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Op-Ed: When Will We See the End of Summer’s End Huge Marina Plans?

Hurricane destroyed restaurant and apartment building eyesore under Summer's End control. (Photo by Sharon Coldren)
A Coral Bay restaurant and apartment building destroyed by hurricanes Irma and Maria in 2017 remain eyesores under Summer’s End control. (Photo by Sharon Coldren)

The remote community of Coral Bay, St. John, U.S. Virgin Islands has been under the threat of a 144-slip mega yacht marina development for more than a decade now.

I hear St. John citizens lament that the principals of the Summer’s End mega-yacht marina keep saying that โ€œany day now the final permit will be receivedโ€ from the Army Corps of Engineers. But this is flatly false. The reason the Army Corps is the central federal agency issuing a permit for a huge marina like this is because there are many environmental, navigational, historical preservation and public interest concerns that must be addressed by different federal agencies.

To get a permit, each of these concerns must reach a positive outcome at the relevant agency through analysis by their staff of the application documents and studies submitted.ย  Additionally, several non-governmental organizations, including the Coral Bay Community Council, provided the Army Corps with more than 30 expert analyses, thousands of pages, covering environmental and practical navigational and marina practices โ€” all opposing the development of this kind of marina in remote Coral Bay, far from the nearest airport.

Under the Clean Water Act, the Environmental Protection Agency has the right and responsibility to reject a permit application if the project would damage an โ€œaquatic area of national importance.” Coral Harbor has this designation. EPA issued what is called a โ€œ404Qโ€ letter in opposition to the project in 2015. This still stands. Summerโ€™s End claims they have revised and changed the project to be responsive to concerns โ€” but to those of us who review their plans closely, they have literally made small changes โ€œaround the edges.”

The marina docks and density of boats parked there will directly harm more than 27 acres of seafloor vegetation with near constant shade, and indirectly harm a much larger area due to possible leaks of fuel and washing and other chemicals and stirring up sediment.ย  The local mangroves, already trying to recover from the hurricanes, are extremely susceptible to fuel spills.

And, before some people complain that this is an example of โ€œtoo much federal regulation,” I would pose this rather as an example where some developers thought they could get away with doing a mega-yacht marina on the remote side of St. John, without meeting U.S. criteria for such a marina. Look it up: You could not get this kind of marina approved in Florida in a similar noncommercial bay with similar shallow depths ever since the Clean Water Act amendments of 1992. You cannot do this in the U.S. Virgin Islands either โ€” for the same reasons, and actually more reasons in the USVI coral-rich environment.

I have previously stated in written testimony before the Virgin Islands Legislature in 2019 that the Summerโ€™s End, LLC project is a fantasy, and provided much supporting analysis. Yet five years later in 2024, this marina project is still being promoted by Chaliese Summers and Rick Barksdale.

Local businesses that currently exist in the planned land footprint of the marina that want to invest in improvements or negotiate longer leases in these buildings cannot โ€” due to the landowner agreements with Summerโ€™s End. Why? Because โ€œany day now the final permits will be granted” has been the Summerโ€™s End public refrain since 2015.

This has completely stopped natural economic growth in this area, particularly following the devastation of the hurricanes of 2017. Further, Summerโ€™s End has refused to remove hurricane building wreckage under their control โ€” or allow nonprofit organizations to do the removal. This hurts everyone in Coral Bay every day as we drive by in this highly visible tourism area.

Over the years, we have used the Freedom of Information Act to get copies of email communications and documents that are part of the official project file in this lengthy Army Corps process.ย  It interesting to see how some of these communications could be construed as meaning that a final permit was near, when all that was being discussed was confirming that the most recent data and information could be leading to a particular report or step being finalized โ€” before the next step could start.

For instance, right now a part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s consultation is reaching its final stage, but there is another division of NOAA whose consultation is still underway, and then when that information is agreed to on how much environmental damage the marina will inevitably cause, the applicant needs to write a โ€œMitigation Planโ€ to provide compensatory marine vegetation within their project footprint. Then this must be discussed, reviewed and gain ย approval by NOAA and possibly other government agencies. How long will that take, if ever? This step alone has killed off many projects in the U.S.

Then there is the ongoing Archaeological Consultation โ€” about a significant 1700โ€™s shipwreck found in the dock footprint. ย The marina has been modestly reconfigured to deal with it, but will still have mega-yachts passing right over this site. This consultation is not completed.

The Army Corps in 2018 said in a written letter to the applicant that the permit might be denied โ€œdue to not being in the public interest,” a finding that the Army Corps can make under the law, and occasionally does do. The Army Corps prefers to have the applicants withdraw rather than force this kind of active negative conclusion to the regulatory process.

Some of you will recall the Amalago Marina and hotel development on West End, St. Croix approved by CZM in 2009 which then started the Army Corps process. What happened to that? More than a decade later, the Army Corps met with the applicantโ€™s representatives on St. Croix and told them it would likely be denied. That idea and permit application seems to have quietly gone away.

