April 2002
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News
Bringing the Everglades into the classroom
Thanks to a joint education venture, students can now journey
through the Everglades ecosystem -- without ever leaving their classroom.
In April 2002, middle schools throughout the South Florida
Water Management District's 16-county jurisdiction received copies of a new
resource guide designed to increase awareness and understanding of the
Everglades. See: http://www.sfwmd.gov/histo/3_counties.html
Developed in conjunction with the Newspapers In Education
program, Everglades - An American Treasure will bring to life the
interconnected Kissimmee-Okeechobee-Everglades watershed and the unprecedented state/federal efforts now under way to restore and revitalize
this extraordinary ecosystem. Read More...
Copyright © 2002SFWMD
All rights reserved.
30-Apr-02
Environmental Protection Indicators for
California (EPIC)
The 2002 EPIC report is available for download as either a
series of pdf files or as one large file. You will need the free program Adobe
Acrobat Reader to view or print these files. This 300-page report describes the process for the
identification and selection of environmental indicators that are adopted as part of
the EPIC system, and presents the initial set of environmental indicators. Read
More..
Copyright © 2002
OEHHA All rights reserved.
Army Corps Suspending Work on 150 Water
Projects
Decision is Unprecedented
Response to Criticism
The Army Corps of Engineers is
suspending work on about 150 congressionally approved water projects to
review the economics used to justify them, an unprecedented response to
criticism of Corps analyses inside and outside the Bush administration.
Maj. Gen. Robert H. Griffin, director of the Corps civil works program,
announced that the Corps will immediately "pause" work on billions
of dollars worth of active public works projects that are not yet under
construction. Griffin said any project with a pre-1999 economic analysis
will need a new analysis before it can proceed. The Corps will also review
newer projects where questions about economics, engineering or the
environment "may have resulted in significant changes in project
justification or support."
Copyright © 2002 Washington Post All rights reserved.
Washington Post series on Army Corps

Ibis fly along
a mangrove lined wilderness waterway
near the Shark River in Everglades National Park. (Tim
Chapman)
Army
Corps of Engineers: Documents, graphics and recent coverage.
Post Series - Links
Part 1: <A HREF="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A36661-2000Sep8.html">An
Agency of Unchecked Clout</A>
Part 2: <A HREF="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A45866-2000Sep10.html">Working
to Please Hill Commanders</A>
Part 3: <A HREF="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A51707-2000Sep11.html">A
Race to the Bottom</A>
Part 4: <A HREF="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A57934-2000Sep12.html">Reluctant
Regulators</A>
Part 5: <A HREF="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A578-2000Sep13.html">A
Chance for Redemption</A>
<A HREF="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A47092-2000Feb13.html">How
Corps Turned Doubt Into a Lock</A>
<A HREF="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A49146-2000Sep11.html">A
Brief History of the Corps</A>
<A HREF="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A38241-2000Sep8.html">The
Corps' Controversial Projects</A>
Researcher questions Everglades plan focus
Inside a 1907 clapboard house fitted with solar panels, where
a stationary bike powers a
black-and-white television and the coffee is ground by hand, dwells the author
of an unfinished
book almost nobody has read. Yet this book's contents are creating a scientific stir.
Has Chris McVoy -- Lake Worth resident, folk dancer, peace
activist, part-time yoga instructor
and speaker of six languages -- uncovered fatal flaws in the $8.4 billion plan to
restore the Everglades? Some environmentalists think he has. He's also caught the ear of certain federal scientists, who
say the plan is sound but that McVoy has found ways they can improve it. The book painstakingly describes the wet, wild,
flowing
Everglades that existed before the 1880s, when early drainage projects began its slow death.
That picture differs from the scientific thinking behind the
restoration plan -- either a little or a lot, depending on whom you ask. Here's the awkward part: McVoy is a wetlands scientist at the
South Florida Water Management District,
one of the prime forces behind the $8.4 billion plan.
Copyright © 2002 Palm Beach Post All rights reserved.
EDITORIAL: Keep hands off funds to buy land
This bad idea just won't go away. Once again, the Legislature is considering a raid on Florida's
Preservation 2000 reserve fund, the current version of which was established by
voters in 1998. The $49 billion state budget to be taken up in the special
session that began Monday includes a plan to take $100 million from the fund to
pay for a variety of worthy matters, such as health care and education. We realize the state is hard-pressed to pay for lots of needed
programs. But this money is morally committed to the state's excellent
conservation land-buying program, by voter action. Furthermore, environmental
groups were given a commitment that there would be no raid on environmental
funds in this budget. There was a $75 million raid last year. The commitment of money to the land fund makes it possible to
borrow for the purchases at a good rate.
Copyright © 2002 Fort Meyers News Press All rights reserved.
Rural committee approves changes to growth management
program
Rural landowners in Collier County moved a big step closer
Monday night to guidelines that will set the course for what they say will be
compatible growth management around the Immokalee area. The Rural Area Assessment Oversight Committee unanimously
approved two sets of revisions to goals, objectives and policies for a program
called the Rural Lands Stewardship Area Overlay, which involves the northeastern
section of the county surrounding Immokalee. All 11 of the committee members present at Monday's meeting -
three others were absent - agreed to send the proposed growth plan amendments
through the approval process. That will include review and scrutinizing by the
county's Environmental Advisory Council, the Planning Commission and the Collier
County Commission - as well as a series of public hearings. The state Department of Community Affairs will have the final
say. The plan, or overlay, gives landowners in the 200,000-acre
study area the option of asking Collier County commissioners to designate places
for protection, called stewardship sending areas, and places where development
would be allowed under new rules, called receiving areas. Committee members concentrated their discussion on what can
and can't be done in the sending and receiving areas. The plan includes an
elaborate point system, which would reward landowners for setting aside land for
protection or keeping it in agricultural production.
Copyright © 2002 Naples News All rights reserved.
Lee, Collier among fastest-growing counties in
nation, new census figures show
More than 100 years ago, Thomas Edison made this observation:
"There is only one Fort Myers and 90 million people are going to find it
out." During one recent 15-month period, about 36,000 of them did -
or at least they found Southwest Florida. Newly released census figures tell
Southwest Florida residents what they already knew. Lee County and Collier
County are each among the fastest-growing counties in America. Collier in fact is the fifth-fastest growing county in
Florida, and the 63rd fastest growing in the country. The new figures focus on
the population growth between April 1, 2000, and July 1, 2001. During that time
Collier's population grew by 5.7 percent, from 251,377 to 265,769. It's not like Lee County's growth dragged the region down,
however. Lee County saw 21,567 new residents move in during those 15 months, an
increase of 4.9 percent. Lee's population went from 440,888 to 462,455. Lee's percentage of growth was 100th in the nation, but in
terms of the sheer number of new residents the county ranked 31st in the nation
and sixth in Florida. Collier ranked 58th nationwide and ninth in the state in
terms of actual people, not percentages. Apart from the more obvious factors of weather and geography,
locals cite efforts to provide new residents with what they need. "I really think it's the fact community leadership is
working to build the infrastructure that contributes to the quality of
life," said Steve Tirey, executive director of the Chamber of Southwest
Florida. "That's been the real challenge in this area since the Calusa were
digging canals." Lee County Commissioner Ray Judah said the rapid growth is
something county officials deal with daily. Judah, a planner for the county
before he was elected in 1988, since 1990 has seen a 38 percent population
increase. During those same years, Collier's population grew by 75
percent, from 152,099 in the 1990 census to the current 265,769.
Copyright © 2002 Naples News All rights reserved.
29-Apr-02
Resource Manager Of The Year

Governor Jeb
Bush, the Florida Cabinet, DEP and Nature Conservancy officials, and the
DiMaggio family.
Jeff DiMaggio, Park Manager for Waccasassa Bay
Preserve State Park and Cedar Key Scrub State Reserve, was honored as the
Department of Environmental Protection's "2001 Resource Manager of the
Year" at the April 23 meeting of Governor Jeb Bush and the Florida Cabinet.
The award, established in 1992, is presented
annually to recognize outstanding resource management achievements by a DEP land
manager in the protection of state lands. It is based on a review of nominees by
a selection committee composed of three major Florida environmental
organizations -- Audubon of Florida, the Sierra Club and The Nature Conservancy."Under Jeff's management, the rate of scrub
rejuvenation in Cedar Key Scrub State Reserve has rapidly increased," said
Florida State Parks' Director Wendy Spencer. "Rejuvenation of the scrub
will dramatically increase the breeding habitat for the threatened Florida
scrub-jay. The population of jays in this region of the state has recently been
deemed one of the most critical in the state due to habitat loss." Read
More...
Copyright © 2003
Florida
Department of Environmental Protection All
rights reserved.
Wetlands saved at uplands' cost
Development of habitat hurts wildlife
Janet Palmer saw cardinals dart by her condominium lanai and
heard nighthawks' calls during spring evenings when she moved to south Fort
Myers nine years ago. That's changed. Today, the cardinals have been replaced by urban animals such
as crows and grackles - the kind of bird commonly seen pecking at discarded
french fries in fast-food restaurants' parking lots. Her situation is copied in neighborhoods across Southwest
Florida as rooftops replace pine trees. As 50 people a day move into Lee County, environmentally
crucial uplands are finding themselves scraped clean and sprouting concrete
foundations at a record pace. Florida's laws extensively protect its swamps and wetlands,
but that isn't the case with upland habitats such as pine forests that have been
mowed over, often right up to wetland boundaries. Uplands are developed for residential and commercial use near
Florida's coasts and for agricultural uses inland. With wetlands usually off limits for building, the homes and
businesses that support new residents are built in dry - often wooded - areas.
