©  Tampa Tribune, 2003

U.S. House relaxes conditions for Everlgades funding.
This dam is designed to help maintain the flow of water through the Everglades. Changes made in the U.S. House on Wednesday weakened the link between federal funding and the pollution cleanup timetable in the Glades.


 
18-July-03

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31-July-03

Everglades restoration group won't abolish team
By Robert P. King
© Palm Beach Post
A panel of state and federal scientists will get a higher profile and clearer goals instead of being abolished, a task force overseeing the Everglades restoration decided Wednesday. South Florida water managers had suggested dissolving the Science Coordination Team, arguing it would be more efficient to transfer its duties to a separate scientific committee that also oversees the $8.4 billion restoration. But environmentalists, including Sierra Club national President Larry Fahn, argued that the team plays a needed role by looking at broad questions about South Florida's environment.  Read more

Front group for big tobacco fights Riley
Citizens for a Sound Economy refuses to make public a list of its membership
By Robert A. Martin
© Montgomery Independent
Citizens for a Sound Economy (CSE) touts itself as a grass roots organization dedicated to help consumers. It claims to have over 7,000 members in Alabama and 280,000 nationwide. But last week when The Independent asked the group to prove it had a membership of 7,000 in Alabama by showing us a list of its dues-paying members, CSE refused to provide a list. In reality CSE is a shill organization for big tobacco and other huge multi-national corporations. Since one of the planks in Governor Bob Riley's tax and accountability package levies an additional tax on cigarettes, it isn't difficult to determine where CSE is getting the funds to help fight the governor's package. In 1998 alone the tobacco industry gave CSE $1.1 million. It was no surprise that this was a time when CSE was opposing new tobacco taxes.
Read more

 

30-July-03

Dishing Out Florida's Water: A Challenge For The Future
By Neil Johnson
© Tampa Tribune
TAMPA - It could come to this someday as water management districts wrestle with how to slice a limited pie of the state's water resources. Who should get a permit to pump more water? The people filling a new subdivision or a farmer who grows crops? It hasn't come to that for the Southwest Florida Water Management District, though governing board members have discussed what will happen when competing requests for permits surface. They don't have an answer. But seeing this on the horizon, the state Department of Agriculture & Consumer Services spent the past two years crafting an agricultural water policy.  Read more

State Watering Rules May Be Lifted In August
By Neil Johnson
© Tampa Tribune
BROOKSVILLE - The state's toughest watering rules could be lifted by the end of next month, meaning a return to sprinkling twice a week for residents of Pasco, Hillsborough and Pinellas counties. Officials at the Southwest Florida Water Management District said Tuesday that lakes and wetlands are almost back to levels they were at before Swiftmud imposed regulations limiting residents from Levy to Charlotte counties to watering only once a week. As the state recovered from the effects of a three-year drought, restrictions in other counties were eased to twice a week watering, except for the Tampa Bay area. But that could end when Swiftmud next meets, in late August.  Read more

Land sale signals new day for sleepy fishing town
Change is coming for little Carrabelle after developer St. Joe Co. successfully bids for 48 acres of waterfront land.
By Julie Hauserman
© St. Petersburg Times
TALLAHASSEE - St. Joe Co., which is developing vast tracts in North Florida, was the only bidder Tuesday for a valuable piece of public waterfront that the state put up for auction. The state Department of Environmental Protection put the 48-acre parcel up for a minimum bid of $6.7-million, saying it wasn't needed for conservation. St. Joe submitted a sealed bid of $6.8-million, said Kathalyn Gaither, spokeswoman for the state Department of Environmental Protection. St. Joe officials did not return phone calls seeking comment on the company's plans for the land, which has been publicly owned or 18 years. Gov. Jeb Bush and the Cabinet will likely approve the sale in September, Gaither said.  Read more

Commissioners OK plan that could start handover of Estates roads
By Eric Staats
© Naples Daily News


Al Perkins, a 15-year resident of Golden Gate Estates, tells members of the Collier County Commission why he is against turning over roads in Southern Golden Gate Estates for Everglades restoration, at the commissioner's meeting Tuesday at the Collier County Government Center in Naples. Gary Coronado/Staff


In front of a room of skeptical sportsmen, Collier County commissioners took a first step Tuesday to clear the way for an Everglades restoration project in the county's rural area. Commissioners voted 4-1 to approve an agreement with water managers and the Florida Cabinet that could lead to the county turning over road easements that threaten to hold up restoration of 55,000 acres in Southern Golden Gate Estates. The next step is a public hearing and possible vote within 90 days on the roads question, which has set off a backlash from ATV riders and swamp buggy enthusiasts who for decades have used the mostly abandoned subdivision south of Interstate 75 for fun.  Read more

Water district warned FGCU
Manager say they told university it needed permit
By Pamela Smith Hayford
© Ft. Myers News-Press


Construction continues Monday on an Olympic-sized swimming pool at Florida Gulf Coast University. The construction of the aquatic center made necessary a dewatering program for which FGCU is now under fire from the South Florida Water Management District. STEPHEN HAYFORD/news-press.com


FGCU officials received two warnings in June from water managers that a permit was needed before the school could dewater land to accommodate its new aquatics center, records show. But for three months the university has pumped tens of millions gallons of water and still has not applied for a permit - despite last week's notice that the South Florida Water Management District had launched an investigation. Jack Fenwick, director of facilities planning at Florida Gulf Coast University, said he wasn't aware the school needed a dewatering permit and that now FGCU is working on an application.  Read more

University doesn't live its values
FGCU’s disregard for environment deeply disturbing
Editorial
© Ft. Myers News-Press
Florida Gulf Coast University officials, who promote their institution’s environmental credentials, are under fire again for what critics say is an offense against nature. This sort of thing is getting old, and calls into question once again the seriousness of FGCU’s commitment as an institution to the environment: Will FGCU practice the values its faculty teaches? The university has done some valuable restoration work at its site, which was infested with melaleuca and other exotic vegetation. It is building an impressive new environmental center, and more than half the campus is in preserved wetlands. But its plans to put a marine lab on largely undeveloped Lovers Key — plans since abandoned — and its support for a developer who once wanted increased density for housing in a water resource area near the university have drawn fire.  Read more

Referendum Idea Misguided
Editorial
© Sun-Sentinel
Even well-informed and well-intentioned government "reformers" sometimes do better at identifying problems than at suggesting proper solutions. Case in point: a committee seeking 489,000 voter signatures on petitions to put a proposed Florida constitutional amendment on the Nov. 2, 2004, ballot. The amendment would let city or county voters have the final say at a referendum on any new local comprehensive land-use plans or plan amendments. The goal is to fix a genuine problem, but the amendment risks becoming the "Law of Unintended Consequences." It could confuse voters, further clog crowded ballots, boost housing costs and stall government decision-making.  Read more

Clear plans for better waterways
New deal to dredge Miami River should aid economy, environment
By Curtis Morgan
© The Miami Herald


CONTAMINATED: Wagner Creek is cited as the most polluted tributary to the Miami River. 
PETER ANDREW BOSCH/HERALD STAFF

For 70 years, the bottom of the Miami River has been slowly filling in with a soft ooze, making it shallower and shallower and nastier and nastier. For about half as long, people have been talking about cleaning it up. Today, all the talking, studying and planning finally become reality. In a ceremony scheduled for 10:30 a.m. at Lummus Park along the river, Miami-Dade County and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers will sign an agreement that will make a dredging project on the drawing board since the 1970s a done deal. ''This is the real thing,'' said David Miller, managing director of The Miami River Commission. ``Once this is signed, we really have a project that's really funded.''  Read more

