Add action to assurance: Public sentiment is
loud and clear: Preserve the Preserve. Collier County commissioners got
the message and agreed in February to rescind its November approval of a
three-story private dining club on the lone private lot amid pristine
Barefoot Beach Preserve. It is time for the board to remember that promise
and rekindle that resolve as the commission comes due for an update from
parks staff members on progress.
Copyright © 2001 Naples News All rights reserved.
http://www.naplesnews.com/01/05/perspective/jj8877.htm
Privatize water and kill two of the most
pressing problems facing South Florida with one stone. Privatization would
place a free-market check on development without the need for arbitrary,
capricious and inefficient bureaucratic management and prevent overuse and
abuse of the resource to boot. ... In a state-managed water system, the
price of water is not determined by market forces. The cost of water to
the consumer then does not respond to either supply or demand. This leads
to wasteful use of the resource and artificially supports water-intensive
development, both directly by keeping prices low in a tight
market and indirectly by not requiring development to pay for
damage to the supply. ... Water managers will want you to think replumbing
the system will bring relief, and perhaps it will someday provide an
increased supply. However, without some better way to manage development,
local politicians and permitting agencies will continue to ignore the
impact of rampant, thoughtless development on our natural resources.
Copyright © 2001 SW Florida News
Press All rights reserved.
http://www.news-press.com/opinion/010522soundoff.html
.... The loggerhead sea turtle was about 3
feet wide and 3 1/2 feet long. ... In an egg-laying daze, the
turtle stopped just two feet from where Murphy sat happily in the sand and
tall sea oats. She began digging, flinging sand behind her, and then
started dropping leathery, ping-pong ball-sized eggs in the hole. The
whole process took about 45 minutes. Afterward, the turtle
slowly crawled down the beach and into the Gulf of Mexico. ...
"Turtlers" live for moments like that - the simple thrill of
coming face-to-face with a species that's existed for millions of
years. With turtle nesting season in full swing in Southwest
Florida, hundreds of volunteers, biologists, naturalists and others who
search area coastlines for turtle nests have even more opportunities for
magic. (Turtle nesting season officially goes from May 1 to Oct. 31.)
Copyright © 2001 SW Florida News
Press All rights reserved.
http://www.news-press.com/news/today/010522turtles.html
The South Florida Water Management District
Governing Board approved appointments to its new Water Resources Advisory
Commission today. This action completes the first step of a resolution
passed last month to create a blue-ribbon advisory body to the Governing
Board in order to enhance public participation and consensus-making on
critical water resource issues, projects and programs affecting South
Florida and its citizens.
Governing Board member Michael Collins was
named chair of the new commission by Governing Board Chair Nicolas
Gutierrez. "It is important for us to focus and set a definitive
agenda," Gutierrez said. "Mr. Collins, with his many years of
experience working with different groups on water-related issues, is the
perfect person to kick it off and and get the commission going."
Under the resolution guidelines, commission membership reflects a
balanced, cross-section representation of South Florida, including
appointees from the business community, water supply utilities, public
interest groups, local government, agriculture and environmental
organizations.
District General Counsel John Fumero noted
the community leaders who agreed to participate in the commission and
recommended issues for consideration by the commission. These issues
include drought management, Lake Okeechobee water quality protection
initiatives, and implementation of the Comprehensive Everglades
Restoration Plan. Governing Board member Patrick Gleason suggested water
supply plans, funding for alternative water supply, real estate
acquisitions, as well as the development of short- and long-term Lake
Okeechobee back-pumping plans. The commission will meet prior to the
next Governing Board meeting to begin developing a Water Resources
Advisory Commission priority plan.
Governing Board appointments to the Water
Resources Advisory Commission are:
In fixing Florida's hodgepodge of a tax
system, reformers like the State Tax Reform Task Force and state lawmakers
should ask these questions... Florida must find innovative
ways to diversify its tax base and mend its illogical tax
non-system. ... To avoid previous mistakes: Adopt clear and consistent
principles about why something is taxed or exempted. Make sure taxpayers
participate in tax reform discussions at an early stage through public
hearings. Don't bring reform up at a legislative session until some
consensus forms among House and Senate members, the governor and the
public about exactly what should be done. And conduct every phase of
the discussions in public, with no more secret meetings in
Tallahassee townhouses and Capitol bathrooms.
Copyright © 2001 Sun-Sentinel All rights reserved.
http://sunsentinel.com/news/opinion/editorial/sfl-edittstx2may21.story
Boaters want Bush to halt restrictions
The ongoing battle between boaters and
manatee protection advocates is shifting to Tuesday's Collier County
Commission meeting. Boaters will ask commissioners to adopt a resolution
urging President George W. Bush to put the brakes on an agreement intended
to protect the sea cow from death or injury due to boat collisions.
Copyright © 2001 SW Florida News
Press All rights reserved.
http://www.news-press.com/news/today/010521manatee.html
Water district to ask council to help fix
drainage problems
Bonita Springs - The San Carlos Estates Water
Control District wants the city council to force new home
builders in the development to build culverts and drainage
ditches. ... "It's something that needs to be done,"
said Jeanette Oldland, resident and president of the Homeowners
Association of San Carlos Estates. "During the rainy season, there's
some streets you can't get through because they're flooded. We need to
start somewhere." .... Mary Gibbs, Lee County's community
development director, said Friday the county is concerned that REQUIRING A
CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE from the district before building permits,
development orders or certificates of occupancy are issued COULD BE
FRUSTRATING FOR SOMEONE WAITING TO MOVE INTO A NEW HOME. [Emphasis
added.] Note: The "frustration" would be for the
builder who does not receive final payment until an occupancy certificate
is provided.
Copyright © 2001 SW Florida News
Press All rights reserved.
http://www.news-press.com/news/today/010521sancarlos.html
EPA plans wetlands crackdown
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is
about to crack down on homeowners who damage wetlands without a permit.
Southwest Florida EPA representative Bruce Boler said he gets 10 to 15
calls a month from people complaining that a neighbor is dredging or
filling wetlands illegally.
Copyright © 2001 SW Florida News
Press All rights reserved.
http://www.news-press.com/news/today/010521epacrackdown.html
Editorial
Block this hidden tax on state's
homeowners
.... Gov. Bush needed to raise $200 million a
year to match federal money for the Everglades restoration plan. Rather
than issue bonds to provide a steady, sure source of the money, he decided
to "find it" here and there. "Here" turned out to be
in the South Florida Water Management District's budget. Some of what Gov.
