Friday, January 22, 2010

Florida environmental and wildlife news for the period ending 1-22-10


FEATURED STORIES

EPA to provide pollution limits for Florida waters
By John Frank
St. Petersburg Times/Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau
In a move cheered by environmental groups, the federal government Friday proposed stringent limits on "nutrient" pollution allowed to foul Florida's waterways.

New EPA water rules worth every penny
Editorial
Miami Herald
Few things are more deadly to a healthy watery ecosystem than algae, much of which comes from nutrients in fertilizers and pollutants that wash from the land into waterways during rainstorms.

Rising Tide: Sea-level rise affects the Keys now
By George Neugent
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Let me start by saying that I'm not trying to take a Chicken Little approach by saying the sky is falling.

Record number of manatees counted
By Curtis Morgan
Miami Herald
An annual aerial survey recorded a record high number of endangered manatees this year — 5,067.

DEP warns that Florida springs are being degraded
By Bruce Ritchie
FloridaEnvironments.com
A Florida Department of Environmental Protection official on Wednesday warned a Senate panel that waiting to protect Florida's springs could cost more in the long run.

Cold killed record number of sea turtles
By Kate Spinner
Sarasota Herald-Tribune
Volunteers, state biologists and conservation groups across Florida mounted an unprecedented rescue effort to save most of the 5,000 endangered sea turtles found near death during this month's cold snap.

Statewide turtle rescue hits historic proportions
By Dinah Voyles Pulver
Daytona Beach News-Journal
Hundreds more endangered green sea turtles were plucked from the frigid waters of the Indian River Lagoon on Tuesday and delivered to temporary turtle hospitals statewide during what could be the largest turtle rescue in history.

Florida's least wanted: invasive plants
By Craig Pittman
St. Petersburg Times
Some of them, like fire ants and water hyacinths, have been around so long they seem like a natural part of the landscape.

Federal stimulus money injects new life into Everglades restoration
By Craig Pittman
St. Petersburg Times
The multibillion-dollar Everglades restoration program, which for 10 years has moved with the speed of a tortoise with a broken leg, suddenly turned into a jackrabbit over the past two months.

Hundreds of risky fuel tanks go unrepaired despite state deadline
David DeCamp
St. Petersburg Times
Despite 19 years notice, hundreds of gas stations, governments and businesses failed to upgrade risky fuel storage tanks before a New Year's deadline.

State planners enforcing climate, energy requirements
By Bruce Ritchie
FloridaEnvironments.com
State planners increasingly are requiring cities and counties to show that proposed new developments include features to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from motor vehicles, a Department of Community Affairs official said today.

Giving voters the say on development plans
By Tom Lyons
Sarasota Herald-Tribune
Related: Manatee's McClash favors amendment
As amendment titles go, "Hometown Democracy" is the apple pie kind that usually makes me suspicious.

Stimulus funds help Red Hills ecosystem
By Dave Hodges
Tallahassee Democrat
Federal stimulus dollars have found their way to Tallahassee yet again with the start of an environmental project designed to improve pine forest habitat for endangered species living in the Red Hills region.

House panel considers Florida Forever funding
By Bruce Ritchie
FloridaEnvironments.com
A House committee's budget exercise includes proposed new money for Florida Forever but the land-buying program may still face an uphill battle to get funded for the 2010-11 fiscal year.

Fund Florida Forever
By Charles Pattison
Miami Herald
The nation's biggest land-conservation program has another chance before the 2010 Legislature to renew itself and change course from the 2009 majority decision not to fund this very popular and successful effort.


Operation Migration in action.

THE BIG OIL ROUNDUP

The Big Oil roundup: news and information about Big Oil’s push to rig Florida’s coastline for the period ending 1-22-10:



Eglin commander: Offshore drilling could affect bases
By Jim Ash
Tallahassee Democrat
In an unusually candid acknowledgement, the commander of Eglin Air Force Base told lawmakers Wednesday that oil and gas drilling in Florida waters could pose a threat to military operations.

Florida oil drilling opponents challenge report
By Mary Ellen Klas
Miami Herald/St. Petersburg Times Tallahassee Bureau
Related: Nelson: Oil drilling is incompatible with military training
Oil drilling opponents attempted to refute one of the most potent arguments against drilling off Florida shores Tuesday with a new report that suggests that weapons testing and pilot training is compatible with oil rigs and pipelines.

Is oil drilling safe in the Gulf of Mexico? SAFE says so – or do they?
By Cathy Harrelson
Creative Loafing Tampa
On January 19th, a report was issued by a corporation called SAFE (Securing America’s Future Energy)…They are not energy specialists but have military backgrounds.

Military Is ‘No Go’ on Oil Drilling
By Mark Pafford
YouTube video
January 13, 2010 testimony before the Florida Legislature’s Military and Local Affairs Policy Committee by Eglin Air Force Base Col. Bruce McClintock regarding what impact oil drilling and exploration off Florida’s Gulf Coast would have on United States Air Force operations in Florida.

Drilling bad for Eglin
Editorial
Pensacola News-Journal
It's about time that area military leaders realized that many Panhandle legislators are simply looking for an excuse to vote in favor of putting drilling rigs off Northwest Florida's coast.

Oil lobby scaling back its presence in Tally
By John Kennedy
The News Service of Florida via Orlando Sentinel
Florida Energy Associates, the group spearheading the effort to open the state’s Gulf waters to offshore oil-drilling, is scaling back its once dominant presence at the state Capitol.

House panel debates offshore drilling
By Jim Ash
Tallahassee Democrat
A House panel took up offshore drilling on Thursday at a time when supporters are scaling back their legislative push and opponents are building momentum.

