News - April 2003
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30-April-03
Bush urged to shun Glades measure
By Lesley Clark
The Miami Herald
Four influential congressional leaders,
including Rep. Bill Young, the Florida Republican who heads the House
appropriations committee, are urging Gov. Jeb Bush to abandon his support for a
controversial sugar-industry-backed Everglades cleanup bill. The congressmen
sent Bush a letter Tuesday in the clearest signal yet that Congress fears that
the hotly disputed legislation will threaten the fragile federal support for
splitting the cost with the state of a massive $8 billion Everglades restoration
project. Environmentalists have assailed the legislation as a gift to the sugar
industry, and Rep. Clay Shaw, R-Fort Lauderdale, has repeatedly warned that it
jeopardizes the federal project by delaying deadlines for cleaning up the
Everglades by as long as a decade. In the letter Tuesday, the congressmen who
hold sway over the congressional budget agree with some of the critics, noting
the bill would ``limit the state's ability to achieve water quality that is
protective of the Everglades environment.'' Though the congressmen wrote that
the Senate version of the legislation is improved, they said it ``remains
inadequate and we recommend it be vetoed by the governor.'' Environmentalists
said they fear that congressmen from other states will think Florida has lost
its commitment to the cleanup and then siphon money from the Everglades.
Read
more...
29-April-03
Senate OKs softer bill on Glades
By Lesley Clark
The Miami Herald
Over the objections of environmentalists,
the Florida Senate unanimously gave final approval Monday to
sugar-industry-backed legislation that eases pollution restrictions in the
Everglades. The measure passed with little debate, with Senate sponsor Al
Lawson, a Tallahassee Democrat, telling senators that three changes suggested by
the federal government make the legislation more environment-friendly. But
federal officials distanced themselves from the changes, and environmentalists
skewered them as mere window dressing. ''This is really just subterfuge
orchestrated to make it look like it's been improved,'' said Dexter Lehtinen,
the former federal prosecutor who first took the state to court more than a
decade ago to force it to start cleaning up the Everglades. ``It still provides
for loopholes and massive delays.'' And U.S. Rep. Clay Shaw, R-Fort Lauderdale,
reiterated his warning that the state Legislature is putting at risk the federal
contribution toward an $8 billion Everglades restoration effort -- one of the
largest environmental projects ever attempted. Read
more...
26-April-03
White House enters Glades dispute
By Lesley Clark
The Miami Herald
President Bush's administration, stepping
into the fray over a controversial move to ease pollution standards in the
Everglades, has asked state lawmakers to make changes that could soften
opposition from environmentalists. The proposed changes come one day after the
White House received a letter from nine national environmental groups protesting
the measure making its way through the Legislature. Critics have suggested the
president's reelection bid could suffer in Florida if a perception persists that
he and his brother, Gov. Jeb Bush, have abandoned the Everglades. The
legislation, pushed by the politically influential sugar industry and its
lobbyists, has prompted worries from a federal judge and cries of protests from
environmentalists. Even members of Congress have weighed in, contending that the
tweaking could imperil the Everglades and put at risk a massive federal-state
effort to restore it. The measure has sailed through the Legislature despite
critics' attacks, though conservationists acknowledge the legislation has been
tempered in the Senate, which advanced the measure Friday with little debate.
The bill's sponsor, Sen. Al Lawson, D-Tallahassee, told colleagues it will be
changed again next week to reflect the concerns of the federal government. ''I
think that what you will see when the legislation is adopted is that we're in a
much stronger position in terms of our commitment to the Everglades,'' Lawson
said. Under the landmark 1994 Everglades Forever Act, polluters are supposed to
meet a low-pollution standard by the end of 2006. But state environmental
officials said that deadline may be impossible to meet, because of the polluted
nature of much of the soil around the Everglades. Read
more...
25-April-03
Spillway to help Loxahatchee River
By Joe Brogan, Staff Writer
Palm Beach Post
The Loxahatchee River, under threat from
saltwater that is destroying the tower cypress trees along its banks, will
soon be getting the fresh water it needs to flourish, water managers said
Thursday. Officials from various environmental agencies gathered along
the C-18 Canal north of PGA Boulevard to break ground for a $2.1 million
spillway that is designed to bring fresh water to the beleaguered river. The spillway, the second-largest structure of its kind in the
16-county South Florida Water Management District, will block water from as
far south as Northlake Boulevard and allow the water to seep into the surrounding Loxahatchee Slough, said Patrick Gleason, a former
water district board member. From there, the water will find its way into the river's
northwest fork. "This structure is a key to the restoration of the Loxahatchee
River and is part of the first portion of the Everglades restoration
effort," Gleason said. "It will provide the water we need to push the
saltwater back and stop saltwater damage in the Loxahatchee River."
Read
More...
Glades bill heads for Senate showdown
By JULIE HAUSERMAN and CRAIG PITTMAN, Times Staff
Writers
St. Petersburg Times
Both sides in the fight to delay the Everglades cleanup
claim the other guys are dead wrong. A Senate vote is scheduled
today.
As a bill delaying a key part of the Everglades
cleanup heads for its first vote in the Florida Senate today, political
pressure is mounting on both sides of the debate. A group with ties to the sugar industry, the Everglades
Forever Partnership, began running television advertisements around the
state and sponsoring telephone calls to voters, urging them to phone Gov.
Jeb Bush to support the bill. The ads refer to delaying the cleanup by up
to 20 years as "the next phase of Everglades restoration." Pearl Troyer, 68, of Tampa got a call from the group Thursday
morning. "They said, "Are you interested in saving the
Everglades? Let me connect you to the governor's office to get him to vote yes,' "
she said. Troyer told the caller she would love to talk to the
governor's office about the Everglades - but when she was connected to Bush's
office she lambasted the governor's staff for not standing up to legislators
who want to push back the cleanup deadline. "In 20 more years, the Everglades will be gone," Troyer said.
Meanwhile, the heads of nine national environmental groups,
including the National Wildlife Federation and the National Audubon Society,
called on President Bush to get his brother to block the delay. Otherwise,
they said, the Legislature's tinkering might persuade Congress to drop
federal funding for the $8-billion Everglades restoration. Read
More...
Manatee Money In Safe Waters
Tampa Tribune
By MIKE SALINERO
The lawmakers who proposed draining state trust
funds dedicated to manatee research are abandoning their efforts. In the House, state Rep. Lindsay Harrington, R-Punta Gorda,
said Thursday that he has agreed to yank a provision in his bill that would
have taken $2 million - roughly half - of the Manatee Trust Fund to hire
more marine police officers. The plan would have crippled state-funded
manatee research and management, the bulk of which is conducted by the
Florida Marine Research Institute in St. Petersburg. On the other side of the Capitol rotunda, state Sen. Michael
Bennett, R- Bradenton, told lawmakers this week that he would vote against
his own bill if it makes it to the Senate floor unchanged. His proposal
would siphon the trust fund dry to pay for marine police officers, but
Bennett says he wants to look at other options. Critics of the move have argued the proposals were nothing
more than thinly veiled attempts to end the independent scientific research
that developers and others have long complained delays the building of
marinas and boat docks along Florida's coast. Much of the trust fund's $4.1 million in annual revenue comes
from the fees motorists pay for the ``Save the Manatee'' specialty license
plate. Harrington and Bennett dispute any suggestion that they were
trying to cripple manatee research, but their bills had the support of
lobbyists representing marinas, developers and boating groups. Harrington said Thursday that he will instead push a plan
offered by Republican Sen. Paula Dockery of Lakeland to transfer part of the
tax on gas sold at marinas to fund additional marine police. ``It's a positive thing for Florida,'' Harrington said.
``Nobody wants to kill manatees.'' Read
More...
Winsberg Farm to have new purpose
By Laurel Kalser
Special Correspondent
Sun-SentinelThere's a new development going up along Jog Road west of
Boynton Beach and Delray Beach, but it won't be housing people. The 175-acre Winsberg Farm Wetlands Restoration Project, set
for construction this summer, will be home to hardwood hammocks, blue
herons and about 150 other species of indigenous South Florida plant and
wildlife. " ... Right now it's a farm field, but we're going to create a
marsh and see what animals will show up," said Bill Wilsher, superintendent
of park planning and design for the Palm Beach County Parks and
Recreation Department. The purpose of the Winsberg project, named after longtime
Delray Beach farmers Ted and Trudy Winsberg, who sold their land to the county
in 1999, is two-fold. First, it will be a manmade wetlands area run as a
water-conservation program by the county's Water Utilities Department. It will be
modeled after the 50-acre Wakodahatchee Wetlands that opened in 1996 on
the east side of Jog Road west of Delray Beach. Second, it is also an opportunity for the parks department to
increase public awareness about South Florida's wetlands and the role they
play in preserving the earth's ecosystem. Read
More...
Editorial: Florida Legislature
Big Sugar's bill exposed
The Naples Daily News
Sometimes Florida legislators and lobbyists seem to do things
just to see how far they can get without being caught. Surely, amid the isolation and insulation of Tallahassee, what
they are doing will not be noticed by the outside world. In their dreams.
This session's glaring example of that is legislation that
would increase the amount of sugar-fed pollutants allowed into the Everglades, which taxpayers across the nation are joining
Floridians in spending $8 billion to cleanse and restore. This plan embodies bad science — and bad politics.
The science part is easy. Add nutrients from farm fields and
you enable more poison. Delete nutrients and you're on the right
track — if, that is, preservation of a unique ecosystem is the mission.
The politics part is easy too. Such scientific recklessness is
enough to trigger a cost-sharing retreat by an already skittish Congress that even Gov. Jeb Bush's brother, President Bush, could
not corral. Read
More...
Bush is asked to step in on `Glades cleanup
Sun-Sentinel
Palm
Beach County news briefs
Leaders of nine major conservation groups are calling on
President Bush to intervene in the Legislature's attempt to revise Florida's
9-year-old Everglades-cleanup law.
The environmental organization
presidents, meeting in Yulee this week, wrote a letter April 18 to Bush asking
him to work with his brother, Gov. Jeb Bush, "to
prevent the passage of this ill-conceived legislation."
At issue are two bills that would
push back a 2006 cleanup deadline 10 or 20 years. The changes have sparked a
warning from Congress that Florida might scare off $4
billion of federal funds for other Everglades work. The
letter was signed by presidents of the National Audubon Society, National Parks
Conservation Association, World Wildlife Fund, National
Wildlife Federation, Defenders of Wildlife and four other organizations. Read
More...
Case against Glades bill taken to President
Bush
By Lesley Clark
The Miami Herald
A coalition of national environmental
groups asked President Bush in a letter Thursday to intervene and block a
sugar-industry-backed measure in the Florida Legislature that it contends will
bring Everglades restoration efforts to a halt. The letter, signed by the heads
of nine environmental organizations, comes a day after a Miami federal judge
weighed in with worries that the legislative plan could affect an ongoing
cleanup effort. Several Florida congressmen have also warned that the measure
puts at risk an $8 billion federal-state restoration project. ''The Florida
Everglades are nationally significant, and we need to protect them,'' said
Thomas Kiernan, president of the National Parks Conservation Association, one of
the nine who signed the letter to President Bush. The other signatures were from
the heads of the National Audubon Society, the National Wildlife Federation, the
Natural Resources Defense Council, Defenders of Wildlife, Environmental Defense,
the Ocean Conservancy, the World Wildlife Fund and the Wilderness Society. The
White House referred calls about the letter to the Interior Department, where a
spokesman said Secretary Gale Norton remains concerned about the legislation.
Norton last week told a press gathering in Washington that she is keeping tabs
on the measure. Read
more...
24-April-03
Everglades pollution bill alarms U.S. judge
BY LESLEY CLARK AND CURTIS MORGAN
A push by Gov. Jeb Bush and the powerful sugar
industry to loosen pollution standards in the Everglades could be challenged
by a Miami federal judge, who said Wednesday the measure may threaten
ongoing restoration efforts. In a strongly worded order, U.S. District Judge William Hoeveler
demanded that the state appear in court to discuss the matter May 2, the
same day the Legislature is scheduled to end its annual session. Citing Herald reports of the deal, Hoeveler said he views the
proposal with ''considerable apprehension'' and twice noted in a four-paragraph
order that he has no intention of abandoning a 1992 Everglades cleanup
settlement agreement he orchestrated. ''I think we should immediately have a hearing on this subject
and you should make every effort to attend before this legislation becomes
effective,'' Hoeveler wrote. The politically connected sugar industry has angered
environmentalists and members of Congress from both parties in recent weeks with its
aggressive efforts to convince the Republican-led Legislature to soften
water-quality standards in the Everglades. The legislation has moved swiftly through House and Senate
committees with little objection from either party, guided by a battalion of
sugar industry lobbyists. The measures would push back enforcement deadlines for cleaning
up the Everglades by at least seven years -- and the House version would
boost the acceptable amount of one key pollutant by 50 percent or more. Read
More...