Bush took was $20 million the water district would have used to fix
drainage systems in Miami-Dade and Broward counties. Rep. Carlos Lacasa,
is from Miami, and he wants the projects. So he took $20 million from the
Hurricane Catastrophe Fund. ... Since Gov. Bush started the
shell game by "finding" money where he did, it's up to him to
make sure the money stays "found," not replaced by duplicity. He
should veto the $20 million "line" in the budget.
http://gopbi.com/partners/pbpost/epaper/editions/sunday/opinion_5.html
Editorial
OK Flood Projects
The law allows the use of hurricane
catastrophe funds to forestall damage. Insurance Commissioner
Tom Gallagher is right to be concerned that the Legislature tapped the
Hurricane Catastrophe Fund for $20 million to finance drainage
improvements in Miami-Dade and Broward counties. The money should have
come from state sales-tax funds, avoiding any threat of higher
insurance rates. ... Mr. Gallagher, fearful of setting a bad
precedent, has urged Gov. Jeb Bush to veto ``some or all'' of the $20
million appropriation. We disagree. Statutes creating the CAT fund clearly
authorize use of the fund to mitigate damage. The real issue is: How much
money? Legislators do have a tendency upon identifying a new source of
money to spend more than is prudent. But that is not the case today. We
think Gov. Bush should concur there is a clear insurance benefit to
flood control: less damage, fewer claims.
Copyright © 2001 Miami Herald All rights reserved.
http://miami.com/herald/content/opinion/editorials/digdocs/050570.htm
ASR Test Well Drilling Begins Near Lake
Okeechobee
The South Florida Water Management District
and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers began drilling the first of three
federally authorized test wells May 11 to assist in identifying the most
suitable sites for future aquifer storage and recovery (ASR) wells in the
vicinity of Lake Okeechobee. ... The first test well is in
Okeechobee County along District canal LD-4 near the Kissimmee
River. The second test well is near Port Myacca in Martin County along
District canal L-65 near the St. Lucie Canal, and the third test well is
in Moore Haven in Glades County near District structure S-77 adjacent to
the Caloosahatchee River. Drilling will begin on the second and
third test wells next month.
http://www.sfwmd.gov/newsr/3_newsrel.html#asrstart
Letter to the editor
Aquifer proposal rightly stopped
A recent Herald editorial referred to
``public hysteria'' stopping legislation to allow contaminated
water to be added to our aquifer: ... our Gov. Jeb Bush wanted
to allow bacteria-contaminated water be added to our aquifer.
Our fears grew when environmental groups were opposed. Adding to my doubts
was reading that the northern third of Florida would have been omitted
from this treatment. Perhaps up there they have enough influence to avoid
contaminating their water supply. What makes me ``hysterical'' is
that the proponents of this initiative may have been even more so.
Copyright © 2001 Miami Herald All rights reserved.
http://miami.com/herald/content/opinion/letters/digdocs/033137.htm
City seizes private wells
Tampa - Antoinette Lebron received a
certified letter in January telling her the city was condemning her
private well. ... Lebron's well, like about 100 others in central Tampa
neighborhoods surrounding the city's Aquifer Storage Recovery wellfield,
falls in something called the zone of probable influence. Another 100
wells lie in a zone of possible influence located farther from
the ASR field near Sligh and Rome avenues. These wells also could see the
effects of the city withdrawing 10 million gallons a day of
water it stored during last summer's rainy sea son. The $10 million
program is now supplying 15 percent of the city's water. Since the water
was fully treated to meet federal standards before it was injected, the
immediate threat is that the wells could go dry.
Copyright © 2001 Tampa Tribune All rights reserved.
http://www.tampatribune.com/MGAVGEJMZMC.html
Water managers step up campaign to
conserve
South Florida water managers are rolling out
new ads to tell folks that the coming summer rains "are just a drop
in the bucket" of water supply needs. Workers have begun
plastering billboards in the tricounty area with the reminder that water
restrictions have not gone away.
http://sunsentinel.com/news/sfl-poutreach521.story
Photo: New billboard advises water
conservation
http://sunsentinel.com/news/sfl-poutreach521-billboard.photo
Audio: Aneta Sewell, of the South Florida
Water Management District, talks about the need to conserve water
Copyright © 2001 Sun-Sentinel All rights reserved.
http://sunsentinel.com/news/sfl-poutreach521-conservewater.realaudio
Biologists tracking wading birds
Biologists keeping a watchful eye on the
Everglades' wood storks and white ibises say it looks as though ongoing
drought did not destroy the endangered wading birds' 2001 breeding season.
Special concern centered on the two species' nesting and rearing this
winter and spring because of a banner year last year for baby wood storks
in southern Florida's famed River of Grass.
Copyright © 2001 Naples News All rights reserved.
http://naplesnews.com/01/05/florida/d574153a.htm
Bixler to lead Conservancy's office in Lee
County
Matt Bixler, who interned at the Conservancy
in 2000, will begin work running the Conservancy's Lee County
office on June 13. The office will be in the Calusa Nature Center in Fort
Myers. ... Established in Collier County about 36 years ago to fight a
proposed road over the barrier islands to Marco Island, the Conservancy
has long been involved in environmental advocacy, said Michael
Simonek, vice president of environmental policy for the organization. Two
years ago the group decided to boost its involvement in Lee County
environmental issues and changed its name to reflect its regional
approach. "The issues we face, growth and conservation, don't stop at
the county line," said Kathy Prosser, president and chief
executive officer of the Conservancy. "It makes sense to
have a presence in Lee County." ... Bixler received his
bachelor's degree in environmental studies from Washington College in
Chestertown, Md., in 1999. His master's thesis is about the best ways for
coastal communities to provide alternative water supplies, a
relevant topic for drought-ridden Southwest Florida. His research included
study of recycling wastewater, desalinization and aquifer storage.
