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March 16, 2007
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Act Now to Protect Florida's Threatened Gopher Tortoises
Dear
Richard,
Although
Florida's gopher tortoises have been deemed "threatened"
by the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission
(FWC), this move has done little to halt the threat to
these animals. Developers continue to kill gopher
tortoises by getting "incidental take" permits issued by
FWC which allow developers to crush tortoises under
bulldozers and entomb them in their burrows beneath
slabs of concrete. Since 1991, developers have
buried alive an estimated 80,000 gopher tortoises.
Even when
developers decide to relocate the tortoises, current
regulations do not require these relocations to be
conducted properly or humanely, using post-release care
and monitoring. Unmonitored tortoises may wander miles
in search of their previous home and may die from
starvation, predation, exposure, or speeding cars.
You can help stop this senseless killing.
TAKE ACTION
The FWC is accepting public comments on a new draft
management plan for gopher tortoise until 5:00
p.m. April 4. Please take just a few minutes
today to submit your comments by email, and urge the FWC
to approve a plan that protects these animals from cruel
treatment and death.
Click here to submit your comments by email now.
Please
also
tell your friends and family
in Florida how they can help protect gopher tortoises.
Thank you
for your help at this critical time, and for all you do
on behalf of animals.
Sincerely,

Mike Markarian
Executive Vice President
The Humane Society of the United States
P.S. The Orlando Sentinel
published an excellent op-ed on this issue on Tuesday.
Click
here to read why gopher tortoises should
be protected. |
Copyright © 2007 The Humane Society of the
United States (HSUS). All Rights Reserved.
The Humane Society of the United States | 2100 L
Street, NW | Washington, DC 20037
humanesociety@hsus.org | 202-452-1100 |
www.hsus.org
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2060-executive-summary-Final.pdf
SEA
LEVELS ALREADY RISING ALONG FLORIDA COAST
Planner Predicts Higher Hurricane
Surges, Saltwater Intrusion, Loss of Vegetation
Tallahassee — Federal and state policymakers are turning a blind eye
toward unmistakable evidence of rising sea levels affecting Florida
coastal areas, according to documents released today by Public Employees
for Environmental Responsibility (PEER). Within the next twenty years,
predicted sea level rises will begin to inundate much of the Florida
coastline, as well as low-lying open lands, starting with the
Everglades.
Sea level rises are already being recorded in Florida, about 10 inches
during the last century (at a rate of 2.3 millimeters per year as
measured by tide gauge data). Due to global warming, melting ice caps
and thermal expansion of the oceans as they warm, the rate of sea level
rise is predicted to accelerate. Based upon data developed by the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), estimated sea level rises for
Southwest Florida will range from 2.8 inches to 10.6 inches by 2025. At
that rate, sea level increases would double to 2 feet this century and
rise another 3 feet next century – for a net rise of 5 feet by 2200. An
EPA report titled “The Probability of Sea Level Rise” has a predicted a
range of sea level rise from as low as 21 inches with a 90% probability
to 177 inches with a 1% probability.
In the near-term, higher sea levels will lead to higher hurricane storm
surges, resulting in greater property damage. In addition, saltwater
intrusion will compromise the quality and available quantities of fresh
water, as well as change vegetation patterns. In the long-term, coastal
areas, wetlands and many other undeveloped lands will simply disappear
altogether, or exist only behind sea barricades.
“Florida will be a modern Atlantis with its most expensive real estate
under water,” stated Florida PEER Director Jerry Phillips, noting that
much of the $12 billion Comprehensive Everglades Restoration now under
construction may be underwater in less than 50 years. “We had better
begin planning now for how to handle these rising tides.”
Daniel L. Trescott, the Principal Planner for the Southwest Florida
Regional Planning Council, presented the sea level rise material last
month at the Southwest Florida Symposium, sponsored by the Council of
Civic Associations. The symposium was a gathering of scientists seeking
to compile the latest data on environmental changes and trends in the
South Florida. Significantly, top representatives from the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers and the Florida Department of Environmental
Protection pulled out of attending the symposium at the last minute.
The point made by Mr. Trescott, considered the “father” of storm surge
mapping, and others was that state and federal agencies are not
integrating sea rise data into planning efforts. In fact, EPA, which
developed much of the sea rise data, does not allow its officials to
publicly address the matter. Apart from the environmental effects,
scores of critical emergency facilities, such as hospitals and shelters,
that will be needed to help respond to storm emergencies are at risk
from heightened storm surges.
