Bridlewood Farm Supports Vigorous Protection of the Farmland Preservation Area

Bridlewood Farm Supports Vigorous Protection of the Farmland Preservation Area

We fully concur that WEC and the Farmland Preservation Area can and should co-exist to the benefit of all. Thank you, Bridlewood Farm and the Malone family for your continued support of Horse Farms Forever’s mission to preserve the farmland that makes Marion County unique and irreplaceable.

Always Watching

We work hard to keep you informed, and to represent our members’ interests in preserving our horse farms, farmland and the unique character and culture of Marion County.
Join the herd. Every voice matters.

Golden Eggs

Golden Eggs

The irreplaceable destination of Marion County with its open spaces and beautiful places continues to be where successful equine businesses are born. Look around and you will see many “golden eggs” from breeding and training farms to event facilities, suppliers, real estate firms, and on and on. These businesses generate jobs and feed the enthusiasm that brands us as the Horse Capital of the World®. Golden Ocala and the World Equestrian Center are a big part of Ocala’s future.

To the Roberts family – Horse Farms Forever graciously thanks you for your enormous investment in Ocala/Marion County. In the decades to come, your vision to build the World Equestrian Center will dramatically impact this community in many positive ways. It will be a significant driver of the economy and will cement our region’s global brand as the Horse Capital of the World®. THANK YOU!

We also thank Golden Ocala for being a Founding member of Horse Farms Forever and appreciate their support of our mission. It’s important to remember that we are all here, Golden Ocala and the World Equestrian Center included, because of the land. Without it, this point on the map is nothing special. Our county had the foresight to recognize that and create the Farmland Preservation Area 15 years ago.

It is unfortunate that we find ourselves in a disagreement with one of our Founding members. The Golden Ocala-World Equestrian Center Amendment to the Comprehensive Plan contains two areas of concern that impact the Farmland Preservation Area: Map Area 1 that seeks to move the boundary line of the Farmland Preservation Area on 118 acres of farmland, and Map Area 8 where the Amendment seeks to invade 157 acres of farmland inside the Farmland Preservation Area with up to 78 acres of undefined commercial development. In proportion to the complete Amendment, these Areas 1 and 8, are small and geographically isolated from the rest of the Complex.

True to our mission, we must stand firm in protecting the integrity of the Farmland Preservation Area. If we allow an erosion of its boundaries, we all stand to lose the very thing that makes our area unique. Our members entrusted us with this mission. It is our duty to remain vigilant and proactive.

With the exception of these two areas of concern, just 6% of roughly 4,200 acres, Horse Farms Forever offers its full support for approval of the GO-WEC Amendment to the Comprehensive Plan.

We respectfully urge the Roberts organization to withdraw Areas 1 and 8 from the Amendment. These areas can still be developed with appropriate limitations through other options in the planning process. Right now, they are a distraction that galvanizes community opposition. Withdrawal would help to unify the equestrian community’s support and excitement for the tremendous contribution of vision and insight that the Roberts organization brings to Ocala/Marion County.

Always Watching

We work hard to keep you informed, and to represent our members’ interests in preserving our horse farms, farmland and the unique character and culture of Marion County. Join the herd. Every voice matters.

From the Star Banner: Planning and Zoning Board Advises Reining in Sprawling World Equestrian Center

From the Star Banner: Planning and Zoning Board Advises Reining in Sprawling World Equestrian Center

We bring you this article courtesy of the Ocala Star Banner and its author,

Developers of the massive World Equestrian Center want to make it even bigger by adding another 1,000-plus acres to the already approved 3,200-acre footprint of the project in northwest Marion County.

On Monday, however, the Marion County Planning and Zoning Commission balked at part of that plan, voting 4-1 to recommend excluding about 370 acres north of U.S. 27 between Golden Hills Turf and County Club and County Road 225A. The sticking point was its distance from the main WEC property south of U.S. 27. P&Z Commissioner Andy Bonner cast the lone dissenting vote.

The P&Z commission is an advisory board and will send its recommendation to the Marion County Commission. The commission, which is not bound by the recommendation, is scheduled to consider the plan at its May 28 meeting.

The developer, RLR Investments LLC, is led by trucking magnate Larry Roberts, who owns extensive property in Marion County.

