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Florida man builds fortress of tires around Marion County property

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When I was growing up in Pensacola, the local radio station often ran ads for a tire repair business whose slogan was, “Tires ain’t pretty.” I thought of that simple declaration this week when I heard the story of a big fight in Dunnellon over used tire disposal.

The person who told me the story is a woman in her 70s named Rita Gomez. She lives on a 30-acre parcel of land with a horse, a herd of cattle known as Zebu, and quite a few gopher tortoises. She’s far enough out in the country that her driveway is a mile long.

Next door to her is a 15-acre homesite whose owner has posted a sign calling it his “Black Fortress.” The primary feature of Black Fortress: its walls. They are made of stacks and stacks of black tires — truck tires, tractor tires, you name it.

It looks like someone invaded a Krispy Kreme to stack a bunch of the donuts on top of each other in rows. There are more than 1,500 tires forming this immense fence, perhaps as many as 2,000, Gomez said.

The property owner, whose name is Derek Peoples, has surrounded his entire property in Marion County with the stacks of used tires. Each tire is filled with dirt, mulch, or even (pee-ew!) horse poop, Gomez told me.

Now Peoples has begun lining his driveway with them too, she said.

“Something there is that doesn’t love a wall,” Robert Frost once wrote. I think that goes double for a wall made of smelly old tires.

“There is no justifiable reason for this environmental hazard in our community to continue to exist,” Gomez told me.

She sent me pictures of the tires as well as a photo of a sign that Peoples placed in front of the property advertising that it’s a government-run site. But it’s not.

“It is incorrect to claim your property is either a government facility or a solid waste facility,” an official of the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) wrote to Peoples in February. The DEP informed him that his sign “is not accurate or correct” and warned him not to bring in any more tires.

So far, the sign is still there, and Gomez says she’s seen him bringing in more tires, too.

Still, Peoples’ fortress-like farm fence is far from the worst way that Floridians have disposed of old tires.

Like the moon

Tire disposal has been a problem ever since part-time Florida man Harvey Firestone first sold a set to go on one of part-time Florida man Henry Ford’s Model Ts.

The original plan was just to junk them. Toss those bald tires in the nearest landfill! Fill it to the rim with radials!

By the 2000s, there were some 300 million used tires thrown on the scrap heap annually, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). But they would routinely fill up with rainwater, breeding mosquitoes and attracting rats.

As another option, you could burn them.

But tire fires “often become major hazardous incidents affecting entire communities — frequently requiring neighborhood evacuations and long, drawn-out fire extinguishing operations” the EPA noted. “In 1983, a 7 million tire fire in Rhinehart, Va., issued a plume of smoke 3,000 feet high and nearly 50 miles long with air pollution emissions deposited in three states. It burned for nine months, polluting nearby water sources with lead and arsenic.”

Then someone came up with an even worse idea.

Beginning in the 1960s, people around Florida began lashing old tires together and dropping them in the water offshore to create “tire reefs.” Millions of tires went into these offshore sites over the next 30 years.

“At the time, it was thought that tire placement would increase reef populations, promote tourism and fishing activity, and improve habitats for fish species with minimal economic or environmental costs,” the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) reported.

Except it turns out the tire reefs were actually harming both the fish and the waterways. Oops!

“Unfortunately,” NOAA said, “after years of monitoring, scientists determined artificial tire reefs often have not improved fish populations as intended, and the tires have instead caused significant environmental harm. Tires can leach toxic chemicals into the water and can degrade into smaller particles, contributing to microplastic pollution.”

The most notorious tire reef in Florida is the Osborne Reef off Fort Lauderdale, which consists of more than 1 million tires. They’re damaging a real coral reef nearby, too.

A diver interviewed by NPR in 2007 described the underwater Osborne scene this way: “It’s like the moon or something. It’s weird. It doesn’t look like anything you can imagine. It’s just tires for as far as you can see down there.”

Dedicated divers have been steadily pulling the old tires out, but by one estimate there are still 500,000 left out there. Completing the cleanup may take another decade.