Copyright © 2001 Naples News All rights reserved.
http://www.naplesnews.com/01/05/bonita/d580050a.htm
The Conservancy seeks grant to bolster
mangroves in Estero Bay
The Conservancy of Southwest Florida hopes to
boost the mangrove population in Estero Bay if it wins a grant from the
Charlotte Harbor National Estuary Program. The Conservancy is already
planting mangrove seedlings in Naples Bay at the water's edge of
properties whose developers years ago removed the mangroves and replaced
them with a seawall or riprap, a manmade gradual shoreline. Now the
Conservancy has its eyes on the bay side of Estero Island to
plant more mangrove seedlings, said Steve Bortone, director of
environmental science at the Conservancy. The Conservancy has asked the
estuary program for $20,000, which would be matched by the Conservancy, to
restore mangroves along about a mile of coastline in Fort Myers
Beach. ... "The plants should take about a year to get established
and three to five years to start looking like a mangrove forest and to
start functioning," he said. There is still some resistance among
homeowners about the trees blocking their views, he said, but homeowners
are allowed to trim the trees.
Copyright © 2001 Naples News All rights reserved.
http://www.naplesnews.com/01/05/bonita/d580282a.htm
JANEL SHOUN, jrshoun@naplesnews.com
Smoke from 15 wildfires stifles parts of
Florida (AP)
.... ``Right now, we're dealing with 15 large
fires around the state,'' said Gene Madden, a state Division of Forestry
spokesman. ``Smoke is going to be an issue everywhere there's a fire until
we get rains.'' The patchwork of blazes has been spurred by
the state's worst drought on record. ... ``What we're dealing
with is the effect of a four-year drought. There is no immediate relief in
sight,'' Madden said, adding that the weather service predicts ``at least
two more months of below-normal rainfall and higher-than-normal
temperatures.'' ... Since Jan. 1, Florida has had 2,679 wildfires, burning
about 204,413 acres. Orlando has received about 18 fewer inches of rain
than normal during the past year. Tallahassee is down 12 inches and Tampa
8 inches, according to the weather service. Jacksonville is about 5 inches
below normal.
Copyright © 2001 Tampa Tribune All rights reserved.
http://www.tampatrib.com/floridametronews/MGA3UTVLZMC.html
Firefighters continue battle against
blazes in Collier
Smoke, flames and charred debris marked
Sunday as fire departments across Collier County exhausted their manpower
to get three brushfires under control. At one end of the county,
firefighters continued their efforts to control a three-day blaze in rural
Golden Gate Estates that burned more than 6,000 acres. At the other fire,
battles continued to fight flames at Big Cypress National Preserve where
more than 25,000 acres of brush burned over the weekend.
Copyright © 2001 Naples News All rights reserved.
http://www.naplesnews.com/01/05/naples/d588337a.htm
Firefighters control two Collier wildfires
Firefighters gained the upper hand Sunday
afternoon on two large brush fires that have burned more than
30,000 acres in Collier County.
Copyright © 2001 SW Florida News
Press All rights reserved.
http://www.news-press.com/news/today/010521brushfires.html
20-May-01
Plans in motion to dredge river
.... Partial funding for the estimated $80
million project has already been secured from state and federal sources.
Dredging advocates point to residential and environmental benefits of
cleaning out the 5 1/2-mile stretch of the river. The waterway
is now as shallow as 13 1/2 feet in some places. Many larger
vessels have to wait for high tide to move along the waterway. Richard
Bunnell, chairman of the dredging committee of the Miami River
Commission, represents the Miami River Marine Group, an organization of
shippers and boatyard owners. He warned Saturday that if the
dredging project is not undertaken soon, the river will
continue to get clogged at an ever-faster rate. The project, which could
start as soon as next June, could take up to five years.
Copyright © 2001 Miami Herald All rights reserved.
http://www.miami.com/herald/content/news/local/dade/digdocs/038013.htm
LILA ARZUA larzua@herald.com
Canker-immune citrus trees being developed
by scientist
In a lab in Alachua, a sleepy town outside
Gainesville that's far removed from the citrus-tree-cutting chain saws of
South Florida, Dean Gabriel is developing a cure for canker. The cure
involves genetically modifying citrus trees in such a way that they are
immune to the fruit-blemishing disease. ... Even if the injunction is
lifted and state workers cut enough trees to stem the present outbreak,
Pete Timmer, a University of Florida scientist who works at
the state's citrus research center in Lake Alfred, and others agree it
won't be long before canker comes back. The state has too many major
airports and seaports for the disease not to slip by customs agents once
again, as state officials believe it did in the early 1990s. Wild citrus
in the Everglades also may harbor the disease, meaning canker could jump
back at any moment into areas where officials thought it was gone.
Copyright © 2001 Miami Herald All rights reserved.
http://www.miami.com/herald/content/news/local/dade/digdocs/106938.htm
GRIFF WITTE gwitte@herald.com
Park project tiptoes near mound
Every day, dozens of boaters glide by the
large grassy hill topped by an aging mansion on the western banks of the
Indian River. Few realize they're looking at what some archaeologists have
deemed one of the most significant ancient Indian sites in southeast
Florida. Named Mount Elizabeth, the nearly 35-foot-tall site covers an
area about the size of a football field.
http://gopbi.com/partners/pbpost/epaper/editions/sunday/martin_stlucie.html
Sarah Eisenhauer, Palm Beach Post Staff
Writer Florida divided over Reno
Janet Reno taking on Jeb Bush fascinates and
confounds an electorate accustomed to surprises.
Copyright © 2001 Miami Herald All rights reserved.
http://www.miami.com/herald/content/news/local/florida/digdocs/087622.htm
Strategists believe Reno could tap huge
network for funds, support
The Republican machinery in Florida raises
lots of money for candidates, and the top Republican in the state, Gov.
Jeb Bush, would be in line for much of it if he seeks re-election. To beat
that, a Democrat would have to build a huge network of supporters fast and
put the machinery in place to counter Bush's incumbent power and
fund-raising ability. Unless it is already there.
Copyright © 2001 Naples News All rights reserved.
http://www.naplesnews.com/01/05/florida/d570144a.htm
19-May-01
MD Feeds the Fight to Protect Open Spaces:
$35 Million Program Launched to Target Vital Sites
.... "I can remember when the Everglades
were truly one of the wonders of the world. Now there are miles of
subdivisions, and they're having huge environmental problems," Gov.
Glendening, a Florida native, said in an interview. In Maryland, he said,
"I have a unique opportunity to try to stop that." Over the next
five years, GreenPrint is budgeted to grow to $145 million.
Compared with programs in some other states, it is a paltry sum. Florida
and New Jersey, for example, each spend $1 billion a year on land
conservation, according to Kathy Blaha, of the Trust for Public
Land. But philosophically, Maryland is at the forefront of a
national trend championed by conservationists determined to end a long
history of preservation by crisis. GreenPrint represents a new way of
thinking: saving "the best of the rest," instead of "the
last of the least," in the summation of Doug Samson, of the Nature
Conservancy.