Related link;
April 24, 2003
JUDGE HOEVELER'S ORDER
I have been viewing the Herald coverage of the proposed
legislation by the state with considerable apprehension. I do not propose to deviate
from the settlement that now exists between the state government and the
federal government. If we do nothing, there appears to be an action by
the Legislature which may indeed affect the settlement. I think we should immediately have a hearing on this subject and
you should make every effort to attend before this legislation becomes
effective. Again, I say that I do not propose to deviate from the settlement
agreement. Now I cannot control what the parties do as to the other parts of
the Everglades, but the national parks are and will be controlled by
the settlement and amendments thereto which have been memorialized in
the settlement decree. I would like to propose a hearing immediately
and therefore, IT IS ORDERED that counsel shall appear before this Court on May
2, 2003, at 10 a.m. in Courtroom 9 at 301 North Miami Avenue, Miami, Florida.
-- William Hoeveler, senior United States district judge Read
More...
The Everglades aren't dead yet
The Miami Herald
MARTHA MUSGROVE
Floridas sugar industry headed to Tallahassee for this years
legislative session determined to kill Everglades restoration. It bought the
casket -- pouring $800,000 in state-election campaigns -- polished the
hearse and recruited a cadre of pallbearers. Not surprisingly, things got messy.
Sugars bills (SB 626 and HB 1893) rewriting the 1994 Everglades
Forever Act are two of the worse pieces of legislation to be put before the
Legislature since the late 1960s. Environmentalists are outraged and staffing
phone banks, members of the states congressional delegation have warned
that passage will make it impossible to continue funding the $8.4
billion, 30-year Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan, and Gov. Jeb Bush has
found himself in the squeeze. Tuesday night the Senate Appropriations Committee balked. It
attached six amendments intended ''to clean up'' the Senate bill, and David
Struhs, secretary of the states Department of Environmental Protection,
declared that the bill had ''turned green.'' If so, its a very pale green. The question to ask now is: Why a bill at all? To answer, you
have to look for the intent of those who have pushed the legislation. Read
More...
Groups claim miners, developers destroyed panther habitat
By CRAIG PITTMAN, Times Staff Writer,
St. Petersburg Times
Federal regulators illegally allowed developers and miners to
destroy crucial habitat for the endangered Florida panther, a
trio of environmental groups charged in legal notices Wednesday. The National Wildlife Federation and two other groups notified
the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the Army Corps of Engineers
that they will sue in the next 60 days if the agencies do not halt a 6,000-acre mine and other projects in Lee and Collier counties
where panthers prowl. "We realized we can't afford to sit on the sidelines as the
panther's last remaining habitat is chipped away," said Jamie Rappaport Clark, senior vice president of the National Wildlife
Federation and former director of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. A spokesman for the Corps of Engineers said it could not
comment because no one had received the notice yet. A spokesman for the
Fish and Wildlife Service defended his agency's actions. "The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has done nothing in the
past but keep the Florida panther's best interests in mind," said
spokesman Bert Byers. "We've got a long way to go but it's not like we're doing things that would endanger the Florida panther."
The panther is one of the most endangered mammals in the
world. Although panthers once roamed the South, fewer than 100 now
exist, most hemmed into Southwest Florida -- an area that over the past decade has experienced some of the most rapid development in the
country. Read
More...
Wildlife groups: Lawsuits planned to protect Florida
panther
By ERIC STAATS

An adult male Florida panther growls as he leaves his shipping
container to enter his new home at Big Cypress National Preserve
in this Jan. 30, 1997, file photo. Three wildlife conservation groups
notified the federal government Wednesday they intend to file
lawsuits to stop development in the habitat of the endangered
Florida panther. Fewer than 100 panthers remain in Florida. About
half of their habitat is on private property. They also roam Big
Cypress National Preserve and other public property.
MAP
http://www.naplesnews.com/03/04/graphics/24panther-map-big.JPG
Naples Daily News - Front Page Top of Fold
Three environmental groups threatened Wednesday to go to court to keep habitat for the endangered Florida panther out of the hands
of developers. At issue is a massive rock-mining proposal in southern Lee
County and a federal environmental permitting system that allows
shortcut permits for smaller projects that the groups say are eating away
at habitat for one of the world's rarest mammals. The best guesses
put the panther population at 80 to 100 cats. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers approved a permit for the
Florida Rock Industries mine in February 2003 after a biological opinion from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in January 2002 concluded
that the mine would not jeopardize the Florida panther. The National Wildlife Federation, Florida Wildlife Federation
and the Florida Panther Society sent letters Wednesday to Army
Secretary Thomas White and Interior Secretary Gale Norton, calling on the agencies to reconsider their decisions or face a lawsuit in 60
days. A second 60-day letter sent by the NWF and the Florida Panther
Society calls on the Corps of Engineers to suspend the use of shortcut permits for utility lines, roads, farming and
residential and commercial development in Florida panther habitat in Collier
and Lee counties. "We have realized we can't afford to sit on the sidelines any
longer as the last remnants of panther habitat are chipped away piece by piece," said NWF senior vice president Jamie Rappaport Clark.
New litigation would be a follow-up to a similar lawsuit filed
by some of the same groups in 2000. A federal judge threw out the lawsuit, saying he had no jurisdiction because the lawsuit was
too wide-ranging. The lawsuit targeted 26 projects in Collier and Lee counties.
Clark called litigation a "mechanism of last resort" and said
she hoped the 60-day notice would spur developers and federal
agencies to come to the table to talk with environmental groups about a big-picture approach to saving panther habitat in Southwest
Florida. "We were finally able to get them to pay attention," Inge
said, referring to federal wildlife officials. Read
More...
Editorial: Senate a co-conspirator against the Everglades|
Palm Beach Post
The attempt to kill Everglades restoration but cover up the
crime gathered force Tuesday, even as more evidence emerged that shows the
deception behind the scheme. In the Senate, the misnamed Natural Resources Committee voted
15-0 for a bill that would weaken the 1994 Everglades Forever Act, designed to
clean up water flowing into the state's "river of grass." The
bill is set for a full Senate vote Friday. In the meantime, South Florida Water
Management Director Henry Dean, whose agency is in charge of
the cleanup, told The Post that he hadn't asked for any legislation, nor was he
asked for his advice. Of course he wasn't. The sugar industry, working through
nearly four dozen lobbyist/perpetrators, has greased this legislation through
other sources -- the water district board members to whom Mr. Dean
reports and legislators. Since the Legislature and the equally misnamed Florida
Department of Environmental Protection are portraying
themselves as saviors of the Everglades because they support the legislation,
the only hopes may be a veto from Gov. Bush or failure of the House and
Senate to reconcile their differing bills. Read
More...
Everglades moves get judge's notice
By Robert P. King, Staff Writer
Palm Beach Post
Legislators' attempts to rewrite Florida's Everglades cleanup
law ran into what could be an immovable roadblock Wednesday: a federal judge who
says he has no intention of letting the state delay its
deadlines. In a surprise order, U.S. District Judge William Hoeveler in
Miami expressed "considerable apprehension" about bills that would postpone
enforcement of strict pollution limits until 2016 or 2026.Hoeveler then set a hearing for May 2 -- the last day of the
legislative session -- so that he could hear arguments "before this legislation
becomes effective." Hoeveler's opinion matters because he is still overseeing the
1988 lawsuit in which the federal government accused the state of polluting the Everglades with phosphorus-laden sugar farm runoff. That suit
led to creation of a state cleanup law that calls for the pollution to end by
Dec. 31, 2006 -- a deadline that South Florida water managers now say
they almost certainly cannot meet. "I do not propose to deviate from the settlement that now
exists between the state government and the federal government," Hoeveler wrote.
However, he also seemed to hint that his power may not extend
beyond the parts of the Everglades controlled by the federal government: Everglades National Park to the south and the Arthur R.
Marshall Loxahatchee National Wildlife Refuge in Palm Beach County. Environmentalists and the Miccosukee Indian tribe argue that
he also has at least a powerful say in what happens to the state-owned
Everglades in the middle. "Now I cannot control what the parties do as to the other
parts of the Everglades," he wrote, "but the National Parks are and will be
controlled by the settlement." Environmentalists say Hoeveler would be a much more formidable
opponent than the activists groups, U.S. representatives and U.S. senators
who have been decrying the bills for weeks. Read
More...
Judge intervenes on Everglades
U.S. District Judge William Hoeveler, concerned that
legislators may delay the cleanup deadline, calls a hearing.
By CRAIG PITTMAN
St. Petersburg Times
A federal judge, alarmed that Florida lawmakers are about to
alter a longstanding agreement to clean up the Everglades, on Wednesday summoned state and federal officials to his Miami courtroom
for an emergency hearing. U.S. District Judge William Hoeveler, who is overseeing the
Everglades cleanup, set the hearing for May 2 -- the last scheduled day of the
legislative session. For weeks, powerful state lawmakers have debated whether to
delay the deadline for clean up by as much as 20 years. Congressmen and environmental groups have howled, warning it
could unravel an $8-billion deal between the state and federal government to
restore the River of Grass. But their concerns have done
nothing to derail the proposals. In his order, Hoeveler wrote that he has been reading "with
considerable apprehension" news stories about what state lawmakers were doing to
the Everglades cleanup plan and feared that "if we do
nothing," lawmakers will change the plan. "I do not propose to deviate from the settlement agreement,"
Hoeveler wrote in his one-page order, saying it twice for emphasis. The fight centers on phosphorus, a pollutant that runs off
sugar farms and suburban lawns and can tip the Everglades' natural balance so it
becomes a stagnant swamp full of cattails instead of a flowing
river of sawgrass. State law now requires the state to cut back the flow of
phosphorus no later than 2006. Although phosphorus has been cut far below its
historic high of 300 parts per billion, state Department of
Environmental Protection Secretary David Struhs has said he doubts it can be cut
to 10 parts per billion, which is what the Everglades needs, by 2006.
Read
More...
Legislators jeopardize $4 billion for Everglades cleanup
By Linda Kleindienst and Neil
Santaniello,
Staff Writers
Sun-Sentinel
A controversial Everglades cleanup bill prompted
concern on Wednesday from a federal judge and stern warnings from a South
Florida congressman that the state is on the verge of losing
$4 billion in federal help. The proposal, backed by Gov. Jeb Bush's administration, is on
a fast track in the Legislature, but environmentalists warn that it will torpedo
attempts to reduce agricultural pollution running into the
River of Grass.
"This is going to cost Florida billions of dollars, no
question about it," said U.S. Rep. Clay Shaw, R-Fort Lauderdale, a key leader in
getting Congress to ante up its share of funding for the unprecedented
state-federal cleanup project. "[U.S. Sen.] Bob Graham and I worked like hell to get this
legislation through, and the Florida Legislature is blowing it up. You can't
enter into a partnership and then each partner goes where they darn well
please." The legislation, backed and written with the help of the sugar
industry, extends a 2006 cleanup deadline by 20 years under the House plan
and 10 years under the Senate version. Senate President Jim King, R-Jacksonville, said he decided to
let the bill move forward after being assured by David Struhs, secretary of the
Florida Department of Environmental Protection, that most of
the state's congressional delegation understood the bill. "I said, `Do you think it's safe?' And he said, `Yes, I think
it's safe. I don't think that the funding we've talked about is at risk,'" King
said. But Shaw, chairman of the Florida delegation, disputed those
claims, saying, "Anyone who claims the Florida delegation is behind this is not
telling the truth." Angry at the sugar lobby for pushing the bill, Shaw said:
"I've never seen lobbyists having such a chokehold on government. This is a
bipartisan screw-up."