“All of Florida is living in a state of denial,” Phillips added.
“Despite this mounting evidence, rising sea levels are like the elephant
in Florida’s living room that no one dares talk about.”
###
Look at the Estimated Sea Level Rise for Southwest Florida (2025-2200)
Check out the EPA report: “The Probability of Sea Level Rise”
See the Tide Gauge Data for Key West (1910-1990)
View Ft. Myers Tide Data (1966-1997)
Scan breakdown of Southwest Florida Region Acreage Subject to Sea Level
Rise
Look at Southwest Florida lands that will be inundated with a 5 foot
rise in sea levels
See coastal changes around Florida if sea levels should rise
_____________**____________
From
July Florida Trend magazine
Beginning of the End?
Florida’s best-known shrimp are the pinks, but the future
for shrimpers and growers here is anything but in the pink.
The business is “not looking good,” concedes John Williams,
55, a Tarpon Springs owner of four shrimp vessels and
executive director of the Southern Shrimp Alliance, an
industry group.
Prices have been in a free fall, he says, since 2002 when
Asian growers, shut out of some world markets because of
concerns about their use of illegal antibiotics, began
dumping their shrimp in the U.S. market, driving down the
price the boat owner received for medium shrimp to as low as
80 cents per pound.
Until
then, “we were very profitable. We never were overfished. We
never were overcapitalized,” Williams says, but now, “a lot
of people dropped out. A lot of people lost their boats.”
National and state marketing campaigns to differentiate
wild shrimp from farm-raised to consumers have helped demand
for wild shrimp, but more needs to be done, Williams says.
“It’s the beginning of the end for the commercial shrimp
fishermen in the United States,” says Bob Rosenberry, editor
and publisher of Shrimp News International in San Diego.
“They are hunters and gatherers, and hunters and gatherers
have always lost the battle to agriculture. I’ve been saying
this now for 30 years. It’s just been coming true for 30
years.”
Land, labor and production costs, meanwhile, make the
outlook for Florida farm-raised shrimp doubtful as well. The
state aquaculture division has 24 entities on its
shrimp-grower list but most are university-related or
experimental. “I can only think of three that might possibly
be producing,” says the division’s chief, Mark Berrigan.
“The economics of it have just not proven out here.”
GROWING PROBLEM:
Until Asian shrimp farmers began flooding the U.S.
market, “We were very profitable,” says shrimp boat owner
John Williams. Now, “A lot of people have dropped out,” says
the executive director of the Southern Shrimp Alliance.
OceanBoy Farms, a Clewiston company, has found a way to
grow marine shrimp with well water inland, rather than on
pricey coastal land. Its shrimp sells at a 30% premium to
imported, farm-raised shrimp and is marketed to
supermarkets, exporters and distributors as well as direct
to consumers through Costco.com, where it sells at around
$10 to $12 per pound, including shipping and handling.
OceanBoy Chief Operating Officer Steve Walton says the
company expects to produce 3 million pounds this year. The
shrimp is pathogen free and organic, and the company uses
natural feed to improve taste, appearance and nutritional
value, lowering cholesterol and raising Omega 3 and Omega 6
content, Walton says. “I think that’s why we have an edge,”
he says. “The way we’re trying to beat (farm-raised imports)
is value added.”
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CARL
HIAASEN,
The Miami Herald
Let the celebration begin.
Manatees, those lovable, bewhiskered icons of Florida waterways, are
officially no longer endangered!
The news is all the more amazing because the state's own biologists
fear ''a significant decline'' in the manatee population due to
increased threats from boats, red tide and habitat loss.
That doesn't sound like much of a reason to break out the champagne,
but it's only because we don't understand the advanced scientific
logic used by state regulators:
Reducing the number of manatees in the wild simply means there will
be fewer of them to die later.
That's obviously what members of the Florida Fish and Wildlife
Conservation Commission had in mind last week when they voted
unanimously to downgrade the pokey sea cow to the status of
``threatened.''
Cheering estimates that the burly aquatic mammals now number about
3,000, commission chairman Rodney Barreto said, ``I believe the
manatee has recovered. We should be rejoicing.''
So far, the only ones rejoicing over the panel's decision are
waterfront developers, marina builders and representatives of the
marine industry, who or five years have been waging an expensive
political campaign to get the manatee ``downlisted.''
