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The Oleta River State Park is a 1,033-acre (418 ha) state park on Biscayne Bay in the municipal suburb of North Miami Beach in metropolitan Miami, Florida.Adjoining the Biscayne Bay Campus of Florida International University, the park contains one of the largest concentrations of Casuarina trees (Australian 'pine'), an invasive species in the state park system.
Backlash against a state plan to build pickleball courts, golf courses and hotels in Florida state parks spilled from social media to the grass of Oleta River State Park on Tuesday, where more ...
Sandspur Island (also known as Beer Can Island) [1] is the largest spoil island in Biscayne Bay, which is part of the Oleta River State Park [1] in Southern Florida. [2] The island is 15 acres (6.1 ha), [1] [3] the largest island in North Bay of the Biscayne Bay and only accessible by boat.
The Oleta River State Park is the largest urban park in the Florida State Park system. The park is located on 1,043 acres (4.22 km 2 ) - 993 acres (4.02 km 2 ) of land and 50 acres (0.20 km 2 ) of inland water - on Biscayne Bay , in the northeastern end of the city of North Miami in Miami-Dade County , Florida , and adjoins the Biscayne Bay ...
Tree-hugging liberals and MAGA Republicans can agree that the mission of state parks isn’t what Florida officials are proposing. | Opinion
Florida environmentalists are raising concerns about a push to increase amenities at state parks that they believe includes plans for three golf courses at popular Jonathan Dickinson State Park ...
On 19 August 2024 the Florida Department of Environmental Protection announced plans [21] to build golf courses and 350-room lodges on state park lands. [22]In statements to the Tampa Bay Times and in posts to social media, the agency claimed that the construction of a golf course on vulnerable scrub habitat will be done in a way to "minimize habitat impacts".
The Oleta River, situated north of Miami, drains the northern Everglades into Biscayne Bay, allowing freshwater to reach the Atlantic Ocean. Today, it is the only natural river in Miami-Dade County that has not been dredged and channelized. Its seven miles (11 km) of shoreline are largely undeveloped, making the Oleta River Corridor a vestige ...