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Guana Cay
Magruder said that she believes Sullivan Sealey's research is at arm's length from Discovery Land Company. It's like saying somebody who is employed by the Nazis to study the effects of gassing the Jews is at arms length from Hitler. Sullivan-Sealey was in fact the primary writer for the Environmental Impact Assessment. No doubt that document was tied to her being involved in the monitoring program.

In fact, the very basis of Sullivan Sealey's vast experiment requires this project to go ahead. Sullivan Sealey, if you believe the EIA or her own words to me, wants Guana Cay to be her test tube. If a golf course destroys a coral reef, she wants to be there for the data. In fact, this data would be amazing for any marine scientist. Few scientists have been able to definitely prove the destruction of habitat to specific sources of pollution and land-use. In the EIA for the development, Sullivan Sealey and terrestrial ecologist Lester Flowers write,

"The project will be an experiment in sustainability for small island developments. Clearly, local residents or Bahamians in general would not appreciate being the site of 'experimental' approaches to development of their natural resources, but the aim of the experiment is to provide a truthful documentation of the real ecological costs."

EarthwatchAlthough they initially hinted in the EIA that the development would use the islanders of Guana Cay as mere guinea pigs in a vast experiment, it has become clear that she has shown a strong disregard for the people of Guana Cay, going so far as to call them 'culturally disappointing.'

If she has to be involved in a study that would harm the inhabitants, it would be convenient to believe these inhabitants are somehow inferior. In fact, the people of Guana Cay are part of a rich Bahamian heritage. Their lineage has remained, in many cases, so untouched, even Victorian. So much so, that in its filming of Pirates of the Caribbean Parts II and III, Disney is actively hiring people of the Abaco Sound as extras. Nobody on Earth resembles more closely the image of pirates and Caribbean settlers than the strong cheekboned, deeply tanned loyalists of this area. Many of these people still engage in the same professions as their ancestors: boatbuilding, fishing, sailmaking.

Although these people's histories are rich and their culture is worth preserving, their qualities should not matter. Human rights does not judge people based on the 'richness' of their heritage.

Kathleen Sullivan Sealey and Lester Flowers are crucial to the development of Baker's Bay Golf and Ocean Club. Without their EIA and their paid roles as continuous monitors of the development, the government would not have been able to sign off on the project. They are the turtles holding up the developer's world.

Reiterating this idea, Sullivan Sealey writes me, "It is the accessibility to the project site before, during and after construction that draws our research to Bakers Bay. Both Mr. Flowers and I see this as the ultimate opportunity to test our theories..."

Mary Blue Magruder, after hearing from me that she is involved in the greenlighting of a golf course, wrote to Sullivan Sealey to ask her about my questions. After this, Sullivan Sealey wrote me, "By the way, thanks for the email to Earthwatch, they are a great organization, and fortunately they are a bit smarter than you give them credit for."

I was confused by this email. But Mary Blue Magruder was even more confused when I said that the Discovery Land Company was using the Earthwatch name to sell the idea of their golf course.

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Rise Up Sweet Island

Guana Cay Controversy - get the latest news on RSS Feed
Read up on the issue by the locals themselves
Jean Michel Cousteau
Speaks up on Bakers Bay Development
Bimini Bay Sawfish
Video on Bimini Bay

Great Guana Cay is a thin, six mile island in the Northern Bahamas.

The island's inhabitants, who settled here 200 years ago, are employed in fishing and cottage industry tourism.

The island's coral reef is of international importance as one of the most intact surviving elkhorn/staghorn coral communities in the world.

The inhabitants began fighting tooth and nail to save their island's coral reef and mangroves from destruction after hearing of plans for a golf megadevelopment on their tiny barrier reef island.

Hundreds of the world's most revered coral reef scientists and marine ecologists, as well as almost every single Bahamian environmental organization, have banded together to try to stop the Baker's Bay Golf & Ocean Club (Discovery Land Company) from realizing completion.

The proposed 585 unit, 180 slip marina, tennis courts, hotel, destination spa and championship golf course were pushed through the Bahamian central government with no local consent and without proper permits in a land grab (including of local public land designated for use by Bahamians) of unbelievable proportion. In one of the most amazing and unique environmental stories in history, the islanders have brought the developer, and the Bahamian government, to task. The small island is now waging a bitter legal battle with the government and the developers.

Rise Up Sweet Island compiles the viewpoints of the Bahamian and international marine conservation community and presents documents, evidence and history for all interested parties.

Notes from the Road is a travelogue which covers environmental and cultural issues around North America, the Caribbean and Europe.

National Geographic
National Geographic Magazine supports anti-Megadevelopment movements in Abaco and Bimini in new article on shark conservation.

ReEarth
SharkLab
Restrict Bimini Bay
Mangrove Action Project
Global Coral Reef Alliance
Caribbean Conservation Corps
Notes from the Sea


Petition

75% of Bahamians on Great Guana Cay signed a petition this winter against Baker's Bay Club. Three years later, resistance is strong.