They were miffed by strict rules imposed in some places while
manatees were on the state's endangered list. Speed zones were
established that inconvenienced fishermen and weekend boaters, while
restrictions were imposed on permits for new docks and marinas in
certain areas.
As adorable as they might be, the sea cows had become a nuisance.
They were getting in the way of big plans by people with big bucks.
The more slips that you can cram into a marina, the fatter your
profit margins. And the larger the marina is, the more boats will be
sold to fill it.
Everybody makes out dandy except for the near-sighted manatees,
which tend to gather and breed in the same quiet waters along which
developers like to build their projects.
So, heavyweight lobbyists such as Wade Hopping were hired to promote
the notion that manatees are doing just great. Last week the seven
FWCC commissioners, all appointed by Gov. Jeb Bush, agreed.
A non-scientist looking at the mortality data might wonder why
they're so upbeat. Last year, 396 manatees -- more than 10 percent
of the estimated population -- died. Of those, only 81 fatalities
were classified as natural.
This year, manatees are perishing at a record pace. As of May 31,
there were 195 known deaths in Florida.
Those sort of statistics don't exactly make you want to dance a jig
with Rodney Barreto. Nor does the final report of the state
Biological Review Panel, which says there's a better-than-even
chance that the manatee population will shrink by 20 percent over
the next 30 years.
But sunny optimism rules at the wildlife commission, which prefers
to trumpet a 100 percent increase in the annual aerial manatee
census over the last 20 years.
Yet if the protection program is working so well, why scrap it?
Isn't it insane to eliminate the very rules that resulted in such
impressive results?
It is if you want the manatee population to continue growing -- but
that's plainly not the goal of coastal developers, the recreational
marine industry or state wildlife managers.
By their count, we've got enough sea cows. What we need more of is
boats, docks, ramps, marinas and condos. To the softhearted, the
lobbyists might say: What better way to reduce the number of manatee
deaths than to start reducing the number of manatees?
Scratching the species off the endangered list was the first step,
but no restrictions on building or boating can be lifted until the
state comes up with a management plan.
Meanwhile, the manatee remains on the federal endangered species
list, although the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is under pressure
from members of Congress who are shilling for the same special
interests that prevailed in Florida.
At last week's meeting in which the manatee's rebound was heralded,
state wildlife officials elevated the gopher tortoise to the list of
threatened species.
They did not, however, suspend the policy of permitting developers
to bury the animals alive in exchange for paying into a conservation
fund.
More than 74,000 gopher tortoises have been ''entombed'' with state
approval, which might explain why the species is in trouble.
Commissioners promised to find a less cruel way to deal with the
critters, one of these days.
Presumably we can look forward to another round of rejoicing. |
__________________**__________________
The so called “Agriculture
and Economic Development Act” (Senate Bill 716 and House Bill 5621)
is moving quickly through the legislature. It is expected to be
voted on by the Senate Environmental Preservation Committee and by
the House next week. If you care about fairness and local government
control and are concerned about rampant sprawl and overdevelopment
in our state, please contact your
legislators and the Governor now and ask them to stop this damaging
legislation.
Click here to find your legislators. Governor Bush may be
reached at 850.488.4441 or at
jeb.bush@myflorida.com.
Under the proposed Act, vacant, undeveloped areas up to 5,120 acres
(parcels bigger than many Florida towns) surrounded on 75 percent of
their borders by lands designated for industrial, commercial, or
residential uses are deemed “agricultural enclaves.” Landowners can
compel local governments to designate these “enclaves” for more
intensive uses similar to the adjoining lands, regardless of what is
called for in the legally adopted local comprehensive plan.
Further wresting away local control, if the local government does
not take action within six months, comprehensive plan amendments and
developments of regional impacts pertaining to development within
these agricultural enclaves would be automatically approved. The Act
would also give landowners additional rights to sue if local
government changed the zoning on agricultural lands.
The development interests behind this bill say the Act is intended
to help family farmers impacted by hurricanes and citrus canker.
Clearly, this is not the case. A number of recommendations by 1000
Friends and others have been rejected that would legitimately help
family farmers without promoting sprawling development.
Both the Governor and Legislature have indicated that improving
growth management is a top priority this session. Far from doing
that, this damaging legislation takes discretionary land use
decisions out of the hands of local government, and promotes just
the type of sprawling development that our growth management laws
are intended to prevent. The Act actually undermines the little
local government control that is left.