A similar but smaller disaster happened off Pinellas County.  Evidence of what could go wrong cropped up just last year.

“A reef project from the 70s is turning into an environmental problem in Pinellas County as old tires wash onto the beach,” WTSP-TV reported in December. “Back-to-back hurricanes dislodged the tires, which were placed in the water decades ago to create artificial reefs.”

NOAA has awarded Pinellas a $2.2 million grant to clean up the mess it created, a process expected to take at least two more years.

OK, so piling the tires up in a landfill is bad. Burning them is bad. Dropping them offshore is bad. How about grinding them up and turning them into your child’s playground?

Nope. Turns out that’s bad for the kiddies.

“Children playing on tire crumb could potentially be exposed by ingestion of the product directly, by ingestion of surface water runoff through the product, by inhalation of dust, or by skin contact with the material or surface water runoff,” a 2005 study found.

I contacted Steven J. Laux, a solid waste expert at the University of Florida, to ask if there was any safe way to dispose of old tires. He said recycling works. The shredded components can become part of a new road, he said, meaning you could use new tires to drive on old tires. Your new tires could contain bits of old tires, too.

Because I am a curious guy, I checked. Guess where the biggest tire recycling plant in Florida is located: Marion County.

And I don’t think their perimeter fence is made out of Michelins, either.

Chicanery and clear springs

Dunnellon was founded more than a century ago amid some deliberate chicanery.

The town founder was a close-mouthed Ocala banker named John Dunn (where the “ellon” part came from, I don’t know). In 1890, he worked with the elaborately mustachioed Albertus Vogt and a chemist named R.R. Snowden to secretly amass as much acreage as possible after Vogt discovered a phosphate deposit while sinking a well.

They managed to pull together 13,000 acres, dug up as much phosphate as they could excavate, and shipped it out via river and then railroad. So many people showed up hoping for a piece of the action that Dunnellon got the unlikely nickname “Boomtown.”

By the 1920s, the phosphate deposit had played out, and the mining moved southward to Polk County. Little Dunnellon hung on, but just barely. In an official history of the city, the next significant event mentioned is the on-location filming of the 2001 horror movie “Jeepers Creepers.”

To me, though, Dunnellon’s finest feature is Rainbow Springs State Park, which began life as a privately owned tourist attraction in the 1930s.

The park offered glass-bottom boat tours, waterfalls built atop the old phosphate mines, and a monorail. You could enjoy watching a swim team called the Bahama Belles and even an occasional mermaid like at Weeki Wachee Springs.

But that rodent-oriented theme park in Orlando drew most would-be visitors away, and the new interstate bypassed the region, making the tourist tires turn elsewhere. In 1974, the Rainbow Springs private attraction closed. It reopened as a state park in 1995.

Needless to say, the main attraction remains the crystal waters. But Rainbow Springs, like many springs around the state, is now facing some serious problems, including nitrate pollution and decreases in the historic flow due to over-pumping of groundwater.

Now add “contaminated tire runoff” to the mix, and you can see why using tires to build a wall might be a problem.

Don’t tread on me

I tried multiple times in multiple ways to contact Peoples, the Fortress Builder, but he didn’t respond to my calls, texts or emails.

I read in some Marion County court records that when a process server tried to hand him a notice about being sued by a bank, he told her she was trespassing and ordered her off his property.

On the other hand, the somewhat confusing sign on his fence specifically says, “No Trespassing, Harassment, Threatening Violence or Lying Against Sanctioned Government Facility Will Result in Criminal Prosecution, Charges, Fines and Tort. You Will Lose. This Sign Is Exhibit B.” (No mention of what Exhibit A might be.)

Instead of “Black Fortress,” perhaps he should have just posted a picture of a bald tire with the slogan, “Don’t Tread On Me.”

I asked Rita Gomez how the tire wall got started four years ago.

“One day he dropped one tire,” she recalled. Gomez asked Peoples’ wife what was going on, and remembers her saying, “Don’t worry about it, this has nothing to do with you.”