 

29-July-03

A Fair Plan To Protect Manatees
Editorial
© Tampa Tribune
While it faced a nearly impossible charge, the local panel established to recommend manatee zones for Tampa Bay has developed a reasonable plan. Its recommendations, which would require slow boat speeds in areas frequented by the seagoing manatee, will undoubtedly anger some boaters. But the committee - which included boaters, conservationists, commercial fishermen and others who make their living off the bay - tried to be fair to boaters while also safeguarding the animal, which is frequently rammed by boats. The recommendations will go to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, which will have the final say on the regulations.  Read more

Water district wants science team disbanded
By Robert P. King
© Palm Beach Post
South Florida water managers want to abolish a state-federal science team that helps monitor the Everglades restoration, saying the move would trim the project's jungle of bureaucracy. The proposal would dissolve the Science Coordination Team, a six-year-old panel that has tackled such touchy issues as whether Tamiami Trail should be elevated to restore flowing water to Everglades National Park. The team is descended from an earlier science group that ignited a fury a decade ago by calling for a massive buyout of sugar farms. Some critics have accused the all-volunteer team of meddling in politics, and a federal audit in March said a lack of money and staff has kept it from accomplishing all its goals.
Read more

Letter to the Editor: Environmentalists' enemy is sugar, not lawmakers
By Robert E. Coker, Senior Vice President of U.S. Sugar Corp.
© Palm Beach Post
If The Palm Beach Post were correct in its false claim that Florida's governor and environmental agencies are "betraying" the Everglades ("Give Everglades guardian," July 14, and "Short Everglades leash," July 26), then Congress would be right to renege on its promise to finance the Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Project. Sugar farmers strongly disapprove of that outcome. The environmental lobbyists from Florida who went to Washington this spring and summer to stir up political mud prior to the 2004 presidential election may, however, get their way. Members of Congress may pull the plug, and who would blame them? The Washington Post's series on the project a year ago already had sowed considerable doubt on Capitol Hill about the project. Most representatives care more about the rivers, lakes and mountains in their own districts than they do about restoring
another million acres of wetlands in Florida to match the existing 1.5 million acres of pristine Everglades.  Read more

 

28-July-03

Letter to the Editor:  Progress made in Everglades, but Post's editorial ignores it
By Kenneth W. Wright, Chairman of the Environmental Regulation Commission
© Palm Beach Post
The Environmental Regulation Commission has adopted a stringent, science-based water-quality standard for the Everglades. The Post's July 14 editorial "Give Everglades guardian" ignored that fact and consistently disregards the unprecedented progress achieved during the past four years to restore water quality and flow to the "River of Grass." The 10-parts-per-billion water-quality standard for phosphorus is one of the first in the nation. More scientific research has gone into developing the water-quality standard than any other standard in Florida -- and perhaps even the nation.  Read more

Commission policy ... Collier should participate in Everglades restoration
Editorial
© Naples Daily News
Everglades restoration promises to help Collier County by cleansing an immense natural resource to the east. It is time for the county itself to get with the program and let state and federal officials get on with the work of restoring costly past mistakes — draining Southern Golden Gate Estates and installing roads for development. That means taking the final step of relinquishing easements for roads in return for replacement of recreational all-terrain vehicle access and assumption of maintenance of some stormwater canals elsewhere in the county. Granted, the canals will be kept clear with local taxes now going to the Big Cypress Basin board. But still, the flood control job will get done.  Read more

Collier set to consider Everglades restoration plan
By Denes Husty III
© Ft. Myers News-Press
Collier County commissioners Tuesday will consider approving a crucial part to the overall mammoth $4 billion state and federal Everglades Restoration project. The county’s part in helping restore water levels and water flow through what is known as the River of Grass, which takes up most of Florida south of Lake Okeechobee, centers on what is called South Golden Gate Estates. In the 1970s, developers built hundreds of miles of roads in the area — bounded by Road 951 to the west, U.S. 41 to the south, Alligator Alley to the North and the Picayune State Forest to the east — for a development that went bust and never was built.
Read more

Democracy is served by current system
By Gerald Broening
© Sun-Sentinel
The proposed state constitutional amendment to require land-use changes be approved by public referendum should be cause for great concern. While I share the fear of environmentalists, some elected officials and many citizens that the tremendous growth most planners see as inevitable might continue to result in the detrimental dilution of precious undeveloped land west of the urbanized coast, I see bad things ahead for us if such a radical measure is adopted.  Read more

27-July-03

State rejects rural Lee development proposal; suggests land swap
By Chad Gillis
© Naples Daily News
The state's top planning department is not real keen on the idea of transforming rural Lee County land set aside to control urban sprawl and allow for recharge into drinking water aquifers into residential golf course communities. At least that's what a letter from the Florida Department of Community Affairs says. The department sent a letter to Lee officials last week objecting to the latest attempt to permit previously unallowable development in the density reduction-groundwater resource area.  Read more

Commissioners could move to give up county roads in southern Estates
By Eric Staats
© Naples Daily News
A logjam over an Everglades restoration project in Collier County's back yard could shake loose Tuesday. After months of resistance, county commissioners are set to take a first step toward giving up its roads in Southern Golden Gate Estates, where restorers plan to tear out roads and plug canals that criss-cross the abandoned subdivision south of Interstate 75. The project, a state and federal partnership, would return natural water flows to the Ten Thousand Islands and help recharge the county's underground drinking water supply. County commissioners want more, though.  Read more

Letter to the Editor: WMD chairman should be honest about tax increase
By Gary R. Nikolits, Palm Beach County Property Appraiser, West Palm Beach
© Palm Beach Post
In his attempt to deflect criticism for raising property taxes, Nicholas J. Gutierrez Jr., chairman of the South Florida Water Management District Board, incorrectly blamed rising property taxes on county property appraisers. His July 20 letter "Higher values, not taxes, raising water district revenues" shows Mr. Gutierrez to be either ignorant of the property tax system or purposely trying to mislead taxpayers. Property appraisers are required by the state constitution to assess property at market value. The WMD, however, can raise, lower or have the same amount of tax revenue as in the previous year, depending on the tax rate it adopts. Tax bureaucrats such as Mr. Gutierrez can vote to lower their tax rate to offset any increase in tax revenue that would come from higher property values. Simply keeping the same tax rate as last year will increase tax revenue, which Mr. Gutierrez knows is the reason behind his agency's huge proposed tax increase.  Read more

Shortsighted on the seas
Runoff pollution and overfishing are chief reasons that Congress must enact regulations for protecting our oceans and coastal waters.
© St. Petersburg Times
In Florida, lawmakers put off a tough cleanup standard for the Everglades. In Virginia, the state refused to support a program to save Chesapeake Bay's declining blue crab population. In the Pacific Northwest, officials chose dams over wild salmon threatened with extinction. While those shortsighted decisions appear to be unrelated, they all signal the confused and ineffective effort to protect our nation's oceans and coastal waters. Contrary to the way we have treated the sea, it is not infinitely renewable. A comprehensive study by the Pew Oceans Commission released this summer reminds us that the threat to our nation's ocean realm is also a threat to our economy and way of life.  Read more

