Florida Senate - 2026                            (NP)    SR 1800
       
       
        
       By Senator Brodeur
       
       
       
       
       
       10-01768B-26                                          20261800__
    1                          Senate Resolution                        
    2         A resolution affirming the importance of the Florida
    3         Wildlife Corridor and its significant environmental,
    4         cultural, economic, and tourism value as a unique
    5         natural resource and recognizing February 17, 2026, as
    6         “Florida Wildlife Corridor Day.”
    7  
    8         WHEREAS, the campaign to establish the Florida Wildlife
    9  Corridor began 16 years ago, and supporters saw their vision
   10  become reality with the passage of the Florida Wildlife Corridor
   11  Act of 2021, and
   12         WHEREAS, the Florida Wildlife Corridor establishes a
   13  geographic area of more than 18 million acres of land, of which
   14  10 million acres are public conservation lands that could be
   15  permanently disconnected from each other without the additional
   16  conservation of nearly 8 million acres of currently unprotected
   17  opportunity areas connecting them, and
   18         WHEREAS, Florida’s population has grown from 21.8 million
   19  when the Florida Wildlife Corridor Act was signed to more than
   20  23.8 million today, resulting in urban and suburban sprawl
   21  consuming rural and natural land within and adjacent to the
   22  corridor, and
   23         WHEREAS, the nearly 8 million acres of opportunity areas
   24  that still need protection consist largely of working ranches,
   25  farms, and forests, the majority of which can be protected
   26  through conservation easements with willing landowners, thereby
   27  supporting the state’s agricultural economy and contributing to
   28  the long-term food security of this state and the nation, and
   29         WHEREAS, the Legislature has appropriated significant
   30  funding for the state’s conservation programs, providing
   31  incentive for conservation and sustainable development while
   32  preserving the green infrastructure that is the foundation of
   33  this state’s economy and quality of life, and
   34         WHEREAS, since July 2021, more than 400,000 acres of land
   35  in the Florida Wildlife Corridor have been approved for
   36  protection by Governor Ron DeSantis and the Cabinet, including
   37  Commissioner of Agriculture Wilton Simpson, who made the
   38  corridor a priority during his term as Senate President, with
   39  funding appropriated by the Legislature from the Department of
   40  Environmental Protection’s Florida Forever program and the
   41  Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services’ Rural and
   42  Family Lands Protection Program, and
   43         WHEREAS, the nearly 62,000-acre Raiford to Osceola Greenway
   44  project, made possible through the voluntary conservation
   45  easement by Weyerhaeuser Forest Holdings, Inc., is located
   46  within the Florida Wildlife Corridor and serves as a historic
   47  example as the largest conservation easement completed in
   48  Florida’s history, led by the Department of Environmental
   49  Protection’s Florida Forever program, helping to permanently
   50  connect an urgent and vulnerable gap by utilizing the designated
   51  funding for the Ocala to Osceola Wildlife Corridor, and
   52         WHEREAS, the Florida Forever program continues to bolster
   53  its statewide success, having closed on 210 conservation
   54  easements totaling 464,846 acres and maintaining a robust
   55  pipeline of interested landowners dedicated to land
   56  conservation, as evidenced by the current portfolio of 138
   57  projects totaling 2,088,443 acres, and
   58         WHEREAS, since 2023, the Department of Agriculture and
   59  Consumer Services’ Rural and Family Lands Protection program has
   60  experienced a 90 percent increase in interest from willing
   61  landowners seeking to conserve working agricultural lands within
   62  the Florida Wildlife Corridor, as demonstrated by the submission
   63  of more than 500 applications from Florida landowners
   64  representing over 600,000 acres at an estimated value exceeding
   65  $2.1 billion, which highlights the growing commitment and
   66  enthusiasm of landowners to participate in conservation efforts,
   67  and is supported by the expansion of delegated authorities,
   68  resulting in the successful protection of more than 224,000
   69  acres of land since the program’s inception, advancing both
   70  conservation and agricultural viability, and
   71         WHEREAS, together, the Florida Forever program and the
   72  Rural and Family Lands Protection program empower landowners to
   73  do their part, making these programs critical to ensuring the
   74  long-term protection and connectivity of the Florida Wildlife
   75  Corridor by safeguarding both natural and working landscapes for
   76  the benefit of future generations, and
   77         WHEREAS, the state’s prioritization of the Florida Wildlife
   78  Corridor has prompted many federal and local programs to
   79  increase their investment in Florida conservation, and
   80         WHEREAS, these programs share the state’s goal of
   81  protecting an additional 600,000 acres in the Florida Wildlife
   82  Corridor by 2030, balancing the state’s commitment to urgent
   83  conservation with the demand for development to accommodate the
   84  more than 2 million new residents projected to move to this
   85  state within the next 5 years, and
   86         WHEREAS, public access to the Florida Wildlife Corridor was
   87  greatly expanded in 2023 when the Legislature passed and
   88  Governor Ron DeSantis signed legislation that connected the
   89  corridor to the Florida Greenways and Trails System and the
   90  Florida Shared-Use Non-motorized (SUN) Trail Network, as well as
   91  additional pathways to heritage small towns throughout this
   92  state, and
   93         WHEREAS, with the state’s funding commitment in recent
   94  years to such projects, the Department of Environmental
   95  Protection and the Department of Transportation have coordinated
   96  the establishment of multiuse trails, including investment in
   97  the planning, design, and construction of the SUN Trail Network
   98  and the campaign to recognize various communities as “Trail
   99  Towns,” in conjunction with Visit Florida’s promotion of trail
  100  based tourism, and
  101         WHEREAS, connecting trails with the Florida Wildlife
  102  Corridor creates a means to preserve many natural areas and
  103  provides expanded access for Floridians and visitors to hike,
  104  run, and bike between trail destinations and see firsthand this
  105  state’s unique natural habitat and picturesque small towns, and
  106         WHEREAS, the Florida Wildlife Corridor provides strong
  107  protection of other tourism and recreation destinations, such as
  108  spring vents, rivers, estuaries, fisheries, and wetlands, which
  109  support carbon sequestration, nutrient capture and cycling,
  110  water storage, and groundwater recharge, which is critical to
  111  water supply, and
  112         WHEREAS, the Florida Wildlife Corridor is a nature-based
  113  solution that supports the state’s resilience against
  114  strengthening storms and provides billions of dollars’ worth of
  115  flood hazard protection by keeping the current 10 million acres
  116  of the state’s floodplains located within the corridor
  117  undeveloped, NOW, THEREFORE,
  118  
  119  Be It Resolved by the Senate of the State of Florida:
  120  
  121         That the Senate affirms the importance of the Florida
  122  Wildlife Corridor and its significant environmental, cultural,
  123  economic, and tourism value as a unique natural resource and
  124  recognizes February 17, 2026, as “Florida Wildlife Corridor
  125  Day.”