The growing controversy, which has sparked two television ad
campaigns -- one by the sugar industry and the other by the environmental
community -- has also caught the eye of U.S. District Judge
William Hoeveler. Hoeveler presided over the settlement of a 1988 lawsuit
brought against the state by the federal government that eventually led to the
1994 landmark Everglades Forever Act. He has periodically monitored
the water cleanup progress. On Wednesday, he set a court hearing for May 2 -- the last
scheduled day of the Legislature's session -- saying he has been viewing the
proposed legislation with "considerable apprehension."
In his order, Hoeveler said he does not propose to deviate
from the settlement, adding, "If we do nothing, there appears to be an action by
the Legislature which may indeed affect the settlement."
Read
More...
Judge orders a hearing on Everglades legislation
Concern is that bills could change restoration plans
By Brendan Farrington, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Tallahassee Democrat
A federal judge in Miami on Wednesday ordered a hearing on
whether two bills moving through the Legislature could change the agreement the
federal and state government have to restore the Everglades.
U.S. District Judge William Hoeveler ordered lawyers for all
parties involved in the restoration to a hearing May 2, the last scheduled day
of the legislative session. Environmentalists have opposed bills
moving through the House and Senate and hope the order will keep them from passing. The bills (PCB NR 03, SB 626) put into law technical details
about how the $8 billion federal-state restoration project will proceed,
including standards on how much phosphorus can run into the ecosystem.
Phosphorus is a nutrient that has run into the Everglades for decades from
cities, suburbs and farms. Excess amounts can kill vital algae
and grasses. Environmentalists have complained that the House and Senate
bills fail to ensure a strict enough standard for phosphorus entering the
ecosystem and delay the deadline for when it must be judged clean of the
nutrient. Hoeveler said in his order that he has been reading news of
the legislation "with apprehension." "I do not propose to deviate from the settlement that now
exists between the state government and the federal government," he wrote. "If
we do nothing, there appears to be an action by the Legislature
which may indeed affect the settlement."
Read
More...
Panther fight heads to federal court
By Joe Newman, Staff Writer
Orlando Sentinel
By itself, a limestone mine approved for the western edge of
the Everglades might not seem like a significant threat to the survival of the
Florida panther. But the mine just east of Fort Myers has become a rallying
point for environmentalists, who say federal officials are allowing development
to chip away at habitat essential to the panther's future.
"You eat an apple one bite at a time, and pretty soon the
apple is gone," said Manley Fuller, president of the Florida Wildlife
Federation. "It's piecemeal, cumulative habitat destruction."
Now, it looks like the fight to protect the panther -- which
numbers fewer than 70 adults and is one of the most endangered mammals in the
world -- is headed to federal court, where its fate likely will be
pitted against the needs of southwest Florida's booming population. The Florida Wildlife Federation, the National Wildlife
Federation and the Florida Panther Society announced Wednesday that they plan to
sue the Army Corps of Engineers and the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service
for violating the Endangered Species Act, as well as the Clean Water Act.
It's the second set of legal challenges aimed at the two
federal agencies in the past nine months. In August, three other environmental
groups sued over the expansion of a limestone mine in western
Miami-Dade County. Limestone essential While it might only be coincidental that the agencies are
being sued over permits issued to mining companies, it is certainly symbolic
because limestone is essential to Florida's growth. The material is
used in the construction of roads and homes, among other things. Construction-industry analysts say that blocking mining
operations in Florida could cause a steep increase in the cost of homes and
roads because limestone would have to be shipped in from out of
state. The environmental groups, however, aren't trying to block
growth, Fuller said. The development pressure in Lee and Collier counties is not
expected to subside. Naples has the highest new-home construction rate in the
country among metropolitan areas, while Fort Myers is third.
"It would be naive on our part to think we can stop all
development in [southwest Florida]," he said. "We'd just like to see it steered
away from panther habitat."
Read
More...
Algae poses threat, experts say
Palm Beach Post
By Libby Wells, Palm Beach Post Staff Writer
Red tide invaded the Treasure Coast last
winter. Now, it's a "green tide" of exotic seaweed that has marine scientists and
environmentalists worried. Caulerpa brachypus, a species of enemy algae, blankets
offshore reefs in Palm Beach County like an overgrown lawn. Patches of the invasive
bloom, which is native to the Pacific Ocean, have been spotted by
fishermen and divers in the Indian River Lagoon and St. Lucie River.
"I feel a little bit guilty because this problem has existed
for years for our neighbors to the south," Kevin Stinnette, executive director
of Indian Riverkeeper, told a roomful of people who met Wednesday night at
the Fort Pierce branch of the St. Lucie County Library to talk about the
problem. "And now it's here and we're kinda late."
Brachypus doesn't appear to have a firm foothold in local
waters, but experts agreed that it will become a serious threat to native
marine life if it's ignored. Read More...
23-April-03
Senate: Give Glades cleanup 10 more years
By JULIE HAUSERMAN
St. Petersburg Times
That's 10 years fewer than the House wants. Washington
watches nervously as
the two restoration bills evolve.
A controversial Everglades pollution
cleanup bill, which has spawned television attack ads and a political scuffle
between Tallahassee and Washington, got more moderate Tuesday -- at least in the
Senate. A Senate committee made changes to
extend a key Everglades cleanup deadline by 10 years, instead of the 20-year
delay in the House bill. The bill also holds firm to a phosphorus pollution
limit favored by environmentalists (10 parts per billion), instead of a looser
standard sought by sugar companies (15 parts per billion.) "Now
it's a green bill," said David Struhs, secretary of the Florida Department
of Environmental Protection. Not everyone
agreed. Environmentalists and sugar growers left grumbling. Since
the Senate and House bills differ, the legislation will probably change more as
it heads to the floor in both chambers. Sugar
growers sought protection against government seizure of their lands by eminent
domain, but the Senate committee refused. Environmentalists said the legal
language in the bill still gives too much wiggle room on deadlines. One chief
concern: The second phase of cleanup can't begin until the plan goes back to the
Legislature for approval in the future. In Washington, lawmakers are closely
watching what happens in Florida because the federal government and the state
are splitting the cost of the $8.4-billion effort to clean up the Everglades. It
is the largest environmental restoration project ever attempted in the United
States. The main issue of disagreement is a
2006 deadline to reduce phosphorus, a pollutant that tips the marsh's natural
balance so it grows cattails instead of sawgrass. Although phosphorus levels
have dropped dramatically during the initial stages of the cleanup, getting to
10 parts per billion won't happen by the 2006 deadline set in the 1994
state-federal agreement, Struhs said. The
state favors a 10-year delay, sugar growers want 20 more years, and
environmentalists want no delay. "It's
hard to look at this bill and say it's going to change the state's commitment to
Everglades restoration," said state Sen. Al Lawson, D-Tallahassee, the
bill's sponsor. Read
More...
U.S. Sugar Industry Targets New Study
Lawmakers' Aid Sought In Halting WHO Report
By Juliet Eilperin
Washington Post Staff Writer
The sugar industry has launched a vigorous campaign to
discredit a World Health Organization report on healthful diets, questioning why
the Geneva-based group would urge people to derive no more than 10
percent of their daily caloric intake from sugar additives. Hoping to block the report, which is scheduled for release
today, the Sugar Association threatened to lobby Congress to cut off the $406
million the United States gives annually to WHO. The funds account for nearly
a quarter of the organization's budget. "We will exercise every avenue available to expose the dubious
nature of the 'Diet, Nutrition and the Prevention of Chronic Diseases' report,"
Sugar Association President Andrew Briscoe said in an April 14 letter
to WHO's director general, Gro Harlem Brundtland. WHO's report suggests that people can reduce their
susceptibility to obesity, diabetes and some heart problems by curbing the amount
of sugar they consume. It warns that "unbalanced consumption of foods high
in energy (sugar, starch, and/or fat) and low in essential nutrients contributes to
energy excess . . . and obesity." Read
More...
Editorial: Set Tribe Free From State
South Florida Sun-Sentinel Editorial Board
The Miccosukee Tribe of Indians of Florida, a nation of 500
Indians who inhabit the Everglades, wants independence from the state. The
Legislature should grant its wish. The tribe wants the state to rescind a law giving Florida
authorities jurisdiction over what happens on Miccosukee-owned land. Although
Native American affairs are the domain of the federal
government, Florida grabbed jurisdiction after Congress briefly opened the
window on joint governance in the 1950s.
Now it's time for Florida to close that window, as the
majority of other states have already done. Two bills before the Legislature,
House bill 269 and Senate bill 424, seek to do just that.
The bills are similar, with one major exception. The Senate
bill grants the Miccosukees complete legal autonomy from the state, though they
would remain under federal jurisdiction. The House bill
reserves the right of Florida courts to hear civil cases involving non-Indians
and gives Florida police concurrent criminal powers in cases where the
victim is a non-Indian. Lawmakers should support the exceptions in the House bill,
which are designed partly to cover Florida residents and tourists who gamble or
dine at the Miccosukee-owned and -operated casino and hotel
complex in western Miami-Dade. Read
More...
Editorial: Track
the reef killer
Palm Beach Post
Now
that an invasive seaweed, already a problem in the Florida Keys and on
reefs off Palm Beach County, has reached the Treasure Coast, groups are
organizing to seek solutions. The state should help. The St. Lucie
County Conservation Alliance hosts a first meeting of those
organizations today in Fort Pierce. The concern is caulerpa brachypus, a
Pacific Ocean native that smothers sea grasses, covers reefs and crowds
out fish and other native marine life. Keynote speaker is Harbor Branch
Oceanographic Institution scientist Brian Lapointe, who identified the
seaweed and believes it is fed by nutrient-rich sewage that is dumped
into the ocean or seeps up from storage wells. Mr. Lapointe is using a
$279,000 Environmental Protection Agency grant to trace possible sources
of nitrogen feeding the algae. State Sen. Ken Pruitt, R-Port St. Lucie,
has asked for $500,000 in this year's budget to do more, but Gov. Bush
has vetoed similar "green tide" study money the past two
years, and this very tight budget year is even tighter. More money,
though, could help on a number of fronts. Scientists could work with
volunteers to track seaweed location and map areas of infestation.
Tracking when growth occurs also could be important. Some other invasive
seaweeds, for example, grow faster in the summer. This one appears to
grow year-round. "After the initial cold weather in January
ended," Mr. Lapointe said, "it took over Palm Beach County
reefs in a month." Read
More...
State takes aim at the manatee
By Sally Swartz, Editorial Writer
Palm Beach Post
If red tide doesn't get Florida's manatees, politicians will.
Sixty-four manatees have died since Feb. 27 in an outbreak of
deadly red tide along Florida's southwest coast. At the same time, state legislators are trying to kill manatee research and management
programs to get money for law enforcement. And a state commission that is
considering whether to change the manatee's status from
"endangered" to "threatened" has decided to make its decision without waiting
for scientific information. "It's getting really, really bad," said Judith
Vallee,
executive director of the Save the Manatee Club. "The state is pretty much a
monster right now." She's talking about the political situation, not the red tide.
The red tide is named for a bloom of microscopic algae. It emits a powerful
nerve poison that interferes with breathing in mammals and fish, and
it's a monster of another kind. In 1996, red tide killed 149 manatees between March 5 and April 27 in the same coastal area. Deaths have
tapered off since last week, but Tom Pitchford, director of Florida's Marine
Mammal Pathology Laboratory in St. Petersburg, isn't ready to declare
the red tide at an end. Manatees don't always die from the toxic algae. Since 1995,
people have rescued about two dozen red tide victims, holding their heads above water so they can breathe while guiding them into shallow
water. Once they are moved out of the poisoned water, the majority recuperate
quickly. The Legislature, however, wants to shove the endangered sea
cow's head under the water, politically speaking. Ready to hit the Senate floor
is SB 1476, which would divert almost all the money from the Save
the Manatee Trust Fund -- raised from boat registration fees -- and the popular
Save the Manatee license plate to pay for more wildlife
law-enforcement officers. Nobody would object to that if the bill didn't
simultaneously cut most of the money for manatee research and management programs
that have been 20 years in the making. Read
More...
Everglades pollution bill alarms U.S. judge
By Lesley Clark and Curtis Morgan
The Miami Herald
A push by Gov. Jeb Bush and the powerful
sugar industry to loosen pollution standards in the Everglades could be
challenged by a Miami federal judge, who said Wednesday the measure may threaten
ongoing restoration efforts. In a strongly worded order, U.S. District Judge
William Hoeveler demanded that the state appear in court to discuss the matter
May 2, the same day the Legislature is scheduled to end its annual session.