Copyright © 2001 Washington Post All rights reserved.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A47718-2001May18.html
18-May-01
What Energy Plan Means For
Us

In Florida, worries about gulf
drilling: Florida is mentioned only twice in the 163-page
energy blueprint released Thursday by the Bush administration, but look a
little deeper and you'll see that the president and the state could be on
a collision course. ... In laying out a comprehensive strategy involving
more domestic production and new energy technologies, the report mentions
the wealth of untapped oil and gas in offshore areas and the bureaucratic
red tape that companies encounter when they want to drill. That's an
apparent reference to Chevron's problems getting authority to drill for
natural gas south of Florida's Panhandle. The report also praises
"the impressive environmental record" of offshore drilling. ...
His administration is following through with a Clinton administration plan
to sell new leases in an L-shaped tract known as Area 181, which begins
off the Alabama coast near Pensacola. His comments
during the campaign and the contents of the new report put the president
at odds with his brother, Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, who has taken a
zero-tolerance approach. Gov. Bush opposes the new leases in Area
181 and has joined with Florida Republicans and Democrats in opposing the
181 plan.
Copyright © 2001 St. Petersburg Times
All rights reserved. http://sptimes.com/News/051801/Worldandnation/What_energy_plan_mean.shtml
16-May-01
ASR Test Well Drilling Begins Near Lake
Okeechobee
The South Florida Water Management District
and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers began drilling the first of three
federally authorized test wells May 11 to assist in identifying the most
suitable sites for future aquifer storage and recovery (ASR) wells in the
vicinity of Lake Okeechobee. ... The first test well is in
Okeechobee County along District canal LD-4 near the Kissimmee
River. The second test well is near Port Myacca in Martin County along
District canal L-65 near the St. Lucie Canal, and the third test well is
in Moore Haven in Glades County near District structure S-77 adjacent to
the Caloosahatchee River. Drilling will begin on the second and
third test wells next month.
http://www.sfwmd.gov/newsr/3_newsrel.html#asrstart
02-May-01
Editorial
Water Law Fell Victim To Hysteria
It was a smart political call to withdraw legislation lifting requirements
that water be treated to drinking-quality standards before being pumped
underground for storage. It was also a sad call by Gov. Jeb Bush and
Environmental Protection Department Secretary David Struhs, one forced by growing public hysteria over ``poisoning'' of the aquifer. While fanned by
some environmental organizations, that hysteria might have been quelled
quickly were it not for political arrogance that refused to accept
amendments limiting the legislation's impact. ... With careful monitoring
and public evaluation of any physical, chemical and biologic changes,
public trust can be restored and South Florida's water supplies conserved
and protected.
Copyright © 2001 Miami Herald All rights reserved.
http://www.miami.com/herald/content/opinion/editorials/digdocs/022878.htm
Editorial
Growth reform package
The finely cut, polished goals of the Growth
Management Study Commission have hit the wood chipper known as the Florida
Legislature. On Page 25 of the commission's handsome report is a section
called "Enhancing Citizen Involvement."...the commissioners
conclude that public officials need to hear from the public. But a bill
that comes before the Senate today attempts to shut out members of the
public who would protest development. ... Unfortunately, there are favors
-- especially in the House bill -- that remove state review of airports,
marinas and petroleum storage facilities from development of regional
impact rules. The Senate bill includes a provision that conservation
groups believe is strictly for St.
Joe Paper, which owns 1.1 million acres in the state and is expanding its
real-estate division. ... Growth-management "reform" laden with
favors for private groups and poison for the public is not reform.
http://www.gopbi.com/partners/pbpost/epaper/editions/friday/opinion_2.html
Editorial
Jeb finally taking growth to school
Development lobbyists are hoping to sabotage Gov. Jeb Bush's responsible
plan to ensure local governments address the need for new schools when
they make development decisions. Developers are aghast because Bush's plan
would, under rare circumstances, allow local officials to deny a project
if it would add more students to an already overcrowded school system. ...
When another development would result in already overcrowded schools
becoming even more chaotic, elected officials should have the authority to
say no. As things stand, local officials cannot even consider the plight
of
schools. This doesn't make sense. Lawmakers should think about
schoolchildren, not lobbyists, and adopt the governor's worthy growth
management proposal.
Copyright © 2001 Tampa Tribune / Associated Press All rights reserved.
http://www.tampatrib.com/News/MGA8XV8S6MC.html
Officials seek to test plan for underground storage of
tainted water
A bill allowing contaminated water to be stored
underground around Florida is dead, but a plan to test that idea for the
Everglades is still alive and moving forward. Water managers want
permission to pump surface water containing more coliform bacteria, which
can come from fecal matter, than drinking standards allow into eight
proposed pilot aquifer storage wells -- and one in West Palm Beach that
already exists. They intend to ask the state Department of Environmental
Protection for a variance from federal drinking water requirements to
proceed. ... Water district aquifer storage expert Peter Kwiatkowski said
tests done a decade ago offer proof that bacteria pumped into the upper
Floridan Aquifer should die off within 28 days, which makes spending money
to remove that pollutant "fiscally irresponsible." But more
study is needed, he said. A new West Palm Beach
aquifer storage well that would draw water from Clear Lake is to be the
first proving ground. "Once we get the variance we can flip a switch
and move forward right then and there," Kwiatkowski said. The next
Everglades test well could come on line by 2005, he said.
Copyright © 2001 Sun-Sentinel All rights reserved.
http://www.sunsentinel.com/news/
(Third item under "South Florida")
http://www.sunsentinel.com/news/local/southflorida/sfl-pwater03may03.story?
Restriction on environmental lawsuits proposed
Majority Leader Jim King, R- Jacksonville, sponsored an
amendment that says
individuals must be directly affected by environmental damage to start an
administrative action against a state agency. The Environmental Protection
Act of 1971 allows any state resident to appeal decisions by government
agencies in any part of the state. King's amendment would restrict
nonprofit groups that sue on behalf of residents. Groups such as the
Sierra Club would need to have at least 25 members in a county where the
suit is
filed. The group also must have been in the county for one year prior to
the suit. King said the environmentalists' opposition did force him to
``soften'' his original legislation. ``I couldn't have passed what I
wanted to pass,'' King said. ``... ``Let me see the data to support the
charge that there's a lot of frivolous litigation,'' Richard Grosso of the
Environmental and Land Use Attorneys Center said.