Motorists still can drive by tree-thick corners at major
intersections and see a wall of green out the car window.
Copyright © 2002 Fort Meyers News Press All rights reserved.
School program is picture purr-fect
Southwest Florida school children are playing a big role in
helping biologists learn more about the endangered Florida panther. The
Pennies for Panthers program is gathering money that is used to buy special
cameras that will photograph panthers in their natural setting. Students
at LaBelle's Country Oaks Elementary School are the first to raise the $444
needed to buy a camera. That camera was recently placed in the Florida Panther Refuge
located off State Road 29 in Collier County. The camera is triggered to
take a picture by body heat and can snap photographs day and night. Wildlife biologist Larry Richardson said the photos are an important part of
panther research. The date and time printed on each photograph help
researchers learn about the panther's living patterns. The information provides clues about where they go. The photos
help biologists look at the health of individual panthers, and it shows them
what areas they frequent the most. "It tells us about the value of a
certain area," Richardson said. The information is critical to
researchers who are working on plans to enhance the panther population. They believe only 50 to 70 are living in the wild, all in southern Florida.
The panthers are studied by air three times a week. Collared panthers are tracked to see where they go.
Copyright © 2002 Fort Meyers News Press All rights reserved.
Editorial:
New science, new ideas require public scrutiny
Three stories dominated the front page of this newspaper on
Sunday, April 21. One was about mitigation banking.
Another was about Everglades restoration. The third was about the future of farming and residential
development in the Immokalee area. They all had something in common. They all are driven by
growth. They have this in common too: They are all experimental, and
we get only one chance to get them right. "We" is apropos because all of us have to live with
the results. That means we have to keep both eyes wide open to what is going on
around us.
Copyright © 2002 Naples News All rights reserved.
Collier may hire private planning firms
Critics: Potential conflicts of interest mar proposal
Collier County's overburdened community development department
may start hiring outside companies to help plan, leading some critics to raise
the issue of potential conflicts of interest. Private planning firms are usually employed by developers to
navigate projects through the county's regulatory process. "The county can't hire a private planning firm who has a
stable of developers they provide services to," said Nancy Payton, Florida
Wildlife Federation representative. "If they have a contract with the
county to help write the rules that govern the developers, who do you think
they'll be looking out for?" Commissioner Fred Coyle said private firms would do limited
work for the county. "These consultants wouldn't be getting involved in the
approval process for developments or building projects," Coyle said.
"They'll be advising us as to creating land development codes to govern
growth." Commissioners voted to allow Community Development
Administrator Joe Schmitt to start looking at private firms to help the planning
department April 23. Schmitt said the first thing he'll do is try to work out a
foolproof method to avoid conflicts.
Copyright © 2002 Fort Meyers News Press All rights reserved.
Letter to Editor - Miami Herald
Sportsmen crucial to health of Big Cypress
Re the April 15 editorial Preserving Big Cypress: I have
comments on three
issues: 1) the purpose of the preserve, 2) damage that allegedly
occurs from off-road vehicles, and 3) the permanent roads being planned by
the National Park Service. I was executive director of the Florida Wildlife Federation
during the 1970s when the Big Cypress was created. The sportsmen were worried they
would be shut out if the federal government purchased the area. I worked
in Washington to get the bill out of the Senate committee and also
helped write the Florida version of Big Cypress, securing $40 million for
Florida's share of the purchase.
Copyright © 2002 Miami Herald
All rights reserved.
OP-ED
JIM KING
Balancing environment and development
Recent editorials and articles have expressed disapproval of
an environmental initiative that I authored, which passed the
Legislature this past session. The legislation, a combination of a measure to provide a
dedicated funding source for the restoration of the Everglades and a reform of
Florida's environmental permitting process, was a priority of mine. During my tenure in the Legislature, I have always been a
supporter of environmental issues and preserving Florida's natural resources,
while also continuing my commitment to the business community and to managed
growth. I have received numerous awards from environmental groups and
criticism from others It's a delicate balance. At times, being supportive of both the environment and
development has been difficult, but I have continued to strive to balance the needs of
an expanding population while protecting the environment. Thus I
decided to amend my bill relating to administrative procedures to another
measure that I championed, the Everglades funding bill.
Copyright © 2002 Miami Herald
All rights reserved.
US Farm Bill Blasted in Australia, Accepted in
Asia
Farm goods exporter Australia Monday
threatened to challenge the U.S. farm bill in the World Trade Organization (WTO),
but Asian importers offered mild support for the bill if it produced cheaper
food imports. The Australian government and the country's top
farm body both castigated the United States for its six-year farm bill, which
will increase grower subsidies by US$4.8 billion a year and was approved for
legislation by lawmakers Friday. ``We're extremely disappointed. The U.S. has
clearly abrogated its leadership on the issue of world trade in agriculture,''
Australian Agriculture Minister Warren Truss said through a spokesman Monday.
As Australia fumed, industry sources in Beijing
said the U.S. bill could push China further toward assisting farmers who had
been hit by WTO entry concessions. Another Beijing analyst told Reuters that while
the U.S. farm bill was not good for Chinese farmers, it would strengthen a
search by the Chinese government to find ways of supporting farmers by reducing
taxes or by other means.
Read
More... Copyright © 2002 NY Times, AP online All rights reserved.
28-Apr-02
Editorial: Growth management
Collier wrong to farm out its planning
responsibilities to growth-friendly firms.
Late last year, when Collier County government officials
announced plans to do more land-use planning in house rather than have
developers go first, growth-pummeled citizens were optimistic. There was hope for real growth management, starting with
accountable regulators setting the rules instead of reacting to problems such as
clogged roads and sewers when growth mushroomed out of control. That hope is put off, only four months later, by the county's
plans to turn over fundamental planning chores to local consulting engineering
firms - and to pay them to do so. It is a breathtaking move, even by standards of Collier County
where we are getting harder and harder to amaze regarding government's courtship
of development. The county's planning and zoning office prefaces all of this
by saying it is overworked and understaffed. What office isn't? Among the myriad pitfalls with this contract plan is that it
makes the county a business partner with developers and their chief lobbyists.
Though county commissioners stress that any plans forthcoming from privateers
will be subject to public board review, this deal gives the growth industry an
inside track on more of the growth that is overwhelming the county's own staff.
"The fox guarding the henhouse" is a blunt and
overworked comparison, yet it fits.
Copyright © 2002 Naples News
All rights reserved.
Lee, Collier influx makes 'top 100' list
Jobs, affordability, weather a big draw
Warm temperatures and sunny skies
perfect for golf or the beach year round. A strong economy with new jobs added nearly every day.
Housing that's still largely affordable. That's what makes Lee County among the fastest-growing
counties in the country, according to census figures released today. Lee County ranked 31st among the top 100 counties, with more
than 21,500 people added in the 15-month period from April 1, 2000, to July 1,
2001. That brings the total to 462,455. Collier was 58th, with 14,392 more people in the same time
period, for a total of 265,769. Maricopa County, Ariz., had the greatest population gain, with
122,649 more residents. In terms of percentage increases, Douglas County, Colo., near
Denver, saw the biggest gain, with a 12.6 percent increase. By comparison, Lee's
increase was 4.9 percent and Collier's 5.7 percent. The status didn't faze those in government circles.
"Growth is going to happen. We don't have a barrier we
can put up'' said Janet Watermeier, Lee County's economic development director.
"It's a desirable place to live.'' But it comes with a price and it's taking a toll on
infrastructure.
Copyright © 2002 Fort Meyers News Press All rights reserved.
Amorous alligators causing anxiety
As they wander, encounters climb
Suddenly, the big reptiles are everywhere, wallowing in golf
course ponds, lurking on suburban lawns, snapping in schoolyards. Ah, springtime in Florida, when an alligator's thoughts turn
to love. And to food like frogs, fish and family pets. And to wet holes safely away from other hormonally juiced,
cannibalistic, bigger gators. But mainly, to love. Gators have been smitten with their annual case of the
hots,
and reports of close encounters of the reptilian kind, which hit a record of
nearly 17,000 last year, are again pouring in by the hundreds statewide.
Copyright © 2002 Miami Herald
All rights reserved.
Birders keep constant watch at event
With an Audubon Society book in his back pocket and a pair of
binoculars,
Joe Barros started out Saturday at 4 a.m. to see as many birds as
possible in 24 hours. As president of South Florida's Tropical Audubon Society,
Barros and his wife, Helen, took part in a 24-hour Birdathon to raise money to
help maintain the group's headquarters and for environmental lobbying. Participants donate money for every bird they spot. Donation
amounts are up to the individual. About 40 people participated. Categories included most birds seen by an individual, most
birds seen in a backyard, most birds seen from a boat and even most birds seen on
television. Prizes include a new pair of binoculars, native
plants and gift certificates from merchants. Making a sound with his mouth called a
''spish,'' Barros
walked through Everglades National Park, Matheson Hammock Park and Bill Baggs
Cape Florida
State Park, counting as many different kinds of birds as
possible.