Citing Herald reports of the deal, Hoeveler said he views the proposal with
''considerable apprehension'' and twice noted in a four-paragraph order that he
has no intention of abandoning a 1992 Everglades cleanup settlement agreement he
orchestrated. ''I think we should immediately have a hearing on this subject and
you should make every effort to attend before this legislation becomes
effective,'' Hoeveler wrote. The politically connected sugar industry has
angered environmentalists and members of Congress from both parties in recent
weeks with its aggressive efforts to convince the Republican-led Legislature to
soften water-quality standards in the Everglades. The legislation has moved
swiftly through House and Senate committees with little objection from either
party, guided by a battalion of sugar industry lobbyists. The measures would
push back enforcement deadlines for cleaning up the Everglades by at least seven
years -- and the House version would boost the acceptable amount of one key
pollutant by 50 percent or more. Read
more...
23-April-03
Eased rules
on Glades pollution advance
By Lesley Clark and Curtis
Morgan
The Miami Herald
Despite massive opposition
from environmentalists and Congressional warnings that an unprecedented
effort to restore the Everglades could be at risk, a
sugar-industry-backed measure to ease pollution restrictions shows no
signs of slowing in the Legislature. In less than five minutes, with no
debate or public testimony, the proposal cleared its final Senate
committee Tuesday and is now ready for action by the full chamber. The
speed at which the measure was approved was in keeping with its
trajectory since it surfaced just three weeks ago -- pushed by Big Sugar
and its estimated 46 lobbyists. More than a half-dozen members of
Congress from both parties have warned state lawmakers that weakening
pollution regulations in the Everglades could endanger the $8 billion
federal-state agreement to clean up the River of Grass, but legislators
and Gov. Jeb Bush insist the Washington politicians are worried about
outdated versions of the proposal. Bush's top environmental
administrator acknowledged Tuesday that an early version of the proposal
favored the sugar industry but said it's since been modified to protect
the Everglades. ''We started with a brown bill, we moved to neutral and
now we're solidly, positively green,'' said Department of Environmental
Protection Secretary David Struhs, adding that the agency and Bush are
backing the newest Senate version. ``We had a bad first impression with
the initial bill.'' But Charles Lee, senior vice president of Florida
Audubon, said the revised version still threatens restoration efforts
because it gives polluters room to wiggle and pushes back enforcement
deadlines for cleaning up polluted water. ''It's still a killer for
Everglades restoration,'' Lee said. The politically powerful sugar
industry maintains that the new Senate version is ''radically
different'' from the initial House proposal that prompted protest from
environmentalists, editorial writers and Congress -- as well as a TV ad
campaign that targets Bush.
Read
more...
22-April-03
Cane Cutters Take On
Big Sugar in Backpay Fight
Steve
Ellman
Miami Daily Business Review
14-year fight on behalf
of sugar cane cutters in Palm Beach County may be entering last phase
Starting today in state trial court in Florida, 20,000 Caribbean sugar cane
cutters get what could be their last shot at Big Sugar in their long-running
legal battle to win tens of millions of dollars in backpay. Pre-trial
motions in the class-action contract lawsuit, Bygrave v. Sugar Cane Growers
Cooperative of Florida, quickly turned rancorous Monday, following a pattern
set in preceding cases. One of the defense attorneys, David Coulson, insulted
the plaintiffs' proposed chief expert witness; Judge Karen Miller admonished
Coulson, prompting him to apologize. The outcome of the trial, for which jury
selection begins today in Palm Beach Circuit Court, could determine whether
attorney David Gorman's 14-year-long crusade on behalf of the predominantly
black cutters is finally over.
21-April-03
Public comment sought on proposed water policy
Orlando Business Journal
Florida Agriculture Commissioner Charles H. Bronson announced
Wednesday that his department has developed a proposed agricultural water
policy and is seeking public comment on it between now and May
16. The draft policy, which has been developed after more than a
year of public meetings, is posted on a Department of Agriculture and Consumer
Services' Web site at
http://www.floridaagwaterpolicy.com Citizens and agricultural industry
groups are encouraged to view the site and make any recommendations that they may have in the comment section.
The 31-page draft policy identifies actions that are needed to
assure that agriculture has access to an adequate supply of water of sufficient
quality to remain competitive in a global marketplace. It
calls for all levels of government to work together to achieve that goal and
stresses the need for industry groups to implement environmentally friendly
best management practices and employ various water conservation measures.
A final policy is expected to be approved by Bronson at a
water policy meeting in Marco Island on July 15. Read
More...
Related link
Office of Agricultural Water Policy
http://www.floridaagwaterpolicy.com/
14-April-03
September 20, 2001
Who We Are
Brian Scherf - Hollywood, Fla.
Chair, Biodiversity Committee of the Broward County Group
When American Automobile Association members
reach travel counselor Brian Scherf on the phone to help them plan a vacation,
they get more than highway routes and discount motels. They get an environmental
education as well. "I talk about national parks all day, and I
always work in a conservation message," says the Florida activist. "So
you're going to the Great Smoky Mountains National Park? Do you know about the
work that they're doing there to reintroduce elk? Bound for Yosemite? Are you
familiar with the efforts being made to reduce the impacts of visitors
there?" Some are interested, some are ambivalent - it
just depends on the person, says Scherf. Read
more . .
Copyright © 2003 Sierra
Club Planet Newsletter All rights reserved.
12-April-03
Lawmakers: Extend ’Glades pollution deadline
Part II
While on the subject of lobbyists, it looks like the sugar
industry did a number on a House committee considering some significant changes
to the landmark 1994 Everglades Forever Act. On a 16-1 vote, the committee moved to the full House a
bill that
would give polluters an extra 20 years to meet clean water standards in the
Everglades. As reported by The Miami Herald’s Lesley Clark, the committee
chamber was packed with agricultural lobbyists who worked hard to back off
the original 2006 deadline set in the original 1994 Act. This flies counter to the stand taken by many environmental
groups and even by some prominent GOP members of Congress, who now fear that the
state sends a very wrong signal – backpedaling on this $8 billion joint
state-federal Everglades cleanup.
Copyright © 2003 Keynoter
All rights reserved.
Related Article,
April 12, 2003
Lawmakers: Extend ’Glades pollution deadline
Lawmakers: Extend ’Glades pollution deadline
A Florida Keys marine-advisory panel unanimously
voted this week to oppose a state law that softens a deadline for curtailing
phosphorous pollution in Everglades water. The recommendation from the
Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary Advisory Council did little to sway
members of a key state House of Representatives committee, which the next day
passed the controversial bill on a 16-1 vote. The bill – which would
eliminate a 2006 deadline for sharply reducing phosphorous pollution from
stormwater flowing into the Everglades – still must win endorsement of the
full Legislature. A companion bill would curtail state water-management
districts’ authority to "reserve" water for ecosystem
preservation. "We believe both these bills have the potential to
derail Everglades restoration," said Nancy Klingener, Keys program manager
for The Ocean Conservancy.
Copyright © 2003
Keynoter
All rights reserved.
Related Article,
April 12, 2003
Lawmakers:
Extend ’Glades pollution deadline - Part II
Editorial: The Everglades 'albatross'
As a House committee voted Wednesday to postpone
Everglades cleanup for two more decades, Florida's top environmental cop was
remarkably docile. "Whatever date is put into law will not speed up or slow
down our process," said Department of Environmental Protection Secretary
David Struhs. "That is because the laws of man cannot affect the laws of
nature." Is that so? The Everglades is losing roughly six acres a day
to cattail invasion because the laws of man allowed sugar and dairy farmers and
urban developers and flood-control engineers to use it as their sewer. After
environmental groups waged fruitless battles over the years to change those
permissive laws, a U.S. attorney sued in 1988 and found a federal court that
would listen. The result was that some new laws of man, the 1994 Everglades
Forever Act, were passed.
Copyright © 2003 St.
Petersburg Times All rights reserved.
11-April-03
Letter to the editor: Stalling Everglades cleanup for 20 years will make it moot
I was outraged as I read the April 3 article "20-year delay
sought for Everglades cleanup law." It makes me sick to see the work of the
past 30 years being destroyed by Gov. Bush and his administration. All the state needs to do is to make sugar
farmers do what
other farmers are required to do, which is on-site retention of water polluted
with phosphorus and pesticides. This was first suggested more than 30
years ago, but the sugar interests were exempted. On-site retention requires farmers
to take a portion of their
land to build reservoirs to recycle water off the cropland and into the
retention ponds. In dry times, the retention ponds are available to provide irrigation. This keeps the overly enriched and pesticide-laden
water out of the Everglades and out of state waters. When the Everglades Forever Act passed in 1994, I thought it
was a stall so the sugar farms could conduct business as usual.
Copyright © 2003 Palm
Beach Post All rights reserved.
Letter:
Threat of Extinction
To the Editor:
The news that gorillas and chimpanzees are in grave danger of extinction is
profoundly disturbing ("Gorillas and Chimps in Peril, Report Says," news
article, April 7). But this is just the tip of the iceberg. A majority of
biologists now believe that humans are currently causing the greatest mass
extinction of species of life on earth since the extinction of the dinosaurs 65
million years ago. According to the most recent United Nations Global Environment Outlook Report,
if current trends continue, one quarter of all mammal species will be extinct in
30 years, and E. O. Wilson of Harvard, the world's most esteemed biologist,
estimates that one half of all species on earth will be extinct by the end of
this century. It is long past time for us to stop wasting our resources killing
each other and to start using them to rescue the planet we are rapidly
devastating.
Copyright © 2003
NY Times
online All rights reserved.
Related Article,
April 7, 2003
Gorillas
and Chimps in Peril, Report Says
House Endorses Oil Drilling in Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
House members endorsed oil drilling in the Arctic
National Wildlife Refuge tonight as they considered a wide-ranging energy
measure that seeks to spur domestic energy production and provides tax
incentives to oil and power companies. Siding with the Bush administration on one of its top energy initiatives, the
House defeated on a 228-to-197 vote an effort to strip the drilling plan from
the measure. Lawmakers did support limiting development to a 2,000-acre
"footprint" in the 1.5 million-acre coastal plain of the refuge on the North
Slope of Alaska. The Senate, which is developing its own energy measure, rejected the drilling
plan in a crucial budget vote last month and Republican leaders there say they
do not intend to return to the issue in their energy proposal. But House
advocates of drilling said they hoped to persuade the Senate to reverse that
position.
Copyright © 2003
NY Times
online All rights reserved.
Letter to the Editor: Bush ignores restoration
On Dec. 11, 2000, Congress
passed the Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan with a $7.8 billion price
tag. Over the years, the activities of the Corps of Engineers (drainage for
large plantations, mining and dike building) have been responsible for the
conditions that required such a large price tag. Now the Bush
administration is allowing the Corps of Engineers to issue two new mining leases
to corporations for limestone mining in the Everglades. Currently, the leases
call for two deep open-pit mines totaling 5,000 acres just east of the
Everglades, and one would abut the park. Limestone in Florida is used for
making cement and these new mines are supposed to support construction for the
new people moving into the state. The future goal of the corporations is
to secure permits for mining limestone in 15,000 acres of wetlands just north of
the national park.
Copyright © 2003
Statesman
Journal All rights reserved.
Related Links,
U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers
Jacksonville District
Hot
Topics - Lake Belt Permits
Invasive Species Find Florida to Their Liking
Conservationists are warning that the Florida's
problem with invasive species must be addressed immediately. A new booklet on
the issue, compiled by the Florida Chapter of The Nature Conservancy, details
the severity of the situation, as nonnative plants and animals continue to
destroy native habitats and species. "The problem of invasive,
non-native species grows exponentially worse each day," said Vicki
Tschinkel, director of the Florida Chapter of The Nature Conservancy. "The
time to act is now." "There is a point in the proliferation of
these invaders where intervention can be effective, but unfortunately it is a
very small window of opportunity," Tschinkel said. The organization
is passing the booklet, titled "Stopping the Spread" to state
legislators and agency heads in an attempt to get them to recognize the
seriousness and scale of the issue.
Copyright © 2003 Environmental
News Service - ENS All rights reserved.