Under the proposed plan, the number of homes remains at just below 2,400, but commercial space increases to 4 million square feet, up from 525,000 square feet. Hotel rooms could top out at 1,350, suggesting plans for more hotels besides the 254-room facility currently under construction. Seating at the WEC outdoor stadium would also increase from 10,000 seats to 13,500.

Horse Farms Forever, a local rural land conservation organization, of which Roberts is a member, is against parts of the plan because it infringes on the Farmland Preservation Area (FPA) boundary. About 118 acres of the new land eyed for residential development falls over the FPA boundary to the north of the main WEC development. Another 160 acres to the west also falls in the FPA.

While RLR suggests it would put polo fields on the 160-acre site, representatives fear it will eventually fall to commercial development.

In 2017, the County Commission moved the FPA boundary west to accommodate about 1,000 acres of the WEC project.

The County Commission designated the Farmland Preservation Area in December 2004. It covers much of northwest Marion.

The WEC would feature a sport horse competition area as the centerpiece of an upscale residential community currently planned for about 3,200 acres between Northwest 80th Avenue and Northwest 100th Avenue and U.S. 27 and State Road 40.

The new proposal, introduced on Monday, would add about 1,000 acres, including more than 560 acres north of U.S. 27, 160 acres west of Northwest 100th Avenue and about 52 acres east of Northwest 80th Avenue.

Jimmy Gooding, an attorney representing RLR, presented the plan, which would bring all 4,200 acres under the same umbrella.

“It allows us to continue to develop the WEC without having to come back for everything and having to get separate approvals for movement of items,” Gooding said.

Gooding said they would still be bound by limits in the underlying development agreements.

“It’s not the Wild West. It is governed by the text policy that we have, and it’s covered by our (planned urban development) zoning,” he said.

But P&Z Commission Chairman Greg Lord did not feel it was appropriate to include the property outside of the core project.

“It’d be a lot easier for me to support almost everything you’re asking for if you didn’t have all these outparcels outside of the major portion,” Lord said. “As you ease out to these other parcels, I really feel like they should be addressed individually instead of being put all in there together.”

During the meeting, several people addressed the issue of the FPA intrusion, though the commission did not discuss that issue.

“While we agree the WEC will be a great boon to our horse industry and economy, we believe it needs to be well managed,” said Busy Shires Byerly of the Ocala-based Horse Farms Forever.

The organization is against changing the FPA boundary.

“We believe this land use category is really like a Trojan horse. It sounds and looks good, but if it is approved, it will invade the Farmland Preservation Area with undefined, intensive commercial development,” she said.

Gooding said they hope to work with the group to find a compromise, but ultimately the changes they seek would only affect a tiny portion of the FPA.

“I understand some people think the lines are cut into stone, and they are perfectly entitled to their opinion, but under the county’s comp plan, it contemplates changing the boundary,” he said. “There are circumstances where the applicant can show the need to move the boundary, and we are seeking to move it.”

Separately, the commission unanimously recommended the county move forward with a plan to swap 20 acres on Northwest 80th Avenue, adjacent to the WEC, and currently owned by the Marion County School Board, for other property from RLR.

Contact Carlos E. Medina at 867-4157 or cmedina@starbanner.com

Always Watching

We work hard to keep you informed, and to represent our members’ interests in preserving our horse farms, farmland and the unique character and culture of Marion County. Join the herd. Every voice matters.

Live Oak Stud Urges the County To Stand By the Farmland Preservation Area

Live Oak Stud Urges the County To Stand By the Farmland Preservation Area

Thank you, Live Oak Stud, for continued support of the Farmland Preservation Area and for expressing faith in Horse Farms Forever as we work to protect its boundaries from encroaching development.

To learn more about the Golden Ocala-World Equestrian Center development plans that affect the Farmland Preservation Area. Read our latest report.

The County Commissioners meet on May 28 at 2pm. Monitor this link for details on Public participation. There will be both in-person and call-in options. 

Always Watching

We work hard to keep you informed, and to represent our members’ interests in preserving our horse farms, farmland and the unique character and culture of Marion County. Join the herd. Every voice matters.