Copyright © 2001 Tampa Tribune / Associated Press All rights reserved.
http://www.tampatrib.com/floridametronews/MGA7ORP0AMC.html
http://www.gopbi.com/partners/pbpost/epaper/editions/friday/news_10.html
Legislator sends `manure-gram'
Frustrated by defeat in the nursing home battle, Rep.
Nancy Argenziano, R-Dunnellon, responded with a ``manure-gram'' that may
topple her from Republican leadership. Argenziano was attacked in ads by
the nursing home group this year. ``I was appalled,'' said Jodi Chase, the
manure recipient and a lobbyist for Associated Industries of Florida, a
powerful business group retained by the nursing home industry to help it
lobby for protection from lawsuits. ``I can't help it,'' said Argenziano.
``When I think of Jodi
Chase, I think of cow manure.'' ... Argenziano was the only Republican in
the Republican-dominated House to cast a no vote. ...the nursing home bill
passed by a 112-8 vote Wednesday on its way to becoming law by the end of
the month.
Copyright © 2001 Miami Herald All rights reserved.
Copyright © 2001 Naples News All rights reserved.
Copyright © 2001 Tampa Tribune / Associated Press All rights reserved.
http://www.tampatrib.com/MGAVZ5FX9MC.html
http://ap.tbo.com/ap/florida/MGATF95T9MC.html
http://www.miami.com/herald/content/news/local/florida/digdocs/102410.htm
http://www.naplesnews.com/01/05/florida/d628014a.htm
Legislature: Speed bumps, softball complexes real meat
of state budget
.... if Leon County wants any of the $458.5 million
slated for road construction, it must remove the "road
impediments" — speed bumps — that slow drivers down as they drive
[on a short cut] to the Tallahassee airport. Senate President John McKay
thought the condition was a good idea. "I think when you want a
community to do something, to be effective, you tie it to funding,"
said McKay, R-Bradenton. "I personally don't like
speed bumps." He was put off a little that the matter was questioned.
It also has to change the name of the Tallahassee/Leon County Civic Center
back to its old name, the Donald L. Tucker Civic Center. Tucker, a former
House speaker, is McKay's uncle-in-law. ... Gov. Jeb Bush said before that
he doesn't like projects that don't have statewide impact. He's also
vetoed local projects in each of his first two years. As for the speed
bumps in
Leon County, they don't bother the governor. He avoids the street.
"When I go to the airport, I go around. I take the old route,"
Bush said. "I don't slow down."
Copyright © 2001 Naples News All rights reserved.
http://www.naplesnews.com/01/05/florida/d626746a.htm\
Senate, House at Odds Over Career Service Overhaul (AP)
The Senate refused to go as far as the House in reducing
job protection for most state employees in a Career Service system
overhaul it passed 33-7 Wednesday. ... Eight of the 15 Senate Democrats
joined all 25 Republicans in voting for Garcia's bill. Some Democrats said
they voted for it only because they dislike the House version even more.
Senate Majority Leader Jim King, R-Jacksonville, said they could still
vote against the
legislation when a negotiated version returns for a final vote. At least
one Republican, however, said he, too, may vote against the bill if Senate
negotiators cave in. "I used to be a state employee many years
ago," said Sen. Jack Latvala, R-Palm Harbor. Latvala said he thought
every group of employees should be treated the same, but pointed out the
House bill exempts highway patrol troopers and other law enforcement
officers. "My way
of looking at it is they exempted law enforcement personnel because they
have a strong lobby up here, because they support many of us," he said.
Copyright © 2001 Miami Herald All rights reserved.
http://ap.tbo.com/ap/florida/MGAGIFNG9MC.html
http://www.miami.com/herald/content/news/local/florida/digdocs/102894.htm
01-May-01
Judge William Hoeveler made it clear he felt court
scrutiny was still necessary, despite overhauled state laws, ongoing
construction of vast filtration ponds and an $8 billion state-federal plan
to replumb and restore the struggling system.
Copyright © 2001 Miami Herald All rights reserved.
Thousands of residents have called, written or e-mailed lawmakers urging
them to reconsider.
Public opposition has killed a bill that would have allowed
pumping untreated water into the state's aquifer, a startling turnaround for a
measure that passed both the House and Senate by wide margins earlier in the
legislative session. Two weeks ago the bill seemed certain to become law. But on Monday two of the
bill's leading supporters, Gov. Jeb Bush and state Sen. Ken Pruitt, R-Port St.
Lucie, said they will withdraw the aquifer-storage proposal from further
consideration. Bush said he did not want to subject his allies to the "distorted"
political fallout that would result if the bill passed. Pruitt, the bill's
Senate sponsor, blamed environmental "extremists" for its demise.
"Hysteria prevailed over science," Pruitt said. However, one of the few senators to vote against the bill, Sen. Ginny
Brown-Waite, said Monday's announcement shows how powerful the people's voice
can be. Thousands had called, written or e-mailed lawmakers who voted for the
bill, urging them to reconsider, she said. "To now see this turnaround is very, very refreshing," Brown-Waite,
R-Brooksville, said. "This is what our democracy is all about."
Copyright © 2001 St. Petersburg Times
All rights reserved.
08-March-01
Utilities
fight water rules
Limits on development raise objections
South Florida's utilities are balking at pending state rules to protect
the Everglades, warning they could jack up consumer costs and force
building moratoriums over the coming decades. Miami-Dade County
utility directors consider the potential impact on grand suburban
expansion plans so sweeping they are asking the County Commission today to
pass a resolution urging that the South Florida Water Management District
put the rules, already nearly 30 years overdue, on indefinite hold.
``This is a very, very critical rule,'' said Jorge Rodriguez, assistant
director of Miami-Dade's Water and Sewer Department. ``In the case of
Miami-Dade County, we'd have to wait 20 years for the water we
need.'' Environmentalists scoff, saying the rules help ensure
survival of water resources. They contend that booming urban communities,
even in the face of a historic drought and a monumental $8 billion federal
and state plan to restore the Everglades, refuse to confront the reality
of a limited water supply.
Copyright © 2001 Miami Herald All rights reserved.