But of course, it has had everything to do with the neighbors and the whole community.

Gomez told me when she saw what he was building, she began making repeated complaints to both Marion County and the state DEP. She was particularly steamed when she saw that the wall of tires was blocking the path of a threatened gopher tortoise.

I contacted both DEP and Marion County code enforcement about what’s happening with this literal embodiment of the “tires ain’t pretty” concept.

“The property owner originally used a limited number of tires filled with soil as planters and barriers,” Sarah Fayed of the DEP told me via e-mail. “In 2021, DEP issued a letter outlining limited beneficial use, but this was not intended as a perpetual authorization.”

After that February letter that told Peoples to stop bringing in tires, “any new tires placed since that time are not authorized by DEP,” she wrote. “DEP continues to monitor the matter and will evaluate next steps as appropriate.”

And Marion County spokesperson Stacie Causey told me that Peoples’ ever-growing tire collection is the basis of “an open investigation” for code enforcement.

Gomez shared with me a text that Peoples sent her four years ago, after getting wind of her first complaints about what he was doing. He threatened a lawsuit that he never filed.

“You all cannot dictate what we can do on our land,” he told her.

Yet, as any student of American civics knows, your local government’s zoning code and state and federal environmental regulations can and should dictate what you do or don’t do on your property.

That’s because — despite all the Florida politicians we’ve heard ranting and raving about the importance of property rights — what you do on your property can affect everyone around you, either via the air or the water. There is no “right to pollute” in either the state or federal constitution.

Legally speaking, this is where the rubber meets the road.

___

Craig Pittman reporting. Florida Phoenix is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Florida Phoenix maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Michael Moline for questions: [email protected].


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UWF analysis on ‘puppy mills’ leads to consumer protection investigation

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Attorney General James Uthmeier issued a report this week concluding that deceptive sales of pets have ripped off Floridians to the tune of $25.1 million annually.

The analysis focused largely on the sale of puppies in the state. The report found that at least 80% of young canines sold in Florida are sourced from breeders in other states in so-called “puppy mills.”

Since those animals usually undergo extensive transport to get to Florida, the puppies often arrive sick or mischaracterized in their breeds, which ultimately results in substantial vet bills for families.

The research was conducted by the University of West Florida’s Haas Center, an economic impact and workforce survey arm of the Panhandle campus. Uthmeier said the results led to his Office launching a consumer protection investigation into deceptive sales, sick animals and predatory financing schemes.

“Florida families deserve fair and honest business practices,” Uthmeier said. “This report exposes how deceptive retailers and shady lenders are preying on consumers who are bringing a pet into their family. Our office is opening a formal investigation into the lenders and retailers pushing these predatory loans for sick puppies.”

The 90-page report, “The Cost of Deception: How Sick Pets Drain Florida’s Economy,” also outlines the difficult conditions puppies face on their way to Florida.

As many as 120 puppies can be crammed into one van and transported thousands of miles, with few exams by veterinarians and hardly any oversight. That creates conditions for the spread of disease, which often leads to pricey veterinarian bills.

The report also found that some pet sales involve big retailers that include store-brand credit cards with interest rates as high as 35.9%, along with hidden fees and “deferred interest” in promotions.

“A $5,000 pet purchase can ultimately cost families as much as $16,000 under these terms,” a news release said.

The counties with the most complaints about puppy problems include Orange, Pinellas, Duval, Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach.

The UWF analysis also provided some recommendations, including increasing consumer protections and oversight for breeders and transporters. Researchers also suggest the state modernize pet lemon laws and restrict questionable financing practices.



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Majority of South Florida residents support Fontainebleau redevelopment plan

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Fontainebleau Miami Beach’s proposed “family-friendly improvements” are enjoying broad support among South Florida residents, according to a new poll commissioned by the developers and conducted by MDW Communications.