Join the ‘Hands Across the Sand’ event to help protect Florida’s coast against oil drilling
By Cathy Harrelson
Creative Loafing Tampa
On Saturday February 13, 2010, Florida residents and tourists will be going to a number of beaches across the state to do a beach clean up and hold hands to show a united front to protect Florida’s beaches against oil drilling during the ‘Hands Across the Sand’ event.

Offshore drilling remains hot topic at Tallahassee debate
By Paul Flemming
Tallahassee Democrat
The proposal to drill for oil or natural gas in Florida state waters may be on simmer, but debate remains heated.

House panel working on new state energy policy
By Bruce Ritchie
FloridaEnvironments.com
The House Energy & Utilities Policy Committee Wednesday heard from speakers on what a new state energy policy should include.

Why Offshore Drilling is a Bad Idea for Florida
Interview with John Jelks
Not the Answer
John is a marine geologist who spent over 10 years in the 1980s and early 1990s working as a Houston-based contractor for major oil companies on oil drilling platforms in the Gulf of Mexico.

Oil Drilling Debate Has Begun Again
By John Kennedy
News Service of Florida
Officials from the federal Interior Department, Shell Oil Co. and an industry association touted the technology and safety history of offshore oil-drilling last week before a panel in the drill-friendly House.

Forum to discuss oil, gas drilling in Gulf
Staff Report
Pensacola News Journal
The E. O. Wilson Biophilia Center will be sponsoring a public forum on the proposal to allow oil and gas drilling in Florida state waters.

A message on drilling
Editorial
Pensacola News Journal
Northwest Florida's Legislative Delegation got a clear message last week from the area's business community: protecting tourism and — especially — the mission of Panhandle military bases far outweighs the value of offshore drilling.

Capping offshore drilling
Editorial
Orlando Sentinel
Offshore drilling may not be coming to Florida's Gulf Coast, thanks, it appears, to Senate President Jeff Atwater.



TAKE ACTION NOW

Write Your State Senator: Big Oil's Promises Are "Empty"
Big Oil and their hired hands in Tallahassee have sworn that drilling Florida’s coast would be “invisible” – that there would be no unsightly rigs just a few miles off our coast. We know different – and a recent eye opening story in the Sarasota Herald-Tribune has proven Big Oil’s promises completely “empty.” Click the picture above – keeping the pressure on by letting our State Senators know people like you are paying attention is how we’ll beat Big Oil.

MORE ONLINE ACTIONS
Help Drill for Solutions Not for Oil, via Southern Alliance for Clean Energy.
Let us decide! Petition to Governor Charlie Crist, Senate President Jeff Atwater, and House Speaker Larry Cretul, via Civic Concern.
Contact Your Officials About New Drilling Off Florida's Coasts, via Civic Concern.
Ask your state legislators to keep the rigs out, via Save the Manatee Club.
Write a letter to the editor, via Audubon of Florida.
Write your state legislators, via Audubon of Florida.
Urge Senate President Jeff Atwater to oppose offshore oil drilling, via Progress Florida.
Tell Sen. Atwater Not To Allow Oil Drilling In Special Session, via Audubon of Florida.
Sign the petition against oil drilling, via Protect Florida’s Beaches.
Tell Salazar: No drilling off Florida's Coast, via Environment Florida.
Tell new Senator LeMieux to Repower America, via Environment Florida.
Related action: Don't go drill crazy in the Everglades, via Center for Biological Diversity.
Related action: Keep oil drilling out of climate change legislation, via Oceana.

ADDITIONAL RESOURCES OF NOTE
Hands Across The Sand website; their Twitter page is here.
Protect Florida’s Beaches, recently launched coalition website.
Protect Florida’s Beaches on Facebook.
Think, Baby, Think blog via Protect Florida’s Beaches.
Don’t Drill Florida website.
Don’t Drill Florida Facebook page.
Save Our Shores Florida website; their Twitter page is here.
Save Our Shores Florida Facebook page.
Environment Florida offshore drilling page.
Southern Alliance for Clean Energy offshore drilling page.
Skytruth blog, an excellent source of info.
Not the Answer blog, courtesy Surfrider Foundation.
Eye-opening map of oil and gas leases and infrastructure in Gulf of Mexico, via MMS.
EnergyFLA.com, online hub of drilling proponents; their Twitter page is here.

MORE GREEN NEWS

Florida panther found dead in Lee County; first reported death of year
By Eric Staats
Naples News
Florida wildlife officials reported this morning the first death of an endangered Florida panther in 2010.

Private land to be set aside for panthers
The Associated Press
Miami Herald
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has approved the conservation of a 4,000-acre chunk of private land for Florida panther habitat.

Florida Panther: More Than Hope
Editorial
Lakeland Ledger
On New Year's Eve, a Florida panther kitten was run over by a car on a road in Naples. That brought the number of panther road kills in 2009 to a record high of 17.

Whooping crane flock makes it to Florida — finally
By Barbara Behrendt
St. Petersburg Times
The 20 whooping cranes that make up the Class of 2009 have finally made it to Florida.

Operation Migration - Whooping Cranes Arrive in North Florida!
By Rich Leighton
Florida Nature Photography
For the first three days of this week, an event was happening in St. Marks, Florida area that held the riveted attention of birders and other wildlife enthusiasts around the North America.

Whooping cranes make annual flyover
Staff Report
Ocala Star-Banner
Printed on the side of a white Operation Migration truck are these words: "Fewer than 500 Whooping Cranes remain between survival and ... extinction."