Litigation
28-August-01
(Filed on 08-Feb-01)
BARLEY vs. SFWMD
The Supreme Court of Florida accepts
jurisdiction and sets calendar for oral argument
Case No.: SC00-1998 Lower Tribunal No.: 5D98-3178
MARY BARLEY, ETC., ET AL. vs. SOUTH FLORIDA WATER
MANAGEMENT DISTRICT Petitioners Respondents
ORDER ACCEPTING JURISDICTION AND SETTING ORAL ARGUMENT
The Court has accepted jurisdiction of this case and
will hear oral argument at 9:00 a.m. TUESDAY, AUGUST 28, 2001. A maximum
of TWENTY minutes to the side is allowed, but counsel is expected to use
only so much of that time as is necessary. Petitioners' brief on the
merits shall be served on or before MARCH 5, 2001; Respondent's brief on
the merits shall be served 20 days after service of petitioners' brief on
the merits; and petitioners' reply brief on the merits shall be served 20
days after service of respondent's brief on the merits. Please file an
original and seven copies of all briefs. UNLESS BRIEFS ARE TIMELY FILED,
THE PRIVILEGE OF ORAL ARGUMENT WILL BE FORFEITED. The Clerk of the
District Court of Appeal, FIFTH District, shall file the original record
on or before MARCH 26, 2001. NO CONTINUANCES WILL BE GRANTED EXCEPT UPON A
SHOWING OF EXTREME HARDSHIP.
HARDING, ANSTEAD, PARIENTE AND QUINCE, JJ., concur.
LEWIS, J., dissents.
[signed] Thomas D. Hall Clerk, Supreme Court
Served: HON. FRANK J. HABERSHAW, CLECK JON MILS PAUL L.
NETTLETON REBECCA O'HARA RICHARD A. KELLER RUTH P. CLEMENTS WILLIAM L.
HYDE
Notes:
The above notice is posted here in pdf download format
under February 2001: http://www.flcourts.org/sct/clerk/Review%20Granted/index.html
Fifth District Court of Appeal opinions are not online.
To watch/hear oral arguments live: http://wfsu.org/gavel2gavel/
Legislation
New
Bills
Senate action:
Search
Thomas
Congressional Testimony
Regulations
Case Law
Law Review Articles
March 2001
Alligators
and Litigators :
A Recent History of Everglades Regulation and Litigation
by Keith W. Rizzardi
To many Florida lawyers, litigation in the Everglades seems as old as
the Everglades itself. Its history can be traced back to the 1800s when
Hamilton Disston and Henry Flagler were draining, dredging, and filling
Florida's land while fighting in the courts with shareholders,
speculators, and state land administrators. The modern history
of litigation in the Everglades is dominated by agricultural interests,
environmental interest groups, the Miccosukee Tribe of Indians, and state
and federal agencies. Along the way, important precedents have been
created, affecting the Everglades as well as Florida administrative and
environmental law in general.
Copyright © 2001 The
Florida Bar Journal
Reports
10-May-01
Florida Forever Work Plan
http://www.sfwmd.gov/org/wsd/cerp/forever.pdf
(182 pages, 3 MB download file)
In 1999, the Florida Forever program was created, which authorized the
issuance of bonds in an amount not to exceed $3 billion for acquisitions
of land and water areas. This revenue is to be used for restoration,
conservation, recreation, water resource development, historical
preservation and capital improvements to such land and water areas. This
program is intended to accomplish environmental restoration, enhance
public access and recreational enjoyment, promote long-term management
goals, and facilitate water resource development.
Water management districts are required to create a five-year plan that
identifies projects meeting specific criteria. In developing their project
lists, each district is to integrate its surface water improvement and
management plans, Save Our Rivers land acquisition lists, stormwater
management projects, proposed water resource development projects,
proposed water body restoration projects, and other properties or
activities that would assist in meeting the goals of Florida Forever.
The initial plan must be submitted by June 1, 2001 to the President of
the Senate, Speaker of the House of Representatives, and Secretary of the
Department of Environmental Protection. By January 1 of each year
thereafter, each district must then report on acquisitions completed
during the year, as well as modifications or additions to its five-year
work plan. The plans will also include the status of funding,
staffing and resource management for every project funded for which the
district is responsible.
Thirty-five percent of the Florida Forever bond proceeds are
distributed annually to FDEP for land acquisition and capital expenditures
in order to implement the priority lists submitted by the water management
districts. A minimum of fifty percent of the funding is to be used
for land acquisition. The South Florida Water Management District (SFWMD) annual net share is
$33,075,000. The Everglades Restoration Investment Act, Section
373.470(5)(b), F.S., mandates that for ten consecutive years, $25M of this
funding is to be used to implement the Comprehensive Everglades
Restoration Plan (CERP). Since approximately 75 percent of the Florida
Forever funding that the SFWMD will receive will be dedicated to CERP,
CERP is a major focus of the SFWMD Florida Forever Workplan. This work plan describes specific projects that will be eligible for
Florida Forever funding in the FY2001 - 2005 period. It is arranged in
sections that correspond to the regions described in the August, 2000 CERP
Master Program Management Plan. Additionally, it includes projects for
which the SFWMD expects to seek reimbursement through Florida Forever in
fiscal year 200: the Western C-11 Diversion Impoundment and Canal (Cell
11), C-43 Basin Storage Reservoir, and Kissimmee River Restoration.
See the SFWMD's Florida Forever Work Plan
http://www.sfwmd.gov/org/wsd/cerp/forever.pdf
Committee
on Restoration of the Greater Everglades Ecosystem
Aquifer Storage and Recovery in the Comprehensive
Everglades Restoration Plan: A Critique of the Pilot Projects and Related
Plans for ASR in the Lake Okeechobee and Western Hillsboro Areas. A
federal law enacted in December calls for a multi-billion dollar effort to
restore the Florida Everglades' natural ecosystem. This report offers
advice on restoration pilot projects that would involve storing excess
surface water underground and pumping it back up for use during droughts.
Aquifer
Storage and Recovery in the Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan: A
Critique of the Pilot Projects and Related Plans for ASR in the Lake
Okeechobee and Western Hillsboro Areas
Copyright ©
2000 National Academies
All rights reserved.
