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A flood insurance issue that could end up costing millions for residents in unincorporated Lee County and several of the county's cities will be aired Tuesday at the Board of County Commissioners meeting.At stake is federal flood insurance community ratings in unincorporated Lee County and multiple municipalities in the county. FEMA confirmed Monday that unpermitted work, lack of documentation, and failure to properly monitor the rebuilding of properties in flood hazard areas in the post-Hurricane Ian world is why the federal government has chosen to significantly downgrade those ratings.That means federal flood insurance policy holders — there are more than 51,000 in unincorporated Lee County alone — will lose their 25 percent discounts on flood insurance premiums come Oct. 1. Some 64,000 policy holders in Bonita Springs, Estero and Cape Coral will no longer quality for the discounts until possibly spring 2026.The matter will be discussed in further detail when the Lee County Board of County Commissioners meet for their regular board meeting at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday.
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A grant from The Collaboratory helped to replace a hurricane-damaged aviary at the Wonder Gardens in Bonita Springs. There is fundraising continuing for additional aviaries.
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The City of Bonita Springs is looking for public comment on the city’s Comprehensive Plan.
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The Everglades restoration is among the largest aquatic restoration efforts to ever occur, with dozens of projects spanning 18,000 square miles from Orlando to Biscayne Bay, and from Florida Bay to the Caloosahatchee River.Dozens of the projects were discussed in sessions at the year’s Everglades Coalition annual gathering, which brought together the more than 50 nonprofits working toward a restored River of Grass for a weekend of panels on completed projects, lessons learned, and what else still needs to be accomplished.
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More than 50 nonprofits formed the Everglades Coalition whose goal, simply put, is to ensure the health and recovery of the Everglades
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A food truck park and rooftop bar opens this week in downtown Bonita Springs.
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At 104 Dorothy Newberry is the cool 'girl' to her fellow residents at The Terraces at Bonita SpringsYou'd be wrong to think that at 104 years, Dorothy Newberry is no longer an active participant in life.Judging by the reaction at her birthday celebration, Newberry is the lifeblood of her Bonita Springs senior community.
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Arts Bonita honored veterans with a Big Band concert featuring the South Florida Jazz Orchestra and Lisanne Lyons, a former United States Air Force Band vocalist.
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The Bonita Springs City Council is unhappy with its current partnership with the Wonder Gardens. It will be holding a workshop with the zoo on November 1 to address grievances, inlcuding lack of rent payments to the city.
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The Bonita Springs City Council has approved lower building heights on the new London Bay development at the former Weeks Fish Camp.