|
Preface
In 1991 The Conservation Fund and
1000 Friends of Florida and the Conservation Fund teamed together
to establish the Florida Greenways Program to aid in the conservation
of greenways throughout Florida. The Florida Greenways Program is
involved with greenway planning initiatives on the state and local
levels. In 1993 1000 Friends of Florida was influential in establishing
the 38 member governor appointed Greenways Commission. The mission
of the Florida Greenways Commission is to establish a statewide
system of linked open space (greenways), parks and refuges and recognize
150 greenways on Florida's sesquicentennial (150) birthday in 1995.
On the local level, the Florida Greenways
Program has initiated four regional prototype greenway planning
projects. These greenway planning projects include: the Suncoast
River Based Greenways Project in the Tampa area, the Loxahatchee
Slough Greenways Project in Martin and Palm Beach counties, Broward
County Urban River Greenways, the proposed South Walton Greenways
effort in southern Walton County, and the Apalachee Greenways Project
in Florida's Big Bend area.
Each of these projects focuses on
the particular planning needs for each local area. The Suncoast
greenways project focuses on the remaining green spaces along the
Hillsborough, Alafia, Peace and Manatee Rivers. Hillsborough County
has joined in the effort in establishing these rivers as greenways.
The Loxahatchee Greenways effort is the first local project undertaken
by the Florida Greenways Program and it focuses on the remaining
greenway connections in a network connecting the natural areas of
Jonathan Dickinson State Park, the Pal-Mar lands, the Dupuis Reserve,
and the Corbett Wildlife Management Area. The Broward County Urban
River Greenway effort focuses on designing and implementing a water-based
greenways network in Broward County. This network will utilize the
New River, the Intercoastal Waterway and the South Florida Water
Management District's canal system to enhance community by providing
open space and recreation. The decommissioned Cross Florida Barge
Canal is being converted into the Cross Florida Greenway. 1000 Friends
of Florida worked closely with the Canal Lands Advisory Committee,
the governors office and the legislature on the preparation of the
greenway management plan.
In January 1993, the Florida Greenways
Program, The Red Hills Conservation Association and the Apalachee
Land Conservancy began working on a recreational, natural, cultural,
and historic resource assessment of the Apalachee Region. Since
that time, the Northwest Florida Water Management District and the
region's local governments have joined in the assessment effort.
The Apalachee Greenways Project focuses on lands within a six county
region of north Florida and south Georgia stretching from the Aucilla
River on the east to the Ochlockonee River on the west. The Apalachee
Greenways Project area consists of Gadsden, Jefferson, Leon and
Wakulla counties in Florida and Thomas and Grady counties in Georgia.
The Apalachee Greenways Project highlights the significance of the
region's historical canopy roads and plantations and the rivers
providing their natural and cultural ties of the Red Hills to the
river ports on the Gulf of Mexico. The Greenways Project is being
conducted in a series of three phases over a period of three years.
Phase 1 - Regional Assessment and Visioning; Phase 2 -Network Planning
and Demonstration Project; and Phase 3 - Resource Protection Implementation.
The St. Marks and Wakulla Rivers Greenway Project is Phase 2 of
the larger Apalachee Greenways Project.
The St. Marks Greenway Project focuses
greenway planning in the St. Marks Watershed which includes the
Wakulla River. The St. Marks Project focuses on the cultural, historical,
recreational and natural features spanning the region. Like the
larger Apalachee Project, the St. Marks Greenway Project's theme
is centered on the rivers. The St. Marks and Wakulla Rivers link
the communities of Jefferson, Leon and Wakulla counties. They have
been used for thousands of years by various peoples settling in
the Apalachee Region. They provide Apalachee Bay with nutrient rich
water sustaining a healthy population of finfish and shellfish.
The project emphasizes the need for greenway planning at the local,
regional and state levels to maintain the existing water quality
of the rivers.
BACK
NEXT
|