Research
01-Nov--00
Missing
Pieces in Ecosystem Restoration: The Case of the Florida Everglades
Economic Systems Research, VoL 12, No. 3, 2000
RICHARD WEISSKOFF
(Received January 1999; revised November 1999)
ABSTRACT The largest ecosystem restoration in the world-a $7.8
billion rescue package-is now beginning in the Florida Everglades. This
paper examines both the economic impact of the restoration itself and
those pieces that are 'missing' from the official project analysis;
namely, increased tourism, urban construction, in-migration, and changing
agricultural patterns. These pieces comprise a variety of scenarios that
are tested for a 45 year planning period with an augmented
input-output model derived from a regional SAM. The new output and
employment generated by the 'missing pieces', which are small
relative to the vast economic base of the region, do represent a
considerable increase over the annual growth, especially by the
year 2045. We conclude with a discussion of ways in which a growing
regional economy might be reconciled with ecosystem restoration.
Conferences,
Hearings
19, 20-Feb-01
22-Mar-01
All Eyes on Florida: Revitalizing, Restoring and Revisiting
The seventh annual public interest environmental conference
University Conference Center Doubletree
Gainesville, FL
March 22-24, 2001
This student-run conference brings together diverse interests to take part
in panels discussing a multitude of environmental issues. This form of
interaction allows the parties to develop understanding and even cooperation
on difficult environmental conflicts that may otherwise be impossible.
The University of Florida College of Law's Environmental and Land Use Law
Society in cooperation with the Florida Bar
05-Sep-01
Wetlands and Remediation: The Second International Conference
Background: In November, 1999, Battelle Memorial Institute, a
not-for-profit research organization based in Columbus, Ohio, sponsored
and organized a wetlands and remediation conference in Salt Lake City,
Utah, that brought together more than 300 wetlands and remediation
experts to discuss common issues related to cleaning up contaminated
wetlands and using wetlands (both natural and constructed) for treating
contaminated ground-, surface-, and wastewater. Based on the success of
that meeting, Battelle is pleased to announce that Wetlands and
Remediation: The Second International Conference will be held September
5-6, 2001, at the Sheraton Burlington Hotel and Conference Center in
Burlington, Vermont.
Organization: Karl Nehring of Battelle (614/424-6510, nehringk@battelle.org), Conference Chairman, will be responsible for
coordinating the development of the technical program. Carol Young (614/424-7604,
youngc@battelle.org) will be the Conference Coordinator, responsible for scheduling, correspondence, and issues involving
abstract and manuscript submittal and preparation. The Conference Group (800/783-6338,
conferencegroup@compuserve.com) of Columbus, Ohio, is
handling the meeting logistics.
Format: After an opening plenary session, there will be multiple platform sessions (two or three concurrent tracks), and a poster session
on Wednesday evening. Speakers at the Plenary Session will include Dr. Jean-Paul Schwitzguebel of the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology
Lausanne, Dr. Barry Warner of the University of Waterloo (current vice president of the Society of Wetland Scientists) and Dr. John Pardue of
Louisiana State University.
Sponsorship: Battelle is the sponsor and organizer, and we are hoping to add co-sponsors for the 2001 conference. Parsons Engineering
Science, Morrison Knudsen Corporation, the U.S. DoD Environmental Security Technical Certification Program/Strategic Environmental
Research and Development Program, and the U.S. Naval Facilities Engineering Command were co-sponsors of the 1999 Conference.
Organizations interested in co-sponsoring the 2001 Conference should contact The Conference Group.
Participating Organizations: Organizations committed to helping with publicity for the conference and encouraging participation should
contact The Conference Group at 800/783-6338. Participating organizations for the 1999 meeting included The Center for Wetlands and
Riparian Design (University of Utah), Environmental Business Journal, the USDA NRCS Wetlands Science Institute, the University of Florida
Center for Wetlands, The Michigan State University Institute of Water
Research, the Olentangy River Wetland Research Park (The Ohio State University), The Department of Oceanography and Coastal Sciences/Coastal
Ecology Institute (Louisiana State University), The U.S. Army Construction Engineering Laboratory, the Utah Water Research Laboratory
(Utah State University), the Tennessee Valley Authority, and the New York State Wetlands Forum.
Exhibitors: Companies or organizations interested in having an exhibit booth at the conference should contact The Conference Group at
800/783-6338.
Schedule: The Call for Abstracts will be mailed in November 2000; the deadline for submitting abstracts will be March 5, 2001. Once the
program has been finalized and accepted presenters have been sent acceptance letters, a preliminary program will be mailed.
Proceedings: A proceedings volume will be prepared and then published by Battelle Press and mailed to registrants shortly after the
conference. Proceedings papers will be optional but strongly encouraged from all presenters, both platform and poster. Authors wishing to have
their papers appear in the proceedings will be requested to provide camera-ready copies of their papers by July 13.
Registration: Because registration fees are by far the major source of funding for the conference and a significant percentage of registrants
will make presentations, all presenting authors and session chairs are expected to register and pay the standard fees.
Potential topics for this conference include:
- Natural Attenuation in Wetlands
- Biological and Ecological Considerations
- Risk-Based Wetlands Remediation
- Regulatory Trends
- Economic Factors in Wetlands Remediation and Restoration
- Wetlands Hydrology and Morphology
- Wetlands Microbial Ecology
- Phytoremediation and Macrophytes in Wetlands
- Wetlands for the Remediation and Treatment of Wastewater
- Wetlands Treatment of Contaminated Sediments
- GIS and Remediation
- Innovative Technologies for Wetlands Investigations
- Non-point Source Pollution and Agricultural Runoff
- Redox Processes in Wetlands
- Contaminant Fate and Environmentally Acceptable Endpoints
- Wetlands Design and Construction
- Creating Wetlands using Dredge Spoils
- Wetlands Restoration and Mitigation
- Explosives and Wetlands
- Hydrocarbon-Contaminated Wetlands
- Mine Waste Considerations
- Metals and Inorganics in Wetlands
- Perchlorate-Contaminated Wetlands
- Groundwater/Surface Water Interfaces
Links
27-May-01
USC list of law journals
http://www.usc.edu/dept/law-lib/legal/journals.html
St. Thomas Law School
http://www.stu.edu/lawschool/index.htm
Nova Southeastern Shepard Broad Law Center
http://www.nsulaw.nova.edu/
Florida Coastal School of Law
http://www.fcsl.edu/
University of Florida Levin College of Law
http://www.law.ufl.edu/
Florida State University College of Law
http://www.law.fsu.edu/
Stetson University College of Law
http://www.law.stetson.edu/
Columbia Online
Style: MLA-Style Citations of Electronic Sources
Citation styles developed
by Janice Walker (University of South Florida) and endorsed by the
Alliance for Computers and Writing (ACW).
