Skip to main content
File #: 25-1138    Version: 2
Type: Consent Staff Report Status: Passed
File created: 11/24/2025 In control: Board of County Commissioners
On agenda: 12/9/2025 Final action:
Title: Request for Release of the 10-foot wide Conservation Easement on Private Property located at 5380 95th Street (Durrance Road)
Indexes: Consent Agenda, Easement Release / Modification / Establishment
Attachments: 1. Location Map, 2. The River Boat Club Final Plat, 3. Property Survey, 4. Proposed Resolution
TO: Indian River County Board of County Commissioners

THROUGH: John A. Titkanich, Jr., County Administrator

FROM: Patrick J. Murphy, Chief of Long-Range Planning

DATE: December 9, 2025

SUBJECT: Request for Release of a 10-foot Conservation Easement at 5380 95th Street
__________________________________________________________________

BACKGROUND

The County has been petitioned by Charles and Sharon King, owners of Lot 9 of The River Boat Club subdivision, for release of a 10-foot wide conservation easement. The purpose of the easement release is for the construction of a future swimming pool. Therefore, it is requested that the Board of County Commissioners formally consider the following information at its regular meeting of December 9, 2025.

ANALYSIS

In 1990, when the Preliminary Plat for The River Boat Club subdivision was approved, Conservation Element Policy 5.3 of the of the County's Comprehensive Plan required a buffer zone of native upland edge vegetation to be retained around wetland and open water habitats which were constructed or preserved on new development sites. Since The River Boat Club included a man-made canal with a natural vegetation shoreline, the County's Environmental Planning staff required that at the time of the final plat review, a 10-foot wide conservation easement be created on those lots adjacent to the canal to indicate the required buffer. That easement was dedicated to Indian River County via Plat Book 14, Page 39A, and recorded in the Public Records of Indian River County.

The recorded plat states that the conservation easement, while dedicated to the County, reserves unto the owners of the lots the right to construct water access structures (see attached Final Plat). Since the creation of this subdivision, the previous natural vegetated shoreline along the man-made canal has been almost entirely impacted by the construction of sea walls, docks, platforms, boardwalks, and decks. Of the 20 lots that comprise T...

Click here for full text