| Status On
February 28, 2003 the Sugar Cane Growers Cooperative of Florida filed
suit against the Department of Environmental Protection
in an attempt to
keep the statutory default standard of 10 ppb for
phosphorus pollution
entering the Everglades Protection Area from
automatically becoming law
on
December 31, 2003.
The Sugar Cane Growers argued that a the default
standard, without the
"moderating" provisions envisioned in the proposed ERC
rule, would cause
them irreparable harm. The ERC crafted proposed rule
made an absolute
joke
of the pollution standard by delaying real pollution
abatement for
years.
On August 7, 2003, the Miccosukee Tribe of Indians, in
concert with
Friends
of the Everglades, filed an administrative challenge to
the ERC rule.
Audubon of Florida, the National Audubon Society, the
Everglades
Foundation,
Inc., and Florida Wildlife Federation quickly filed suit
as well. And
though
those groups settled out in November, the Tribe and
Friends stayed and
mounted a grueling four week trial, delaying a
determination on the
challenge until after the December 31, 2003 deadline has
passed.
In December a Circuit Court Judge threw out the Sugar
Cane Growers
lawsuit
as premature but granted leave to amend or refile.
As a result of the Miccosukee Indians and Friends of
the Everglades
persistence, the Everglades saw the default standard come
into effect in
2004 - a 10 ppb standard which is truly protective of the
flora and
fauna as
contemplated, and promised, by the State and other
parties over a decade
ago. A determination in the administrative challenge is
still sometime
off
but the Sugar Cane Growers have quietly refiled their
lawsuit. |
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