Developer champions 'Glades
By Buddy Nevins
© Sun-Sentinel
Developer Ronnie Bergeron grew up in a place where the only sounds were chirping and hissing and buzzing and the slap of his hand on the mosquito boring into his thigh. The Everglades. Dirt poor as a boy, he started with one $200 tractor to earn money mowing neighbors' pastures and fought his way to the top of Florida's business world. He's become one of South Florida's biggest landowners, one of Florida's biggest road builders, and owner of one of the biggest mining companies in the state, with thousands of acres of rock pits. He's played a leading role in turning hundreds of square miles of wetlands into homes, schools, shopping centers and warehouses throughout Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach counties.  Read more

 

26-July-03

Free-market conservatives aim to be heard
By Anthony Man
© Sun-Sentinel
John Hallman envisions a force of free-market, small-government conservatives rising from the generally liberal fields of Palm Beach County. "We want to become a voice as big as some of the groups on the left are, [such as] environmental groups that drive public policy through a large membership and making their voices heard," he said. Hallman's a long way from that goal, but months of organizing on behalf of Citizens for a Sound Economy have brought some success. The last local meeting attracted 40 people. The group is interested only in economic policy and does not touch issues such as gun control or abortion.  Read more

Short Everglades leash
© Palm Beach Post
A threat -- meet federal standards or lose federal money for Everglades cleanup and restoration -- has moved closer to an order after Florida's senators stepped in. Under new controls that Bob Graham and Bill Nelson have inserted into a spending bill, Florida would not receive federal money if the state fails to meet strict federal standards for clean water in the Everglades by a 2006 deadline. Federal agencies are unhappy about a new state law, which the sugar industry wrote, that extends the deadline to 2016. The feds also don't trust a state agency's approval of new rules that will allow higher amounts of polluting phosphorus into the Everglades than federal rules permit. So Sens. Graham and Nelson, both Democrats, changed the 2004 energy and water appropriations bill to require that the federal Environmental Protection Agency make sure that the Everglades restoration project meets water-quality standards set forth in a 1992 state-federal agreement. The agreement contains standards far more protective of the Everglades than those the state has approved.  Read more

$620,000 repair to Lake O dike just the beginning
By Robert P. King
© Palm Beach Post
It was the last thing engineers wanted to see in the encircling dike that protects 40,000 people around Lake Okeechobee: Dozens of leaks. The legacy of years of abnormally high water in the lake during the 1990s, the leaks forced the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to make emergency repairs last month to a 1-mile stretch of the Herbert Hoover Dike near South Bay. The dike was never in immediate danger of collapsing, the engineers say. "I wouldn't alarm people," said Karen Estock, Clewiston field operations chief for the corps, which has been patching leaks, sinkholes and other problems in the dike since 1993. "We're doing our job by fixing it as we can." But Estock added that the corps couldn't ignore the leaks, some of which were carrying sand along with the trickling water -- a sign that "you're losing part of your levee," she said.  Read more

Agencies back Hoeveler as 'Glades overseer
© Sun-Sentinel
The federal government and Florida Department of Environmental Protection have filed legal motions arguing that U.S. District Judge William Hoeveler should continue his watch over the Everglades cleanup. In their joint response, U.S. Justice Department and DEP officials opposed a June 4 motion from U.S. Sugar to have Hoeveler disqualified as a cleanup overseer. Sugar growers contend the judge has shown bias against their industry and acted improperly in recent remarks and court actions on the cleanup directive he has supervised since 1992.  Read more  
Judge Hoeveler News Page

Concerns grow with melaleuca tree program
By Milton D. Carrero Galarza
© Sun-Sentinel
Southwest Ranches · When David Longstaff first moved to his five-acre home 17 years ago, he walked around marveling at the melaleuca trees. "You saw all of that green and you really appreciated how great all of this is," he said. "You were here but you were far away from any place. You could see the owls and all the wild animals that you don't see anywhere else. It made me appreciate how much it was like the woods." Few share his nostalgia. Melaleuca trees are considered a pest in South Florida. Introduced in the early 1900s to dry up the land, they have taken over thousands of acres, usurping local vegetation and threatening the natural life of the Everglades. To counteract their spread, the U.S. Department of Agriculture has released a combination of cicada-like bugs as voracious as the invasive trees.  Read more

Building of spillway to raise water levels, aid wetland's wildlife
By Neil Santaniello
© Sun-Sentinel
In a bid to help a still-wild river -- and restore a huge block of north Palm Beach County wetlands -- a concrete-and-steel structure will start to rise from the C-18 Canal this summer. The spillway, a concrete arch holding two massive steel lift gates, will intrude visually on the green natural beauty of the Loxahatchee Slough. But its imposing form is a welcome one too. "I'm jumping up and down," said Joanne Davis, community planner for the environmental group 1000 Friends of Florida. The $2.5 million apparatus, three miles north of PGA Boulevard in the east leg of the C-18, will help wetland wildlife by lifting water levels in the slough, a sometimes over-drained 14,000-acre mix of cypress forest, pine flatwoods and wet prairie, said its installer, the South Florida Water Management District.  Read more

State rebukes Brooksville for promoting sprawl
The state is seeking more proof that the city can provide for a 999-home development.
By Dan DeWitt
© St. Petersburg Times
BROOKSVILLE - The state has slammed the city of Brooksville's plan to allow the 999-home Southern Hills Plantation development, saying it promotes sprawl and fails to account for the project's impact on roads. The Department of Community Affairs sent the letter in response to the City Council's vote in May to change its comprehensive plan to accommodate the Southern Hills Plantation. The change also allows future residential development on property owned by the developer, LandMar Group LLC. As many as 3,000 homes may be built on the
company's 1,600 acres, most of which was previously designated as rural on the county's future land use map.
The letter -- essentially a warning that the city's comp plan changes are not in compliance -- may not be as damaging as it sounds, however.  Read more

Managers cry foul over FGCU pool
Water district says pump permit needed
By Pamela Smith Hayford
© Ft. Myers News-Press
Water managers are investigating Florida Gulf Coast University for pumping millions of gallons of muddy water into nearby preserve wetlands without a permit, according to public records. To install its $4.5 million Olympic-size swimming pool, the school began dewatering the site around mid-March. Contractors can do some dewatering without a permit from the South Florida Water Management District, but pumping must not exceed 90 days, 5 million gallons per day and 100 million gallons total. Environmentalists - among them local scientists - say the dewatering could have several damaging effects: a silty blanket of mud covering the wetlands, wetlands drying out, a drop in the groundwater level in an area where Lee County gets much of its drinking water and putting too much fresh water into Estero Bay, which is normally brackish.  Read more

Plan to improve lake is nearing completion
By Christina Locke
© Okeechobe News
The Lake Okeechobee Protection Plan (LOPP) was the main topic of discussion at a public meeting Thursday evening hosted by the South Florida Water Management District   (SFWMD). The plan is a key element of the Lake Okeechobee Protection Act (LOPA), passed by the Florida legislature in 2000 in order to remedy the three major problems facing the lake: high phosphorous content, high water levels, and exotic species. LOPA requires that a plan and schedule to remedy these problems is presented to the legislature by January 2004. Dr. Susan Gray of SFWMD said that a draft of the plan would be ready for discussion at the next public meeting on August 28.  Read more

Planned quarry irks activists who want to see wetland restored
By Curtis Morgan
© The Miami Herald


