Press Release
Green Reef releases open letter to local government and national
officials to be elected.
San Pedro Town, January 29, 2008
Green
Reef Environmental Institute today released an Open Letter to
government officials on Ambergris Caye and national public officials to
be elected on February 7.
Green Reef is requesting specific
actions by our national and local governments to protect the Bird
Cayes, certain wetland and lagoon areas, and Hol Chan Marine Reserve,
along with the economic benefits and tax revenue they generate. Our
long-term prosperity and the protection of our natural resources are
inseparable.
These issues affect not only the people of
Ambergris Caye, but the people of the entire nation of Belize. “We need
help from our public officials, whether they are PUP, UDP or otherwise.
“This is not a political matter, even though government actions are
involved. We are all in this together.
Open Letter to the
Belize Rural South Area Representative and Other Officials to be
Elected February 7, to Officials to be Appointed by the New Government,
to the San Pedro Town Council and Other Local Agencies:
I am
writing on issues of great urgency that affect everyone who lives,
works, owns a business or has invested on Ambergris Caye. (That these
issues also affect everyone who lives, works, owns a business or has
invested anywhere in Belize will be obvious. However, I will focus
first on Ambergris Caye.
This letter is not intended to be
political in nature, even though I am asking for action by public
officials. Whether those officials are PUP, UDP or otherwise is not my
concern. The prosperity of Ambergris Caye, the value of real estate and
other investments on Ambergris Caye and the tax revenues generated by
Ambergris Caye depend ultimately on the island’s ability to attract
visitors. Those visitors may be tourists here for a week or those who
purchase a condo, time share or house in order to return annually for a
portion of the year.
Any number of surveys and studies make
clear that what attracts visitors to Ambergris Caye is the natural
environment in and around it. That natural environment is our greatest
asset. We and our government, national and local, must protect it. I am
requesting that, quickly following the election on February 7, those to
whom this letter is addressed take such action as is necessary to
accomplish the following:
1. Protect the Bird Cayes.
The
Bird Cayes, natural resources of direct economic benefit to the people
of Ambergris Caye and many other parts of Belize, are apparently being
sold for development.
These tiny cayes west of Ambergris Caye
derive their common name from the huge population of resident and
migratory water and land birds that feed, nest and roost there. The
birds provide a continuous supply of nutrients (guano) to the mangrove
habitats that protect the young of numerous marine species and thus
benefit the fishing industry.
Among the many interesting features of
the Bird Cayes are the well-known bonefish flat near Los Salones, an
important breeding area for the roseate spoonbill and the largest known
nesting colony of reddish egrets in Belize and possibly the entire
Caribbean.
Two of the Bird Cayes are within the boundaries of
Corozal Bay Wildlife Sanctuary. Another three are included in the
Little Guana and Los Salones Cayes Bird Sanctuaries, originally
designated as protected Crown Reserve bird sanctuaries in 1977. Since
1999, the Government of Belize has been “considering” a formal proposal
for bird sanctuary status for the remaining Bird Cayes, along with the
wetlands and lagoons on western Ambergris Caye that are the primary
feeding ground for many bird species of the Bird Cayes, Ambergris Caye,
mainland Belize and the Yucatán Peninsula.
Just last week, I
traveled to a few of the Bird Cayes on a trip organized by the San
Pedro Business Association. Also on the trip were representatives of
Ambergris Today, The San Pedro Sun and Hol Chan Marine Reserve. We saw
and photographed the following:
• Cayo Punta Bajo has been cleared of mangroves. Survey pegs are firmly
in place.
• Cayo Savannah has been cleared of all vegetation. Survey pegs are
firmly in place.
•
Little Guana, a Crown Reserve bird sanctuary, has been surveyed. Survey
pegs in the water suggest plans for dredging and landfill.
• Cayo
Iguana has been surveyed and is now being cleared of mangroves. The
Guatemalans doing the clearing said they didn’t know the identity of
the owner or the development plans, but named the person who hired and
paid them—a prominent San Pedro business man believed by many to be a
champion of tourism.
Whether other Bird Cayes have been sold, surveyed or cleared I don’t
know.
Does the sale and destruction of the Bird Cayes matter?
The
Bird Cayes do matter to the people of Ambergris Caye and beyond. They
matter to the birdwatchers, sport fishermen, naturalists and
ecotourists who come to enjoy them. They matter to the tour guides who
accompany and guide them. They matter to those who house the
birdwatchers, sport fishermen and their families—hotels, condominiums,
real estate management and development enterprises. They matter to the
restaurants, street vendors and bars that refresh them; the shops and
street vendors that cater to them; the taxis that drive them; the water
taxis and airlines that bring them here. They matter to the families
and employees of all those just mentioned. And, eventually, these
natural resources matter to the rest of us.