Who is Funding This?

But Summerโ€™s End persists. Who is funding this? Who has an interest in a mega-yacht marina in Coral Bay? Who is willing to keep funding a project that is not very likely to be approved โ€” or actually be financially profitable to build and operate? These conclusions are almost anyoneโ€™s judgment who is knowledgeable about environmental regulations and marina projects across the USA and the Caribbean. Where is the airport within 15 minutes?ย  Where is the nightlife for the crews? Where is the protection from being โ€œrock and rolledโ€ by the open Caribbean Sea?

When you add in the EPA flat-out warning that the Clean Water Act will not allow it and that EPA is exercising its opposition to the permit being granted by the Army Corps, and knowing there would be subsequent legal appeals, why would investors think that investing more funds in this application process is the best way to spend their money? Why are the Virgin Islands Senate and governor continuing to support this developer, rather than retracting the local permit due to the developmentโ€™s many flaws?

Why is this application still ongoing? Who are the actual investors? Why are they hiding? ย These are questions that need to be addressed now for the sake of the landowners and small businesses in Coral Bay and the overall successful local tourism economy being stifled right now by the continued threat of the โ€œany day nowโ€ endless refrain from the Summerโ€™s End mega-marina proponents.

โ€” Sharon Coldren, past president and board member,ย Coral Bay Community Council

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3 COMMENTS

  1. As is typical in todays media, a handful of haters feel entitled enough to speak as the voice of the people and lazy journalists love that. The story is written for them with no research required. The truth is that the marina project is still happening due to the vast and overwhelmingly positive support from the locals, the government, the international boating community, the local business owners, the tourists and even the sea life. Also, as echoed in todays media-driven world, the supporters of the project are reluctant to speak up due to the lunatics who will try anything to silence them – truth be damned. However, the supporters are clearly there and clearly in vastly superior numbers. I’d wager that most slips are already spoken for and most retail shops are already filled. The people opposed to the project are the same people who will lose the vital-to-them ability to pump their waste overboard. The people whose derelict boats with no means of propulsion are an eyesore to the bay and a scourge to the marine life. The boats which inevitably sink and are immediately abandoned. The locals know what Coral Bay was – and what Coral Bay has become and they spoke up loud and clear. Not on Facebook or to a local blogger – they spoke effectively and with the truth at their sides. By “local”, I mean the real locals. Not the folks who insist on injecting “how many years they’ve been on island” into every conversation or awkwardly drop a local colloquialism such as, “soon come” into their vocabulary. Over the last 25 years, the Bay itself has essentially become what looks like a homeless encampment. It’s pretty rare to see anyone swim anymore. Any unaware snorkelers are more likely see a dumped outboard engine before seeing a coral head. I’ve witnessed a vagrant live-aboard argue that he can dump his bottles overboard because, “the glass is made of sand and is used as shelter by the crabs”. I dare anyone to swim around his boat and I double-dare you to do it without a snorkel. Here’s a fun fact: When the mandated government water testing shows a low-enough percentage of human feces to allow for swimming – it’s actually newsworthy. That’s true. Occasionally, the morning news will contain an article exclaiming the (temporary) ability to safely swim in Coral Bay. Look out over the bay for yourself. If you’re not nearby, zoom in to the on-line photos for yourself. Most boats are clearly immobile. None are on a proper mooring. So, they drag. They leak. They break loose and forever sit abandoned in the mangroves killing everything their anti-fouling paint touches or their oil leas onto. Real boaters do not behave like this and real conservationist do not support this. The ardent Save Coral Bay folks are nowhere to be found when there’s a mastless sailboat on the beach slowly leaking diesel fuel into the water. Save Coral Bay is a business, folks. It’s Save Coral Bay, INC. It collects donations and while there’s no money to be made in the actual cleaning of the bay, there is a lot of money to be made by polarizing a community and fighting windmills. The longer they can drag it out, the better. Just google the founder and it’s clear. He creates a similar “public uproar” about every single proposed project on the island. His war-cry is, “This must be stopped – send me your donations”. In the meanwhile, for the rest of us, it’s no secret that when looking out over Coral Bay in the early morning, you’ll be greeted with someone hanging off the side of his or her boat doing their morning business. So yes, the marina is a big development. Yes, it will change Coral Bay forever. It will eliminate the polluters, eliminate the lawless mentality and it will eliminate the “takers” from the bay. It will clean up the literal tons of trash, stop the continuous pollution with modern waste collection and processing, it will provide countless jobs and will almost immediately become one of the most positive economic forces to not only the island, but to the region as a whole. Apologies to the vagrant boats who will be displaced – but not really. How long did they think that they could just spoil the bay for everyone else? Why do they have the sole right to monopolize the bay indefinitely? What if I want to also enjoy the bay with my family and friends and neighbors? I also have a right to clean water and a feces-free cup of morning coffee. The marina project will restore Coral Bay and allow it to continue to be one of the crown jewels of the USVI for future generations and I can’t wait to see the first piling go in.

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