Riverkeeper not consulted as judge grants confidentiality
By Bruce Ritchie
FloridaEnvironments.com
The talks among Alabama, Florida and Georgia over water-sharing are confidential now under an order entered last week by a federal judge -- despite an objection from an environmental group involved in the litigation.

Controversy surrounds seagrass project
By Cammy Clark
Miami Herald
On 95 acres of ocean floor near the Seven Mile Bridge, a seagrass meadow damaged by boaters is Exhibit A in an environmental group's controversial quest to start a new marine mitigation fund for Florida.

State studies tax, eventual ban of paper, plastic bags
By Jim Ash and Jim Waymer
Florida Today
When he reaches the register, Drew Martin always has to explain

PSC rejects Progress Energy rate hike request
By Jim Saunders
Daytona Beach News-Journal
West Volusia homeowners and businesses will avoid a hefty increase in electric bills after regulators Monday scuttled a Progress Energy Florida proposal to raise base rates.

Up against the law, fuel pumps go dark
By Kim Hackett
Sarasota Herald-Tribune
Hundreds of Florida gas stations, including 39 in Southwest Florida, have closed since Dec. 31 because of an environmental protection law intended to protect drinking water resources.

New laws aim to rid South Florida of `injurious' snake species
By Curtis Morgan
Miami Herald
Federal wildlife managers said Wednesday they will pursue a ban on the import of Burmese python and eight other giant exotic snakes that threaten the Everglades.

Lake Okeechobee water once again tapped for Gulf coast
By Andy Reid
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Lake Okeechobee water, relied on to back up South Florida supplies, will once again be siphoned off to protect west coast fishing grounds.

11th Circuit allows Georgia water appeal to proceed
By the News Service of Florida
FloridaEnvironments.com
As Gov. Charlie Crist continues to try to navigate a long-standing water dispute with Georgia and Alabama, a federal appeals court has ruled that Georgia can move forward with an appeal.

Red snapper may be in short supply
By Chris Phillips
Pensacola News Journal
The new year has arrived and once again everyone is left wondering what will happen with the upcoming red snapper season.

Regulators slash FPL's rate hike request
By Julie Patel
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
The Florida Public Service Commission approved a $75.5 million base-rate increase for Florida Power & Light Wednesday, all but rejecting the utility's request for a record hike of $1.27 billion.

African rock pythons add to worries about snakes in Everglades
By Andy Reid
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Fears of a new "super snake" emerging in the Everglades grew this week during a hunt to track South Florida's invasive python population.

Progress Energy rate hike rejected; will FPL lose too?
By Mary Ellen Klas
Miami Herald/St. Petersburg Times Tallahassee Bureau
The Public Service Commission did Monday what many consumer groups and industry watchers never expected -- it voted down a rate increase for one of the state's largest utility companies, Progress Energy.

Consumer victory
Editorial
Florida Today
You won big Wednesday in Tallahassee when the Public Service Commission rejected almost all of a huge rate hike request by Florida Power & Light.

Finally, the 'River of Gra$$'
By Sally Swartz
Palm Beach Post
It looked like a ho-hum gathering of environmentalists at last weekend's recent Everglades Coalition Conference at PGA National Resort. But it was historic, even exciting.

County prevails in watter bottling case
By Bill Thompson
Ocala Star-Banner
A local judge has rejected arguments that the Marion County Commission wrongfully denied a proposed land-use change that would have green-lighted the pumping of nearly a half-million gallons of water a day for bottling.

Cold inflicted major toll on fish in Florida
By Curtis Morgan
Miami Herald
Everywhere he steered his skiff last week, Pete Frezza saw dead fish.

Bill would require permit votes again
By Bruce Ritchie
FloridaEnvironments.com
SB 142 by Sen. Carey Baker, R-Mount Dora, would reverse the Legislature's elimination last year of a requirement that water-management district boards vote to approve water-use permits.

Florida has a few fixes for Lee plan
By Gabriella Souza
Ft. Myers News-Press
Lee County will look at state-recommended changes in the next few weeks to a plan to protect 83,000 acres in southeast Lee County.

Breathing easier
Editorial
St. Petersburg Times
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's proposed new limits on smog will vastly improve the quality of life for millions who suffer from heart, lung and other serious health problems.

EPA to Florida: No more rivers green as grass
Editorial
Daytona Beach News-Journal
Here's Florida's standard for clean water: "In no case shall nutrient concentrations of a body of water be altered so as to cause an imbalance in natural populations of aquatic flora or fauna."

As farmers pump, neighbors go dry
Editorial
St. Petersburg Times
This month's freeze underscores why Florida needs to better balance the interests of farmers and their suburban neighbors.

Recycling will pay off, if Tallahassee gets onboard
Editorial
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Florida lags in recycling efforts, and lawmakers have been loathe to do anything about it.

Glades menace
Editorial
Miami Herald
A hunt for Burmese pythons in the Everglades turned up an even scarier predator: the African rock python.

Everglades momentum
Editorial
Miami Herald
Nothing talks quite like money. This helps explain the optimism at the annual Everglades Coalition's 29th annual conference this past weekend in Palm Beach Gardens.


Endangered green sea turtle.

Wildwood Preservation Society is a non-profit 501(c)(4) project of the Advocacy Consortium for the Common Good. Click here to learn more.

"it's all connected"

Friday, January 8, 2010

Florida environmental and wildlife news for the week ending 1-8-10


FEATURED STORIES

Manatee death rate hit record high in '09

By Curtis Morgan

Miami Herald

Related editorial: Boats, cars take high toll on Florida's creatures

It was a landmark year, good and bad, for Florida manatees.