SOUTHEAST DADE: Conservationist John Adornato says mining would ruin this land, 
the Everglades' Long Glade branch. CURTIS MORGAN/HERALD STAFF

Long Glade, a branch of the River of Grass that once bent east to feed fresh water to the mangroves and sea grass of south Biscayne Bay, is long gone and largely forgotten. It's been severe by U.S. 1, crisscrossed by rutted roads and plowed under for decades to grow corn, potatoes and, now, palms. Much of the remnant wetland has been reduced to illegal dump site and playground for a different sort of wildlife. A sign warning, ''No ATV's, No Partying Allowed'' has been edited by shotgun blasts to erase both ``No's.'' But a proposal to dig a 931-acre rock quarry has put Long Glade back on the map for environmentalists, who want the shriveled sawgrass slough protected. They consider it a key piece of an Everglades restoration project intended to revive the fringe of wetlands and mangroves along the coast and improve water quality in the bay.  Read more

 

25-July-03

Renewed lake drawdown draws critics
By Libby Wells
© Palm Beach Post
The drawdown of a Central Florida lake that was postponed early this year after widespread protest has been rescheduled, and is already fueling renewed criticism from advocates for Lake Okeechobee and the St. Lucie River. The state Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission will lower Lake Tohopekaliga by about 5 feet beginning Nov. 1 as part of an $8 million project to rejuvenate the sea grasses and fish population. The spill from the lake, south of Orlando, will run through the Kissimmee chain of lakes and into Lake Okeechobee. The project was shut down in January because of complaints that it was being done during an El Nino winter when Lake Okeechobee was swollen from heavy rains in the Kissimmee valley, and the St. Lucie and Caloosahatchee estuaries were suffering from months of freshwater discharges.  Read more

Everglades projects get $20 million boost
By Ross Rapoport
© Palm Beach Post
WASHINGTON -- Nine Everglades restoration projects received a $20 million boost this week from a congressional panel. The House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee agreed Wednesday to authorize $95 million for nine "critical restoration projects" associated with the $8.4 billion Everglades restoration. Individual projects, which had been limited to $25 million, would be capped at $30 million. The action came as the committee adopted the Water Resources Development Act, which still faces a vote in the House and Senate. The critical restoration projects are equally funded by the federal government and state agencies. Seven of the projects are sponsored locally by the South Florida Water Management District. The Florida Department of Community Affairs is sponsoring a $6 million study on the viability of the ecosystem in the Florida Keys, and the Seminole Indians are sponsoring a $50 million project to restructure the canal system on the Big Cypress Reservation.  Read more

 

24-July-03

Conditions put on 'Glades funding
Congressional move ensures water quality
By Pamela Smith Hayford
© Ft. Myers News-Press
Congress is tying federal Everglades dollars to water quality in the famed River of Grass in the wake of a state bill that congressmen had begged Florida not to pass. Critics said the state bill passed this spring delays cleaning excess phosphorus from the water by 10 years. The bill eroded trust in Congress and put federal money at risk of going elsewhere. Congress is putting conditional language in its appropriations bills that will pull federal Everglades money if Florida drops the ball on water quality.  Read more

Journey Into (What's Left of) the Everglades- The River Where Everything Went Wrong
Journey with us through the watery heart of the largest subtropical wetlands in America: the Everglades. Why? Because it's there - or used to be.
By W. Hodding Carter
© Outside Magazine

"WAKE UP HODDING, WE'VE GOT TO GET GOING." A kick in the ribs accompanied these grumbled words. A six-foot-six-inch redheaded monster stands over me. Without hesitating, he starts swinging his arms in full circles like an irate baboon, rocking our makeshift canoe campsite. The monster's name is David Conover, He's a 42-year-old documentary filmmaker, and he's been swinging his arms all night long for two nights straight. Something's gone wrong with his wrists and hands after six days of poling a canoe through the Shark River Slough, in Everglades National Park. The windmilling make his arms feel better, and under different circumstances I might feel happy for him.  Read more

Growth Proposal Puts Plans on Ballet
By Mike Salinero
© Tampa Tribune
TALLAHASSEE - Ross Burnaman and Lesley Blackner grew up in Florida and watched the state's mostly rural landscape be smothered by condominiums, strip malls and sprawling residential subdivisions. To the two environmental lawyers, Florida's growth and development industry has used its financial muscle and political connections to undermine the state's meager effort at growth management. Proof of that, they say, is the ease with which county comprehensive growth plans are amended, in many cases to aid a developer.  Read more

Farmers Do Their Part In Clean-Up
Editorial
© Sun-Sentinel
It's becoming more difficult to point fingers at the farmers of the Everglades Agricultural Area. They're no longer the villains in the state's ongoing efforts to reduce phosphorous levels in the River of Grass. In fact, agricultural interests in the area have made a concerted effort to do their part in the cleanup. That's the good news, and it's backed up by South Florida Water Management District data that show that since 1996 the farmers have cut their volume of phosphorous discharge by an estimated 1,100 tons. Is it perfect? Of course not. Stark differences remain in the results among the farms. There clearly is room for improvement in individual performance. Overall performance standards also could be improved, but that can't happen without the input of the farmers who have to bear the costs in establishing and reaching any new pollution standards.  Read more

Developers fear building industry would suffer if voters are allowed to decide local growth
By Robin Benedick
© Sun-Sentinel
Frustrated by frenetic development, a grass-roots movement is pushing for a statewide constitutional amendment to allow voters -- not elected officials -- to control local growth. Under the proposal, if a developer wanted to convert a piece of land for new houses, increase densities or the height of a building, voters would have the final say. "We want to put people back in charge of the places where they live," said Lesley Blackner, a Palm Beach County environmental lawyer, who is spearheading the petition drive to get the idea on the November 2004 ballot. She and Ross Burnaman, a Tallahassee lawyer who worked for the Florida Department of Community Affairs, have formed a nonprofit, nonpartisan group, Florida Hometown Democracy, based in Volusia County. The group needs almost 500,000 signatures to get the issue on the ballot.  Read more

Developer-led Group Seeks Property Tax Hike For Land Preservation
By Michael W. Freeman
© The Ledger
KISSIMMEE -- A developer is leading an environmental group that is seeking a property tax levy dedicated to preserving undeveloped areas in Osceola County.Kevin Schoolfield's motives are both profit and community. "Yes, I'm a real estate investor and my family's primary business has been here over 30 years," said Schoolfield of the Kissimmee company Schoolfield Properties Inc. "But we're also active citizens," he said, "and we value our community, and want to make sure it grows smart." Schoolfield is chairman of SAVE Osceola, a grass-roots organization formed in June 2002. The group now has more than 50 members and a nine-member steering committee.  Read more

County delays debate on SWFWMD
Director wants 60 days to prepare
By Phil Attinger
© News-Sun
SEBRING - After hearing from the Southwest Florida Water Management District, Highlands County commissioners decided Tuesday they want to know more before asking to change water districts. Commissioner Bob Bullard said he wanted a better explanation of the scientific reasons why the district has the county in the Southern Water Use Caution Area, and if that has really had any effect on the county's water levels. If not, he'd like to see the county taken out of the caution area, or have the Florida Legislature redraw the water district lines so most of Highlands County would sit in the South Florida Water Management District.
Read more

 

