Is Nassau Co. shaking down one of its biggest community partners?

nassau county
The county processed the plan for this first phase without incident or conflict.

Editor’s note: This is Part 1 of a Florida Politics investigative series.

Public documents in a lawsuit Raydient Places + Properties (Raydient) filed against Nassau County all point toward one conclusion: Some in Nassau County government have been extorting one of its largest community partners.

Creation of the ENCPA

Raydient is the developer of the East Nassau Community Planning Area (ENCPA), a state-approved sector plan that was adopted by Nassau County in 2011.

The sector plan is a 24,000-acre, long-range, and mixed-use project that is memorialized in the county’s comprehensive plan. The plan has been heralded as a project that would “change the face of Nassau County and spur much-needed economic development.

It has been evident since master planning began in 2007 that ENCPA would not only transform Nassau County from a rural to a suburban county, it would also help the county overcome many of the challenges it faced, such as balanced and mixed-use economic development, housing options and jobs.

ENCPA also would help mitigate the expected growth impacts by providing the county with land for civic facilities, like public open spaces, parks, fire and police stations and libraries.

The ENCPA divvied up funding responsibilities between Raydient and the county, and the two parties agreed that the county is responsible for provisions of individual civil facilities. At the same time, Raydient would donate all the land for those facilities.

The terms also dictate that Raydient would be responsible for everything else in the development, such as roads, sidewalks, streetlights and utilities, and it would be required to dedicate a little over half of the 24,000 acres to permanent conservation and open space.

While much of the conservation area is wetlands, about 4,000 acres of are uplands that would otherwise be developable.

The Dispute

As the project moved forward, Raydient commenced development within the first of the plans Detailed Specific Area Plan (DSAP), part of which would be later named “Wildlight.”

The county processed the plan for this first phase without incident or conflict.

Then came a small, but significant staffing change: Mike Mullin, the attorney who represented Raydient and Rayonier during the creation of the ENCPA, took a job as Nassau County Attorney.

By the time Raydient was ready to start development on the next DSAP, there had been a seismic shift.

When the company submitted its plan, which included an active adult community in another part of the ENCPA, Mullin argued Raydient was responsible for funding the construction of all civil facilities in addition to donating the land.

Mullin’s new position was a 180 from the terms he had successfully advocated for when he represented Raydient and Rayonier. His new position wasn’t only a divergence from the agreed-upon terms, but with county staff, including then-County Manager Shanea Jones.

The dispute unfolded in the spring and summer of 2017, culminating in a formal written demand from Mullin on behalf of Nassau County in November 2017 that falsely claimed Raydient had agreed to fund construction and maintenance for all civil facilities at the penalty of losing further development rights within the ENCPA — including in Wildlight Village, where development was already underway.

Nassau County’s Change in Position

Mullin, who had negotiated the ENCPA on behalf of Raydient and Rayonier, including the growth mitigation provisions, had changed the county’s position without warning

Between the start of the ENCPA and the second DSAP, Nassau County’s long-standing money problems came to a head.

In 2007, the county government had been warned by its own paid consultants, Fishkind & Associates, that “the capital budget is deficient.”

It was a warning that was reiterated multiple times and by various parties over the next several years, including Fitch Ratings in 2015, which said that the county’s “capital needs had been pay-go funded, but allocated resources appear inadequate to meet the needs beyond 2016.”

The county had found itself in a position where it had a growing deficit and no sustainable path to reverse the trend.

Mullin’s shift in employment brings up its own ethical questions, but the dispute between Raydient and Nassau County encompasses more than just ethics.

Was the county’s reversal the genesis of an attempt to extort one of its largest community partners? And how deep does this go?

___

Next: Part 2 of “Has Nassau County been shaking down one of its biggest community partners?”

Peter Schorsch

Peter Schorsch is the President of Extensive Enterprises Media and is the publisher of FloridaPolitics.com, INFLUENCE Magazine, and Sunburn, the morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics. Previous to his publishing efforts, Peter was a political consultant to dozens of congressional and state campaigns, as well as several of the state’s largest governmental affairs and public relations firms. Peter lives in St. Petersburg with his wife, Michelle, and their daughter, Ella. Follow Peter on Twitter @PeterSchorschFL.


4 comments

  • Douglas Adkins

    February 18, 2020 at 10:31 pm

    Make no mistake about it Peter – Wildlight has been “shaking down” the Nassau County taxpayers for a long time – Mike Mullin is the person who has had the courage to stand up and say NO to a powerful corporation. Think about this like “Dark Waters” with the infamous lawyer Robert Billott – its hard to believe but its all true. There is a $5 million road that forms the entrance to Wildlight that was built with an interest free loan from the Nassau County School Board – BTW it runs right by the world HQ of Rayonier – then you have the “donated land” for the school at Wildlight – not quite so fast – it was a swap according to the state auditor general – they traded the land for credits – so not quite a donation. This is just my personal opinion but Wildlight is really expensive $400,000 for a 1300 sq ft home – a bit too pricey for us in Nassau.

    • Garito

      February 24, 2020 at 8:27 am

      No courage involved. He’s just a corrupt advisor to a good old boy network of corrupt county commissioners.

  • Flo

    February 19, 2020 at 8:39 am

    Maybe someone finally figured out that the majority of people in Nassau County do not want to be a Little Orange Park and we were and still are quite happy with Nassau being a nice,quiet, RUAL county.

  • Rick

    February 24, 2020 at 7:17 am

    I hope one of your future parts of this article focuses on the fact that the current Chair of the BOCC does not live in his district, which per the Florida Constitution means his seat is vacant — though he continues to serve.

Comments are closed.


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