Florida's big chill stuns sea turtles, send manatees in search of balmy waters

By Tamara Lush

The Associated Press

More than 200 manatees are wintering in a balmy canal outside a power plant, the latest exotic Florida animals seeking refuge from the state's frigid temperatures.


Tragic year in Florida for panthers

By Bill Sargent

Florida Today

For the endangered Florida Panther, 2009 will be remembered as a tragic year for road kills that went down to the last day.


Wading bird population soars in 2009

By Erika Pesantes

South Florida Sun Sentinel

Wading bird populations, specifically the endangered wood stork, soared in 2009, according to a South Florida Water Management District report.


Navy faces lawsuit over submarine training range near Jacksonville

By Ludmilla Lelis

Orlando Sentinel

With the U.S. Navy intent on building a new anti-submarine training range off the Florida coast, a group of environmentalists announced it would file a lawsuit to halt the plans, saying the range poses a risk to the world's most endangered whale.


Court records reveal trouble at Turkey Point

By John Dorschner

Miami Herald

When Coleen Ware walked into Turkey Point, she was shocked to see that the indicators showing control rod positions looked like something out of an early '70s sci-fi movie.


Florida officials look at bag ban

By Jim Ash

Tallahassee Democrat

When he gets to the register, Drew Martin always has to explain.


Historic Everglades restoration project starts in Picayune Strand

By Eric Staats

Naples News

Bulldozers carved up 55,000 acres south of Interstate 75 in rural Collier County with roads and canals, slicing through wildlife habitat and cutting off water flows.


Everglades Coalition conference to discuss restoration

By Curtis Morgan

Miami Herald

Progress, or the lack of it, on Everglades restoration is the focus of a major environmental conference this weekend in Palm Beach Gardens.


New rules put fish off limits

By Jim Waymer

Florida Today

Starting this month, Florida fishermen no longer can keep red snapper or 11 species of shallow-water grouper from the Atlantic.


Wading birds like the endangered Wood Stork have been flourishing in Florida’s wetlands this year.


THE BIG OIL ROUNDUP


The Big Oil roundup: news and information about Big Oil’s push to rig Florida’s coastline for the week ending 1-8-10:




Oil drilling researchers face deadline

By Jeremy Wallace

Sarasota Herald-Tribune

A group that stands to have considerable influence over the future of oil drilling off the Florida coast is unlikely to present its findings to the Legislature until the first week of March.


Promises of jobs, revenues from offshore drilling just don't add up

By Scott Maddox

TC Palm

I am strongly opposed to allowing near-shore drilling for oil off Florida’s coast. In coming to this conclusion, I considered several questions.


Oil lobby scaling back its presence in Tally

By John Kennedy

The News Service of Florida via Orlando Sentinel

Florida Energy Associates, the group spearheading the effort to open the state’s Gulf waters to offshore oil-drilling, is scaling back its once dominant presence at the state Capitol.


Southern Strategy, hit on offshore drilling by Welch, loses bid

By David DeCamp

St. Petersburg Times

Southern Strategy Group, the influential lobbying firm based in Tallahassee, has lost a bid to be Pinellas County's consultant for its latest charter review.


CEPD chairman receives ovation following speech

By Jane Brickley

Sanibel-Captiva Islander

Mike Mullins, chairman of the Captiva Erosion Prevention District received a standing ovation from the audience last Tuesday after he addressed the Lee County Legislative Delegation at Edison State College.


Drilling in the Gulf or Hands Across the Sand?: Debate spills into Destin Chamber of Commerce

By Fraser Sherman

Destin Log

If the beauty of the Emerald Coast doesn't convince you to oppose oil drilling, South Walton's David Rauschkolb says, think of the beauty of the Emerald Coast economy.


Top Dem offshore oil drilling advocate retiring

By Jeremy Wallace

Sarasota Herald-Tribune

One of the U.S. Senate’s most vocal pro-oil drilling Democrats has announced he’s retiring and won’t see re-election in 2010.


A day at the beach

Editorial

Gainesville Sun

Would legislators take notice if tens of thousands of Floridians joined hands on Feb. 13 to protect Florida's beaches? We hope so, right now they only seem to be taking notice of Big Oil's money and influence.


Near-Shore Oil Drilling: Deep-Sea Tech Wrong for Florida

Editorial

Lakeland Ledger

Floridians and their legislators have had many reasons to be skeptical since proposals surfaced rapidly to open near-shore waters to exploration and drilling for oil.


TAKE ACTION NOW


Write Your State Senator: Big Oil's Promises Are "Empty"

Big Oil and their hired hands in Tallahassee have sworn that drilling Florida’s coast would be “invisible” – that there would be no unsightly rigs just a few miles off our coast. We know different – and a recent eye opening story in the Sarasota Herald-Tribune has proven Big Oil’s promises completely “empty.” Click the picture above – keeping the pressure on by letting our State Senators know people like you are paying attention is how we’ll beat Big Oil.


MORE ONLINE ACTIONS

Help Drill for Solutions Not for Oil, via Southern Alliance for Clean Energy.

Let us decide! Petition to Governor Charlie Crist, Senate President Jeff Atwater, and House Speaker Larry Cretul, via Civic Concern.

Contact Your Officials About New Drilling Off Florida's Coasts, via Civic Concern.

Ask your state legislators to keep the rigs out, via Save the Manatee Club.

Write a letter to the editor, via Audubon of Florida.

Write your state legislators, via Audubon of Florida.

Urge Senate President Jeff Atwater to oppose offshore oil drilling, via Progress Florida.

Tell Sen. Atwater Not To Allow Oil Drilling In Special Session, via Audubon of Florida.