Related Article,
April 7, 2003
Press
Release: Conservancy Sounds the Alarm About Invasive Species Crisis
Related Link,
Florida’s
Agriculture Commissioner Charles Bronson calls for decisive, quick action.
Editorial: Bush getting bad advice on Everglades legislation
Gov. Bush and his chief environmental regulator
either don't understand the behind-the-scenes manipulations by the sugar
industry that threaten Everglades cleanup and restoration, or they are part of
the industry's efforts to gut rules and delay restoration indefinitely. The governor told The Miami Herald this week that U.S. Reps. Clay Shaw,
R-Fort Lauderdale, and Porter Goss, R-Sanibel, "need to be briefed" to
understand that industry-written changes to the 1994 Everglades Forever Act are
not a problem, even if the changes allow more pollution and a 20-year delay in
enforcing any water-quality standard. The Florida House Natural Resources
Committee approved the amendments this week; a Senate panel considers them next
week. Gov. Bush, however, is the one who needs the briefing.
Copyright © 2003
Palm
Beach Post All rights reserved.
Federal Everglades money threatened
The congressmen's warning this week could not
have been more blunt: Florida can kiss $4 billion in federal money goodbye if
the state's lawmakers persist with a rewrite of its Everglades cleanup law.
The four Democratic congressmen's letter to U.S. Interior Secretary Gale Norton
and the White House upped the stakes in what has become a bipartisan outcry over
state legislation that environmentalists insist would weaken and delay the
cleanup. The four, including U.S. Rep. Peter Deutsch of Pembroke Pines and
Jim Davis of Tampa, put their key sentence in boldface type: If the bill passes,
"the U.S. Congress will not appropriate funds" for a larger,
state-federal $8.4 billion Everglades restoration project. Norton's staff
is still studying the legislation and the congressmen's objections, spokesman
Hugh Vickery said Thursday. The White House environmental office failed to
respond to a request for comment.
Copyright © 2003 Palm
Beach Post All rights reserved.
Letter to the Editor: Stalling Everglades cleanup for 20 years will make it moot
I was outraged as I read the April 3 article
"20-year delay sought for Everglades cleanup law." It makes me sick to
see the work of the past 30 years being destroyed by Gov. Bush and his
administration. All the state needs to do is to make sugar farmers do what
other farmers are required to do, which is on-site retention of water polluted
with phosphorus and pesticides. This was first suggested more than 30 years ago,
but the sugar interests were exempted. On-site retention requires farmers
to take a portion of their land to build reservoirs to recycle water off the
cropland and into the retention ponds. In dry times, the retention ponds are
available to provide irrigation. This keeps the overly enriched and
pesticide-laden water out of the Everglades and out of state waters. When
the Everglades Forever Act passed in 1994, I thought it was a stall so the sugar
farms could conduct business as usual.
Copyright © 2003 Palm
Beach Post All rights reserved.
10-April-03
Business: U.S. Left Out of Emissions Trading
During negotiations over the Kyoto Protocol, the
United States preached the importance of market solutions to reduce greenhouse
gas emissions. Few countries listened. Now, with the Americans no longer
at the table, the former free-market opposition has taken over the pulpit.
Canada ratified the treaty in December, meaning the plan to reduce greenhouse
gases is just one nation shy of becoming law in more than 100 countries. And the
heart of the treaty is an emissions-trading plan that closely resembles what the
United States originally proposed. "When Bush pulled out in the
cavalier way he did, he galvanized everyone around the world to make it
work," said David Doniger, a former Kyoto treaty negotiator under President
Bill Clinton and now policy director of the Climate Center at the Natural
Resources Defense Council. "The system is made in America, and the
Americans aren't part of it." Other countries see opportunity in
America's retreat.
Copyright © 2003
NY Times
online All rights reserved.
Editorial: Well-deserved awards
Wildlife Federation, Law Institute recognize Maggy
Hurchalla
Congratulations to former
Martin County Commissioner Maggy Hurchalla, honored last weekend by the National
Wildlife Federation for her efforts to improve the quality of life for both
humans and wildlife. Hurchalla was one of 12 persons recognized in Washington,
D.C., with the presentation of the prestigious National Conservation Achievement
Award. In addition, the Washington, D.C.-based Environmental Law Institute
has just selected Hurchalla — among eight outstanding conservationists
nationwide — to receive a 2003 National Wetlands Award. The award celebrates
exemplary contributions to the conservation and restoration of the nation's
wetlands. She and the other winners will be honored at a ceremony May 20 on
Capitol Hill.
Copyright © 2003
Stuart News
- TC Palm All rights reserved.
Related Article,
April 8, 2003
Hurchalla
receives national award Water managers store hope in underground well plan
Water managers will seek permission today to
begin drilling exploratory wells that could help determine the fate of a
critical -- and expensive -- component of the Everglades restoration. The
South Florida Water Management District governing board will consider a $2.4
million contract to drill four wells as part of $33 million in projects to
investigate whether the district's ambitious plan to store millions of gallons
of storm water underground will work. The wells would be drilled at Port
Mayaca and Moore Haven, near the Kissimmee River's entry to Lake Okeechobee and
on a former citrus grove near the Caloosahatchee River. The information
unearthed from the wells would augment the findings from an existing exploratory
well west of Boca Raton alongside the Hillsboro Canal.
Copyright © 2003 Sun-Sentinel
All rights reserved.
Panel extends 'Glades deadline
Despite warnings from Congress that the
partnership to restore the Everglades could be shattered, a state House
committee on Wednesday approved a bill giving a 20-year extension to the
deadline for cleaning up phosphorous pollution in the endangered marsh. The House Natural Resources Committee voted 16-1 to amend the
Everglades Forever Act, the landmark 1994 law that required the state to
reduce the phosphorous washing into the Everglades from farms and cities.
Phosphorous damages the Everglades by encouraging the growth of cattails and
other invasive plants that crowd out sawgrass, leaving little habitat
for snakes, birds, fish and frogs. The amendment would move the deadline for reducing phosphorous
to acceptable levels from 2006 to 2026. It would also place
restrictions on the expansion of treatment marshes on private land, although the
state's top environmental official says the state has enough land to
expand the marshes.
Copyright © 2003 Sun-Sentinel
All rights reserved.
Seminoles: Ousted leader can't run for council
Ousted Seminole Tribe of Florida chairman James Billie doesn't
live on a Seminole reservation and can't try to regain his position, the Tribal Council has ruled.
The council ruled Wednesday that Billie can vote in tribal
elections but can't run for any seat on the council because he does not live on
a Seminole reservation. The council said Billie lives in the
Glades County town of Moore Haven. Billie's attorney, Robert Saunooke, said he would fight the
ruling. Billie, who has sued the tribe demanding his immediate reinstatement,
had planned to run for chairman in the May 12 election. Saunooke said Billie has two homes at the Seminole's Big
Cypress reservation in the Everglades. The Seminoles also have reservations in Hollywood, Tampa, Immokalee, Fort Pierce and Brighton in
Glades County north of Moore Haven, according to the tribe's Web site.
Copyright © 2003 Herald
Tribune All rights reserved.
Everglades deadline extension advances
Environmentalists charged that a House panel
dealt a serious blow to Everglades restoration on Wednesday, and then
added insult to injury by signing off on controversial legislation that would
hamstring water managers in other parts of the state. Spurred by a powerful sugar lobby and the assurances of Gov.
Jeb Bush's top environmental regulator, the House Natural Resources
Committee voted 16-1 to approve a measure that would dramatically push back
deadlines for the final phase of phosphorus cleanup in the famed River of
Grass. Jack Seiler, D-Pompano Beach, was the holdout. Committee chairman Joseph
Spratt, R-Labelle, won support from
skeptical Democrats on the panel after softening an earlier version and
winning the resounding support of Department of Environmental Protection
Secretary David Struhs and the South Florida Water Management District.
Copyright © 2003 Palm
Beach Post All rights reserved.
House Panel OKs Bill Extending Deadline For Cleaning Glades
A sugar industry-backed bill is on the fast
track in the House, despite a letter from two Florida congressmen who say the
proposed law will endanger the state's partnership with the federal
government in restoring the Everglades. The House Natural Resources Committee passed the bill (PCB NR
03-01), which would extend the December 2006 deadline for reaching water
quality standards to 2026. The standards were established in the state's
landmark Everglades Forever Act. The bill is slated to go straight to the House floor. No
similar bill exists in the state Senate. The measure has the backing of Gov. Jeb Bush's administration.
Department of Environmental Protection Secretary David Struhs,
a Bush appointee, said it would be impossible to lower phosphorus levels
to the mandated 10 parts per billion in water entering the Everglades by
2006.
Copyright © 2003 Tampa
Tribune All rights reserved.
09-April-03
CALIFORNIA: PARK SERVICE REJECTS COAST PROPOSAL
In
a long-awaited study of the Gaviota Coast, the National Park Service said the 76
miles of seashore should not be a national park, despite its beauty, history and
bounty of plants and animals. Running north from Santa Barbara to the northern
tip of Vandenberg Air Force Base at Point Sal, the Gaviota Coast takes in half
of the remaining rural Southern California coast, and it is the "healthiest
remaining coastal ecosystem" in the region, the Park Service said. But the
agency added the area should not join the national system because of landowners'
opposition and the cost of acquiring the land and running a new park.
Copyright © 2003 NY
Times, AP online All rights reserved.
JOINT CONFERENCE ON THE SCIENCE AND RESTORATION EFFORTS OF
THE ECOSYSTEM SET FOR APRIL 13 - 18
Physical, biological and social scientists will gather with
Everglades natural resource managers for a Joint Conference on the Science and Restoration of the Greater Everglades and Florida Bay
Ecosystem - From Kissimmee to the Keys from April 13 - 18, 2003, at the Westin Innisbrook in Palm Harbor, Florida. This is the first time
that the Florida Bay and Adjacent Marine Systems Science Conference and the
Greater Everglades Ecosystem Restoration (GEER) Science Conference
have joined forces to provide a combined forum for the exchange of information among
scientists. Read
more...
Copyright © 2003
South Florida
Ecosystem Restoration Task Force All rights reserved.
South Florida Water Management District Awards Accela $5
Million Contract
Software Maker's Technology Selected to Manage, Protect, and
Preserve Area Water Supply
Accela, Inc., the leading provider of government
enterprise management solutions, announced today that the South Florida Water
Management District (SFWMD), in partnership with the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers, has selected Accela software to automate and track the land
acquisition activities involved with managing and maintaining the water supply
for 16 central and southern Florida counties. Accela Automation(TM), a Web
browser-based solution, will directly aid SFWMD in meeting the land acquisition
requirements set forth in the 30-year, $7.8 billion Comprehensive Everglades
Restoration Plan (CERP) and allow the District to effectively provide the land
required to protect and preserve the area's water supply and corresponding
ecosystem in a timely manner. Read
more . . .
Copyright © 2003 PR
Newswire All rights reserved.
South Florida Water Management District awards $5M software
deal
In partnership with the U.S. Army Corp. of
Engineers, the South Florida Water Management District has signed a $5 million
contract with Dublin, Calif.-based Accela Inc. The contract will bring new
software to the district that will automate and track its land acquisition
activities in the 16 central and southern Florida counties it covers. District officials will employee Accela Automation, the company's Web browser
software, to help meet the land acquisition requirements found in the 30-year,
$7.8 billion Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan, which encompasses seven
bodies of water within an 18,000-square-mile radius. The district already
uses some Accela software to join more than 20 of its offices, including those
in Orlando, Altamonte Springs, Osceola County and Winter Springs.
Copyright © 2003 Orlando
Business Journal All Rights Reserved.
Proposal could ease reins on developers
With strong support from builders, the state
Senate on Tuesday gave preliminary approval to a bill that could make it harder
for local governments to restrict the construction of condominium towers, office
buildings and other developments. The Senate approved an amendment to the
Bert J. Harris Jr. Private Property Rights Act that would clear the way for
property owners to sue local governments if the value of their land is
diminished by height restrictions, density limits or other land-use changes. The
bill (SB 1164 and HB 113) would remove local government's immunity from
lawsuits, known as sovereign immunity, for land-use decisions. The House has not
yet taken any action. The bill is backed by the Property Rights Coalition,
a group of builders, farmers and landowners. Dan Stengle, the group's attorney,
said the bill is designed to fix a glitch in the original law and that it won't
bring any major changes in the way local governments regulate development.
