Rick's Blog

Blackwell misinterprets OLF-8 Master Plan to fit her vision

Photo by Ali Mohseni Rad on Unsplash

PNJ published columnist Theresa Blackwell’s monthly tirade on OLF-8 yesterday. Bless their hearts, the Gannett-owned newspaper apparently does not have the staff to fact-check Blackwell.

Blackwell’s points were:

Of course, Blackwell doesn’t mention that no one elected her to be the “voice” of the Beulah community. She didn’t write about how she worked with the DPZ to make the 540 acres all public amenities and residential, even though most Beulah residents wanted commercial development and employment initiatives.

She touts the final hybrid DPZ plan and repeatedly stresses that it must be followed. Yet, Blackwell doesn’t believe fulfilling the hard-fought Light Industrial component is essential and continues to mock and attack any proposal that meets the Light Industrial component of the DPZ master plan.

Her code word for unwanted prospects for OLF-8  is now “advanced manufacturing.” Advanced manufacturing can be light industrial, but Blackwell needs “red meat” to feed her small following.

Reminder: The DPZ master plan creates a Light Industrial District, even defining it as “A medium intensity district, consisting of light industrial and commercial/office uses.”

Blackwell has an agenda and has been less than truthful in pursuing it. She wants to be seen as the interpreter of the OLF-8 master plan and the decision-maker on what should be allowed on the site. Ironically, private developers give her less control, not more.


In January 2019, Escambia County acquired OLF-8 in a land swap with the U.S. Navy for property in Santa Rosa County. The process took over 20 years to put together. For more background, read:

This infographic covers the history of offers for the OLF-8:

Featured Photo by Ali Mohseni Rad on Unsplash

Exit mobile version