JEKYLL ISLAND AUTHORITY SAYS REVITALIZATION PLANS STILL A WORK IN
PROGRESS
Since I
had talked recently to David Egan — whose group, the Initiative to
Protect Jekyll Island, has great concerns about the island’s proposed
revitalization — I thought it only fair to see what the Jekyll Island
Authority has to say. (Besides, it affords me the opportunity to stop by
the exquisite little Georgia Sea Grill on St. Simons Island and stuff my
face with corn-fried shrimp. Being a modest and much-beloved columnist
does have its rewards.)
The JIA’s
message is simple: Relax. Everything is still in the planning stage. A
lot of details have to be ironed out before revitalization plans are
finalized. The revitalization is a work in progress. Eric Garvey, the
authority’s senior director of marketing, says the controversy over the
proposal has occurred because the Jekyll Island Authority and the
developer, Linger Longer Communities, chose to intentionally put out a
“concept plan” to initiate discussion.
And did
it ever. I have received hundreds of emails from all over the country —
the vast majority opposed to what they have seen or heard about the
authority’s intentions.
“Those
who have voiced concerns about what is being planned for Jekyll Island’s
redevelopment need to understand that we are listening to them,” Garvey
insists, “and the next iteration of the Linger Longer plan will reflect
that.” The revised plan should be ready around July 1 and Garvey says
the JIA will be seeking additional comments.
Garvey
points out that you can plan in a vacuum or you can get input from all
concerned. The JIA, he says, has chosen the latter. If they had it to do
over again, I think the organization would have put more effort into
communicating up front its good intentions.
By and
large, the public doesn’t believe that government at any level is
capable of organizing a two-car funeral, much less the revitalization of
one of Georgia’s most treasured assets. The JIA should have seen that
one coming.
Garvey
emphasizes that the Jekyll Island Authority is a conservation-based
organization. While many Georgians care for Jekyll Island, none do more
that the people who work for the authority and who have dedicated their
careers to preserving the island’s public assets. Exhibit Number One is
Jekyll’s recently opened and magnificent Georgia Sea Turtle Center. It
is a jewel.
Furthermore, Garvey says that whatever the final plan, the emphasis will
be on “green.” JIA’s marketing chief says the intent is for all future
development to achieve or exceed environmental construction standards.
What
about the discrepancy in the numbers being tossed around both by
opponents of the redevelopment and the JIA? “Numbers can be used any way
you want depending on what you are trying to prove,” Garvey said. “For
planning purposes, we are taking a long-term view — 1980 to 2008 — and
plugging in a lot of raw data. I’m not sure slicing numbers for a year
or two proves anything.” That statement is an obvious jab at the
Initiative to Protect Jekyll Island’s publication of automobile traffic
counts from 1996-97.
As for
accommodations, Garvey points out that quality lodging is essential
because most people visiting Jekyll Island live too far away to take a
daytrip and there are not enough quality facilities available at the
current time. He says the intent is not to make the island “exclusive.”
The plan must include more rooms and a variety of choices: cottages,
existing campgrounds and condominiums oriented to tourism, not full-time
residences. This is perhaps the most sensitive point to those who are
concerned about the Linger Longer plan.
After
looking at this issue from the perspectives of the developer, the
grassroots groups and the Jekyll Island Authority, I think that a
solution is on the way if everyone will lower the rhetoric, muzzle the
grandstanding politicians and develop some mutual trust. The good news
is that there are well-intentioned people on both sides of the issue.
Everybody wants what is best for Jekyll Island and its future. For the
moment, let’s all take a deep breath and see what the revised plan looks
like.
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