County Zoning Commissioners Hear the Public But Vote in Favor of GO-WEC

County Zoning Commissioners Hear the Public But Vote in Favor of GO-WEC

Busy Shires Byerly, Horse Farms Forever’s Director of Conservation Strategies, addresses the Zoning and Planning Board at the public meeting on May 11th.

At last evenings’ Marion County Zoning and Planning Commission meeting, Horse Farms Forever’s Busy Shires-Byerly presented our clear position opposing Golden Ocala/World Equestrian Center’s plans specific to Area 1 and Area 8 on their plan map. In these two areas, totaling 275 acres, they are asking the County to remove 118 acres of land from the Farmland Protection Area and to rezone 157 acres as “WEC Rural” which will allow up to 50% commercial development.

Our presentation on behalf of the Horse Farms Forever’s Board of Directors and membership was well-received and almost universally-supported by unsolicited comments from the public, both in person and by phone.

At the meeting, Ms. Byerly requested that the two land use amendments be removed from the DRI because they are “inconsistent with the county’s comprehensive plan to protect the Farmland Preservation Area,” she said. “The WEC land use category will allow up to 75 acres of intensive and undefined commercial development in a rural area. In addition, moving the boundary of the Farmland Preservation Area will also set a precedent for future land use decisions.”

See the entire meeting recording. We present from 1:13:23 to 1:18:58.

Particularly impactful to the Zoning Commission was our mention of recent letters of support from the Florida Thoroughbred Breeders’ and Owners’ Association (FTBOA) and the Ocala/Marion County Chamber and Economic Partnership (CEP) to protect the Farmland Preservation Area.

GO-WEC’s land use attorney, James Gooding, who represented them at the meeting, acknowledged our concerns and referenced them several times during his presentations. He also stated that the Roberts family, owners of GO-WEC, are founding members of Horse Farms Forever and “don’t want to pick a fight with us.” He publicly committed to come to the table to work out a solution but made no specific offer to withdraw GO-WEC’s stated plans for Areas 1 and 8. Mr. Gooding repeatedly emphasized GO-WEC’s disregard for the boundary of the Farmland Preservation Area. “We are talking about 118 acres out of a huge area,” said Mr. Gooding.

In the end, the appointed Planning and Zoning Commission chose to largely ignore Horse Farms Forever’s and the public’s concerns. They voted and approved one concession, which excluded the Area 1 lots from the plan. This is the area where 118 acres is slated to be removed from the FPA and added to the Urban Growth Boundary. This vote was 4 to 1 in favor. Their second vote approved all other zoning changes, including the WEC Rural designation allowing commercial development in Area 8, by unanimous vote.

Horse Farms Forever is disappointed as the Zoning Commission’s recommendation paves the way to the next meeting. The GO-WEC land use amendment now heads to the Marion County Board of Commissioners on May 28th. This Board does not have to accept the recommendation of the Planning and Zoning Commission. Unlike the Zoning Commission, the Board of County Commissioners are elected officials and have the ability to change the DRI request to protect the Farmland Preservation Area.

What’s Next?

Horse Farms Forever will use our seat at the table to engage in discussions with GO-WEC. We have retained Land Use Attorney G. Matthew Brockway to negotiate on our behalf. We will keep you informed of any breakthroughs.

In the meantime, it is time to turn up the volume and make sure that our unified voice echoes through the halls in the County. We have two weeks until the May 28 hearing. Please join us as we email and call the County Commissioners and representatives from GO-WEC.

Turn Up the Volume

We are urging GO-WEC to abandon their plans for Areas 1 and 8 of their application to the County.

Please ask them to join us in protecting the Farmland Preservation Area and valuing the environment that makes Ocala an irreplaceable destination.

We are not Wellington,
nor do we want to be!

Once erased,
it can never be replaced.

Email GO-WEC leadership:

Email the County Commissioners:

David Moore 

Kathy Bryant

Jeff Gold

Carl Zalak, III

Michelle Stone

G. Matthew Brockway Joins Threat Response Team

We welcome Matt Brockway back to represent us at the May 28 hearing. You may remember him as a part of the team that helped defeat the Coastal Connector in 2018. Matt’s land use practice encompasses the entire land development process – from conception through final certification. His land use practice includes complex land use litigation and zoning approval concerns.