Copyright © 2003 Sun-Sentinel
All rights reserved.
08-April-03
Hurchalla receives national award
The former Martin County commissioner is recognized for her
work with environmental causes.
Former Martin County
Commissioner Maggy Hurchalla has long been known locally as a driving force
behind such environmental causes as restoring the St. Lucie River and Indian
River Lagoon. Now, that recognition has reached the national level. In Washington on Saturday, Hurchalla was one of 12 individuals and organizations
to receive the National Wildlife Federation's National Conservation Achievement
Award, which honors conservationists whose activities set an example for others
around the country. "I was with some very good company," said
Hurchalla. "It was a great bunch of people up there. They all care a lot."
Copyright © 2003
Stuart News -
TC Palm All rights reserved.
Related Article,
April 10, 2003
Editorial:
Well-deserved
awards
Bush: Sugar bill no Glades threat
Pollution standards weakened, state environmentalists
argue
Gov. Jeb Bush said Monday that two Republican
congressmen got it wrong when they warned state Republicans that a proposal under
consideration in the House could jeopardize the $8 billion
Everglades restoration effort. U.S. Reps. Porter Goss of Sanibel and Clay Shaw of Fort
Lauderdale cautioned Friday that a sugar industry-backed proposal being debated in the
state House of Representatives could put at risk a ''fragile partnership''
between Washington and Florida, which are splitting the tab for the
30-year cleanup project. But Bush on Monday suggested that the two congressmen ''need to
be briefed'' on the issue. Environmentalists have charged that the legislation would weaken
pollution standards, particularly one set by the landmark 1994 Everglades
Forever Act, which sought to cap phosphorus, a key ingredient in the
fertilizer used on farms and sugar cane fields.
Copyright © 2003 Miami
Herald All rights reserved.
07-April-03
Gorillas
and Chimps in Peril, Report Says
Gorillas and chimpanzees, the most common of the great apes and humanity's
closest relatives, are facing such severe threats from hunting and now from the
Ebola virus that they should immediately be declared "critically endangered,"
researchers say.The scientists, from a broad spectrum of research institutions
and conservation organizations, reported yesterday that ape populations in Gabon
and the Republic of Congo, home to 80 percent of the world's gorillas and most
of its chimpanzees, fell by more than half between 1983 and 2000. At that rate
of decline, the scientists said, the population of both gorillas and chimpanzees
would drop by another 80 percent in 33 years, about a generation and a half,
which would meet the World Conservation Union's criteria for upgrading their
status.
Copyright © 2003
NY Times
online All rights reserved.
Related Article,
April
11, 2003
Letter:
Threat of Extinction
Press Release: Conservancy Sounds the Alarm About Invasive Species Crisis
Florida’s problem of
out-of-control non-native plants and animals destroying native habitats and
species must be addressed immediately to optimize the state’s chances for
success, The Nature Conservancy said today. The Florida Chapter of the
international environmental group, through a booklet being distributed called
"Stopping the Spread," is alerting state legislators and agency heads
about the seriousness and scale of the invasive, non-native species problem. The
Conservancy is urging lawmakers to maintain environmental trust fund balances so
money is available to deal with the crisis. "Stopping the Spread"
recommends ways to stem the tide and reduce the destructive impacts caused by
predatory catfish, disease-carrying insects and smothering vines, to name a
few. "The problem of invasive, non-native species grows exponentially
worse each day. The time to act is now," said Vicki Tschinkel, Florida
Chapter director. Read
more . . .
Copyright © 2003
Florida
Chapter of The Nature Conservancy All rights reserved.
Related Article,
April 11, 2003
Invasive
Species Find Florida to Their Liking
Related Link,
Florida’s
Agriculture Commissioner Charles Bronson calls for decisive, quick action.
Take
Action!
Stop Compromise on Everglades Pollution Limit!
A cadre of highly paid lobbyists from the Sugar
Industry is pressing the legislature to pass a bill that would undermine a
landmark law [The Everglades Forever Act] that reduces pollution in America's
Everglades. Every day, parts of the River of Grass are being lost rapidly
to the effects of phosphorus. The pollution emerging from corporate farms in the
Everglades Agricultural Area is causing healthy Everglades marshes and sloughs
(supporting endangered species like Snail Kites) to convert into cattail choked
wasteland at a rate of between 2 and 9 acres per day. The proposed
legislation will: Delay restoration -- precluding any
discharge limits until 2026, Read
more . . .
Copyright © 2003 Audubon
Society All rights reserved.
Related Link,
No
Compromise on EVERGLADES Pollution Limit!
STOP
THE SUGAR INDUSTRY ATTACK ON EVERGLADES RESTORATION
New batch of environmental bills considered
Activists are more optimistic about this legislative
session than last year's.
A year ago Florida's environmental groups and
activists were outraged when lawmakers passed measures that limited citizen
opposition to development and made it easier to build toll roads. This year, environmentalists are venting over a proposal that
could delay pollution cleanup standards for the Everglades for 20 years. But
state lawmakers have also sponsored more than 100 bills that deal with
water, growth management and the environment. While some environmental activists grumble about what they
call a "piece- meal" effort to weaken various laws, others say they are more
optimistic about this session than last year's. "It doesn't appear that they are gunning for us as bad as last
year," said David Gluckman, a lobbyist for the Florida Wildlife
Federation.
Copyright © 2003 Gainesville Sun
All rights reserved.
Editorial:
Legislation To Savage The Everglades
Florida lawmakers at the command of agricultural interests are
seeking to sabotage the ambitious plan to rescue the Everglades. Legislation that would attempt to weaken water quality
standards and otherwise undermine the restoration program would result in the
continued destruction of the Everglades. It also could scuttle the state
and federal agreement to restore the River of Grass. Yet such measures are proceeding through the House and Senate,
and it is not entirely surprising. Among the lobbyists hired to push the
sugar industry's agenda are John Thrasher, former speaker of the House,
and Michael Corcoran, who is close to current Speaker Johnnie Byrd. Tallahassee insiders say Corcoran's friendship with Byrd has made
him the hottest lobbyist in the Capitol. The legislation in question would manipulate water quality
standards to allow a phosphorus level of 15 parts per billion, instead of the
10 ppb to which federal and state officials agreed.
Copyright © 2003 Tampa
Tribune All rights reserved
Area lands few ’Glades restoration bids
Bidding process difficult, time-consuming
Out of more than $246 million in Everglades restoration
contracts awarded so far, Southwest Florida companies wrangled four primary
contracts worth $6.4 million. That’s less than 3 percent of contracts bid out so far under
the district’s half of the $8 billion Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan.
The plan is a joint commitment by the state and federal
governments to save the River of Grass from the damaging effects of ditching and
diking some 50 years ago. The repairs are expected to take more than
30 years to complete. The reason more Southwest Florida companies aren’t getting
contracts is anyone’s guess, business leaders say. A district spokesman said many Southwest Florida companies
just aren’t applying for the contracts.
Copyright © 2003 News-Press
All rights reserved.
06-April-03
More Sea Turtles Washing Ashore
Sea turtles washed up in parts of Florida this
winter at triple the rate of an average year, with scientists speculating that
problems such as cold weather or red tide could be to blame. From Jan. 26
to mid-March, 159 turtles washed up sick or dead in an area that includes most
of Florida's Atlantic Coast, state officials said. That's three times more than
the average for that region during the last 10 years. Last year, 83 turtles
washed up in the same period. In the last two weeks, 40 turtles have
washed up from St. Johns to Brevard counties. "We're not sure what's
going on,'' said Tony Redlow, a research biologist with the Florida Marine
Research Institute in St. Petersburg. Redlow and other scientists said
part of the reason might be that this year's cold winter stressed some turtles.
But they are also investigating other factors, including the possibility of red
tide off the coast.
Copyright © 2003
Tampa
Tribune All rights reserved.
Editorial: Save the trust funds
If you care about the environment, fight back, contact
state legislators
The environment is under
attack in Tallahassee. Developers, special interests such as the sugar
industry, and Gov. Jeb Bush are looking to gut Everglades cleanup plans and
trust funds designed to ensure preservation of vital lands. Residents must
speak up. It's time to call on legislators to kill the proposals that could undo
more than 20 years of work in Florida. Pleading hard economic times, the
governor and House Speaker Johnnie Byrd have crafted a proposed budget (House
Bill 1793) which eliminates all trust funds established by the Legislature to
assure such things as the Sadowski Affordable Housing Trust Fund, the
Conservation and Recreational Lands Trust Fund, education trust funds, and many
others. The money is to be siphoned out of these funds and put into the state
general fund where it can be spent for any purpose.
Copyright © 2003 Stuart
News - TC Palm All rights reserved.
Everglades restoration in legislative limbo
Special interests at odds over new plan
State Rep. Greg Evers, R-Milton, held up a
plastic bottle of Zephyrhills natural spring water during a meeting of the
Florida House Committee on Natural Resources last Wednesday. The water in
the bottle contains more phosphorus pollution than the water coursing through
the Florida Everglades, he said. Yet the Everglades has become the biggest and
most expensive environmental restoration project in history. "How
clean are we trying to make it?" Evers asked. The natural resources
committee spent two days this week trying to answer that question. A final
answer won't come until next week, when the committee votes on a proposed bill
to ease up on the water quality standards and deadlines called for in the 1994
Everglades Forever Act. Environmentalists say the bill will let the state
government slide out of obligations to reach certain pollution limits.
Copyright © 2003 Sun-Herald
All rights reserved.
Opinion: Big Sugar: sweet and low
Big Sugar's mercenaries rolled into the capital
city last week with an awesome display of raw power. The Pentagon may have
abandoned Colin Powell's doctrine of overwhelming force, but not the sugar
industry. There were more than enough Gucci boots on the ground for an assault
on Tallahassee. Big Sugar's hired guns included two former speakers of the
Florida House, the former chief of staff to Gov. Bob Martinez (who also happened
to be a campaign strategist for Gov. Jeb Bush, a former chief of staff to Gov.
Lawton Chiles, a close political ally to current Senate President Jim King and
House Speaker Johnnie Byrd's close political confidant). Big Sugar (also
known, in political circles, as Big Sugar Daddy) had already softened up
resistance in the Legislature with $800,000 in political contributions to state
lawmakers. And last week, with an army of lobbyists in place, the industry began
its onslaught on the Everglades Forever Act.
Copyright © 2003 Miami
Herald All rights reserved.
Florida's natural treasure at risk
The $8.4 billion Everglades restoration plan that Congress
approved two years ago is not only about saving the wading bird and swamp grass depicted on a Florida commemorative coin design.
It’s about a water war on the southern tip of a peninsula that
will have three million more residents by 2020. The plan will determine whether residents find themselves in
competition for tap water with their neighbors. It will force
water managers hands: Will golf courses stay green in dry months or will tap water
come out when the faucet is turned on? It will provide fuel for the eco-tourism engine that propels South Florida — and determine
whether the engine sputters or cruises. The Everglades restoration plan is about playing politics,
spending taxpayer dollars and making history.
Copyright © 2003
News Press All rights reserved.
Everglades project dollars flow into SW Fla., too
Southwest Florida is not left out of the $8.4 billion
Everglades restoration plan. At least seven projects are planned for the region that
residents don’t typically associate with the Everglades. But it is a part of the Everglades ecosystem — and it’s not as
messed up yet as Florida’s east coast Everglades are. The huge federal-state restoration plan is pushing forward
with already identified projects for the west coast. Some are as
simple as punching holes under Tamiami Trail for better water flow, and some are as complex as building a massive reservoir and
underground storage wells along the Caloosahatchee River. At the same time the Everglades restoration plan is unfolding,
a $12 million document called the West Coast Feasibility Study is in
the works to create a blueprint for restoration solely in Southwest Florida.
Copyright © 2003
News Press All rights reserved.
Editorial: Everglades plan matters
Restoration project’s impact will be felt beyond River of
Grass
The huge Everglades restoration program is one of the biggest
public works projects in U.S. history, agreed to by the state and
federal governments in 2000 with enormous fanfare. So you’d figure that the plan is set, the issues settled, the
work ready to go. You’d be wrong, and you might miss the important opportunities coming this year for citizens to affect the way
this massive act of water management is actually carried out. Remarkably for such a large project, Everglades restoration is
still largely conceptual. The general ideas are in place. They can be reduced to the goal of saving enough of the water now being
drained off to sea to restore the Everglades system AND keep cities and farms well watered as southern Florida adds at least 3 million
more people by 2020.