Sign the petition against oil drilling, via Protect Florida’s Beaches.

Tell Salazar: No drilling off Florida's Coast, via Environment Florida.

Tell new Senator LeMieux to Repower America, via Environment Florida.

Related action: Don't go drill crazy in the Everglades, via Center for Biological Diversity.

Related action: Keep oil drilling out of climate change legislation, via Oceana.


ADDITIONAL RESOURCES OF NOTE

Hands Across The Sand website; their Twitter page is here.

Protect Florida’s Beaches, recently launched coalition website.

Protect Florida’s Beaches on Facebook.

Think, Baby, Think blog via Protect Florida’s Beaches.

Don’t Drill Florida website.

Don’t Drill Florida Facebook page.

Save Our Shores Florida website; their Twitter page is here.

Save Our Shores Florida Facebook page.

Environment Florida offshore drilling page.

Southern Alliance for Clean Energy offshore drilling page.

Skytruth blog, an excellent source of info.

Not the Answer blog, courtesy Surfrider Foundation.

Eye-opening map of oil and gas leases and infrastructure in Gulf of Mexico, via MMS.

EnergyFLA.com, online hub of drilling proponents; their Twitter page is here.


MORE GREEN NEWS


Species return as Kissimmee River restoration makes progress

By Kevin Spear

Orlando Sentinel

Biologist Lawrence Glenn knows how to sell the concept of spending $1 billion to bring the Kissimmee River and its wetlands back from the dead.


Everglades advocates gathering to push for restoration progress

By Andy Reid

South Florida Sun-Sentinel

Flying low over the southern shore of Lake Okeechobee, Everglades advocates look out the window and visualize the time before sugar cane fields and cities blocked the life-giving flow of lake water that once drifted slowly south.


Obama environment officials to visit Fla.

The Associated Press

Tampa Tribune

Officials from the Obama Administration plan a visit to Florida this week for events related to ongoing Everglades restoration.


Florida joins with Ala., Ga. in seeking closed water talks

By Bruce Ritchie

FloridaEnvironments.com

Alabama, Florida and Georgia have agreed to at least one issue in their dispute over water -- that their talks on a water agreement should remain confidential.


Talks in works to protect more corridor land

By Dinah Voyles Pulver

Daytona Beach News-Journal

When two local officials proposed preserving a wildlife corridor through the center of Volusia and Flagler counties in 1998, it seemed to some an impossible dream.


Despite cold, right whales still flocking to First Coast

By Marcia Lane

St. Augustine Record

A week of cold weather isn't discouraging the annual North Atlantic right whale migration to Florida; in fact, the mammals couldn't be happier.


93 "cold-stunned" sea turtles found floating

The Associated Press

Miami Herald

Ninety-three sea turtles found floating in the Mosquito Lagoon along Florida's Atlantic coast were rescued after the cold water shocked their tropically inclined systems.


Activists decry elephant suit dismissal

Staff Report

UPI News

Animal rights activists say they disagree with the dismissal of a lawsuit against a Florida-based circus by a federal judge this week.


FPL is accused of not sharing its tax break

By Mary Ellen Klas

Miami Herald/St. Petersburg Times Tallahassee Bureau

The Florida Public Service Commission said Tuesday it is looking into anonymous allegations that Florida Power & Light's parent company took an estimated $1 billion in tax credits -- and didn't pass the savings on to customers.


New leader of PSC to take on FPL's requested $1.2B rate hike

By Dara Kam

Palm Beach Post

Public Service Commission Chairwoman Nancy Argenziano, who earned a reputation as a maverick lawmaker unwilling to cede to leaders' demands, took over as head of the regulatory panel today in advance of a decision on Florida Power & Light Co.'s requested $1.2 billion-a-year rate hike.


3 states in water wars ask for confidentiality

The Associated Press

Tampa Tribune

Georgia, Alabama and Florida have asked a judge to keep their negotiations in the long-running regional legal fight over water rights confidential.


Sea grass plan doesn't cut it

Editorial

St. Petersburg Times

Boat propellers have sliced up underwater sea grass beds all around Florida, impairing the environment needed to nurture marine wildlife.


U.S. Sugar shareholder suit ends in $15.9M settlement

By Paul Quinlan

Palm Beach Post

If there was any doubt that U.S. Sugar Corp. was worth as much as its brass claimed, those doubts dissipated in June 2008 when Gov. Charlie Crist unveiled his extraordinary, $1.75 billion bid to buy the company and its land to restore the Everglades.


DEP says incineration, innovation can help reach 75-percent recycling goal

By Bruce Ritchie

FloridaEnvironments.com

Florida can increase its recycling rate to 75 percent within 10 years by requiring more recycling at construction-waste landfills, implementing innovative new programs to reduce waste disposal and by counting waste-burning as recycling, according to a state report issued today.


Florida report wants deposits on bottles, business recycling

By Steve Patterson

Florida Times-Union

Dime deposits on reusable bottles and extra fees on tires, light bulbs and landfill dumping should all be on the table to meet Florida lawmakers’ goal of recycling more trash, a state agency report released Monday says.


SRWMD purchases 6,350 acres for water conservation

By Karen Voyles

Gainesville Sun

The Suwannee River Water Management District spent $635,000 at the end of December to buy a 6,350 acre conservation easement in Suwannee and Columbia counties.


Tests find antibiotic, other contaminants in Tampa's drinking water

By Christian M. Wade

Tampa Tribune

The tap water that Tampa residents consume is contaminated with low levels of antibiotics, nicotine byproducts and a chemical used to produce firefighting foams.