Directly or
indirectly, the Bird Cayes affect the livelihoods, property values and
investment returns of everyone who lives, works, owns a business or has
invested on Ambergris Caye.
The sales of the Bird Cayes must be
undone. All sales of the Bird Cayes should simply be reversed and the
purchasers refunded their purchase price. If the purchasers decline,
the Government of Belize can exercise its power of eminent domain.
Eminent domain allows a government to take property for a public
purpose, such as for a road, a school or a bird sanctuary; and it also
requires the government to pay fair market value for the property it
takes.
In the case of the Bird Cayes, fair market value was
established when the Government of Belize recently sold them. What the
Government of Belize received for the cayes is the most it should pay
to get them back. The amount paid should be further reduced in
consideration of the loss of mangroves and any other damage that has
already occurred, unless formally permitted by the Government.
While
I don’t know whether the Government of Belize had the legal authority
to sell a Crown Reserve bird sanctuary for development, I do know that
the power of eminent domain provides the Government with the legal
authority to buy back all the Bird Cayes sold. The next Government
should do so as quickly as possible after the election. Then the next
Government should quickly grant protected bird sanctuary status to all
the Bird Cayes not yet protected.
Most of all, the next
Government and all the governments that follow must in fact respect and
enforce the protected status of our natural resources.
2. Protect the Wetlands and Lagoons of Ambergris Caye
The
San Pedro Town Council and the Government of Belize have each recently
sold part of the wetlands and lagoons on western Ambergris Caye that
are the primary feeding ground for many bird species of the Bird Cayes,
Ambergris Caye, Belize and the Yucatán Peninsula. These are the
same
areas for which protected status was formally requested in 1999.
Actually,
these wetlands and lagoons had already been proposed for protected
status many times before 1999. In addition, protection of these areas
for bird watching, sport-fishing and other recreational activities have
been a part of numerous plans for tourism development on Ambergris
Caye. For example, the master plan developed in 1992 by the Ambergris
Caye Planning Committee recognized the value and potential economic
benefit of preserving these wetlands and lagoons. So did the 1990
program for development of tourism on Ambergris Caye commissioned
jointly by the governments of Belize and Mexico.
The tour
guides of Ambergris Caye have long understood the value and economic
benefit to be derived from preserving the wetlands and lagoons of
western Ambergris Caye. The owners of a local resort catering to sport
fishermen even offered to purchase the area and donate it solely for
conservation purposes. Part of the area was sold for residential
development
The recent sales of the wetlands and lagoons must
be undone. The area of which we speak does not include the high ground
suitable for development, nor does it include the existing San Mateo
residential area (that was somehow deemed suitable for development
several years ago). We refer to the area traditionally used for bird
watching, sport fishing and kayaking. The area has been defined in the
proposals and plans mentioned, but we will be glad to assist in drawing
the precise boundaries.
Again, the sales can be reversed through the
Government’s and Town Council’s exercise of their powers of eminent
domain. Then the wetlands and lagoons should immediately be granted
protected status by the Government of Belize.
3. Protect Hol Chan, the single most visited site in Belize.
Hol
Chan Marine Reserve is another natural resource that matters to
Ambergris Caye. When Hol Chan no longer attracts visitors, the effect
will be felt first in the pocketbooks of those whose livelihoods and
businesses directly serve visitors to Ambergris Caye. The negative
impact on the rest of us and the value of our investments will follow
not far behind. The reduction in tax revenues will be felt all over
Belize.
Why is Hol Chan in need of protection? Hol Chan is
endangered because its marine life and surrounding environment—the
features that attract the divers, snorkelers and sport fishermen who
support us—are threatened by the following:
a. Adjacent to Zone
C of Hol Chan Marine Reserve is the proposed South Beach development, a
“gated resort community” modeled after South Beach, Florida. The
building plans include condominiums, hotels, villas, shopping malls,
marinas, a casino, a theatre, a trolley line to San Pedro and numerous
supporting facilities.
See
http://www.southbeachbelize.com
to understand the massive scale of the planned construction. Look at
the map to see clearly how close South Beach will be to Hol Chan. Note
that the South Beach map even labels a part of Hol Chan as its “Grand
Canal,” on the shore of which are the labels “HIGH END LUXURY RESORT”
and “EXCLUSIVE SUPER-LUXURY VILLAS, YACHTS DOCK.” Look at the
architect’s drawings of South Beach from the water, and see that view
through the eyes of someone sport-fishing in Hol Chan.
