TARPON SPRINGS, Fla. ā Pinellas County announced Thursday it had finalized the purchase of the West Klosterman Preserve, following five years of effort from a citizens group to save the 14 acres from development.
āItās wonderful,ā said Tex Carter, president of the nonprofit WK Preservation Group. āWe wanted to save this piece of property and make it part of the Marinerās Point Management Area and preserve a pretty good-sized chunk of natural Florida.ā
Carter said it started with a dozen people trying to raise $3 million in six months. Back in 2020, Pinellas County Schools was considering selling the land to a developer for $3.3 million.
āThe school board was almost ready to do a contract with the developer to turn this into 76 condos and bulldoze all the trees and all the wildlife thatās here,ā Carter said.
When residents spoke out against the move, he said the district offered them the chance to buy it for $3 million. According to Carter, the steps they took to become a nonprofit prompted an extension of the original six-month deadline. Eventually, Pinellas County offered to share the cost. The preserve borders the countyās 76-acre Marinerās Point Management Area.
āThis is one active ecosystem integrated with different kinds of habitat for different kinds of plants and animals,ā Carter said of the two properties. āIf you took this out and turned it into condos, it would destroy the ecosystem all the way down to the ocean.ā
He told Spectrum News the nonprofit collected more than 2,000 donations ranging from $10 to $350,000.
āThat brought us together, the county and us together, to do more than we would have been able to do as individuals, and thatās a good thing,ā said Carter. āItās really great for people when people realize they can make a difference with government, and itās always great when government responds to its people.ā
According to the county, the West Klosterman Preserve is specifically meant for habitat preservation and will remain a non-public zone. Carter said as part of the nonprofitās agreement with the county, there is a chance it could eventually include walking trails. That would only happen if it can be shown there would be no impact on the environment.