Copyright © 2002 Miami Herald
All rights reserved.
Suppliers to study storage of rain water
Utilities can share water under plan
Southwest Florida's water dilemma is simple: It rains too much
for part of the year and not enough the rest of the time. A new effort by water suppliers will study how to collect
water in the wet summer months and store it to feed thirsty lawns in the dry
season. The South Florida Water Management District is spearheading
the plan. Seven utilities in Lee and Collier counties have signed on. The district and utilities are pitching in to cover the
$250,000 cost of the plan. Engineers and water managers will study whether it's possible
to:
- Plan and build a system to collect rain and treated
wastewater in the damp summer months.
- Store it in lakes, ponds or underground wells.
- Eventually build a system to deliver the stored water to
customers.
"The end goal is to have some kind of grid system, like
electricity," said water district spokesman Kurt Harclerode, referring to a
method of transporting electricity, sometimes hundreds of miles away. Under the plan, water utilities could share if one had excess
of water while another had a shortage. Such a system would help solve the type of problems Collier
County faced this month, Harclerode said.
Copyright © 2002 Fort Meyers News Press All rights reserved.
Biscayne park fishing may be cut
Rules would aim to protect stocks
EARLY START: A fisherman casts his line in Biscayne National
Park, where new limits are being proposed to protect a range of fish species
under pressure.

No-fishing zones, so controversial in the Florida Keys, may
soon move north to the troubled waters of Biscayne National Park. The park, which is revising its management plan and fishery
regulations, wants to set aside small portions of its 270 square miles for
areas where visitors can look but not touch, hook, net or spear. Park managers, who have hinted at the move for nearly a year,
intend to unveil specific proposals sometime this summer and aren't ready
to pinpoint locations or reveal the size of potential no-take zones. But
sections of shallow coral reefs east of Elliott Key, popular with everyone
from snorkelers to spearfishers, rank as likely initial targets.
Copyright © 2002 Miami Herald
All rights reserved.
27-Apr-02
Flooding concerns may stall rural Collier
restoration project
The Army Corps of Engineers might postpone a request to
Congress for millions of dollars to build an environmental restoration project
in rural Collier County while the agency determines how to handle flooding from
the project on neighboring land. The project, in the talking stages since 1985, would restore
natural water flows by tearing out roads and plugging canals in a largely
abandoned subdivision called Southern Golden Gate Estates, which stretches for
miles between U.S. 41 East and Interstate 75. Flooding concerns came to the forefront earlier this year when
the Corps of Engineers ran the project through a computer model that showed the
restoration would worsen flooding problems during heavy rains on home sites in a
chunk of Golden Gate Estates north of Interstate 75 - beyond the restoration
project's boundary. Corps of Engineers project manager John Chaput told a project
team of engineers, biologists and hydrologists meeting in Naples this week that
he will recommend to his bosses that they hold off on going to Congress for
construction money for Southern Golden Gate Estates until 2004. It had been scheduled to happen this summer, and environmental
advocates are split on whether to push top brass at the Corps of Engineers to
keep the project on a fast track. A draft schedule distributed this week calls for design work
to continue and for construction to begin in 2006. "We've got to get the plan right, we've got to know what
we're doing," Chaput said.
Copyright © 2002 Naples News All rights reserved.
Accord Reached on a Bill Raising Farm Subsidies
Senate and House members agreed today on a farm
bill costing more than $100 billion over six years that will raise subsidy
payments to the country's biggest grain and cotton farmers, a nearly complete
reversal of Congress's attempt six years ago to wean farmers of all subsidies.
At the same time, the measure finances some of
the most significant conservation and environmental programs in recent years,
with $17 billion dedicated over the next decade to preserve farmland, save
wetlands and improve water quality and soil conservation on working farms.
It is also one of the major pieces of social
welfare legislation before Congress this year, increasing food stamps for
working families and children and restoring the right of legal immigrants to
receive them. Months of election-year jockeying produced a bill
that seeks to satisfy every region and segment of the country. Lawmakers from
farm states in the Midwest and South won the largest subsidies for cotton, rice,
wheat, corn and soybeans. Legislators from the Northeast won a new $1.3 billion
national program to replace the defunct dairy compact. The conservation programs
will help densely populated states hoping to control urban sprawl. And for
cities and rural areas, the increase in the food stamps and nutrition program
will begin to redress the losses from the 1996 welfare overhaul that has led to
overburdened private soup kitchens and food pantries. "The winners in this bill are the American
farmers," said Representative Larry Combest, the Texas Republican who
headed the conference committee of House and Senate members. The measure represents an agreement to subsidize
farmers' income at a time when grain and cotton prices are at record lows and
production is at an all-time high. Lawmakers did not say how much of the $100
billion-plus would go for subsidies, but it is believed to be the vast majority
of the money.
Read More... Copyright © 2002 NY Times, AP online All rights reserved.
Main Provisions
The main provisions of the agreement reached
yesterday by Senate and House negotiators on a six-year farm bill costing more
than $100 billion are these:
SUBSIDY PAYMENTS Raise subsidy payments to large
cotton and grain farmers, without the significant payment limits passed by the
Senate.
CONSERVATION PAYMENTS Dedicate $17 billion over
10 years to preserve farmland, save wetlands and improve water quality and soil
conservation on farms.
FOOD STAMPS Increase food stamp benefits for
working American families and restore the rights of legal immigrants to receive
them.
DAIRY PROGRAM Create a new national $1.3 billion
dairy program to replace the lapsed Northeast dairy compact.
FOOD LABELING Require that starting in two years
all meat, fish and produce be labeled with its country of origin.
Copyright © 2002 NY Times, AP online
All rights reserved.
26-Apr-02
Rerouting preservation dollars causes an
outcry
Environmentalists are outraged that the state
budget plan takes
$100-million from a land preservation fund.
Environmental activists sounded the alarm
Thursday over what they called the theft of land conservation dollars that helped
cement a budget deal. The $49-billion budget deal that lawmakers will consider in a
special session next week includes a plan to take $100-million from a
land conservation program and use it to help pay for other such things
as education and health care. Although budget planners say they hope to use at least some of
the money for other environmental projects, activists worry that nothing in
the deal guarantees that. "We're trying to mobilize to stop this thing," said
Eric Draper of Audubon of Florida. "We're real surprised by this."
Environmental groups thought they had a commitment not to raid environmental funds again. Lawmakers took $75-million from a land
buying fund last year. The Legislature failed to adopt a budget when its regular
session ended March 22. The special session that begins Monday will focus on
the budget, an update of education laws, the job duties of the new state
chief financial officer and some smaller matters.
Copyright © 2002 St. Petersburg Times All rights reserved.
House and Senate in Agreement on a $100 Billion Farm Bill
Senate and House members agreed today on a more than $100 billion
farm bill that would raise subsidy payments to the country's biggest grain and
cotton farmers, a nearly complete reversal of a Congressional attempt six years
ago to wean farmers of all subsidies. At the same time, the measure finances some of the most significant
conservation and environmental programs in recent years, with $17 billion
dedicated to preserve farmland, save wetlands and improve water quality and soil
conservation on working farms. It is also one of the major pieces of social welfare legislation before
Congress this year, increasing food stamps for working American families and
children and restoring the right of legal immigrants to receive them. Months of election-year jockeying produced a six-year bill that attempts to
satisfy every region and segment of the country. Lawmakers from farm states in
the Midwest and South won large increases in cotton, rice, wheat, corn and
soybean subsidies. Legislators from the Northeast won a new $1.3 billion
national program to replace the defunct dairy compact. The conservation programs
will help densely populated states hoping to control urban sprawl. And for
cities and rural areas, the increase in food stamps and nutrition programs will
begin to redress the losses from the 1996 welfare overhaul that has led to
over-burdened private soup kitchens and food pantries.
Read
More... Copyright © 2002 NY Times, AP online All rights reserved.
Congress Is Close to Final Accord on Farm Bill
Senate and House members said tonight that
they were close to a final agreement on a six-year farm bill that would increase
subsidy payments to the country's biggest grain and cotton farmers. After nearly a month of trying to reach
compromises between the House and Senate versions of the $171 billion bill,
which would extend to 2008, the negotiators said they believed they had resolved
most of their differences and would complete the legislation on Friday. "We think we have an agreement," said
Representative Larry Combest, Republican of Texas, the chairman of the House
Agriculture Committee. While the lawmakers refused to divulge most
details of the compromises, senior Congressional aides said the Senate had
dropped demands that annual subsidies be limited to $275,000 per farmer. That provision had been a major source of
contention. Urban and rural lawmakers supported a cap on large payments as a way
to spread federal money to more small family farmers and to discourage huge
farms from buying out their smaller neighbors. Instead, the farm bill will
increase commodity subsidies by 70 percent without altering requirements that
allow 10 percent of American farmers to receive the big part of the subsidies.