Seize the sunshine, save the environment

Editorial

Miami Herald

While the economic slump has had a negative effect on almost every aspect of life in South Florida, it has given our natural world a breather.


A Florida manatee sticks it's head out of the water at the Tampa Electric Company manatee viewing site Thursday, Jan. 7, 2010 in Apollo Beach, Fla. An outflow of warm water from the power plant attracts the gentle sea creature as they seek refuge from the cold temperatures.



Wildwood Preservation Society is a non-profit 501(c)(4) project of the Advocacy Consortium for the Common Good. Click here to learn more.


"it's all connected"



Friday, January 1, 2010

Florida environmental and wildlife news for the period ending 1-1-10

FEATURED STORIES


Looking back on 2009, and ahead to 2010

By Bruce Ritchie

FloridaEnvironments.com

Here's a look at the Top 10 environmental stories from around Florida's Capitol in 2009 and a look at how those issues may play out in 2010.


Destroying the Everglades at 25 Cents Per Ton

By Alan Farago

Counterpunch

In early December, on an unseasonably hot and humid Florida day, I sat under a large tent in a crowd of hundreds at the edge of a man-made canal draining the Everglades.


Sugar's sweet deal sours Glades' prospects

By Mike Thomas

Orlando Sentinel

The world's largest empty swimming pool, a massive 26-square-mile reservoir two years in the making, sits high and dry in the middle of the Everglades, abandoned after taxpayers invested $280 million building it.


It's manatee vs. military in pending habitat ruling

By David Fleshler

Los Angeles Times

Reporting from Fort Lauderdale, Fla. - Manatees may rank lower than traditional military menaces like torpedoes or air-to-sea missiles.


Manatees dying at a record pace

By Jim Waymer

Florida Today

A record 105 manatees died in Brevard County this year, almost twice as many as the next highest county and a quarter of the manatees to perish statewide.


Will Florida's growth-a-holic tendencies change with new reality?

By Jim Stratton

Orlando Sentinel

In a state hooked on development, Flagler County became a junkie.


Groups threaten suit over panther habitat

By Bruce Ritchie

FloridaEnvironments.com

Two environmental groups served notice today that they plan to sue federal officials for failing to take steps to protect the Florida panther.


Die-offs multiply as humans push '6th extinction'

By Jeff Corwin

Daytona Beach News-Journal

There is a holocaust happening. Right now. And it's not confined to one nation or even one region. It is a global crisis.


Crist meets with Ala., Ga. governors on water-sharing

Staff Report

News Service of Florida via FloridaEnvironments.com

Gov. Charlie Crist met with his two neighboring governors today in Alabama to renew efforts to resolve a dispute over water usage and the three emerged confident they'll resolve the dispute rather than let a federal judge's solution stand.


Developers Rush to Get Ahead of Amendment 4

Staff Report

News Service of Florida via WBOB Radio Jacksonville

The prospect of land-use changes going before voters if constitutional Amendment 4 is approved next year, is sparking an unprecedented crush of proposals being sent to state planning officials.


Amendment 4 is the Floridians' Declaration of Independence

By Greg Gimbert

Destin Log

Florida voters should be on the lookout for the politicians and speculators who are ramping up their Founding Fathers spin against the Florida Hometown Democracy Amendment.


A Worsening climate: Political pressures on Crist place the environment at risk.

Editorial

Orlando Sentinel

Florida's ban on offshore drilling may be history. So too its claim to being in the forefront of states on clean energy. We're convinced of that because of what Gov. Charlie Crist said.


Editorial cartoon by Bruce Beattie, Daytona Beach News-Journal.


THE BIG OIL ROUNDUP


The Big Oil roundup: recent news and information about Big Oil’s push to rig Florida’s coastline:



Statewide gulf oil drilling protest planned for February

By Kari C. Barlow

Northwest Florida Daily News

Related: Drilling in the Gulf or Hands Across the Sand?

Restaurateur Dave Rauschkolb has surfed the Gulf of Mexico for more than 30 years.


Commissioner Ken Welch on Offshore Drilling

Video Interview

Civic Concern

In this interview with CIVIC Concern, Pinellas County Commissioner Ken Welch explains why he opposes new drilling off Florida's coasts and urges Floridians to take a stand.


Reject near-shore drilling

By Scott Maddox

Tampa Tribune

In 2008, a super-modern, hi-tech, state-of-the-art oil drilling rig was installed 250 miles off the Coast of Australia.


Drilling won't give us what proponents promise

By Scott Maddox

Tallahassee Democrat

There are some very good reasons for Floridians to consider drilling for oil off our coast, but there are probably more reasons to reject such an idea.


Environmentalists Fight Effort To Allow Oil Drilling Closer To Florida's Coastline (audio story)

By Robert Lorei

WMNF Community Radio Tampa

There's a move by a group in Tallahassee to get the legislature to allow oil and gas drilling in state waters, 3-10 miles off Florida's coast.


Love tourists, not drilling: Stop near shore drilling off Florida’s coast

By Sharon Joy Kleitsch

Creative Loafing Tampa

Grass roots are growing along Tampa Bay beaches to halt off shore drilling. They “love tourists, not drilling”.


Captiva official urges SW Florida legislators to oppose offshore drilling

Staff Report

Ft. Myers News-Press

The Captiva Erosion Prevention District urged local state legislators this afternoon to oppose oil drilling off Lee County’s shores.


Largo commission opposes oil drilling

By Tom Germond

Largo Leader

Most Largo commissioners are opposed to offshore oil drilling in areas of the Gulf of Mexico that are controlled by the state.


