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Appeals Court Sides With Hammock Association Against County and Developer on 240-Boat Storage Facility

January 26, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 10 Comments

Hammock Harbour wants to level the old hangar where boats were manufactured, and build a 240-boat storage facility. County government said yes. Two courts so far have said no. (© FlaglerLive)
Hammock Harbour wants to level the old hangar where boats were manufactured, and build a 240-boat storage facility. County government said yes. Two courts so far have said no. (© FlaglerLive)

The Hammock Community Association won another victory today as a district court denied the appeal by a developer of a lower court decision quashing redevelopment of a boat yard into a 240-boat storage facility next to Hammock Hardware on State Road A1A.

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The one-line order by a three-judge panel of the Fifth District Court of Appeal denies the appeal by Hammock Harbour, owned by developed by Jim Buckley, of a July decision by Circuit Judge Chris France in Flagler County, who’d ruled that the Flagler County Commission was wrong to let development go forward on the 4.26-acre site. France agreed with the association: the commission had based its decision on insubstantial or incompetent evidence.

The immediate result of the decision is that the plan for a boat launch in the Hammock remains halted. The next step is either up to the county or up to the developer.

“They either have to reapply to get a definition from the planning department, or they need to revise or amend the ordinance. Or just keep the status quo,” Dennis Bayer, the Flagler Beach attorney the Hammock Community Association retained, said this evening.

The county could change its zoning, allowing for the development. But that would be an immensely controversial move that either creates a warehousing enclave in the Scenic A1A corridor or sets a precedent that throws out A1A’s overlaid protections in favor of more intense development. Alternately, the developer could submit scaled down plans that fit within existing land-use allowances, as the previous plan did not (according to the the courts).

Judges are also sending a message.

The two courts’ decisions amount to an indictment of what had been a clumsy, bumbling way for commissioners to make a land-use decisions. Those decisions are by law expected to be based on solid evidence and documentation. Instead, commissioners relied on “gut feelings” and personal, anecdotal observations, betraying an increasingly zealous indulgence of development at the expense of legal standards–and, in the association’s view, of community interests and historical uses of the property in question.
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The association, backed by engaged and, when necessary, financially committed members, is building a strong record of challenging county decisions where it sees fit–and where it sees arbitrariness displacing more deliberate decision-making. It was the association that caused the county to back down from its original plans to allow Captain’s BBQ to build a new, larger restaurant in the middle of Bings Landing. (Once the county backed down, Captain’s sued the county. That case is continuing.)

The parcel at 5658 North Oceanshore Boulevard. It had once been a Newcastle boating company manufacturing plant, when it employed a handful of people and built about a boat a year. It was not an “intensive” operation. That ended several years ago. Buckley is seeking to level the existing hangar and build a storage facility and a restaurant. The application did not have to go before the county commission. It would normally have been handled by regulators within the county administration, with the County’s Technical Review Committee signing off. It did, once Buckley agreed to stay within certain parameters.

But it did so based on a key and “informal” determination by Planning Director Adam Mengel: that the boat storage facility would not be a more intensive use of the property than the previous boat-manufacturing operation, and therefore, was allowable without further land-use changes. (The “informal” characterization of the determination is conceded by Hammock Harbour.)

The Hammock Community Association disagreed with Mengel’s determination, seeing boat storage as a warehousing operation that would significantly change the footprint of the current hangar and, with a restaurant, generate substantially more traffic. The association was not against a restaurant, nor against a boat storage facility per se. But it was against Mengel making a determination that did not appear to be documented. The association hired Dennis Bayer, the Flagler Beach attorney who often handles land use matters, and filed an appeal of Mengel’s determination. The County Commission heard the appeal in November 2019, after the issue was heard at the county’s planning board.
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“There is a significant difference in intensity of what’s being discussed under this current boat storage facility because,” Bayer told commissioners at the time. “The existing building that’s there is completely going away. Parking is increasing substantially,” with what the Hammock Association estimates will be a tenfold increase in parking and the installation a 10,000-gallon fuel tank to enable daily boat launches. The facility, in other words, would be a warehouse. Warehouses are not allowed under current zoning regulations there. If the commission were to allow it, it would have to change the zoning, a tall order in the Scenic A1A corridor that the county, under a different commission, worked hard to secure. A1A is a central artery in the county’s tourism anatomy.

Greg Hansen, one of the county commissioners, relied on his own, one-time, undocumented observations or another boat storage facility to declare that the one Buckley was proposing would be no different. He called claims by the association “bogus.” And with that, likely invited the lawsuit that followed, once the commission voted unanimously to deny the association’s appeal of Mengel’s determination.