Copyright © 2003 News
Press All rights reserved.
05-April-03
Paul's environmental budget lean
Rep on conservative side in budget battle
When the Florida House considered state Rep.
Jerry Paul's proposed budget for state environmental and agricultural programs
Friday, there was no debate. Some observers may find that remarkable,
considering the fact that Paul, as chairman of the House Subcommittee on
Agriculture and Environment Appropriations, crafted his budget to keep within
his fiscally conservative philosophy: Don't raise taxes -- prioritize needs
instead. And even though the Legislature is dominated by fellow
conservatives, there are some who challenge many of the leaner budget
proposals. Paul, R-Port Charlotte, feels the lack of controversy indicates
his colleagues fully understood his presentation of his committee's
budget. "It was the only category in the budget that did not receive
any opposition whatsoever on the floor," Paul said. "There was not
even any questions about it.
Copyright © 2003 Sun-Herald
All rights reserved.
House Republicans warned over Glades project
Two influential Republican congressmen warned
their state House counterparts Friday to back off a proposal they say could ruin
the nation's Everglades restoration project. State House Republicans began
work this week on a sugar-industry-backed proposal that environmentalists say
weakens pollution standards and puts off enforcement for another 20 years.
But U.S. Reps. Porter Goss of Sanibel and E. Clay Shaw of Fort Lauderdale
cautioned that the tinkering could jeopardize a ''fragile partnership'' between
Washington and Florida, which are splitting the tab for the 30-year, $8 billion
restoration effort. ''At this time, for the Legislature to offer changes
to existing Everglades law could be a fatal error,'' the two wrote to Rep.
Joseph Spratt, R-LaBelle, the chairman of the House Natural Resources Committee.
Copyright © 2003 Miami
Herald All rights reserved.
State can discharge treated waste water into Gulf, U.S.
says
Florida can discharge more than 500 million
gallons of treated waste water into the Gulf of Mexico to prevent pollutants
from overflowing from open-air storage at an abandoned fertilizer plant, federal
officials ruled. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency predicted that
continued heavy rains could soon cause a spill at the Piney Point Phosphates
plant near Tampa Bay if the water is left in earthen mounds at the factory.
A spill would flood local roads and pollute the bay with untreated waste water,
officials said. The acidic water could cause a massive fish kill, according to
environmental reports. That led the Florida Department of Environmental
Protection to ask for permission to treat the water and dump it into the Gulf.
Recent heavy rainfall and the impending rainy season forced the agencies to
consider the plan.
Copyright © 2003 Sun-Sentinel
All rights reserved.
State warned against easing pollution law
Legislators' attempts to rewrite a state
pollution law could be a "fatal error" for the $8.4 billion Everglades
restoration, two Florida congressmen warned Friday. A bill awaiting action
in the state House "could jeopardize the fragile partnership between
Washington and Tallahassee in dealing with the restoration of the Florida
Everglades," U.S. Reps. Clay Shaw, R-Fort Lauderdale, and Porter Goss,
R-Sanibel, wrote in a letter to a top state lawmaker Friday. The legislation
"could result in a reduction of federal dollars," they wrote. "At this time, for the legislature to offer changes to existing Everglades
law could be a fatal error," they added. Shaw and Goss sent the
letter to state Rep. Joe Spratt, R-LaBelle, chairman of a state House committee
considering a bill that environmentalists warn would weaken and postpone the
cleanup of farm and suburban runoff in the Everglades.
Copyright © 2003
Palm
Beach Post All rights reserved.
Editorial: Future of the Everglades depends on the governor
The late Gov. Lawton Chiles is remembered for
initiating the agreement that ended a lawsuit and was written into law as the
1994 Everglades Forever Act. It began a new era of cooperation between the state
and federal governments to preserve the Everglades. Because of the state's
sugar industry, Gov. Bush is at a crossroads. Will he be remembered as the
governor who essentially killed Everglades cleanup and restoration, or will he
resist industry lobbying and keep his commitment to the state's unique
ecosystem? If he wants to help the Everglades, the governor will tell the
Legislature that he won't support sugar growers' efforts to rewrite the
Everglades Forever Act, which governs the $867 million cleanup. He also will
insist that the Legislature make no changes without consulting the federal
agencies that are the state's partners in restoring the Everglades.
Copyright © 2003
Palm
Beach Post All rights reserved.
Everglades restoration
To garner the wide support needed to get federal
funding for the Everglades restoration effort, the various agencies pushing the project kept their goal as simple as possible: "getting the
water right." As work begins on the planning and implementation of the
unprecedented $7.8 billion project, the scientists involved need more specific
goals in order to make sure even the simplest goal of restoring water
flow is met, according to a study released late this week. The Committee on Restoration of the Greater Everglades
Ecosystem, which has been charged with analyzing the science of the project,
worked several years and spoke with hundreds of scientists planning
the best way to take on the almost 70 projects involved in the Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan.
The chairwoman of the subcommittee that oversaw the study
urged the Army Corps of Engineers, the Interior Department and the South Florida
Water Management District to provide more direction to ensure
the project is a success.
Copyright © 2003 Naples
News All rights reserved.
Related Link,
Committee
on Restoration of the Greater Everglades Ecosystem - CROGEE
04-April-03
Rare Charges Filed in Wounding of Sea Lion
Two California men, sport-fishing company and
charter boat it owns are charged under Marine Mammal Protection Act in Nov 2002
shooting of sea lion pup that became known as Arrow for the crossbow bolt found
protruding from its neck; about 50 sea lions are found shot each year along
coast of Calif; Arrow has been treated and released back into wild (M) In a rare
prosecution under the Marine Mammal Protection Act, two California men, a
sport-fishing company and a charter boat it owns were charged today in the
November 2002 shooting of a sea lion pup that became known as Arrow for the
crossbow bolt found protruding from its neck. The two, Matthew Lyon, 38,
of Morro Bay, and Anthony Hill, 18, of San Diego, were charged with taking and
attempting to kill a protected marine mammal. Also charged were the charter
vessel Pacific Queen and the ship's owner, Cavanaugh Sportfishing Inc. of San
Diego.
Copyright © 2003 NY
Times online All rights reserved.
House's handling of
Glades plan draws cries from environmentalists
By Lesley Clark
The Miami Herald
House Republicans appear intent on
weakening the intricate rules that shepherd cleanup of the Everglades, despite
cries from environmentalists. After two days of testimony on a sugar
industry-backed proposal that would soften environmental regulations, the
chairman of the House Natural Resources Committee said he would spend the
weekend hammering out a new proposal for the committee to take up next week.
''I believe by the time we get through, most of your concerns will be
answered,'' Rep. Joseph Spratt, R-LaBelle, told the crowd of industry
lobbyists and environmentalists Thursday. But environmental groups said they
have had little say thus far into the plan, which they say could endanger
congressional support for a larger, $8 billion Everglades restoration project
and prompt a round of lawsuits similar to the one that forced the cleanup in
the first place. ''We're headed for a train wreck,'' Charles Lee, senior vice
president of Audubon of Florida, said about the bill, which would lessen
pollution standards and give regulators another 20 years to enforce
compliance. However, the sugar industry, which has hired a bevy of lobbyists,
said environmentalists are overreacting and the bill only updates the 1994
Everglades Forever Act, spelling out standards that work. ''This would let us
move forward based on science, and based on when it makes sense,'' said Philip
Parsons, attorney for the Florida Sugarcane League. ``It provides a way for us
to manage this enterprise.'' Read
more...
03-April-03
Saving The Everglades

Tom Feilden takes an airboat ride through
the Everglades, America's wettest wilderness
It’s going to cost eight billion dollars.
It’s the biggest, most expensive environmental scheme ever attempted. And it
might just fail. For a hundred and fifty years mankind has mounted a
relentless assault on the Everglades, America’s wettest wilderness. This home
to alligators, the rare Florida Panther and the last native people in
the eastern States has seen its freshwater poisoned or stolen, its marshes
drained and every inch of dry land developed. It has become a potent symbol of
man’s inability to live alongside nature, a rallying point for all shades of
environmentalist. But there now seems to be hope for this abused landscape. The Bush brothers -
Florida Governor, Jeb and President George W. have agreed to fund a hugely
ambitious restoration programme. The aim is to return what remains of the
Everglades to its natural state. Read
more . . .
Copyright © 2003
British
Broadcasting Company - BBC Radio All rights reserved.
Related Links,
Science:
Costing the Earth
The
Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan
The
US Army Corps of Engineers
The
Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary
WWF
International
The
South Florida Water Management District
BBCi
Nature: Environment
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external websites
World Wildlife Fund
Visit
the Everglades (1:36 minutes) *
* Real Player 8 or higher required
Eco Awards: Wetting our destruction
posted September 12, 1997
We drink it, we bathe in it, we’re surrounded by it. From
Kissimmee to the Keys, water is Florida’s most important resource. So, how come
we treat it like dirt?
The sun is out and the sky is clear. That
constant breeze off the ocean keeps our urban skyline (on most days) from
looking brown and hazy. People love it here. It really is beautiful. But
look a little closer. That beauty on the outside masks deterioration on
the inside, from our plant life and ocean to our underground freshwater supply
and coral reefs. And when the impact of humans shows up in one place, it is
likely to show up in another, thanks to the unique ecosystem of Florida in which
everything is connected. "The environment is a set of dominoes - you
knock one over, you knock them all over," says **XS Eco Person of the Year
Ken Weemhoff, a science teacher and self-proclaimed Florida boy. Read
more . . .
Copyright © 1997 City
Links All rights reserved.
Interior Deputy Attended Oil Lease Talks
The No. 2 official in the U.S. Interior
Department participated in meetings on oil and gas leases involving companies
that were clients of a lobbying firm he had worked for previously.
Clients of Deputy Interior Secretary J. Steven Griles' former
lobbying firm had huge financial stakes in the leases off Florida and California.
Some of the meetings involving Griles figured in a dispute
that ended with the Bush administration paying $46 million to Chevron USA Inc.
to abandon a natural gas drilling project in the Gulf of Mexico,
just 30 miles from Florida beaches. Before the Senate confirmed Griles in 2001, he promised to
refrain for a year from involvement in any issue in which one of his former
clients or employers had a financial interest.
Though Griles is listed as a lobbyist for Chevron in reports
filed with Congress by his firm, he says he did no personal lobbying for the
company. Read More...
Copyright © 2003 Yahoo
news
All rights reserved.
Related Links,
Interior
Reaches Agreement to Acquire Mineral Rights in Everglades,
Settles
Litigation on Offshore Oil and Gas Leases in Destin Dome
California Overview:
Setting the
Pace as California's Leading Oil Producer
Everglades cleanup could be delayed
Legislation seeks to stretch the deadline by 20 years
for reducing phosphorus flowing into the Everglades.

For decades,
phosphorus flowed into the
Everglades from Sugar
cane factories, such
as the U.S. Sugar Corp. plant in Clewiston.
U.S. Sugar vice president Robert Coker said
the bill should be
acceptable because it does
not change the phosphorus limit.
Under political pressure to back off a cleanup
plan for the Everglades, Florida's top environmental regulator told state
lawmakers Wednesday that scrubbing a pollutant out of South
Florida's water should be delayed for 20 years. David
Struhs, secretary of the state Department of
Environmental Regulation, said afterward the delay simply acknowledges "political reality."
Environmental activists and the attorney for an American
Indian tribe say that would bog down the $8-billion Everglades restoration in
lawsuits and erode congressional support for restoration. Yet they held out
little hope of stopping it. "It's as greased as anything I've ever seen," said Eric Draper
of Audubon of Florida.
Copyright © 2003 St.
Petersburg Times All rights reserved.
'Glades protection law's fate debated
As a House committee opened debate Wednesday on revising a
landmark Everglades protection law, it became clear that the sugar industry was leading the charge.
