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Waterways commission approves multiple bills: derelict-vessel rules, land-use transmittal, environmental assessment funding, resiliency match and submerged-land

3789644 · June 12, 2025
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

At its June 12 meeting the Jacksonville Waterways Commission approved a set of bills and taken actions ranging from a derelict-vessel ordinance to funding an environmental assessment of the Ribault River and Moncrief Creek and a submerged‑land lease for Palms Fish Camp.

The Jacksonville Waterways Commission on June 12 approved a set of bills and took related votes that the commission said will change vessel enforcement procedures, transmit a large-scale land‑use amendment to the state, fund an environmental assessment of two impaired tributaries, authorize a federal-resiliency grant match, and permit the city to seek a submerged‑land lease for a commercial docking facility.

Highlights

- Derelict/abandoned-vessel ordinance (referred to in the meeting packet as 20250432): The commission approved an ordinance that, according to the presenter, “encodes procedures” covering derelict vessels and a new classification for abandoned vessels, establishes clearer notice and citation timelines, and expands the city’s remediation authorities. The bill was moved and approved by voice vote during the meeting; no roll-call tally was recorded in the transcript.

- Large-scale land-use transmittal (ordinance 20 25 3 0 7; land-use case L5989-24A): Planning staff presented a transmittal ordinance for about 190.29 acres along Yellowwater Road that proposes changing agricultural and rural-residential land to low-density residential. The application contains roughly 50.6 acres of wetlands; staff said development would require extension of sanitary sewer lines (about 4,400 feet from Normandy Boulevard) and that, if sewer is provided, buildout could allow up to roughly 950 single-family units — the current rural/agricultural yield was estimated at about 94 units. The commission approved transmittal by a recorded voice vote of 9–1.

- Environmental Quality Assessment funding for the Ribault…

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