The poll, obtained by Florida Politics and taken among 305 likely Miami Beach municipal voters Jan. 14-19, found nearly 60% of respondents supporting the proposal, including more than 30% who strongly support it. Fewer than 30% of respondents say they disapprove.

And most residents are aware of the plans, further signaling not just support, but informed support. Of those polled, more than 2/3 say they have heard information on the proposal, with just a third saying they’ve heard nothing about it.

Fontainebleau Development, led by Chair and CEO Jeffrey Soffer, is planning a sweeping rework of the hotel’s outdoor pool deck aimed at attracting more families, including a proposed water-park concept featuring 11 waterslides — one reportedly about 120 feet tall — along with other pool-deck upgrades.

Poll results are important, as the project requires approval from the city’s Historic Preservation Board because it sits on a historically significant site. The Preservation Board reviews alteration plans on designated historic properties.

The Fontainebleau, designed by architect Morris Lapidus and opened in 1954, is one of Miami Beach’s signature MiMo-era landmarks and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

The project is carefully planned to “responsibly repurpose” outdoor areas of the hotel without expanding its footprint or altering its unique architectural character.

“Under the leadership of the Mayor and the City Commission, Miami Beach continues to evolve as a destination for visitors of all ages, and this vision reflects an increased emphasis on family-oriented experiences that align with the City’s broader tourism goals,” reads a note from developers shared along with poll results.

“The proposed enhancements are private amenities for hotel guests only, and the pool deck access will remain restricted, as it is today. Given the focus on hotel guest experience, the project is not expected to generate additional traffic as guests will be remaining on property.”

The project would repurpose the resort’s existing amenity footprint while integrating features designed to complement the existing historic pool deck and honoring the entire property’s iconic architecture.

The poll comes just days after the Greater Miami and the Beaches Hotel Association urged project approval from the Preservation Board, noting that the project would help maintain Miami Beach as a competitive global hospitality destination. The group’s CEO, Curtis Crider, said projects such as this one are “essential” to the city’s economic future.

“On behalf of the hotel community, we believe this initiative strengthens the city’s competitiveness, supports sustainable economic growth, and reflects the evolution necessary to ensure Miami Beach’s continued success,” he wrote last week in a letter to the Preservation Board.



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Kat Cammack offers early endorsement to Evan Power in CD 2 race

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U.S. Rep. Kat Cammack already knows who she wants to win a newly open race neighboring her own North Florida district.

The Gainesville Republican is endorsing Republican Party of Florida Chair Evan Power to succeed retiring U.S. Rep. Neal Dunn.

“I don’t back candidates who seek permission slips. I back fighters. That’s why I’m proud to endorse Evan Power for Congress,” Cammack said.

“Washington is broken because too many politicians cling to the status quo. Evan isn’t one of them. He’s a proven conservative leader who fights bureaucracy, stands up to the radical left, and wins. I’ve seen him push back against government overreach, defend Florida values, and hold firm under pressure.”

Power, a Tallahassee Republican, filed last week to run in Florida’s 2nd Congressional District a day after Dunn announced he will not seek another term. Cammack first won election in 2020 to Congress to represent Florida’s 3rd Congressional District.

On social media, Power said he was “honored to have the endorsement and support of Kat Cammack.”

It’s an early endorsement for the party leader as other candidates rush to file.

Already, former U.S. Senate candidate Keith Gross filed in the Republican Primary. Other Republicans, including Austin Rogers, the General Counsel for U.S. Sen. Rick Scott, and Chuck Perdue, the Bay County Talk Collector, are exploring runs.

Cammack said Power’s history working on political issues and campaigns led her to publicly support his candidacy.

“Evan doesn’t just talk about freedom, the Constitution, and fiscal responsibility, he delivers. He knows our job is to serve the people, not grow government, appease special interests, or play nice with the swamp,” she said.

“If you want a rubber stamp, look elsewhere. If you want a conservative who will join me to secure the border, protect parents, defend life, back law enforcement, and put America First then Evan Power is the fighter we need in Congress. I’m all in for Evan Power. I hope you are too.”



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