Dunedin City Commission delays vote on resolution opposing offshore drilling

Staff Report

St. Petersburg Times

City commissioners voted Thursday to postpone until January a resolution opposing offshore drilling, saying statewide protesting and political maneuvering had obscured the facts of drilling's hazards and benefits.


Near-Shore Oil Drilling: Deep-Sea Tech Wrong for Florida

Editorial

Lakeland Ledger

Floridians and their legislators have had many reasons to be skeptical since proposals surfaced rapidly to open near-shore waters to exploration and drilling for oil.


Facts sink new drilling technology

Editorial

Tampa Tribune

It is becoming increasingly evident that the shadowy group promoting oil drilling immediately off Florida's shores is playing fast and loose with the facts.


Protect Florida coast. Again

Editorial

Palm Beach Post

Great. If the Senate tries to rekindle its romance with bipartisanship, there might be no love for Florida.


TAKE ACTION NOW


Write Your State Senator: Big Oil's Promises Are "Empty"

Big Oil and their hired hands in Tallahassee have sworn that drilling Florida’s coast would be “invisible” – that there would be no unsightly rigs just a few miles off our coast. We know different – and a recent eye opening story in the Sarasota Herald-Tribune has proven Big Oil’s promises completely “empty.” Click the picture above – keeping the pressure on by letting our State Senators know people like you are paying attention is how we’ll beat Big Oil.


MORE ONLINE ACTIONS

Help Drill for Solutions Not for Oil, via Southern Alliance for Clean Energy.

Let us decide! Petition to Governor Charlie Crist, Senate President Jeff Atwater, and House Speaker Larry Cretul, via Civic Concern.

Contact Your Officials About New Drilling Off Florida's Coasts, via Civic Concern.

Ask your state legislators to keep the rigs out, via Save the Manatee Club.

Write a letter to the editor, via Audubon of Florida.

Write your state legislators, via Audubon of Florida.

Urge Senate President Jeff Atwater to oppose offshore oil drilling, via Progress Florida.

Tell Sen. Atwater Not To Allow Oil Drilling In Special Session, via Audubon of Florida.

Sign the petition against oil drilling, via Protect Florida’s Beaches.

Tell Salazar: No drilling off Florida's Coast, via Environment Florida.

Tell new Senator LeMieux to Repower America, via Environment Florida.

Related action: Don't go drill crazy in the Everglades, via Center for Biological Diversity.

Related action: Keep oil drilling out of climate change legislation, via Oceana.


ADDITIONAL RESOURCES OF NOTE

Hands Across The Sand website; their Twitter page is here.

Protect Florida’s Beaches, recently launched coalition website.

Protect Florida’s Beaches on Facebook.

Think, Baby, Think blog via Protect Florida’s Beaches.

Don’t Drill Florida website.

Don’t Drill Florida Facebook page.

Save Our Shores Florida website; their Twitter page is here.

Save Our Shores Florida Facebook page.

Environment Florida offshore drilling page.

Southern Alliance for Clean Energy offshore drilling page.

Skytruth blog, an excellent source of info.

Not the Answer blog, courtesy Surfrider Foundation.

EnergyFLA.com, online hub of drilling proponents; their Twitter page is here.


MORE GREEN NEWS


2009 Made for Interesting Year

By Tom Palmer

Lakeland Ledger

Another interesting year in the environment.


Florida's future bright with clean energy

By Eric Draper

South Florida Sun-Sentinel

Whether the goal is economic recovery or environmental protection, investing in energy efficiency is one of the most important actions a business can take.


Everglades once again will make headlines

By Kevin Lollar

Ft. Myers News-Press

During last year's look-ahead series, The News-Press said Everglades restoration would be a big story in 2009, and it was with the South Florida Water Management District's plans to buy 73,000 acres of U.S. Sugar land.


Feds Under Fire from Three Environmental Groups to Protect Panthers

By Kate Spinner

Lakeland Ledger

While the state's largest cats teeter on the edge of extinction, federal regulators are accused of hastening the Florida panther's demise over the past few years by allowing some of their best habitat to be bulldozed.


Rock mine expansion proposed for panther habitat in west Broward

By David Fleshler

Orlando Sentinel

The Seminole Tribe has applied for a permit to expand a rock mine in a remote corner of northwest Broward County, in a proposal that could generate opposition from environmentalists concerned about the Florida panther.


Report finds pollutants lurking in S. Florida tap water

By Curtis Morgan

Miami Herald

More than 100 pollutants, from farm herbicides to factory solvents, have shown up in Florida tap water during the last five years -- many barely detectable, but more than a quarter exceeding federal standards at least once, according to a report compiled by an environmental group.


Florida officials look at bag ban

By Jim Ash

Tallahassee Democrat

When he gets to the register, Drew Martin always has to explain.


Ocean Foundation makes dubious claims in sea grass proposal

By Craig Pittman

St. Petersburg Times

Related editorial: Sea grass plan doesn't cut it

A Washington-based foundation has teamed up with a controversial local company to propose a radical change in the way Florida deals with the destruction of its sea grass beds.


Pols, voters abandon go-green positions

By Aaron Deslatte

Orlando Sentinel

This is not a good time to go green in Florida politics.


New South Florida water rules dodge appeals, but face test in Tallahassee

By Andy Reid

South Florida Sun-Sentinel

Opponents of South Florida's new year-round watering rules are taking their fight to the Legislature, opting for legislative muscle over courtroom battles.


EPA proposes new greenhouse gas regulations

By Joshua Lee Holton

WMNF Community Radio Tampa

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has proposed a rule change in the Clean Air Act, such that only the biggest polluters will be subject to regulations for greenhouse gas emissions.