The senators also lowered their demand for higher
spending on conservation programs, agreeing early in the closed sessions to
$17.1 billion rather than the $21 billion that was part of their bill. The compromise farm bill will also include an
increase in food stamps and expand nutrition programs, said Congressional aides,
who added that legal immigrants could receive food stamps as well. Senators convinced the House to accept a new
dairy subsidy that would cost more than $1 billion. President Bush traveled to South Dakota on
Wednesday and exhorted lawmakers to complete the farm legislation this week.
Several close elections this year could be influenced by farm programs and, in
turn, determine control of Congress. The new farm bill will replace the law that will
expire on Oct. 1. Senator Tom Harkin, Democrat of Iowa, chairman of
the Senate Agriculture Committee, said, "Tomorrow we will finish our fine
tuning." Copyright © 2002 NY Times, AP online
All rights reserved.
Soundoff: Today's Featured Letter
Manatees, boats can coexist
Re: Jim Kalvin, "Group sees hold on dock building a call
to action," April 11 (Standing Watch, The News-Press WAVES magazine.) In
reference to the increasing manatee mortality attributed to watercraft, Mr.
Kalvin states, "Surprisingly, this surge in mortality comes almost a year
to the day from the implementation of vast slow speed zones, shoreline buffer
zones, and tide-sensitive speed zones installed by the Florida Fish &
Wildlife Conservation Commission." This issue was addressed at the Manatee Population Ecology and
Management Workshop held April 1-4 and attended by Mr. Kalvin. Leading
population biology scientists stated there are many factors such as number of
boats, natural conditions and level of law enforcement that affect manatee
protection measures. Speed zones are only as good as the level of enforcement
(which is presently inadequate) and boater compliance with posted speeds. Mr. Kalvin also states, "It is a long-held belief of the
leading manatee advocate 'non-profit' organization that water access, or lack of
it, is the key to protecting the species long-term." As far as the Save the
Manatee Club, the intent has never been to stop boating in Florida. We recognize
and appreciate responsible boaters. However, our concern is that manatees be
adequately protected as our boating population continues to grow. As more and
more boats use a given system, the likelihood of a manatee being injured or
killed increases. Surely, many boaters are also concerned about the
ever-increasing boat traffic in waterways they now use both in terms of safety
for themselves and their families, and for the quality of their boating
experience.
Copyright © 2002 Fort Meyers News Press All rights reserved.
24-Apr-02
Justices Weaken Movement Backing Property Rights
The Supreme Court ruled today that a
government-imposed moratorium on property development, even one that lasts for
years, does not automatically amount to a "taking" of private property
for which taxpayers must compensate the landowners. The 6-to-3 decision was a sharp setback for the
property rights movement, which has scored many recent successes in the Supreme
Court. The ruling came in a case that sought millions of dollars in compensation
for a prolonged restriction on development along the shores of Lake Tahoe.
The plaintiffs, hundreds of people who had bought
undeveloped lots in the expectation of building houses on the scenic lake,
argued that a restriction that even temporarily deprives property owners of all
"economically viable" use of their land is a taking for which the
Constitution requires compensation. Supreme Court decisions over the last 15 years
had suggested that this in fact might be the law, a prospect that galvanized a
broad coalition of government and planning groups to urge the justices to reject
such a categorical rule. The Bush administration entered the case against the
property owners. Writing for the court today, Justice John Paul
Stevens said, "A rule that required compensation for every delay in the use
of property would render routine government processes prohibitively expensive or
encourage hasty decision making." He added: "Such an important change
in the law should be the product of legislative rule making rather than
adjudication." The complex law of "takings" is based
on the Fifth Amendment's provision that private property shall not "be
taken for public use without just compensation." Today's decision had the effect of limiting some
of the court's recent property rights rulings and left property rights advocates
scrambling to minimize the scope of their defeat, at least for public
consumption. One such group, the Pacific Legal Foundation, called the decision
"an unfortunate blip in the forward progress of property rights."
On the other side, Community Rights Counsel, a
public interest law firm that filed a brief for government groups that included
the Council of State Governments, the National League of Cities and the National
Governors Association, called the decision "the best news from the Supreme
Court on takings law in more than 20 years."
Read
More... Copyright © 2002 NY Times, AP online All rights reserved.
Parks Under Siege
Most modern presidents have promised to fix the
nation's deteriorating national park system. Nearly all have shortchanged it.
Mindful of that record, and sensing an easy political opportunity, President
Bush made the parks the centerpiece of his modest environmental agenda in the
2000 campaign. He pledged to provide $1 billion a year to erase a huge $4.9
billion repair backlog, thereby relieving park managers of day-to-day budgetary
crises and freeing them to focus on protecting natural resources. But as the
busiest season for the parks commences, it is clear that Mr. Bush has made no
more headway than his predecessors. Hardly a single unit in the system's 385 historic
sites, monuments and wilderness areas is trouble-free. Many of the 25,000 or so
historic buildings are falling apart. Roads and bridges are in disrepair.
Worn-out sewage treatment plants at Yellowstone dump untreated waste into nearby
streams and lakes. There are too few rangers to monitor either nature or the
visitors. If presidents have been indifferent, Congress has
been irresponsible. In the past quarter-century, Congress has added nearly 100
places to the system. Some are "pork parks," shoehorned into the
system to enhance the careers of the politicians who sponsored them. Others are
valid historical sites. All, however, require upkeep, and over the years
Congress has refused to give the Park Service the money it needs to do the job. President Bush vowed to change all this. He won a
modest increase in the operating and capital budgets last year and a bit more
this year, but nowhere near enough. According to Americans for National Parks, a
coalition of advocacy groups, operating funds, now about $1.5 billion annually,
are only two-third of what they should be, while the capital budget is less than
half what is needed. Read
More... Copyright © 2002 NY Times, AP online All rights reserved.
23-Apr-02

Former
Vice President Al Gore talks about
the environmental policies of the Bush
administration during an Earth Day speech
at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tenn.
on Monday.
Gore, on Earth Day, Says Bush Policies Help
Polluters
Sounding very much like the candidate he was and
may become again, Al Gore said today that the environment was a moral issue and
the Bush administration was giving "policy payoffs to polluters."
"Our environment is under siege," Mr.
Gore, the former vice president, said in an Earth Day speech here to 400
students at Vanderbilt University. "The Bush administration has chosen to
serve the special interests instead of the public interests and subsidize the
obsolete failed approaches of the past instead of the exciting new solutions of
the future. Instead of ensuring that our water is clean to drink, they thought
that maybe there wasn't enough arsenic in the drinking water." He criticized the Clear Skies initiative that Mr.
Bush was promoting today in the Adirondacks, saying that it "actually
allows more toxic mercury, nitrogen oxide and sulfur pollution than if we
enforced the laws on the books today." Mr. Bush did not respond to Mr. Gore's remarks.
"Hadn't paid attention to him," Mr. Bush said. In his half-hour speech, Mr. Gore revisited the
election of 2000, taking issue with comments made by Ari L. Fleischer, the White
House spokesman, who said in response to an opinion article by Mr. Gore in The
New York Times on Sunday that the environment was a reason that Mr. Bush
"defeated Al Gore in the election of 2000." Mr. Gore, sounding more amused than bruised, rose
to the bait. "Now, I didn't bring up the election of 2000," he said.
"I put that behind me. They want to keep talking about it. So let me just
say a word. When they say that the American people endorsed their approach to
the environment in 2000, there are two things wrong with that charge.
Read More... Copyright © 2002 NY Times, AP online All rights reserved.

President Bush carries an axe as he helps volunteers work on the trail
during a snowfall near the Ausable River in Wilmington, N.Y. on Monday,
marking Earth Day with a pitch for his air pollution-reduction strategy in
New York state's Adirondack Mountains, which are threatened by acid rain.
(AP Photo )
Bush, in Adirondacks, Defends Environment
Record
President Bush hiked into an Adirondacks
snowstorm this morning to promote his Clear Skies initiative and defend his
administration's environmental record against a new barrage of criticism
from Al Gore. Earth Day arrived in the
mountains of upstate New York with temperatures in the 30's and a wet, heavy
snow. To mark the day, Mr. Bush told a friendly audience that Clear Skies
would help clean the air and reduce acid rain, one of the single biggest
environmental concerns in the Adirondacks. "With
Clear Skies legislation, America will do more to reduce power plant
emissions than ever before in our nation's history," Mr. Bush told an
applauding crowd at the Whiteface Mountain Lodge. The
president got an argument on that claim from Mr. Gore, his opponent in the
bitter 2000 presidential campaign. In his own Earth Day speech, in
Nashville, Mr. Gore accused the president of selling out the environment to
big oil companies and recalled Mr. Bush's campaign promise to curb the
emission of carbon dioxide, the gas principally implicated in global
warming. Reversing that campaign pledge, Mr. Bush decided in March 2001 not
to impose carbon dioxide controls, saying he feared the limits would
endanger economic growth. Today, when
asked about Mr. Gore's accusations as he helped restore a snowy, muddy and
very cold mountain trail, the president retorted, "Haven't paid
attention to them." When a reporter called out that Mr. Gore was saying
Mr. Bush had no environmental record, the president shot back, "That's
why I haven't paid attention to him."
Read
More... Copyright © 2002 NY Times, AP online All rights reserved.