23-July-03

Amendment would let voters alter growth plan
By Robert P. King
© Palm Beach Post
Pregnant pigs, move over. If a Palm Beach activist has her way, Florida developers will be the ones squealing for more room. Environmental lawyer Lesley Blackner is proposing a state constitutional amendment that would let voters decide all changes to city and county growth plans. It would remove the final say from local governments -- bodies that critics consider largely a tool of developers. "This is really about letting people take ownership of their communities," said Blackner, whose not-for-profit group, Florida Hometown Democracy, is trying to get the proposal on Florida's November 2004 ballot.  Read more

Struhs swims against the truth
By Sally Swartz
© Palm Beach Post
The day was sunny and hot, with a breeze brisk enough to blow away most of the biting flies that are part of Florida summer in the woods. Driving toward the Loxahatchee River at Jonathan Dickinson State Park, I slowed to give a gopher tortoise plenty of room for his march across the road. I passed an area that park rangers burned a few years ago. There's no sign of that fire except for the darker trunks of the tall slash pines, blackened by the flames. Everything has grown back green and healthy. I passed a sign with a deer on it. The message read, "Slow down, save a life."  Read more

Officials move to protect land purchases
By Joel Engelhardt and Nirvi Shah
© Palm Beach Post
WEST PALM BEACH -- The county has spent more than $100 million of tax money buying land for its beauty and environmental value. Environmentalists are worried the land won't be preserved for the next generation. So are some county commissioners. Commissioners took the first step Tuesday toward making it harder for any development to occur on the 28,000 acres county voters taxed themselves to save. Under the proposal, the support of at least five of the seven commissioners, instead of just four, would be needed before any development could occur on the land, including roads and electrical substations. "We want to make it very hard for you to do anything with this land," said Joanne Davis, chairwoman of a committee that oversees the purchase of environmentally sensitive land. "Not just you, but the board of county commissioners 15 or 20 years from now. None of us are going to be here."  Read more

Water district scrambles to solve Ranches' water loss
By Angie Francalancia
© Palm Beach Post
Late last month, several Rustic Ranches homeowners watched water in their ponds drop more than three feet in less than 24 hours. The following day, several discovered they had no drinking water. The cause: The Army Corps of Engineers' canal dredging project. "One of the contractors with the Corps was doing a dewatering project as part of construction to build two new canals...That's what brought the water table down," said water management district spokesman Randy Smith. Dewatering, which is the process of pumping the water out of the ground, allows the contractor to work in dry ground rather than work through the water as he dredged the canal.  Read more

 

22-July-03

Time for Re-engineering
Editorial
© Washington Post
SO LONG WAS the list of "miscalculations" in one Army Corps of Engineers water project that the General Accounting Office, in a report published last year, said the "adequacy and effectiveness" of the Corps itself had been thrown into doubt. Other GAO reports have found flaws in the Corps' computer security, have discovered that the Corps lacks documentation for some of its projects and have questioned whether it has accounted fully for environmental impact. The National Academy of Sciences, in a report prepared at the request of Congress, has recommended that the Corps' planning studies be subjected to independent review.  Read more

 

21-July-03

Sandhill cranes lose their habitat
© Tampa Tribune
Florida's sandhill cranes are falling victim to the state's rapid growth and development. Cranes are roaming with their young all over new subdivisions, parking lots and construction sites because they have nowhere else to go, state biologists say. The familiar tall, gray birds with the crimson caps, listed as a threatened species in Florida, are losing their real estate. ``If you eliminate habitat, you eliminate cranes,'' said Steve Nesbitt, biological administrator for the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission.  Read more

Letter to the Editor: WMD plainly contributing to pollution of Everglades
By Wayne L. Nelson, Okeechobee
© Palm Beach Post
South Florida Water Management District Executive Director Henry Dean's letter "Defending water-pumping case important to Everglades cleanup" (July 11) is another example of self-deception and hubris where the district's facilitation of water pollution and pumping of polluters' water is concerned. It is not enough for the district that the late Gov. Lawton Chiles conceded before U.S. District Judge William Hoeveler in 1990 that "the water is dirty" and "I am here to surrender my (the state's) sword." Why was he surrendering his sword? He was admitting the fact that it was wrong for the state to be moving dirty water into the publicly owned Everglades.  Read more

Naturalist Richard Coleman dies
By Thomas R. Collins
© Palm Beach Post
Richard Coleman, a founder of the Florida chapter of the Sierra Club who was as passionate an outdoorsman as he was a protector of the outdoors, died Friday in a head-on airboat collision. He was 59. Mr. Coleman, of Winter Haven, worked for nearly 20 years fighting for restoration of the Kissimmee River and then watching the project's progress hawk-like once it started. He was reportedly piloting an airboat in the Dead River, a serpentine waterway in Central Florida, when he collided with another airboat.  Read more

Glades fight far from over despite revised water law
By Curtis Morgan
© Miami Herald
For four months, Florida's controversial overhaul of Everglades pollution laws produced sharply clashing claims: Environmentalists and others charged lawmakers and regulators with watering down protections to benefit Big Sugar. The state and industry dismissed critics as alarmists urging unnecessary and unreasonably expensive standards. After all the lobbying, rhetoric, editorials and court hearings, this much is clear:  - The state and the sugar industry gained time and leeway in stemming the flow of dirty water from farms and suburbs -- and from pumping hundreds of millions of dollars more into a cleanup already expected to top $1 billion.  Read more

Related Links:
WHAT THE NEW LAW DOES
http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/news/state/6348791.htm

Eleventh Circuit Rules That Rainfall Removed By Pumping Is A "Stormwater Discharge" Under The Clean Water Act
By Harrison M. Pittman, Staff Attorney
© National AgLaw Reporter
The United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit has ruled that a Florida sugar cane farming operation was not required to obtain a National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System ("NPDES") permit to discharge water from its water management system into an adjacent lake. Fisherman Against Destruction of the Environment, Inc. v. Closter Farms, Inc. , No. 01-11932, 2002 WL 1804952 (11th Cir. Aug. 7, 2002). The court determined that an NPDES permit was unnecessary because the pollutants discharged into the lake fell within the scope of the agricultural exemptions contained in the Clean Water Act, 33 U.S.C. §§ 1251-1376. Id. at *2. The Clean Water Act ("CWA") requires "any party that discharges pollutants from a 'point source' into navigable waters to have a NPDES permit, unless the discharges fall into an exception." Id. at *1 (citing 33 U.S.C. §§ 1311, 1342). A point source is "'one which enters navigable waters from a discrete, defined source.'" Id. (quoting 33 U.S.C. §§ 1362(14)). The CWA exempts from the definition of point source "'agricultural stormwater discharges and return flows from irrigation agriculture.'" Id. at *2 (citing
§§ 1362 (14)).   Read more

Letter to the Board of Commissioners Regarding Economic Development Center Proposal
Written by J. William Louda, Ph.D.
Hopefully by now you have received the letter I penned while I was wearing my hat as a scientist involved in Everglades Restoration research. For the present letter, I don the hat of more highly credentialed individual -that of a resident and taxpayer in Palm Beach County. Allowing the proposed Economic Development Center (EDC) to be built on the Palm Beach Aggregates site near 20 mile bend would not only be an environmental travesty it would be the most ridiculous example of bad-planning I have ever witnessed.  Read more

 

