The state gave CSX a deal they could not refuse. They get to do anything they want to push forward their rail agenda in Central Florida. They can even start before the county and city planning is done. It is about as done a deal as you could imagine.
CSX told they can start building railroad center before any planning reviews are done.WINTER HAVEN - State planning officials have told CSX it can begin building a rail transfer center before planning reviews of the massive project are completed. In a letter sent to CSX this week, the state Department of Community Affairs said it would consider an agreement with the company that would allow CSX to begin construction on the Winter Haven project while a comprehensive planning review known as a development of regional impact is under way."
Just go ahead, CSX, and the cities can plan later.
They don't have to follow any rules about preserving wildlife...the bulldozer is their weapon.
No wildlife preservation at CSX siteI've had more time to read over CSX's application for the Winter Haven project--my earlier report was taken on the fly in the middle of a County Commission meeting--and have no good news to report on the wildlife front. It seems the main wildlife management equipment that will be used in this project is a bulldozer. They already have a permit to kill the gopher tortoises. They plan to bulldoze the few rare plants because there's no law that says they can't, and they'll talk with the feds about the sand skinks.
The most significant find in the environmental survey was scrub lupine. This pink-blossomed plant is also known as McFarlin's lupine after the Winter Haven botanist who in the 1930s was the first to recognize its significance. Based on some information I've received, it's possible this may be part of a previously unknown population. And, aside from the CSX issue, it might be worth a more intense survey of the area. CSX says it will allow botanists to come in and collect any plant materials they want before construction begins, which is something.
"No law that says they can't." Palmer is the environmental editor, and this must be breaking his heart.
Ten families are suing the company, and the city of Winter Haven and CSX have been desperate to stop them....as the city will benefit financially as the people get screwed.
10 Families Sue CSX, Haven Over FacilityWINTER HAVEN - Ten families in Sundance Ranch Estates next to the proposed CSX rail transfer facility are suing the railroad and the city of Winter Haven to keep CSX from developing the site.
CSX and Winter Haven are eager to build the rail transfer facility on 1,250 acres the city owns. The city initially plans to sell 318 acres to CSX by the end of the year so the railroad can begin building a major rail center that would transfer cargo from rail cars to trucks.
Sundance residents and CSX have been wrangling for months. Sundance is a rural subdivision of 5-acre plots south of Winter Haven off County Road 653. Many of the residents have horses and say they value the country atmosphere. The residents have repeatedly asked the railroad to buy them out, but CSX has balked
"It's audacious that they could expect to plop something down right on top of them without compensation," Geohagen said. "If they want to develop this monstrosity then they need to compensate."
The inconvenience of the lack of maintenance of CSX of the rail lines has already added to long waits in drives across town. Very long waits.
Freight Train Blues Hit DowntownActually the blues hit the whole city when one travels North to South.
Five minutes passed. Then another five. Car horns honked, as if that would do any good. Tires squealed when some impatient drivers u-turned out of traffic to find another way to where they were going.
Another five minutes passed. The freight was hauling phosphate. Some pedestrians used steps between the cars to climb through the openings between them and go on their way.
By the time all the crossings were passable again, about 45 minutes had passed.
..."Emergency vehicles go past the theatre on South Florida Avenue at least eight or 10 times a day. It's just a wonder they didn't have to cross the tracks then, because they couldn't have crossed at Florida or Massachusetts or any of the other crossings."
This wasn't quite as long as the crossings were blocked in early May. That train stayed in place about an hour and a half before crossings opened.
This deal has Jeb Bush's fingerprints all over it. One of our state's leading Republicans, husband of a state senator, has accused Jeb of being totally involved in this scheme to screw the residents of several Central Florida cities.
Top Florida Republican accuses Jeb Bush of brokering the harmful CSX deal.Whether it is the good fortune of having your buddy Gov. Jeb Bush honchoing a deal for you or whether CSX CEO Michael Ward is simply a good negotiator, it pays handsome dividends.
In November 2004, CSX executives made a half-billion-dollar pitch to Bush's Florida Department of Transportation. That pitch is now being played out in an impending agreement to pay CSX $491 million of taxpayers' money to move some of its freight trains off what they call the A Line, running down the east central part of Florida to Orlando over to the S Line, running down through west central Florida: Gainesville, Ocala, Plant City and Lakeland. The terminus is Winter Haven, where CSX wants to build a huge intermodal logistics center.
The payoff for CSX's Ward was $36 million in salary and benefits paid to him in 2005 and 2006.
Much of the funding for the $491 million, a first-of-a-kind deal for a private company, was accomplished in the 2005 session of the Florida Legislature. The Tampa Tribune reported in its Nov. 28 edition that few legislators knew of the Bush-backed Senate Bill 360 where the funding was inserted just before midnight on the last day of the legislative session, May 6.
Government secrecy in action.
CSX was given a do-whatever-you-want deal with almost no restrictions. Even prominent Republican leaders are not being heard. Can you say Marco Rubio and Jeb Bush in the same breath?