Gore Opposes Bush Environment Policy
In dueling speeches that could be a harbinger of the 2004 election,
President Bush and former Democratic rival Al Gore traded Earth Day barbs on who
represented the best steward of the planet. In an address to about 200 Vanderbilt University
students and environmental activists Monday, Gore blasted the White House for
serving ``special interests instead of public interests.'' Gore said oil and energy company representatives
``are pretty much in charge of the energy and environmental policies of this
administration'' and are working behind closed doors to scuttle progress made
during the Clinton-Gore administration. The speech countered one given earlier in the day
by Bush, who briefly hiked the snowy Adirondack Mountains in New York before
calling for mandatory limits on power plant emissions that cause the acid rain
that plagues the picturesque region. The 1990 Clean Air Act amendments were a start,
``now we should do more,'' Bush said. ``This Earth Day finds us on the right
path, gaining in appreciation for the world in our care.'' Gore disagreed, saying the Bush administration
wants taxpayers ``to pick up the multibillion dollar tab for all the polluters
who want to abandon their toxic waste dumps on America's doorstep.'' Bush and his allies are ``threatening to take us
back to the days when America's rivers and lakes were dying, when the skylines
were some days not visible because of the smog, and when toxic waste threatened
so many communities around America,'' Gore said.
Read
More...Copyright © 2002 NY Times, AP online All rights reserved.
22-Apr-02
Bush and Gore Use Earth
Day to Show Commitment to Environment
President Bush and his political
rival, former Vice President Al Gore, used Earth Day to declare their commitment
to the environment today, but they were many miles apart ideologically as well
as geographically. Mr. Bush went to New York State's
Adirondack Mountains, where he pushed his plan to combat air pollution with a
combination of mandatory limits on industrial pollutants and measures to let
companies meet the limits through a system of credits they could earn and trade.
Mr. Gore was in his native
Tennessee, where he told a group at Vanderbilt University in Nashville that,
despite the president's words, Mr. Bush's policies would serve "special
interests instead of public interests." To judge the comments of the 2000
election rivals side by side, both are deeply committed to preserving America's
land, water and air as a sacred trust for the future. "We have a duty in our
country to make sure our land is preserved, our air is clean, our water is pure,
our parks are accessible and open and well preserved," Mr. Bush said at
Lake Everest as snowflakes gathered on his head. "And that's why I'm here,
to trumpet this duty and to thank those who assume their duty." Mr. Bush asserted that his
approach would protect the environment without hobbling business and industry.
"Some of the biggest sources of air pollution are the power plants,"
Mr. Bush said. "We send tons of emissions into our air. Therefore, we have
set a goal. With clear skies legislation, America will do more to reduce
powerplant emissions then ever before in our nation's history. "We will reach our ambitious
air quality goals through a market-based approach that rewards innovation,
reduces cost, and most importantly guarantees results. Mine is a
results-oriented administration. When we say we expect results, we mean it. We
will set mandatory limits on air pollution with firm deadlines, while giving
companies the flexibility to find the best ways to meet the mandatory
limits."
Read
More... Copyright © 2002 NY Times, AP online All rights reserved.
EPA Ombudsman Quits Over Transfer
An embattled ombudsman at the Environmental
Protection Agency submitted his resignation Monday, complaining the agency was
transferring him into a job where he would ``merely answer a telephone'' and
have no power. Robert Martin, who for nearly a decade has held
the $118,000-a-year job as ombudsman for EPA's hazardous waste office, has been
embroiled in lengthy feud with senior EPA officials going back to the Clinton
administration. A federal court on Feb. 12 rejected a lawsuit
challenging his transfer to the EPA inspector general's office. At the time, EPA Administrator Christie Whitman
said the transfer would give Martin ``more independence and the impartiality
necessary to conduct credible inquiries.'' But Martin called the transfer a maneuver to get
him out of the way because he had become an irritant in the congressionally
established post of ombudsman for the Office of Solid Waste and Emergency
Response. His job includes complaints about the handling the Superfund toxic
waste cleanup program. He accused Whitman of ``obliterating the
independent ombudsman function'' at the EPA. ``I cannot recognize in principle and conscience
... the seizure of my files and planned transfer to the Office of Inspector
General where I will ... merely answer a telephone,'' Martin wrote Whitman in
his letter of resignation. There was no immediate comment from the EPA on
Martin's resignation. In an interview, Martin said that while he was
out of town on EPA business last week, the locks of his office were changed and
his files and computer taken. He said in his new position within the IGs office
he would be ``in an untenable position'' with little independence and barred
from even talking to the media or members of Congress about EPA activities.
Read
More... Copyright © 2002 NY Times, AP online All rights reserved.
President to Use Earth Day to Sell Environmental
Plan
Monday is Earth Day, an annual rite of spring for
the last 32 years. But this Earth Day will sound less like a love-in for Mother
Earth than like an October rally in a presidential election year. George W. Bush, a former oil executive, is not
normally identified with Earth Day rituals but like any president feels the need
to flash some green credentials. Earth Day will find him in the
acid-rain-besotted Adirondacks in upstate New York with Christie Whitman, the
administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency. With Whiteface Mountain as his backdrop, Mr. Bush
is to help restore a hiking trail and promote his "Clear Skies"
initiative, a proposal that the administration says will yield cleaner air than
the Clean Air Act signed by his father in 1990. Protesters will be on hand to
assert that his proposal would only make things worse and to complain about Mr.
Bush's inaction on global warming, a phenomenon some say can be seen when, among
other things, fewer of the big lakes in the Adirondacks are freezing over in the
winter. At the same time, Al Gore, derided by Mr. Bush's
father as Ozone Man, is planning to give a blistering speech in Nashville about
what he calls Mr. Bush's environmental failures. His setting is an academic
forum in his home state, where he is trying to make amends for past inattention.
Whether a rerun of campaign 2000 or a harbinger
of campaign 2004, the dueling events will showcase what Democrats believe is one
of their most potent political issues, one that stands out as a rare piece of
terra firma in a world dominated by the military imperatives of a popular
Republican commander in chief.
Read
More... Copyright © 2002 NY Times, AP online All rights reserved.
19-Apr-02
Senate Blocks Drilling in Alaska Wildlife
Refuge

Senators John Kerry of
Massachusetts, center, and Paul Wellstone
of Minnesota, foreground, both Democrats, joined environmentalists
yesterday to applaud a Senate vote that blocked oil drilling in the Arctic
National Wildlife Refuge
Undercutting President Bush's energy policy, the
Senate sided with environmentalists today and blocked oil and gas drilling in
the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. With eight Republicans breaking ranks with the
president, the decisive vote probably ended, at least for this year, the
longtime dream of many Alaskans and conservatives in Washington that the
protected wilderness could be opened for development, an issue that has pitted
Democrats and environmentalists against Republicans and petroleum interests for
more than a decade. Coming a month after the Senate rejected a
Democratic plan to toughen automotive fuel-efficiency standards, today's vote
means that the Senate's final energy measure will include modest tax incentives
and conservation provisions but no big change in national energy policy. The vote came on a procedural motion to end
debate on the drilling issue, which was presented as an amendment to the
comprehensive energy bill. Under Senate rules, Republicans needed 60 votes to
win. But they could not even get a majority, and the motion failed 46 to 54.
In addition to the 8 Republicans, 45 Democrats
and Senator James M. Jeffords of Vermont, an independent, voted against ending
the debate. Forty-one Republicans and five Democrats voted to bring the wildlife
refuge measure to a vote. Later, with hardly any debate, the Senate voted,
88 to 10, to end oil imports from Iraq until the president certified that
resumption would be in the national interest. The measure allowed senators to
cast a presumably popular vote and has little practical consequence. Saddam
Hussein has stopped oil exports, at least temporarily, to protest United States
support of Israel. The House passed an energy bill last year that
would permit drilling in the Alaska wilderness area. But Republican leaders
acknowledged that today's vote showed that if the House-Senate conference
committee on energy legislation adopted a drilling provision, it would be
defeated in the Senate. "What was proved today is we need more
Republicans in the United States Senate," Senator Frank H. Murkowski of
Alaska, the measure's chief sponsor, said after the vote.
Read
More... Copyright © 2002 NY Times, AP online All rights reserved.
House Votes to Support
Plan Limiting Subsidies for Big Farmers
In an unusual reversal, the House voted today to
support a Senate plan to lower subsidy payments for the country's biggest
farmers, in hope of breaking a deadlock over a final farm bill. In a nonbinding vote of 265 to 158, the House
sent a House-Senate conference committee what the measure's sponsors described
as a strong message that the current farm program gives too much money to big
farmers. "With these million-dollar payments going to
megafarms and huge landholders, it gives the wrong impression of the very small
support that most farmers get," said Representative Nick Smith, the
Michigan Republican who sponsored the measure. But House members on the conference committee
ignored that message today, offering a series of compromises that did not
include the reduced payment limits. By imposing a limit of $275,000 in federal
subsidies, the House and Senate sponsors hope to save up to $1 billion that
would be used instead to underwrite conservation programs available to all
farmers. The action revived the simmering debate over the
direction of farm policy: whether it should continue to underwrite commodities
largely grown in the Midwest and South or move toward giving more money to all
farmers through conservation programs. The current Depression-era commodity subsidy
program is available only for grain and cotton farmers. Most of the subsidies
benefit fewer than 10 percent of farmers, the Agriculture Department says.