In its appeal of the lower court decision siding with the association, Hammock Harbour argued that the circuit court “failed to observe the essential requirements of law and did not analyze the petition in accordance with” the usual standards of review. Hammock Harbour also argued that the lower court’s order was unclear: though it returned the matter to the county commission to decide, is the county to assume that dry storage is an allowable use? Nor was the sort of competent, substantial evidence that was sought defined, according to the appeal.

The appeals court did not shed greater light, at least not the sort of light hammock Harbour was seeking. It merely disagreed with the appeal, rejecting it. Hammock Harbour’s questions in the appeal are, in essence, irrelevant, or rendered moot, leaving only one question standing, assuming the county is uninterested in fighting Hammock Harbour’s battle” what form will Hammock Harbour’s development application take now, if any?

Click On:


  • ‘Flagler Commission Expected to Approve Marinas in Scenic Hammock, Clearing Way for Warehouse-Like Boat Storage
  • Opponents Call Approval of ‘Marinas’ Along Scenic A1A an Orwellian Ploy to Let Massive Boat-Storage Facility Rise
  • ‘Warehouse’ or ‘Marina’? Battle Lines Are Drawn Again Over Dry Boat-Storage Facility Along Scenic A1A
  • Planning Board Refuses to Call 240-Boat Storage Facility in Hammock a “Marina” But Will Seek to Define the Word
  • Flagler Government Planning Code Amendment Specifically to Permit Boat Storage Facility in the Hammock
  • Appeals Court Sides With Hammock Association Against County and Developer on 240-Boat Storage Facility
  • Judge Quashes Flagler Commission Decision on Hammock Boat Storage Facility, Halting Project for Now
  • Judge Chris France's Order
  • Association Opposing 240-Boat Storage Facility in the Hammock Takes Its Case to Circuit Court
  • 240-Boat Storage Facility in the Hammock off A1A Will Go Forward as County Rejects Objection
  • Hammock Harbor Re-Developer Seeks to Reassure Skeptical Neighbors of Project’s Scope
  • Hammock Harbour Background
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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. ROGER CULLINANE says

    January 26, 2021 at 7:47 pm

    Congratulations to the HCA for protecting the Hammock. The last thing we need is a huge boat storage facility on A1A.

  2. Kat says

    January 26, 2021 at 8:04 pm

    I hope this sends a message that we don’t want just any old development rubberstamped for the Hammock. We all moved here because of its unspoiled charm. While further development is in evitable, it needs to be in accordance with the overall plan for the community. The current group of commissioners seem to be very pro developer, not taking into account the residents’ (that elected them) wishes. There are a great deal environmentally conscious people in Flagler county. We want to be heard and we will remember the commissioners vote when it comes time for the next election.

  3. Kendall says

    January 26, 2021 at 8:48 pm

    It’s a shame that the courts have to protect us from our own inept county commission. And the fools here keep re-electing these useless clowns.

  4. Duncan says

    January 26, 2021 at 10:38 pm

    Keep up the good work The Hammock Community Association. I’m thankful the members have the deep pockets to keep our awful county commissioners in check.

  5. Jane Gentile-Youd says

    January 26, 2021 at 10:49 pm

    Bravo!

  6. Boaters says

    January 27, 2021 at 2:42 pm

    Annex into palm coast like Boston whaler just did, problem solved. Also there is boat rack storage going up in marina del palma, isn’t that county also?

  7. capt says

    January 27, 2021 at 3:12 pm

    How many times has the courts identified the inept decision making skills of the Flagler County Commission. Maybe voters will listen and vote all of these men out.

  8. Pogo says

    January 27, 2021 at 10:45 pm

    @”Annex into palm coast like Boston whaler just did, problem solved…”

    Funny you should mention it, “…In May 2019, Brunswick announced it would be purchasing the largest marine franchisor in the United States, Freedom Boat Club…”
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brunswick_Corporation

    And so it goes.

  9. JTL says

    January 28, 2021 at 8:07 am

    Thank you HCA. Without your involvement with all the issues we face in the Hammock, we would already look like the rest of the coast of Florida. Wish we could get protected so we could quit fighting to save our area. If you are not a member, please join or a donation I am sure would help. All this mess takes money!

  10. Steve says

    January 28, 2021 at 4:12 pm

    And now the Zoning will be changed to allow the Development anyway Wow what a slap in the face.

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