20-July-03

Letter to the Editor: Higher values, not taxes, raising water district revenue
By N. J. Gutiérrez Jr., Chairman of the South Florida Water Management District Board, West Palm Beach
© Palm Beach Post
While the July 10 article in The Post regarding the South Florida Water Management District's proposed 2004 budget generally was fair and accurate, readers may have found the headline, "Water district cuts budget despite increase in taxes," and lead sentence to be misleading. A distinction must be drawn between district tax rates and increases in property values.  Read more

Farmers tout success in reducing discharge into the Everglades
By Neil Santaniello, Staff Writer
© Sun-Sentinel
South Bay -- Work to renew the Everglades begins in a farming paradise miles upstream of the government's wetland cleanup construction project. On a 112-acre field owned by U.S. Sugar Corp., a tractor guided by a laser-beam precisely levels the rich, dark earth being readied for another crop of sugar cane. To the west, in the sugar company town of Clewiston, a sign outside a U.S. Sugar pump house tells field hands: "Remember, reduce pumping -- save the Everglades. Reduce pumping -- save your job." Both practices -- scraping fields flat and holding rainwater longer on crops -- are used by farmers to help cut the amount of phosphorus-laden runoff discharged from the super-fertile farming region into canals that pipe it right to the Everglades.  Read more

Water management chief search down to 5 finalists
The hire would be the liaison between the South Florida Water Management District's governing board and the Treasure Coast.
By Suzanne Wentley, Staff Writer
© Stuart News
Officials with the South Florida Water Management District plan to interview five candidates this week for the job many consider the district's voice on the Treasure Coast. A group of officials, headed by Alvin Jackson, deputy executive director of corporate resources, will meet Wednesday with the candidates for the post of director of the district's Martin-St. Lucie Service Center. The Stuart-based post, previously held by Paul Millar who left the district in April, is the liaison between the district's governing board and Treasure Coast residents.
Read more

Okeechobee basin now includes watershed
By Ric Lilkenburg
© News-Sun
SEBRING - It is a moot issue whether it makes any difference to the natural flow of surface water from off the Lake Wales Ridge in Highlands County, water that from ancient times has flowed north from Lake Annie in southern Highlands County, and south from Lake Arbuckle in southeast Polk County, and eventually into Lake Istokpoga. After years of officially ignoring Istokpoga as a source of Lake Okeechobee water, this summer officials of several agencies have decided to include the 238-square-mile Istokpoga watershed that includes the two main streams that feed Istokpoga - Arbuckle and Josephine creeks. With the addition of this watershed, the one time roughly 400-square-mile Okeechobee basin is now more than 600 square miles.  Read more

State paying for bad law
Relaxing pollution rules makes getting federal aid difficult
Editorial
© Ft. Myers News-Press
As far as the Congress is concerned, Florida is guilty until proven innocent as far as Everglades restoration is concerned. That is a self-inflicted problem, growing out of a very ill-advised piece of legislation passed this year in Tallahassee despite warnings from Florida congressmen and others. Under the law the state granted itself a 10-year relaxation of
pollution abatement deadlines. That angered our federal partners, who are pitching in half of the estimated $8 billion it will take to restore some of the natural conditions that once prevailed in the vast Everglades system. They wondered whether Florida’s commitment to Everglades restoration was solid.  Read more

Letter to the Editor: Victory for the district would be loss for environment
By Juanita Greene, Friends of the Eveglades, Miami
© Ft. Myers News-Press
Supreme Re: “Everglades restoration a priority,” Henry Dean, July 3. Henry Dean, executive director of the South Florida Water Management District, defends his agency for appealing to the U.S. Supreme Court an anti-pollution lawsuit won by Friends of the Everglades and the
Miccosukee Tribe of Indians against the district. The issue involves the diversion of polluted water from western Broward County into the Everglades through a pumping station known
as the S-9. Our lawsuit was filed to prevent this addition of damaging pollution, which would not flow into the Everglades if it were not for the pumping. Friends of the Everglades, through our pro-bono attorney John Childe, argued successfully in the lower courts that this pumping requires a permit under the federal Clean Water Act.  Read more

Guest commentary: Rapid resolution of SGGE rights-of-way issue essential to Everglades restoration
By Gary Davis, Nancy Payton, and Brad Corell
© Naples News 
Don't let divisiveness delay the project. That's the message that the Conservancy of Southwest Florida, Florida Wildlife Federation and Collier County Audubon are sending to county commissioners concerning the stalemate between the state and the county over
compensation for right-of-way easements for roads in Southern Golden Gate Estates (SGGE).
On June 30 the groups issued a joint letter to Collier County Commission Chairman Tom Henning asking for exactly that — swift resolution to their differences over the Golden Gate land.  Read more

Leaving A Trail to Follow
Richard Coleman's Legacy Is in His Work and In Those He Inspired
By Tom Palmer
© The Ledger
WINTER HAVEN Richard Coleman was a big man who led big efforts -- restoring the Kissimmee River, protecting Florida's lakes from pollution and the Green Swamp from overdevelopment. His death will leave a gap in Polk County's and Florida's environmental movements, friends said Saturday. He was killed Friday while piloting an airboat on a tributary of the Kissimmee River he loved and spent decades of his life trying save. Coleman, 59, died when his airboat and another collided Friday afternoon on the Dead River between Lake Hatchineha and Lake Cypress on the Polk-Osceola line. Coleman, former Florida chair for the Sierra Club, has been credited with championing the Kissimmee River restoration issue to a skeptical public.  Read more

 

19-July-03

In search of a manatee mating story
Researchers hope learning more about courtship rituals will help protect the species
By Barbara Behrendt
© St. Petersburg Times


[Times photos: Stephen Coddington]
Volunteer research assistant Alana Schoenberg, left, and Chifuyu Horikoshi prepare to guide one of nine manatees at Homosassa Springs Wildlife State Park into a holding tank for observation.


HOMOSASSA SPRINGS - Even without the benefit of singles bars and pickup lines, manatees still find a way to pair off with members of the opposite sex. Scientists don't know much about the behavioral and chemical signals females send to initiate courtship. In fact, many details of manatee reproduction are a mystery. With an endangered animal like the manatee, researchers say that such knowledge could be critical to ensure manatees produce healthy offspring to increase their numbers. The female manatees of the Homosassa Springs Wildlife State Park are now part of a university-sponsored research project focused on manatee behavior and their reproductive cycles.  Read more

 

18-July-03

U.S. House relaxes conditions for Everglades funding
By Cory Reiss, Washington Bureau
© Herald Tribune


This dam is designed to help maintain the flow of water through the Everglades. 
Changes made in the U.S. House on Wednesday weakened the link between 
federal funding and the pollution cleanup timetable in the Glades.