Construction of South Beach will require large-scale destruction of
mangroves, dredging and use of dredged material for fill.
•
Hol Chan depends upon mangroves and seagrass beds for future
generations of its marine life since they serve as a nursery for most
species of coral reef fish and many invertebrates.
• The food
chain for Hol Chan’s marine life begins in the mangroves with the algae
that grow on mangrove roots and the bacteria and fungi that feed on
decomposing mangrove leaves. Decaying leaves and twigs in the water
under the mangroves are a rich source of nutrients for Hol Chan’s
seagrasses and marine life.
• Mangroves trap sediment washed into
the water by rain and serve as a filter, keeping the water clear and
protecting Hol Chan’s reef and seagrass beds.
• Dredging not only
destroys corals and seagrasses directly, but also adds sediments to the
water. These sediments harm corals and seagrasses by reducing the light
that can reach them, smothering them and altering the area’s nutrient
levels and sources.
Marine communities do not remain healthy through
mangrove destruction, dredging, sediment suffocation of seagrasses and
corals and use of dredged material for fill. Such construction-related
activities have serious consequences for reef ecosystems, particularly
fisheries productivity.
b. Just south of Hol Chan are Cayo
Cangrejo and Cangrejo Shoals. These areas now support a healthy
population of bonefish and other species, which in turn supports a
healthy sport-fishing industry.
Moreover, Cayo Cangrejo and
Cangrejo Shoals provide critical habitats supporting Hol Chan and, for
that reason, should have been included in the original designation of
Hol Chan Marine Reserve. In the years since Hol Chan’s creation as the
first marine protected area of its type in Belize, the nation’s
experience in managing marine protected areas has shown that critical
“feeder habitats” must be protected if the rest of the marine reserve
is to serve its purpose. For that reason, the Hol Chan Board and the
San Pedro Tour Guide Association, among others, have for years been
advocating that the Marine Reserve be expanded to include Cayo Cangrejo
and Cangrejo Shoals.
However, Cayo Cangrejo appears to have been
sold. Survey lines have been cut on the island, suggesting that it has
been sold and is slated for development.
Any development of Cayo
Cangrejo and related mangrove destruction, dredging and use of dredged
material for fill will involve the same threat to Hol Chan and its
marine life as the South Beach development. It will also directly
negatively impact the livelihoods of sport-fishing guides who frequent
Cayo Cangrejo and Cangrejo Shoals. Indirectly, development of Cayo
Cangrejo will negatively affect all of us.
The combined effect
on Hol Chan of the South Beach development on its northern border and
development on Cayo Cangrejo to the south is truly horrifying to
contemplate. Hol Chan will have been reduced to a narrow strip of water
and reef sandwiched between developments, diminished to the status of a
hotel pond. Among whatever attractions these developments might offer
will not be proximity to vibrant marine life communities, healthy coral
reef ecosystems, fishing near Cangrejo Shoals or a Hol Chan worthy of
being called a Marine Reserve. In this respect, these developments
would indeed resemble South Beach, Florida.
If the South Beach
and Cayo Cangrejo developments are completed, the loss of mangrove and
seagrasses, reduced fish populations, greater sedimentation, disturbed
and unhealthy corals and the visual impact of a developed skyline will
matter. The resulting loss of visitation to Hol Chan and Ambergris Caye
and loss of tour guiding opportunities will matter. The jobs lost and
the negative impact on the livelihoods, property values and investment
returns of the people of Ambergris Caye will matter, whether that
impact is direct or indirect. Finally, the loss in tax revenues from
Ambergris Caye will matter.
If Cayo Cangrejo has been sold,
the sale must be reversed. Again, the sale can be undone through the
Government’s exercise of its power of eminent domain. Then the Hol Chan
Marine Reserve should immediately be expanded to include Cayo Cangrejo
and Cangrejo Shoals.
To eliminate the threat to Hol Chan, the
proposed plan for the South Beach development must either be modified
significantly or prohibited altogether. To the extent that construction
and other necessary permits fall within the jurisdiction of the San
Pedro Town Council, the Ambergris Caye Planning Committee or other
local agencies, I ask that those institutions deny the permits unless
the South Beach development plan has been modified to eliminate the
threat to Hol Chan. It is unfortunately likely that the necessary
modifications will cause the developers to lose interest; but without
modifications sufficient to protect Hol Chan, the people of Ambergris
Caye cannot afford the South Beach development. If South Beach is
developed as now planned, the developers’ investment returns will come
at the expense of those of us who have already invested here, who live
and work here and call Ambergris Caye home.