http://enlishttu.edu/acw
Yahoo listings for
"Internet Citation" - Links to several online citation Web sites
http://www.yahoo.com/Social_Science/Linguistics_and_Human_Languages/Languages/English/
Yahoo listings for
Writing for the Web
Collection of cites with general advice about writing
and publishing online
http://www.yahoo.com/Social_Science/Communications/Writing/Writing_for_the_Web/
25-May-01
Link: Legal
Florida Supreme Court Briefs and Opinions
Florida State University College of Law web site
http://www.law.fsu.edu/library/flsupct/index.html
Link: Educational
Expedition Everglades
Journey into the Greater Everglades
Ecosystem Restoration: Learn how we are rescuing our "River of
Grass." Discover our plan to preserve this wondrous place
(Ft. Lauderdale Museum of Discovery and Science educational program,
3/01)
http://www.mods.org/education5.htm
03-April-01
Link: Organizations (Federal Government)
U.S. Geological Survey
Geological Survey activities in connection with
the Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan (CERP: General
information, vision statement, team members and program coordinator
http://fl.water.usgs.gov/CERP/cerp.html
Recent USGS water resources publications about
Florida
http://fl.water.usgs.gov/recentpubs.html
U.S. Geological Survey, Florida District
http://fl.water.usgs.gov
Links: Ecology (Advocacy) links
The
Last Noah’s Ark
Brazil
What is it?
The environmental program
The Last Noah’s Ark is result of years of studies of his idealizer
Antonio Silveira Ribeiro dos Santos in natural history and environmental
area. Created in August 1995 and registered at 7th notary public office
of São Paulo (n0 249.836). Author rights register n0 106.123, book 158,
pages 418.
The Purposes
• Conscious about the necessity of nature’s
preservation and conservation;
• Development of studies for an effective
protection of species and main ecosystern;
• Promoting environmental education at all
levels;
• Improving the quality of global life;
• Supplying subvention for the improvement of
Environment’s Rights.
What makes the
difference?
It is a program created and developed by a person
who puts together concerned people with the same idea and an equal
participation, without obedience. It is not an ONG.
The program does not accept any direct monetary
help. Eventually the interested people may collaborate by lending goods to the
program.
http://www.aultimaarcadenoe.com/indexingles.htm
08-March-01
Legal (Academic Organizations) links
Florida State
University
The
Florida Resources and Environmental Analysis Center (FREAC)
Established in 1969,
is the original center within the Institute of Science and Public
Affairs (ISPA) at Florida State
University (FSU). FREAC professionals
conduct research in the general areas of resource management and
environmental analysis, as well as provide advice and technical
assistance to state and local agencies. Public lands research and
analysis, geographic information system development, and graphic
representation of digital databases are current and long-range FREAC
research interests. FREAC also trains university students in these areas
through direct involvement in projects, providing real-world
experiences.
•
FREAC - Florida
Resources and Environmental Analysis Center
08-March-01
Water Resources Atlas of Florida
(1998) Florida State University Editors:
Edward A. Fernald and Elizabeth D. Purdum
Library of Congress Catalog Number 98-072985
ISBN 0-9606708-2-3
Complete update and revision of the widely acclaimed
1984 atlas. The comprehensive reference on Florida's water resources and
their management. Hundreds of full-color maps, photos, charts, and
graphs. Contributors are from U.S. Geological Survey, Florida
Department of Environmental Protection, the Water Management Districts
of Florida and universities. Information on purchasing the Water
Resources Atlas of Florida and other publications can be obtained here:
http://www.freac.fsu.edu/atlases.html
Section I: Introduction
1 Water Issues: Global, National, State,
Ecosystem
Section II: Florida's Water Resources
2 Weather and Climate
3 Groundwater
4 Surface Water
5 Natural Systems
6 Water Use
7 Water Quality
Section III: Management and Regional Diversity
8 History of Water Management
9 Northwest Florida Water Management District
10 Suwanee River Water Management District
11 St. Johns River Water Management District
12 Southwest Florida Water Management District
13 South Florida Water Management District
Section IV: Issues and Conflicts
14 Water Economics and Finance
15 Law and Policy in Managing Water Resources
Illustration Examples
Photo album (direct links below)
http://www.photoloft.com/view/Album.asp?s=plft&u=71267&a=967559
Florida topography (light-to-dark)
0-50-100-150-200-250-300 feet above sea level
http://www.photoloft.com/view/Image.asp?s=plft&u=71267&a=967559&i=6417964
Florida wetlands (1989)
http://www.photoloft.com/view/Image.asp?s=plft&u=71267&a=967559&i=6417973
Florida water management districts
http://www.photoloft.com/view/Image.asp?s=plft&u=71267&a=967559&i=6417973
More illustrations can be seen here:
http://www.evergladesvillage.net/atlas_of_fla/atlas.html
10-Feb-01
The American
Association of Law Libraries
The American Association of Law Libraries was founded in 1906 to promote
and enhance the value of law libraries to the legal and public
communities, to foster the profession of law librarianship, and to provide
leadership in the field of legal information.
Today, with over 4,800 members, the Association
represents law librarians and related professionals who are affiliated
with a wide range of institutions: law firms; law schools; corporate legal
departments; courts; and local, state and federal government agencies.
http://www.aallnet.org/
SEAALL
| the
Southeastern Chapter of the American Association of Law Libraries.
SEAALL is a not-for-profit organization incorporated in Florida with
the purposes of promoting law librarianship and developing and
increasing the usefulness of law libraries, particularly those in
the Southeastern area of the United States. |
 |
| SEAALL
was originally established in 1954 -- an expansion of the Carolinas
Chapter (established in 1939 as AALL's first chapter). Today
our membership is over 500 strong, representing law librarians from the
private sector, the government, academia, and more.
For more on the history of SEAALL,
please see From
the SEAALL Attic, by Hazel Johnson.
A continuing mission for SEAALL has
always been to provide educational services for its members. This
is primarily accomplished through the many educational offerings at our
annual meeting and through instructive articles, pathfinders, and
bibliographies in our newsletter, The
Southeastern Law Librarian.
|
http://www.aallnet.org/chapter/seaall/index.shtml
06-Feb-01
Ramsar
Convention on Wetlands
Ramsar
and Wetlands International 1999 Directory of Wetlands of
International Importance
Web
directory