WASHINGTON -- The U.S. House has loosened conditions that would tie Everglades funding to compliance with a court settlement on water pollution flowing into federal lands. Given efforts to remove funding caveats entirely, environmental groups said they could live with a compromise the House passed Wednesday night as part of an Interior Department spending bill. The new language makes it less certain that Florida would suffer consequences for failing to achieve pollution reductions under a consent decree. The author of the compromise, Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart, R-Fla., said he wanted to ensure that money would continue to flow to the $8 billion restoration even if the state strays from the pollution deal it struck in 1992 to end federal and state litigation. "This was not the original proposal that we had in the bill, but I think this is an improvement," Rep. C.W. "Bill" Young, a Florida Republican who is chairman of the House Appropriations Committee, said on the floor Wednesday night.  Read more

Measure would give Congress control of money for Everglades project
By Joel Eskovitz
© Naples News
WASHINGTON — Southwest Florida's two congressmen have struck a deal with House appropriators that would place the onus on Congress, not four federal agencies, to decide whether to continue sending money to Florida for Everglades restoration. The measure, which was included in a spending bill for the Interior Department that was expected to be passed late Thursday, is the most recent shot from Washington to the state to ensure it is holding up its end of the bargain in returning water flow in the River of Grass. A House subcommittee had decided last month that before Florida could get construction dollars for projects within the heart of the restoration plan, state officials needed to give a status report on phosphorous cleanup efforts to the heads of four departments: the Army, Interior Department, Environmental Protection Agency and Justice Department. Those agencies would have to approve the state's efforts before money could flow to Florida.  Read more

 

17-July-03

Martin to rethink 'western corridor' path
By Jennifer Sorentrue
© Palm Beach Post
Martin County commissioners told their Palm Beach County counterparts Wednesday they will reconsider the path the "western corridor" will follow to link the two counties. Residents say the route approved by Martin commissioners last year for the extension of Island Way into Palm Beach County is not the track that officials now plan to build. The new path, they say, brings cars and traffic much closer to homes in Jupiter's North Fork neighborhood -- a route that was questioned by Palm Beach County Commission Chairwoman Karen Marcus. Martin officials say the original route, approved in September, was altered in order to keep traffic away from wetlands. Commissioners gave staff the option to modify the route as needed to minimize impacts on sensitive areas. The new track keeps traffic east of a large wetland south of Jonathan Dickinson State Park.  Read more

House deal keeps feds watching Everglades
By Larry Lipman, Washington Bureau
© Palm Beach Post
WASHINGTON -- The Everglades deal was sealed at suppertime. At stake was federal money for the $8.4 billion Everglades restoration. The issue -- which split the Florida congressional delegation -- was whether and under what circumstances Congress would require Florida to meet water-quality standards before allowing federal money to flow. The players, all Republican lawmakers, included the Diaz-Balart brothers--  Mario and Lincoln, both from Miami -- vs. three senior delegation members: Bill Young of Indian Rocks Beach, Porter Goss of Sanibel, and E. Clay Shaw of Fort Lauderdale. Several other senior GOP House members from other states also were involved.  Read more

Palm Beach builders, city officials angered by county's 'cap' on population growth
By Prashant Gopal
© Sun-Sentinel
Palm Beach County's proposal to decrease its population forecast for the next 25 years has angered builders and city officials, who see the move as an artificial cap on growth. Critics say county officials won't properly plan for roads, schools, libraries, and police and fire protection if they underestimate growth. And growth laws limit development in areas where roads and services are overburdened. But environmental groups have come out strongly in support of the proposal, saying that overestimating growth also has costs -- the loss of open space, more sprawl and traffic congestion.  Read more

 

16-July-03

Letter to the Editor- MANATEES: Strong protection is necessary
By Judith Vallee, Executive Director of the Save the Manatee Club, Maitland
© Jacksonville Florida Times-Union
Letters and articles continue to be written about the status of the manatee population. There is a great deal of confusion as to whether it is increasing, decreasing or remaining stable. When assessing the manatee population issue, scientific facts presented by qualified experts must be considered. A recently released manatee population model by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, developed by scientists with the U.S. Geological Survey, clearly states that unless drastic steps are taken to reduce human-induced mortality and injury, the long-term fate of the manatee is bleak. Some individuals and special interest groups continue to attribute the record-high manatee deaths from boats in recent years to a growing
manatee population.  Read more

Florida Agriculture Commissioner releases water policy
By Lauren Layden
© Naples News
When Florida Agriculture Commissioner Charles Bronson set out to develop a policy to ensure there's enough water to meet the needs of the state's agriculture industry over the next 20 years, some questioned whether it could be done. But there aren't questions anymore. At a meeting Tuesday on Marco Island, Bronson released a comprehensive agricultural water policy for Florida — a policy that has widespread support from state and local government leaders, state agency heads, growers and water district officials. "I'm very proud of this product that everybody put so much hard work into," Bronson said to a gathering of more than 50 at the Marco Island Marriott Resort Golf Club & Spa. "This is a living document," he added. "As new science and technology come along, we are going to change it."  Read more

Land bought amid controversy to be rezoned for agriculture
Thanks to an easement bought by Swiftmud, 790 acres cost County Commissioner Ted Schrader's family about $4,000
By James Thorner
© St. Petersburg Times
Pasco County plans to revoke development rights on hundreds of acres of land the family of County Commissioner Ted Schrader acquired for $4,000 in a controversial land deal in 1997. It's merely a formality at this point: The Schraders sold a conservation easement to the 790 acres to the Southwest Florida Water Management District for $974,508. That came four days after they bought the land from its Miami owners for $978,425. Some county officials cried foul, arguing that the deal allowed the Schraders to acquire the pasture, woods and swamp for mere pennies. The water district gave the Schraders what at the time was the highest dollar amount it had paid per acre for such an easement. The land, southwest of State Road 52 and Bellamy Brothers Boulevard, was originally approved in 1988 for a 848-acre golf course community to be called The Cedars. The Schrader deal, which Swiftmud sought to preserve land close to the Cypress Creek well field, closed the book on that development.  Read more

Referendum sought so voters would have say over developments
By Michael Reed, Staff Writer
© St. Augustine Record
Petitions are circulating in Florida to make local Comprehensive Plan amendments subject to a referendum by county residents. That means voters, not Boards of County Commissioners, would have the ultimate say on projects such as Nocatee and World Commerce Center,
according to the ballot initiative -- the Florida Hometown Democracy Amendment. If the movement receives 500,000 signatures from registered voters, it will be placed on the 2004 General Election ballot as a referendum to amend the Florida Constitution, according to the
initiative.
St. Johns County resident Julie Parker has taken up the cause and she spoke to the Board of County Commissioners on Tuesday about the petition.  Read more

 

15-July-03

DEP slow out of gate
Editorial
© Palm Beach Post
It's not that Payson Park, which stables as many as 500 thoroughbred race horses each winter, is new to Martin County. Before Virginia Kraft Payson and her late husband, John, bought the 750-acre operation in the late 1970s, it was the St. Lucie Training Center. Mrs. Payson has built Payson Park into a hugely successful stable and training center. Some Payson Park horses race at Gulfstream and Calder during the winter, and others rest and get ready for the spring and summer seasons at Belmont Park, Churchill Downs and Saratoga Race Course. The park and many of the horses it boards are nationally known. So it should have come as no surprise to Florida Department of Environmental Protection regulators that Payson Park's large horse population produces large amounts of equestrian residuals -- horse manure. That is a potential problem, because Payson Park is near the St. Lucie
Canal, which runs from Lake Okeechobee to the St. Lucie River. With manure piles that have grown to a height of 10 feet on 4 acres, runoff from the Payson land into the canal could pollute the river.  Read more

Taking Care of National Parks
Editorial
© Tampa Tribune
The Bush administration deserves credit for seeking to address a backlog of maintenance needs at America's national parks. The National Park Service has spent $2.9 billion in the past two years, but it is not clear how much more remains to be done. The backlog was
estimated to be $4.9 billion 10 years ago. The General Accounting Office earlier this year estimated the backlog could be as high as $6.08 billion. Interior Secretary Gale Norton says progress has been made, but warns against putting a particular figure on the remaining backlog until more information is compiled - including a first-ever inventory of park facilities.
Read more

