’t think the city should buy it,” said District 2 Councilman-elect Pete Brandt. “I tend to think all such things are better in the hands of private enterprise than in the hands of the city.”

As Nolan pondered the property’s future, he decided to do it from the property. He spent much of Friday near the alleged eagles nest trying to figure out just what bird was setting up house near the land.

“The nest is just not close enough to where I can see what is going on,” he said.
“It looks to me like nobody is home.”

Monday, November 05, 2007

Compliance deadline today for Golf Club owners

By Matt Conn
mconn@news-press.com
Originally posted on November 05, 2007


After being found guilty of violating the city’s overgrowth ordinance at a city hearing Oct. 18, the owners of The Golf Club must comply by today.

Frank Cassidy, code compliance division manager, said today is the last day Florida Gulf Venture has to clean up the growth on the former golf course, and officers will check tomorrow to see if it complied.

If it hasn’t complied, Florida Gulf Venture will be assessed a $75 fine each day until it does comply.

Several residents said they had seen workers out cutting some of the growth in the last few weeks.

“They’ve been out cleaning it up,” said Mirtha Lara, who moved to Banyan Trace, the nearby development, 2 1/2 years ago after living in Coral Gables for 40 years.

Lara said she actually liked to see the wildlife in the growth, but friend and fellow Banyan Trace resident Irene Snyder said was the exact opposite and hoped to see the land kept neatly trimmed.