EPA: UF will pay a $175,000 fine

By Thomas Stewart

Gainesville Sun

The University of Florida has agreed to pay a fine of $175,000 for alleged environmental violations that include illegally disposing of hundreds of gallons of a toxic chemical on campus over almost two decades, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency announced Monday.


Amendment 4 would restore proper balance of power

By Richard T. Walker

Panama City News Herald

I believe that the citizens originally had the power to begin with, but was slowly and shrewdly usurped by our local elected officials and misused for their and the developers’ gains.


While Florida's G.O.P. kick at each other, Florida Dems kick dirt

By Gimleteye

Eye on Miami

Back in the days when I coached pee-wee soccer, I called them dirt-kickers.


FPL can live with less, report advises

By Mary Ellen Klas

Miami Herald/St. Petersburg Times Tallahassee Bureau

Florida Power & Light should be allowed to raise its base rate $357 million next year, not the $1.3 billion the company seeks, the staff of the Public Service Commission recommended Wednesday in a report that also says the utility should be forced to cut its executives' pay.


State says manatee deaths up

By Catherine Whittenburg

Tampa Tribune

State wildlife officials are reporting that a record number of manatees were found dead in state waters this year, due partly to cold weather in early 2009.


Alabama, Georgia, Florida governors talk water

The Associated Press

Miami Herald

The governors of Alabama, Georgia and Florida are meeting for the first time in two years to discuss a water sharing dispute that has been going on for two decades.


State advises Volusia to kill massive growth plan

By Dinah Voyles Pulver

Daytona Beach News-Journal

State officials scooted under a legal deadline on Christmas Eve, delivering a bah humbug message to a request from Volusia County and the Miami Corp, the county's largest private landowner.


Kissimmee River making comeback

By Kevin Lollar

Ft. Myers News-Press

An almost day-and-night biological change met passengers last week as the pontoon boat entered the restored section of the Kissimmee River from the C-38 canal.


Navy expresses concern about proposed manatee protections

By David Fleshler

South Florida Sun-Sentinel

Having defeated the Japanese fleet and faced down the Soviets, the U.S. Navy faces a new obstacle, one that hides behind a deceptively gentle, seagrass-munching facade.


Seminole withdraws proposed Putnam County coal plant

By Bruce Ritchie

FloridaEnvironments.com

Environmental groups are applauding Seminole Electric Cooperative Inc.'s decision not to build a new coal-fired power unit at its generating in Putnam County.


Change, after Amend. 4 passes

By John H. Rogers Jr.

Orlando Sentinel

Mary Hurley's recent My Word, "Why I'll vote no on Amend. 4," brought tears to my eyes and enlightened my mind with her impassioned defense of all that is good, right and constitutional about rejecting Amendment 4.


Senate Climate Roadmap Caters to Nuclear, Offshore Drilling Proponents

By Robin Bravender

New York Times

Architects of Senate energy and climate legislation reiterated their support for nuclear power and offshore drilling yesterday in an effort to garner the support of moderate Democrats and Republicans.


The Exotic Menace

By Dinah Voyles Pulver

Daytona Beach News-Journal

Florida's problems with exotic, invasive plants and animals developed over a long period and won't be resolved quickly.


Snakes Alive! Senate Comte. Acts to Stop Spread of Fla. Constrictor Snakes (includes audio)

By Gina Presson

Public News Service Florida

The picture of 400-pound snakes taking over the Everglades may sound like something out of a movie, but a U.S. Senate committee spearheaded by Florida Senator Bill Nelson is taking action to prevent that picture from becoming reality.


Regulators set to release opinion on FPL rate hike

By Susan Salisbury

Palm Beach Post

Another step along an unexpectedly bumpy road for Florida Power & Light Co.'s proposed $1.4 billion rate hike is due Wednesday.


FGCU solar field switched on to provide power to part of campus

By Leslie Williams Hale

Naples News

There was no flip of a giant switch or flickering of lights.


Businesses leaders plan Amendment 4 fight

By Scarlet Sims

Panama City News Herald

Business community leaders last week took the first step toward organizing to fight an amendment that would allow residents to vote on all zoning changes to city and county comprehensive land-use plans.


Judge tosses out Seminole demand for cash over river fight

By Steve Patterson

Florida Times-Union

A state administrative judge has rejected a utility's request to make Jacksonville and the Johns Riverkeeper pay attorney fees the utility spent on a court fight to take drinking water from the St. Johns River.


Brevard Commission OKs 13K new homes

By Rick Neale

Florida Today

Developers can create new communities containing more than 13,300 homes across 36 square miles of Space Coast woodland and cattle pasture, the Brevard County Commission ruled Tuesday.


South Florida water fights resurface with dry weather

By Andy Reid

South Florida Sun-Sentinel

A return to dry weather is reigniting long-smoldering South Florida water fights, worsened by new strains on backup supplies that leave less water to go around.


Area agency wants to take state's control of local growth

By Steve Patterson

Florida Times-Union

A Jacksonville-based council of local governments wants to take over the state's job of regulating development in Northeast Florida.


Body of evidence

Editorial

Gainesville Sun

The conference on climate change in Copenhagen has been somewhat tainted by the publication of hacked e-mails from scientists at the Climatic Research Unit of England’s University of East Anglia.


Waging a global war on climate change

Editorial

Miami Herald

Was the climate summit in Copenhagen worth the two years of preparation and expense, or just another wasted exercise in over-hyped bloviating by bureaucrats and their heads of state?


Editorial cartoon by Jim Morin, Miami Herald.

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