 

14-July-03

Letter to the Board of Commissioners Regarding Palm Beach Aggregates Land
By J. William Louda, Ph.D.
I had the opportunity to attend and participate in the Land Use Advisory board (LUAB) hearing on the proposed "jobs center" (aka Economic Development Center, EDC) this past Friday. As is a necessary evil, I suppose, the petitioner had ample opportunity to rebut or attempt to rebut comments by the public but the same courtesy is never afforded other interested parties. Thus, during some of his many follow up remarks, Mr. Kieran Kilday of Kilday and Associates made several remarks concerning the change in geology of the Palm Beach Aggregates (PBA) land as one crosses the L-8 canal from west to east. Basically, he stated that it is unsuitable for water uses. Several LUAB board members wanted answers to water related questions. Thus, I asked the recording secretary to pass Mr. Hall a note stating that besides teaching Environmental Chemistry I am also performing research (periphyton) on the Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan (CERP) under contract with South Florida Water Management District (SFWMD). Thus, while certainly not expert in all phases of water issues and certainly not a representative of SFWMD, I could have shed considerable light
on Mr. Kilday's misleading statements. This I wish to do now so that you may be forewarned as this issue comes before you.  Read more

Give Everglades guardian
Editorial
© Palm Beach Post

With the Environmental Regulation Commission's approval last week of disastrous rules for measuring pollution in the Everglades, Florida's failure to protect the endangered ecosystem is complete.
The sugar industry has succeeded in dictating a new state law and rules governing cleanup and restoration. The sugar growers have been aided by the Republicans who control Tallahassee, the Department of Environmental Protection and the South Florida Water Management District. So the federal government, Florida's 50-50 partner in the $1 billion cleanup and $8.4 billion restoration of the Everglades, must take charge. The Environmental Protection Agency already has served notice in a July 7 letter that the ERC's rules allowing more pollution are unacceptable under the federal Clean Water Act. The new rules, which DEP probably will approve, allow higher amounts of polluting phosphorus than the Everglades can take and still recover fully.  Read more

The Return Of The Kissimmee River
Editorial

© Tampa Tribune
The revival of the Kissimmee River demonstrates that Florida, for all its growth problems, has some striking environmental success stories to celebrate. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers transformed the winding 103-mile river into a 56-mile polluted ditch in the less enlightened 1960s. Fish and waterfowl populations plummeted. Where the meandering river once filtered water, the canal carried nutrients directly into Lake Okeechobee. Now the Kissimmee is being returned to the original river bed, as part of a $600 million restoration effort. The canal is being filled, but flood- control devices will be maintained where necessary. Much work remains to be done, but the river is flowing naturally in some areas. Wetlands are returning. Bird numbers are way up. It will take years to complete the job, but ultimately the Kissimmee will be a wild river again. The restoration effort is a reminder that not all is doom and gloom on the environmental front. Now if only lawmakers would get rid of the Rodman dam and allow the Ocklawaha River to run free. Read more

 

13-July-03

Everglades photographer tells how he makes it all click
By Alessandra Selg-Harrigan
© Miami Herald
When Clyde Butcher moved to Florida in 1979, nature photographers in the state were focused on alligators and birds. He changed that by going deep into the Everglades and finding its natural beauty, spending hours taking photographs in black-and-white
film. He also became an advocate for the state's natural treasure.
Butcher, often called the Ansel Adams of the Everglades, spoke recently at a Broward Urban River Trails meeting at Secret Woods Nature Center in Dania Beach. He offered tips on taking better photographs and talked about his life's experiences to an audience of about 70 fans, including environmentalists and amateur photographers. In his signature Panama hat and full white
beard, Butcher discussed his 1942 Deardorff camera, one of the three he uses in his craft.
Read more

New look at Glades
Editorial
© Palm Beach Post
People of the Glades have endured decades of adversity that often has left them feeling detached from the rest of Palm Beach County and even the rest of Florida. Most every type of bad news has visited the Lake Okeechobee rim towns of Belle Glade, Pahokee and South Bay. People have watched AIDS spread, jobs disappear, poverty increase and optimism decrease. Each year, the lake got a little more polluted, and not enough people in the coastal cities or Tallahassee cared. Even when something positive happened -- such as the improvements to State Road 80 -- it came with a negative aftershock. The better road just made it easier for people with good jobs to live miles away in Wellington, Royal Palm Beach and Loxahatchee.  Read more

Letter to the editor: Manage Lake O levels to benefit all interests, not just sugar
Written by Paul Parks, Crawfordville
© Palm Beach Post
About Monday's article "Now you see it... but rising water levels threaten lake's recovery": Once again, water managers are damaging fishing in Lake Okeechobee and the St. Lucie and Caloosahatchee estuaries. Every time the recreational qualities of the lake and estuaries are degraded, hundreds of businesses lose income and thousands of citizens experience a reduced quality of life. When asked why the lake so often reaches damaging depths and why harmful dumping keeps happening, water managers spin out a tale of unavoidable technical necessity: "It's the rain"; "Our hands are tied by regulations"; "Nothing can be done until Everglades restoration is complete"; "We must manage Lake Okeechobee this way to protect cities and farms." Not true. By holding lake levels deep, water managers benefit the sugar industry at the expense of other commercial interests and recreational users. When it comes to sharing adversity, water managers have their thumb on the scale, tipping the balance toward sugar.  Read more

 

 

12-July-03

'Glades project funding assured
Water management officials said state and federal programs could replace cut congressional funds.

By Suzanne Wentley
© Stuart News
STUART — In a rare visit to the Treasure Coast, top state water management officials on Friday pledged to fund millions of dollars for land preservation and other water-quality measures even if federal officials cut the $1 billion local Everglades restoration plan. Addressing the Rivers Coalition, Henry Dean, executive director of the South Florida Water Management District, also acknowledged more water should have been released from Lake Okeechobee earlier this year to reduce the threat of heavy, damaging discharges to the St. Lucie Estuary later this summer. Regarding financing, Dean and Len Lindahl, the area's representative on the water management governing board, said they could use other state and federal programs besides congressional appropriations to fund the planned restoration of the estuary and Indian River Lagoon.  Read more

 

11-July-03

Environmentalists fight permit law
© Herald-Tribune
Environmentalists fought Thursday to overturn a year-old law they say stifles their most effective way of forcing the state to protect natural resources. They filed papers in a state appeals court in Tallahassee arguing that the law limiting who may challenge state development and environmental permitting decisions is unconstitutional. However, the law's supporters, including the Florida Department of Environmental Protection, contend the challenge comes too late. They've asked the court to dismiss the environmentalists' appeal.
At issue is a bill, approved in the chaotic closing hours of the 2002 state legislative session, requiring that groups filing legal challenges to state permitting decisions have at least 25 members in the county where the permit is sought.  Read more

No limits on Everglades spending- yet
By Larry Lipman
© Palm Beach Post
WASHINGTON -- The Senate Appropriations Committee adopted a $19.6 billion Interior spending bill Thursday without imposing any restrictions on money for the Everglades, but restrictions could be added when the full Senate acts. Sen. Conrad Burns, R-Mont., chairman of the Interior Appropriations Subcommittee, said he received proposed restrictions late Wednesday from Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla. Burns said he referred the restrictions to his staff and asked for comments from House appropriators who have already adopted similar language. "I'll support