4. Approve a master plan for Ambergris Caye.
The
people of Ambergris Caye must again develop a master plan for Ambergris
Caye to be approved and supported by the Government of Belize. The
Ambergris Caye Planning Committee proposed an excellent master plan in
1992. Had that plan been approved by the GOB and implemented, Ambergris
Caye would have avoided many of the problems it faces today. The 1992
plan grappled with numerous complex issues and balanced various needs,
interests and visions. Most of all, it provided a blueprint for growth
and economic development (along with the necessary infrastructure),
balanced with preservation of the natural environment and local
culture.
Although the 1992 master plan was not adopted, its
approach can be adopted today so that the future development of
Ambergris Caye can be consistent with its long-term prosperity and the
needs and vision of its people. Approval of individual developments
without regard to their impact on the lives and livelihoods of the
people who live, work and invest here is not “economic development.”
Even when the effect of an individual construction project (or dredging
operation or new vehicle) is minimal, their cumulative effect—approved
one permit at a time—can negatively impact the quality of life on
Ambergris Caye and deter the very visitors we depend upon. Only with a
vision of where we want to go can we judge whether a particular project
will move us in the right direction.
Along with approving a
master plan, the Government must establish clear lines of authority,
communication and coordination among Government agencies that interact
with the master plan. Whatever good might be accomplished by a local
authority acting in accordance with the master plan can be undone by,
for example, a Geology Department that sells a dredging permit (and
charges by the ton of dredged material) in close proximity to a marine
protected area without even consulting those who actually understand
the economic and other impacts of dredging.
5. Consider the full economic impact of land sales and development.
Visitors
are attracted to Ambergris Caye and to the rest of Belize not only by
our natural resources, but by the nation’s reputation for commitment to
the effective protection of those natural resources. Just as the number
of visitors will decline if we fail to protect our natural resources,
that number will decline if our Government’s appears unable or
unwilling to actually protect them. (The same can be said of the many
granting organizations that provide funding to Belize.)
• The
Government of Belize, including all its departments and agencies, must
consider the negative economic impact of selling Crown Reserve lands
and other protected areas and of permitting developments that impinge
on protected areas.
• When evaluating a proposal for “economic
development,” those in government at all levels must consider the jobs
to be lost, as well those to be gained.
• The San Pedro Town Council
and other government agencies need to consider the full economic
effects of development on Ambergris Caye, permitting a barge terminal
near Hol Chan, failing to restrict the number of vehicles on the
island, etc. Not all these economic effects are positive.
•
Meanwhile, just as the local community justifiably celebrates acts that
contribute to the betterment of Ambergris Caye, we should also expose
and denounce acts inconsistent with our welfare over the long term. We
must do so even when actions worthy of condemnation are committed by
those who have also made positive contributions to the community. For
example, the facilitation of land sales and investments for
developments such as South Beach are not a contribution to our
long-term prosperity.
There are many ways to encourage
tourists to choose other destinations. One of the fastest is to begin
to view and treat our natural environment as some developers do: as a
blank canvas to be “improved for (my) personal gain,” without regard to
the future or the overall welfare of the population.
*******************************************
These issues touch everyone in Belize—everyone who lives, works, owns a
business or has invested anywhere in the nation.
First,
since Ambergris Caye generates the majority of tax revenues collected
by the GOB, the future of Ambergris Caye affects anyone in Belize who
receives, or wants to receive, any service or benefit from the
Government—schools, roads, disability payments, sewer systems, whatever.
But
these issues are larger than Ambergris Caye. Tourism is important in
many areas of Belize. Protected areas require protection wherever they
are located in Belize. The birds of the Bird Cayes fly all over Belize.
Tourists go to Hol Chan from all over Belize. Sustainable economic
development anywhere in Belize requires a strategy.
Government
officials who make decisions with only a short-term or even
self-interested view damage the welfare and long term prospects of all
of us. Government agencies do all of us a disservice when they fail to
act with foresight, fail to coordinate with or defer to other agencies
with greater expertise, or lack the integrity to say No when
appropriate, even to those who are politically connected, wealthy or
foreign.
The people of Ambergris Caye and of the rest of Belize are
PUP, UDP, independent, third party and apolitical. Our families have
lived here for generations, or we have only recently arrived.
Regardless, all of us deserve government that will protect our
long-term interests and our natural resources, these two being
inseparable.
Sincerely,
Mito Paz
Executive Director, Green Reef Environmental Institute
Member, Hol Chan Marine Reserve Trust Committee