TARPON SPRINGS, Fla. — 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.


What You Need To Know

  • Pinellas County says it completed the $3 million purchase of the 14-acre West Klosterman Preserve

  • A group of residents has been trying to save the land from development for five years

  • The president of the nonprofit WK Preservation Group calls the purchase "wonderful," saying it's important to preserve the habitats on the land

  • PREVIOUS COVERAGE: Fundraising efforts continue to save preserve in Pinellas County

ā€œIt’s wonderful,ā€ said Tex Carter, president of the nonprofit WK Preservation Group. ā€œWe wanted to save this piece of property and make it part of the Mariner’s 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. 

ā€œThe 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 that’s 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 county’s 76-acre Mariner’s Point Management Area.

ā€œThis is one active ecosystem integrated with different kinds of habitat for different kinds of plants and animals,ā€ Carter said of the two properties. ā€œIf you took this out and turned it into condos, it would destroy the ecosystem all the way down to the ocean.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. (Spectrum News/Sarah Blazonis)
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. (Spectrum News/Sarah Blazonis)

He told Spectrum News the nonprofit collected more than 2,000 donations ranging from $10 to $350,000. 

ā€œThat brought us together, the county and us together, to do more than we would have been able to do as individuals, and that’s a good thing,ā€ said Carter. ā€œIt’s really great for people when people realize they can make a difference with government, and it’s 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 nonprofit’s 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.