The 10-year, $171 billion farm bill being
considered allocates $17.1 billion to conservation programs. "This is a signal of the beginning of the
end of these outdated subsidy programs," said Representative Earl
Blumenauer, Democrat of Oregon. "There is an almost unlimited demand from
farmers for money for conservation programs to comply with environmental
requirements, to clean water, for easements to prevent suburban sprawl."
Read More... Copyright © 2002 NY Times, AP online All rights reserved.
Bush Favors Dozens of Sites for Exploration
The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska was
not the only place where the Bush administration was hoping to find more oil. It
is also encouraging drilling at more than 50 new sites in the lower 48 states,
particularly in the Rocky Mountains. The energy bill passed last year by the House
includes a provision directing the administration to make it easier for oil and
gas companies to obtain federal leases and permits to drill for oil and gas.
That version will have to be reconciled with the Senate's. The Bureau of Land Management is considering
dozens of projects across the West. In addition, President Bush set up a task
force last May to examine how to streamline the permit and leasing process. In
doing so, Mr. Bush said that the "increased production and transmission of
energy in a safe and environmentally sound manner is essential to the well-being
of the American people." The Task Force on Energy Project Streamlining,
headed by James L. Connaughton, chairman of the Council on Environmental Quality
at the White House, has collected numerous requests and comments from the
industry, including applications for expanded off-shore drilling in the Gulf of
Mexico and new pipeline, nuclear, hydropower and refinery projects. "We believe by that by improving the process
of issuing these permits, you are more likely to get more energy development in
the long run," one administration official said. Environmentalists are already bracing for what
they predict will be a battle every bit as contentious as that over drilling in
Alaska. Today, the Sierra Club filed a complaint in Federal District Court in
Corpus Christi, Tex., seeking to block a gas drilling operation on Padre Island
National Seashore, the first oil or gas well to be drilled in a national park
during the Bush administration. Liz Howell, an organizer for the Wyoming chapter
of the Sierra Club, said applications for drilling permits and leases were
pouring into her state. "The state has said it is open for
business," Ms. Howell said, noting that the Bureau of Land Management had
just put out for comment its draft environmental plan for more than 51,000
coal-bed methane gas wells in Wyoming, the largest natural-gas project ever
studied by the bureau. The plans have stirred opposition not only from
environmentalists but also from ranchers. The latter are often allied with the
drilling industry but in this case they have filed suits contending that the
drilling would damage their wells and land. Copyright © 2002 NY Times, AP online All rights reserved.
15-Apr-02
Political Battle Looming Over Superfund
Plan
Drawing sharp battle lines with the White House, Democratic leaders of the
Senate are moving to force a showdown vote on a measure that would provide
billions of dollars to clean up toxic waste sites through the federal Superfund
program. The measure would reinstate an industry tax that was a main
source of money for the program until 1995, when the tax expired. The White
House and Republicans in Congress have been reluctant to reinstate it, even
though a trust fund established to pay for the Superfund program has been
running out of money. A spokeswoman for Tom Daschle, Democrat of South
Dakota and the Senate majority leader, said he intended to schedule a vote on
the measure very soon. Democrats, who hold a slim majority in the Senate, say they hope to force
Republican lawmakers to break ranks with the White House and support their plan
for financing the program. Short of that, Democrats see an opportunity to
score points politically by forcing Republicans into the position of voting
against an environmental program that they argue has broad support among
Americans. The Superfund battle is just the latest example of how the two
parties are trying to draw distinctions between each other in an election year
on issues like the federal budget, oil drilling in Alaska and the appointment of
federal judges. "These toxic waste sites aren't only in states with
Democratic senators," said Senator Robert G. Torricelli, Democrat of New
Jersey, who sponsored the Superfund measure. "I think Republicans are going
to be in a very difficult position. They are going to have to take a
stand." Some Republicans say they welcome the fight, arguing that the
solution Democrats are proposing - a tax increase - is politically foolhardy in
an election year. An aide to Senator Don Nickles of Oklahoma, the
Republican whip, said the tax increase Mr. Torricelli and his supporters were
seeking might damage the economy just when it was beginning to pull out of a
slump. "That's not going to be good for jobs in New Jersey or
anywhere else in the country," the aide, Brook A. Simmons, said. "I
would be shocked if there aren't some members of Mr. Torricelli's own party who
aren't asking the same tough questions." Even supporters of the
measure acknowledge that their tactic has its drawbacks, since some conservative
and moderate Democrats may indeed be wary of voting for a tax increase, even to
pay for Superfund.
Read
More...
Copyright © 2002 NY Times online
All rights reserved.
14-Apr-02
White House Ends Environmental Fellowship
The Bush administration is eliminating a respected fellowship program for
graduate research in the environmental sciences, administration officials said
this week. The fellowship provides $10 million a year to students pursuing graduate
degrees in environmental science, policy and engineering, as part of an
Environmental Protection Agency program called Science to Achieve Results, or
STAR. Since 1995, the program has financed nearly 800 students, awarding $60
million for graduate-level environmental research. It now supports 311 fellows,
with each receiving $30,000 to $34,000 for one to three years, said Chris Saint,
assistant director at the agency's National Center for Environmental Research,
which administers the program. ''This is the only federal program that is specifically designed to support
the top students going into environmental science'' and related fields, said
David Blockstein, a senior scientist with the National Council for Science and
the Environment, an environmental science advocacy group in Washington.
Read more . . .
Copyright © 2002 NY
Times online All rights reserved.
12-Apr-02
Permits Issued for Everglades Mining
The Army Corps of Engineers issued permits
Thursday that will allow mining in 5,409 acres in the Everglades for the next 10
years, more than doubling the amount of limestone quarries in the protected
wetlands. The 10 companies who receive the permits will pay
about $46 million in fees that will be used by the federal government to
purchase and improve another 7,500 acres of wetlands near the Everglades,
officials said. ``This is one of the important and complex
decisions I've made since assuming command,'' said Col. Greg May, who authorized
the permits. Mining industry officials said the extra mines
are needed to ensure enough affordable crushed stone for Florida's highways,
bridges and roads. Rock from the Everglades quarries generates 40 percent of the
aggregate used in cement in the state, May said. But environmentalists said the expanded mining
could endanger drinking water and harm efforts to restore the Everglades.
``There's huge uncertainties as to what the
impact of these permits are going to be on the Everglades,'' said Brad Sewell,
senior attorney at Natural Resources Defense Council. May said the additional mining is compatible with
the restoration plan. Most of the permits are concentrated around existing
mines, he said. The permits allow the companies to fill wetland
areas in order to move in equipment.
Read
More... Copyright © 2002 NY Times, AP online All rights reserved.
11-Apr-02
Environmentalists Had 48 Hours to Comment to
Energy Dept.
Energy Department officials gave 11 environmental
groups just 48 hours to submit their policy proposals for consideration in Vice
President Dick Cheney's national energy report last year, a batch of documents
released today indicate. Energy Department officials say, however, that
the groups had other opportunities for comment. The request for recommendations was sent by
e-mail in March 2001 after Mr. Cheney's national task force had consulted with
dozens of energy executives to help formulate a national energy policy. Leaders
of environmental groups have long complained that the White House did not extend
to them the same courtesy given to energy corporations that had made large
donations to the Republican Party to help elect President Bush and Mr. Cheney in
2000. The groups have said that Energy Secretary
Spencer Abraham met with 109 representatives of the energy industry and trade
associations but no environmental groups from late January to May 17, 2001, when
the report was released.
Read More... Copyright © 2002 NY Times, AP online All rights reserved.
White House Ties Oil Cutoff by Iraq to Drilling
in Alaska
The Bush administration said today that Saddam
Hussein's decision to cut off Iraq's oil exports for at least a month, or until
Israel pulls out of the West Bank, makes it urgent for the Senate to allow
drilling for oil in the Alaska wildlife refuge. In spite of that warning, though, there was no
evidence that Iraq's move would end the deadlock in the Senate, where
environmental concerns have so far blocked a vote on drilling in Alaska. Even as the White House was declaring that an
Iraqi cutoff could further raise gasoline and heating oil prices, oil prices
were dropping on the futures market, at least partly because of indications that
Saudi Arabia and other major producers would make up any production shortfall.
"The president knows that ANWR represents 46
years' worth of imports of oil from Saddam Hussein's Iraq," Ari Fleischer,
the White House spokesman, said today, using a somewhat aggressive estimate of
the amount of reserves in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. "And the
president thinks that Saddam Hussein's threat, the promise to cut off oil, is
another reason why our nation needs a comprehensive energy plan that is
independent of such threats."
Read
More... Copyright © 2002 NY Times, AP online All rights reserved.
