Letters to the Editor
Palm Beach Post
July 25, 2015
Op Ed Piece
Agricultural Reserve a misnomer with so few farms now
Whether you are for or against development, the Palm Beach County
Agricultural Reserve doesn’t exist anymore. Long gone are most vegetable
crops, farmland and all the flower farms. In the 1950s, Delray Beach
was the “Gladiolus Capital of the World” and a major center for growing
vegetables and flowers.
Do you realize that, today, no gladiolus
or flowers are grown here, and only 1 percent of the vegetables grown in
Palm Beach County are grown in the Agricultural Reserve?
Palm
Beach County modeled its Agricultural Reserve after Maryland’s
Montgomery County Ag Reserve, with one major difference: Palm Beach
County allowed development. So the few remaining farmers are now forced
to farm next to schools, houses of worship, shopping centers, a
hospital, supermarkets, new roads and housing developments.
Like
it or not, today’s Agricultural Reserve is a flourishing new residential
community with 5,000 new homes and 5,000 more being built. Schools
include Somerset Academy and the soon-to-be-built Happy Hollow Charter
School.
Nursery owners: Fighting unfair rules or ‘a little greedy’?
St.
Mary’s Coptic Orthodox Church is just one of the churches being built.
The Delray Marketplace and Canyon Town Center, two major shopping
centers, are new and thriving destinations.
Bethesda West
Hospital, with a 400-bed capacity, was also approved and built on former
farmland — to serve the emerging community in the Agricultural Reserve.
Commercial,
industrial, institutional and residential developments; conservation
areas; and county-owned property occupy 87 percent of the land in the
reserve. The remaining farmers are unfairly restricted by the outdated
policies in the Agricultural Reserve.
Forced to Farm is a
political action committee to assist private property owners who have
been unduly burdened by property restrictions. We advocate that Palm
Beach County government treat the private property owners in the
Agricultural Reserve equally to private property owners throughout the
county.
The agriculture of the past has been lost to development
in the Agricultural Reserve. Let’s adjust our policies to the 21st
century and allow remaining parcels to serve our community.
SUZANNE MULVEHILL, DELRAY BEACH
Editor’s note: Suzanne Mulvehill, chairwoman of Forced to Farm, is a resident and landowner in the Agricultural Reserve.
1 comment:
So Suzanne, our Ag reserve is partially broken. We should just say "to hell with it" and let it ALL be plowed under for development because your family wants to sell out? BULLCHIT !! Nobody was crying when they were getting the tax advantages for Ag. If your family doesn't want to farm sell to someone who does. Greedy people with the mindset of Mulvehill and her family are the reason the Ag reserve has been as damaged as it is. Thank God that we the people forced our corrupt elected perps to put the brakes on and start honoring their promise to the people of Palm Beach County. We don't want to eat people chow from China. We recognize the irreplaceable value of crop lands and the food they supply.We the people cared so much that we put up 100,000 to ensure the land stayed productive crop land. For our and our children's future.Land owners like Mulvehill had it both ways for too long-Collect Ag tax breaks but then sell out and raise a one time crop of condos on what was supposed to be farmland. With county reps like Newell Mccarty Vana etc. in their back pockets it was easy. Until the people finally stood up and said NO !! Thank God.
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