A spokesman for U.S. Sugar said the company's representatives
had met repeatedly with the chairman of the House Natural Resources committee to push their proposed revision of the Everglades
Forever Act. The chairman refused to meet with the Florida Audubon Society, according to one of its lobbyists. And David
Struhs, secretary
of the Florida Department of Environmental Protection, told the committee he
hadn't even read the bill. U.S. Sugar Corp., Flo-Sun Inc. and other growers are
attempting to persuade the state Legislature to amend the law intended to reduce
harmful agricultural runoff into the sawgrass marshes.
Copyright © 2003 Sun-Sentinel
All rights reserved.
20-year delay sought for Everglades cleanup
Gov. Jeb Bush's top environmental adviser
Wednesday called for a 20-year delay in enforcing pollution limits in the
Everglades. Environmental Protection Secretary David Struhs said he's
dealing with a scientific reality: The current law says the water district must
make sure that all water entering the Everglades is clean by Dec. 31,
2006, but scientists are still trying to figure out how to accomplish that.
Struhs called for changing the law so that the South Florida
Water Management District wouldn't have to meet any specific limit until 2026.
Meanwhile, water managers would have to carry out a $450
million plan for making the Everglades steadily cleaner. "What we want the water management district to do is stay
focused on the plan," Struhs said.
Copyright © 2003 Palm
Beach Post All rights reserved.
Letter to the
Editor: Florida Chamber: Water bill doesn't remove public control
The Florida Chamber of Commerce strongly disagrees with much
of the information in the March 24 editorial "Let public keep control over the
public's water" and wishes to set the record straight.
The Post states that a bill making its way through the Florida
House, HB 1005, would "lead to private ownership of the state's public water
supply." Nothing in this bill addresses ownership of water.
The editorial also suggests that this legislation would "jeopardize Everglades
restoration." Nothing could be further from the truth.
The bill includes language, excerpted from federal law (the
Water Resources Development Act of 2000, which authorized Everglades
restoration), that strengthens the state's commitment to reserving water for
the environment under the Everglades project. The Post also inaccurately claims
that this bill would "make treated wastewater a private
resource."
Copyright © 2003 Palm
Beach Post All rights reserved.
National Briefing: South
FLORIDA: EVERGLADES WATER PLAN
A scientific panel, in a study requested by
the Interior Department, concluded that an ambitious federal plan to restore
natural water flows to the Everglades needed to be more carefully integrated
with monitoring of the ailing ecosystem. Otherwise, it will be impossible to
determine if the billions of dollars that will be spent to store excess summer
rainwater and supply it to the Everglades in dry times is having a beneficial
effect. The plan also needs to account more carefully for rising sea levels and
other changes brought on by global warming, said the panel, which was convened
by the National Academies.
Copyright © 2003 NY
Times online All rights reserved.
House panel working on
Glades restoration
By David Rowse, Associated Press
The Miami Herald
A nearly 20-year-old fight over how to
clean up the Everglades has new life in the Legislature with the sugar industry
and environmentalists clashing over details on how to cleanse the fragile
ecosystem of farm runoff. The fight involves an effort to change Florida's
landmark Everglades Forever Act of 1994, which forced the state to clean up the
massive South Florida ecosystem. Since then, the state has built water treatment
areas adjacent to the Everglades. Those treatment areas include vegetation that
soaks pollutants out of the water before it is discharged into the Everglades
and it has worked well by most accounts. Congress and Florida have embarked on a
30-year, $8 billion project to restore the Everglades' natural water flows from
Lake Okeechobee to Florida Bay, halt its degradation and ensure enough water
goes to agriculture and urban needs. The original 1994 act said that by 2003 the
state had to decide on numeric limits for the concentration of phosphorus
allowed in the water, which has brought the issue into focus again.
Environmentalists and the sugar industry disagree on the limits. The House
Natural Resources Committee is drafting a bill to put into law the technical
details about how much phosphorus must be removed before water is released into
the Everglades. Read
more...
02-April-03
Everglades pollution bill angers activists
A shaky, 9-year legal truce over the Everglades
is falling apart, environmentalists said Tuesday as lawmakers unveiled a bill
that would relax the project's pollution limits and its 2006
deadline. The sugar industry is championing the bill, which it says
would safeguard the cleanup from lawsuits and keep the Everglades' health
improving during the next 23 years.
Both sides portrayed themselves as defenders of the Everglades
Forever Act, the 1994 law in which the state approved a 12-year program for
cleansing the great marsh. That law drew harsh criticism at
the time from many environmentalists, who said it would cleanse
phosphorus-tainted runoff too slowly and let sugar-growers escape most of the
cost. "That is the height of arrogance," said Audubon of Florida
lobbyist Charles Lee, who has said for weeks that the bill was coming. And it won't work, said David Guest, Florida head of the
environmental group EarthJustice, warning of federal lawsuits if the bill
passes.
Copyright © 2003 Palm
Beach Post All rights reserved.
EDITORIAL: Water legislation
suspect
Elimination of reservations would harm environment
Florida gold isn’t sunshine or even orange
juice, it’s water, and no one knows it better than Jim Garner. He probably
knows as much or more about the politics of water and how to make money from it
as anyone in the state. So when you find out he’s behind a legislative
effort that has anything to do with water, look closely and hang onto your
wallet. Most recently the Fort Myers lawyer and former member of the board
of the South Florida Water Management District was identified as the man behind
a bill that would eliminate water reservations, a way to set aside water to
protect fish, wildlife or public health or safety. Garner said he got the
bill introduced to “get attention” and draw people to the table to debate
the uses of reserved water. Maybe.
Copyright © 2003 News
Press All rights reserved.
Pipeline Company to Pay $34 Million for Spills
The government announced today that an
Atlanta-based pipeline company would pay $34 million in fines under the Clean
Water Act, the largest civil penalty ever paid by a company in the 32-year
history of the Environmental Protection Agency. The Colonial Pipeline
Company, which owns a 5,500-mile underground pipeline that stretches from Texas
to New York City, was charged in November 2000 with gross negligence that
contributed to seven spills that released a total of 1.45 million gallons of
oil. The largest, which took place in South Carolina in 1996, spilled
almost a million gallons that traveled 34 miles down the Reedy River and killed
35,000 fish. The company paid a $7 million criminal fine in 1999. "There is a price to being a consistent violator," said Thomas L.
Sansonetti, the assistant attorney general for the environment division at the
Justice Department.
Copyright © 2003
NY Times
online All rights reserved.
01-April-03
Advocate - Florida Conservation Network News
Breaking News - Disaster Everglades Bill proposed in Florida
House
In an attempt to
circumvent the Everglades Forever Act and a proposed Everglades pollution limit,
the Sugar industry has duped legislators into introducing a lobbyist crafted
bill that will throw back efforts to restore the Everglades. Known as Proposed
Committee Bill NR 03 (PCB NR 03), the devious bill is being heard by the House
Natural Resources Committee, Wednesday, April 2. The bill would do five
major things to harm the Everglades: Delay the
Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan, Extend an unfair
property tax to Florida property owners, Adopt a dirtier
Everglades pollution standard than proposed by the state!, Rule out new
pollution treatment areas even if backed by science, and Bypass the 1996 voter
approved constitution amendment that clearly says, those who pollute the
Everglades should pay to clean up the Everglades. Read
more . . .
Copyright © 2003 Audubon
of Florida All rights reserved.
Related Link,
Advocate
- Florida Conservation Network News
Environmentalists leery of lobbyists recently hired by
state's sugar industry
Florida's sugar industry is hiring high-powered
lobbyists and preparing to push legislation that environmentalists charge would
severely set back a years long effort to restore the Everglades. According
to environmentalists who have seen draft copies of the legislation, the proposal
would weaken pollution standards, particularly one set by the landmark 1994
Everglades Forever Act, which sought to cap phosphorus, a key ingredient in the
fertilizer spread on sugar fields and farms. Charles Lee, senior vice
president of Audubon of Florida, said the proposal would water down the standard
and give the industry another 20 years to reduce pollution levels. ''This
is essentially the Sugar Forever Act,'' said Audubon lobbyist Eric Draper.
``This bill ensures that the sugar industry will be able to pollute the
Everglades until 2026."
Copyright © 2003 Miami
Herald All rights reserved.
Suit questions value of mine buyout
A Louisiana-based company wants a jury to
consider whether South Florida taxpayers paid too much for water managers' $139
million purchase of Loxahatchee rock mines. The inquiry is part of an
increasingly nasty legal muck-fight over the rights to oil, gas and other
minerals that may or may not lie beneath the mining land. If it continues,
the dispute could snarl water managers' plans to use the mines to store 10
billion gallons of water -- essential to central Palm Beach County's water
supply, flood control and the $8.4 billion Everglades restoration. The
fight pits Palm Beach Aggregates Inc., the Loxahatchee mining company that sold
the 900 acres to water managers in December, against Southern States Land &
Timber LLC, which owns mineral rights beneath the tracts. The miners want
almost all of the $45 million that water managers have paid so far for the land.
Copyright © 2003
Palm
Beach Post All rights reserved.
Big Sugar takes aim at state plan to reduce
agricultural pollution
Sugar industry targets cleanup
Backed by a lobbying team, the sugar industry has
begun to chip away at Florida's plan for reducing agricultural pollution in the
Everglades. U.S. Sugar Corp., Flo-Sun Inc. and other sugar growers have
persuaded House leaders to introduce a bill that could curtail the state's
efforts to cut phosphorous runoff from the sugar farms south of Lake Okeechobee.
Among the industry's lobbyists are two former House speakers and the former
chiefs of staff to two Florida governors. The
bill, which will go for its first hearing Wednesday, has horrified
environmentalists. Under their interpretation, it would put off for 20 years the
deadline for reducing phosphorous, a major threat to the Everglades. They say it
would ultimately allow 50 percent more phosphorous into the Everglades.
Copyright © 2003 Sun-Sentinel
All rights reserved.
Opinion: Florida lawmakers are letting lobbyists set the agenda
Every now and then in Tallahassee, a small sleazy
moment occurs that exemplifies the disdain of some lawmakers for the citizens
they're supposed to represent. Recently, a bill was submitted that would
repeal a law allowing the state to reserve groundwater for enhancing the
environment. Though the measure is almost never used, builders and developers
fear that it might someday limit their extravagant ambitions. Enter one
Baxter Troutman. Though his name sounds like it belongs in a Kurt Vonnegut
novel, Troutman is a freshman Republican legislator from Winter Park. He's also
an heir to a citrus fortune and a cousin of former Secretary of State Katherine
Harris. No DNA testing is necessary. On March 19, Rep. Troutman presented
his repeal of the groundwater bill to a House committee for preliminary
approval. Though the outcome was never in doubt, fellow lawmakers went through
the drill of asking a few simple questions.
Copyright © 2003
Tallahassee
Democrat / Associated Press All rights reserved.
Doing Business With an Environmental Bent
THE word "environmentalist" does not
roll easily out of Roger Ullman's mouth. He enunciates each syllable. It is a
pleasant if unfamiliar way to define himself. When he says it, even for the
second or third time, he sounds a little like a young contestant in a spelling
bee. "I am still trying to get used to it," he
acknowledges. Mr. Ullman, 42, with a degree from the Harvard Business
School and a career spent in international investment banking, including many
years as a banker in the developing world, left his job as a managing director
of investment banking at Merrill Lynch last year. He began work, at a much
reduced salary, for the recently created New York chapter of Environmental
Entrepreneurs, also known as E2, a small nationwide environmental group made up
of about 400 business executives.
Copyright © 2003
NY Times
online All rights reserved.
The Copper Mine Ran Through It: Tales of a River's Rescue

Tom Bauer
The Clark Fork joining the Blackfoot River
just above Milltown Dam in a drawdown
in 2001. The dam is the last stop for a
toxic stew.
When the talk here turns to fishing, as it often
does, it is usually about the Blackfoot River, which meanders out of
snow-mottled mountains to the north and was affectionately portrayed in "A
River Runs Through It" by Norman Maclean. Not many people regard the
Clark Fork, which combines with the Blackfoot just out of town, the same way. In
a state known for pristine rivers, the Clark Fork has been poisoned by years of
mining the copper deposits that gave the area around Butte the nickname the
Richest Hill on Earth. The state, however, may recover the clean
free-flowing river that it lost more than 100 years ago, though just how clean
is a matter of dispute. After years of study, the Environmental Protection
Agency will soon release a $90 million to $100 million plan to reclaim the
waterway over the next 10 years or so.
Copyright © 2003
NY Times
online All rights reserved.
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