8-Apr-02
Editorial: Fate of coastal waters is uncertain
A comprehensive report on the condition
of the nation's coastal waters and estuaries should be a wakeup call for
Florida. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency divided the country into five
coastal areas and graded them on a scale of good, fair or poor for ecological
health. Overall, the nation's coastal health was rated fair (barely), but the
lowest rated area was the gulf coast, which got a grade of poor. This is
no vague doom-and-gloom warning that can be ignored, but a carefully worded
study that drew on a variety of scientific information. The EPA plans to use the
findings as a benchmark by which we can measure our coastal waters in the
future. The outcome will be vital to Florida, especially the Tampa Bay area,
where the coast is already showing signs of degradation. The EPA judged
each area on seven signs of health. The gulf coast graded poor for coastal
wetlands loss, pollution from runoff, sediment contamination, gulf bottom health
and fish tissue contamination. It rated fair for water clarity, and its only
good rating came for a healthy level of dissolved oxygen in the water, needed to
sustain sea life. The Tampa Bay area, in particular, faces threats from runoff
and contamination of certain seafood. But Florida's waters aren't the worst in
the Gulf of Mexico. The water off Louisiana is the site of the largest
human-caused dead zone in the Western Hemisphere. Nutrients and decomposed
organic material from farmland as far away as Montana and Minnesota flow down
the Mississippi River and into the gulf, starving it of oxygen. The zone grew to
more than 7,000 square miles in 1999. Florida's greatest threat will come
from development pressure, which threatens wetlands and increases pollution. The
fate of our coast is literally in the balance, and that is no minor issue,
especially where tourism, the fishing industry and even property values are tied
to healthy coastal waters. The report was short on solutions, however, probably
because the fixes won't be cheap or easy. The EPA has begun the process by
providing a detailed analysis of the problem, but it will mean little unless we
act soon to stop the destructive activities that threaten our coasts.
Copyright © 2002 St. Petersburg Times All rights reserved.
7-Apr-02
Editorial: Reclaimed water cost more than story said
Your article of March 24 about reclaimed
water did not tell the whole story of the cost of reclaimed water. We live
in The Eagles, and your article mentions an estimate of $290 per year for 20
years, in addition to $9 a month, or another $108 a year. In addition to these
costs, we will have to pay a private contractor to connect our sprinkler system
to the reclaimed water at street side. Also , it is my understanding that every
real property owner in the county pays a certain amount in real property taxes
to fund the reclaimed water program, regardless of whether reclaimed water is
available for use to that property. We voted against reclaimed water because we do not think that a household of one
or two people, as opposed to a golf course, will realize any savings by using
reclaimed water. In fact, since we try to water our yard as little as possible,
we actually think the program will cost us more per year and will encourage
over-use of the water made available. We pay approximately $1,000 a year
for water use. I would estimate that 10 percent or less of this amount is for
lawn watering. With reclaimed water, our bill will increase by about 40 percent
per year. However, if we choose not to connect to the system, we still have to
pay the approximately $290 per year for 20 years. Apparently a majority of residents in The
Eagles petitioned the county for this service. However, we never received any
information from the county stating this and we have never received any
information from the county explaining the actual costs to each household.
If there are about 1077 homes in The Eagles, I would like to be assured that
more than 538 households voted for this system, and I would like to receive
information from the county that properly explains this service and its
approximate total cost to each household. Copyright © 2002 St. Petersburg Times
All rights reserved.
Tourists make natural selection
The 45-foot catamaran swung around the bend, past
osprey nests, alert blue herons and a bald eagle in the distance. The
naturalist guiding the tour pointed toward a splash of color off the right side
of the boat. "The pink flamingos in the
weeds are plastic," Sun Line Cruises guide Scott Hibbs said. "The only
part of our tour that's not real." During
75-minute trips, the eco-tour boat cruises from its slip at the Sponge Docks
through the Anclote River, Tarpon Bayou and the Gulf of Mexico. The
company is in its first full season in Tarpon Springs, after operating a few
months last year. During the summer, the company uses this boat, the
60-passenger Island Star, to offer tours of mansions and lighthouses in Salem,
Mass. "We had this boat just hanging out
in the winter, with nothing to do," said Brian Brailsford, president of the
company and captain of the boat. He decided
this area would be the perfect place for an eco-tour. "The
Anclote River is beautiful, it's natural, there's no high-rises," he said. While not the only eco-tour company in North
Pinellas, Sun Line Cruises is part of a growing trend of eco-tourism in Pinellas
County and the country as a whole. When people go on vacation, many of them are
looking for natural settings like beaches and wooded areas, said Zaneta Hubbard,
public relations manager for the St. Petersburg/Clearwater Area Convention &
Visitors Bureau. "We're in the business
of promoting nature-based tourism," she said. "Our beaches are our
biggest draw, so there's a nature experience right there." The
county also has the Brooker Creek and Weedon Island preserves, the Pinellas
Trail and canoe and kayak trips for eco-tourists, she said. In
Tarpon Springs, the Island Wind company also takes boat tours from the Sponge
Docks, primarily to look for dolphins but also to look at bird sanctuaries.
Other boats in Clearwater also take tours looking for dolphins.
Copyright © 2002 St. Petersburg Times All rights reserved.
Watchdogs of nature area aren't wild about
park plan
A 40-acre park beside Lake Maggiore would disrupt the peacefulness of
the area, Friends of Boyd Hill contends. A plan to develop a city recreation area on Lake Maggiore's western shore is
drawing criticism from people who would rather see the land in its natural
state. A 40-acre waterfront park could include a off-leash dog area, a skate park,
picnic areas, canoe and boat rentals, an "adventure playland," fishing
and perhaps even an equestrian center, according to early proposals. "What we're trying to do is open up the lake. It's not really something
that's accessible to the community," said deputy mayor Mike Dove, who is
leading the project for Mayor Rick Baker. The plan worries a group that
acts as watchdog for the Boyd Hill Nature Preserve, part of about 500 acres
comprising an urban pocket of wilderness called Lake Maggiore Park. "Ideally we would like to see none of (the new recreation proposals) there,
because the lower the impact, the better," said Pam McGuire, president of
Friends of Boyd Hill. "People who like to enjoy the park like to go
there because it's peaceful. The more you put out there, the less its going to
be like a walk in the woods," McGuire said. Right now, the group's
concern is a road that would cut through the wilderness area to the proposed
park site. The road is needed to haul out dredged and dried muck from a
Lake Maggiore cleanup job, city officials say, so that trucks won't have to
rumble through an adjacent residential area.
Copyright © 2002 St. Petersburg Times All rights reserved.
6-Apr-02
Editorial: Kill Measure Restricting
Protests Of Developments
Leave it to the Florida Legislature to use the effort to save the Everglades as
a means to undercut citizens' ability to challenge developments. The plan
to provide a reliable funding source for the rescue of the much- abused
Everglades deserves adoption - but not with insidious amendments that Sen. Jim
King attached to the bill in the closing days of the session. King, a
Jacksonville Republican, is scheduled to become the next Senate president, which
should worry Florida voters. Throughout the session he fought hard to undercut
citizens' legal rights. The House, to its credit, rejected the scheme, but by
attaching the plan to the popular Everglades spending plan, King achieved a
tricky triumph. The plan has been weakened since King introduced it, and
some environmentalists, including Audubon of Florida's Charles Lee, say the law
would do little harm. Lee believes the Everglades funding is so important the
legislation should be signed into law. Residents Are Already Underdogs But the reality is that though the scope of
King's plan has been narrowed, it still would undercut residents, who even now
have scant chance to halt destructive projects. King would make it more
difficult to challenge a project by requiring that any group contesting a state
permit prove that it has 25 members residing in the county where the
development is to take place. The provision is clearly designed to intimidate
citizens by requiring personal information be given to opponents. This could
also subject individuals to harassment, particularly in rural communities where
a few industries may dominate the economy.
Copyright © 2002 Tampa Tribune
All rights reserved.
St. Petersburg man chosen to run state
wildlife agency
Ken Haddad is the unanimous choice to
lead the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission. A
respected St. Petersburg marine biologist was named Friday to run Florida's
wildlife agency. Ken Haddad, 50, will head the Florida Fish and Wildlife
Conservation Commission, which oversees all of the state's marine and land
creatures. He was chosen unanimously by the seven-member commission after a
nationwide search. Since 1993, Haddad has been director of the Florida Marine Research Institute in
St. Petersburg, which is part of the commission. He replaces Allan Egbert, who
has headed the agency for the past eight years. Haddad has lived in St.
Petersburg since 1975. He got his graduate degree at the University of South
Florida. Environmentalists and the commercial fishing industry supported
Haddad for the post. He edged out these other finalists: Rudolph Rosen of
Arizona, the past director of Safari Club International; Larry Shannon, a past
fish and wildlife director in Minnesota; and Curt Kiser, a former Pinellas
lawmaker who is now a Tallahassee lobbyist. Kiser lobbied hard for the job
but didn't make the cut because he "had a salary requirement that we
weren't comfortable with," said commission Chairman John Rood, a
Jacksonville real estate developer. Kiser wanted $145,000, Rood said. The
salary range for the FWCC director is $100,000 to $114,000. Haddad's salary
hasn't been set, but it will fall within that range. Kiser could not be
reached for comment Friday. Haddad likely will start at the end of April.
His appointment is subject to confirmation by the Senate next year. After 27 years in St. Petersburg, Haddad and his wife, Sharon, will move to
Tallahassee. Haddad last worked in the capital in June 2001. He was brought in
during the summer of 2000 as interim director of the agency's Division of Marine
Fisheries after a scandal ousted its longtime director, Russ Nelson. Nelson
resigned after agency investigators discovered that he and other senior staff
members viewed pornography on the Internet in their state offices. Haddad
had the difficult job of running the division after the scandal, then returned
to St. Petersburg to his position at the Marine Research Institute. Laurie
Macdonald, who monitors the commission for the Defenders of Wildlife, applauded
Haddad's appointment. "I've always had a great deal of respect for
Ken," Macdonald said. "I certainly hope that he will bring a basic
scientific foundation to the policy decisions that are ultimately made by the
commissioners." The commission has control over fresh and saltwater
fishing, hunting, protecting endangered species, and enforcing conservation
laws. The agency has about 1,800 employees and an annual budget of about
$160-million.
Copyright © 2002 St. Petersburg Times
All rights reserved.
4-Apr-02
Nature Overrun
In the last month this newspaper has chronicled
the increasing environmental havoc caused by snowmobiles, dune buggies, swamp
buggies, dirt bikes and other forms of off-road vehicles in Yellowstone National
Park and in California, Utah and Florida. Unchecked and unregulated, these
vehicles present a huge threat to fragile landscapes and environmental values in
general. There are now 10 million registered off-road vehicles, although the
actual number is probably much higher. Unfortunately, the Bush administration
has by and large chosen to let them roam where their drivers please. In Yellowstone, as everyone now knows, the
administration, under pressure from snowmobile manufacturers and local dealers,
has scuttled a Clinton-era plan to phase out snowmobiles over three years. Just
last week the Bureau of Land Management retreated from another carefully
negotiated Clinton-era policy when it proposed, partly in response to local
pressure, to reopen 50,000 acres of sensitive federal lands in California's
southeastern corner to dune buggies.
Read More...
Copyright © 2002 NY Times, AP online All rights reserved.
In Unmown Florida, a Call for the Wild
When you have a name like Raymond Jungles, maybe
you are fated to rip up lawns to bring the jungle back to South Florida. These
are invented jungles, to be sure, with rare palms from Madagascar, African
mahogany trees and Asian bamboo. The plants may not be native, but the idea of
restoring a sense of wildness to Florida echoes the thinking that has gardeners
growing prairies instead of lawns in the Midwest and growing rocks and cactus in
Phoenix. Mr. Jungles, a landscape architect based in Key West, is fighting the
kind of tyranny that makes a yard in Oregon look like a yard in Texas. "The landscape is so disgusting around
here," he said as he drove his BMW along a winding road in Coconut Grove.
"Florida McMansions and these plops of plant combinations on an
overabundance of lawn." Too many royal palms. Too much impatiens. Ixoras
clipped into hedges. "It is not so much that the plants are bad, but how
they are used," he said. "So sterile. No layers to it. Doesn't provide
any habitat." He prefers a landscape where the wild things are. He pulled up to one of those landscapes, a 1920's
Spanish-colonial-style house. It was framed by two magnificent South American
oil palms. "See how the tall trees create a space for the house?" he
said. Instead of the ubiquitous driveway leading up to the front door, a raised
green plaza made of satiny smooth saturnia stone and velvety grass now greets
the visitor. "Before, all this stuff was jammed up
against the house, with these two clichιd date palms on either side of a
circular driveway," he said. Why put a vehicle in front of your door? Why
not create a garden room there? "It is all about spaces and
transitions," Mr. Jungles said. "I want you to linger." These are universals that apply to any landscape.
Meaningful entryways.
Read
More... Copyright © 2002 NY Times, AP online All rights reserved.
3-Apr-02
Editorial:
A More Balanced Farm Bill
Small farmers and residents of rural communities have been watching the
deliberations over the $171 billion farm bill with the attention they usually
reserve for the coming of spring rains. It has not been a promising spectacle.
The House version, passed last fall, was an outright capitulation to the biggest
commodity growers. The Senate passed a fairer bill, containing $21.3 billion in
new money for conservation programs that would benefit a much wider universe of
farmers. But when the two competing versions reached a conference committee, the
Senate negotiators caved in, agreeing to generous subsidies for the big growers
at the expense of the environmental programs and smaller farmers. A balanced bill is still within reach if the Democrats, in particular the
majority leader, Tom Daschle, can summon even a modest amount of courage when
negotiations resume next week. First, the Senate should suggest front-loading
conservation spending in the first five years of the bill's 10-year life, much
as commodity payments are front-loaded. This would insure generous funding for
larger programs of demonstrable value - the wetland reserves program, for
example, or the farmland protection program that helps resist suburban sprawl.
Second, the Senate must insist on the survival of smaller, experimental programs
for which the House has shown little enthusiasm. Several of these deserve
special protection. One is an innovative $100-million-a-year water conservation
program sponsored by Senator Harry Reid of Nevada that would pay farmers to
provide water otherwise used for irrigation to help threatened fish species.
A second water-related program would increase
incentives for farmers in the Chesapeake Bay watershed to reduce toxic runoff
from their fields. Also at risk are small but enormously successful
Farmer's Market Nutrition Programs, which provide coupons to the elderly and
low-income families that can be spent only at farmers' markets. This gives
poorer consumers access to fresh foods and puts cash in the hands of small fruit
and vegetable farmers. It also strengthens the ties between country and city and
helps keep inner-city farmers' markets thriving. Compared with the billions
allocated for commodity price supports, the $25 million needed for each of these
programs is microscopic. The $10 million rural microenterprise program
deserves protection as well. This money would help low- and moderate-income
people start small businesses in rural areas. In Nebraska, for instance, 70
percent of new rural businesses fall into the microenterprise category, which
includes people who do not have access to commercial loans. If these communities
were as vibrant as they used to be when they were surrounded by farms, there
would be little need for a program like this. But the effect of modern
agriculture has been to depopulate the countryside and gut the small towns. This
provision offers a measure of redemption. Copyright © 2002 NY Times, AP online All rights reserved.
National and State Politics Help
Safeguard a Swamp
In this fragile swath of the Everglades, the Bush
administration delighted Florida environmentalists two weeks ago by backing a
National Park Service plan to restrict access for swamp buggies and other
off-road vehicles. In Yellowstone National Park, by contrast, the
administration has infuriated environmentalists and many park rangers by
abandoning a Park Service plan to ban snowmobiles. Here in Big Cypress,
Interior Secretary Gale A. Norton promised in January to try to stop oil
exploration by buying out drilling rights or acquiring them in a land swap. In
the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska and on some national monument land
in the West, however, President Bush continues to push oil exploration as an
important part of his energy plan. What explains the seemingly anomalous
attention being paid to this vast swamp? Political analysts in Florida and
national environmental groups say the explanation boils down to two words: green
votes. Enough green votes, perhaps, to allow Gov. Jeb Bush, the president's
brother, to win re-election this year. Enough, possibly, to allow President
Bush, whose first term was won in Florida, to win a second term. The
all-but-even Florida presidential vote in 2000 pointed to a precarious balance
in this state between Republicans and Democrats, a balance that has in recent
years produced some exceptionally tight statewide elections. Polls here have consistently found that environmental issues greatly influence
voters, especially swing ones. "Big Cypress is one of those Florida
issues that a politician cannot allow himself to be perceived as being on the
wrong side of and still win a statewide election," Dr. Lance deHaven-Smith,
a professor of public administration at Florida State University in Tallahassee,
said. "Elections here are almost always so close that if you alienate
voters who care about the environment, you will probably lose." A
spokesman for the Interior Department said federal decisions regarding Big
Cypress were not motivated by politics.
Read
More... Copyright © 2002 NY Times, AP online All rights reserved.
2-Apr-02
Baffling black blob floating
near Florida
Scientists: Strange 'black water' may be type of
algae
Researchers who have been studying a
giant, mysterious area of "black water" in Florida Bay say it
seems to be associated with a diatom, a type of algae. The algae was
found in the water, according to Scott Willis at the Florida Fish and
Wildlife Conservation Commission, and the black water may be an algal bloom
-- an explosion of microscopic marine life. Algal blooms are not rare in
Florida waters, but blooms of this size are. At its peak in February,
the black water covered an estimated 700 square miles north of the Florida
Keys and west of the tip of the mainland.
Read
more.
Copyright © 2002 CNN
All rights reserved.
Group Calls Projects a Threat to Rivers:
A conservation group released a report today saying billions of federal dollars
appropriated for dams, irrigation projects and river dredging were the largest
threats facing the nation's waterways. The Washington nonprofit group,
American Rivers, found that among the most significant threats was the federal
government itself, through the work of the Army Corps of Engineers to alter the
course and levels of of rivers, the group said. The corps' river projects
are intended to make rivers more navigable for shipping barges, supply drinking
water to growing cities and irrigate farm fields. But Rebecca Wodder,
president of American Rivers, as well as some members of Congress, say the plans
of the civilian-run federal agency are larded with legislation written by
lawmakers who want federal spending in their home districts. The
increasing popularity of such projects means more river bottoms are gouged free
of vital grass and more riverbanks are buried under concrete, Ms. Wodder said.
The report included a list of rivers that the group ranked as most endangered,
using criteria like attention of the news media, public awareness and public
policy analysis, but not necessarily scientific study. The Missouri River was
No. 1 for the second year in a row, because of a plan by the corps to improve
barge traffic. Copyright © 2002 NY Times, AP online All rights reserved.
1-Apr-02
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