In 2004, Governor Bush vetoed similar legislation, noting it
violated one of his basic tenets that “local decisions should be
made at the local level.” He also said it would encourage farmers to
“cash out” by developing their property. He was right on both
counts.
Once again this legislation needs to be stopped, and this time
permanently. The Florida League of Cities, Florida Association of
Counties, Audubon of Florida and others have gone on record opposing
this Act. Please join with 1000
Friends of Florida and send a loud and clear message to your
legislators and Governor Bush that this damaging Act must be
stopped.
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Comprehensive
Land Use Plan Constitutional Amendment - Give the voter the decision. Florida
Hometown Democracy, Inc. is asking registered voters to sign a petition to put a
referendum on the Nov 2006 ballot. This Referendum would allow you, the taxpayer to
approve Comp Plan changes that are now decided by a handful of select politicians.
Call CFOF, the Sierra Club or click on the web site for Florida Hometown Democracy on our
Links page or Click
here for your petition form...
Walkable Communities
- He
wants to reclaim towns for pedestrians As reported by Matt Crenson | Associated Press national writer
EAST
AURORA, N.Y. Dan Burden is playing in traffic. The lanky
50-something scurries into the busy main street of this western New York village,
unfurling a metal tape measure as he goes. He gets a quick measurement of the distance
from the curb to the double yellow line, then retreats to the sidewalk. (read the
rest of the story Click here )
Sewage
Blending - On
November 3rd, the EPA proposed a "sewage blending" policy that would allow
wastewater treatment plants to divert sewer flows during periods of heavy rains and
snowmelts to bypass an important required biological treatment phase. The partially
treated water would then be mixed with properly treated wastewater and poured back into
rivers and streams nationwide.
This blending policy poses a serious threat to human health and the environment. Blending
treated and untreated wastewater fails to remove deadly disease producing pathogens from
the water. These pathogens can cause illnesses such as respiratory infections, hepatitis,
and dysentery. Releasing partially treated wastewater would also lead to fish kills, beach
closings, and the destruction of shellfish beds.
Send a petition to your representative
Click here
19 May 05
Urgent action needed......read on:
Dear Richard,
There are two phrases you never want to see in the same sentence:
drinking water and "sewage blending." And yet, that's the Bush
Administration's new plan for your water supply! Take action:
http://www.care2.com/go/z/24102
Incredibly, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is about to
relax restrictions on dumping sewage into our waterways. Their plan
would allow water treatment facilities to release sewage filled with
human wastes, toxins, bacteria, viruses, parasites and other pollutants
into our drinking water.
Common sense tells you that the EPA's plan poses a serious threat to
both our health and our environment. Sewage that has not been fully
treated carries diseases such as cholera and hepatitis, and spoils our
environment in numerous ways -- from frequent beach closings to higher
water filtration costs and devastating fish kills.
This proposal is so outrageous, we've got to get EVERYONE to take action
to defeat it. Urge Congress to support the Save Our Waters from
Sewage Act (H.R. 1126) to protect our families and communities from
unsafe drinking water! Sign here:
http://www.care2.com/go/z/24102
A vote on this bill could come today or tomorrow, so please
act now!
Thank you for taking action today!
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10 Dec 04
Take action to stop sewage dumping!
There are you two things you can do today to protect waters in our
communities from the dangers of sewage dumping: 1) Call
your Senators and urge them to sign Senator Jeffords’ (I-VT) letter to
the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) opposing the EPA’s sewage
dumping/blending guidance! 2) Send a letter to the EPA
Administrator urging him to end consideration of this policy. Visit our Action
Center to take action today.
In the fall of 2003, the EPA proposed a "sewage
blending" policy. It is more accurately called a "sewage dumping"
policy, because it allows sewage treatment plants to bypass an important
treatment phase after rainfalls. They would be allowed to mix partially
treated waste with fully treated waste and dump that mixture into our
rivers and drinking water sources. This policy not only poses a serious
threat to human health and the environment but also violates the Clean
Water Act, which requires sewage to be treated.
The EPA has received nearly 100,000 comments in
opposition to its proposed sewage dumping policy. However, the EPA
continues to bow to industry pressure and is preparing to finalize this
policy guidance. On December 9, Senator Jeffords circulated a letter to
EPA Administrator Mike Leavitt opposing the sewage dumping/blending
guidance, seeking signatures from his fellow Senators. Senator Jeffords
is asking other Senators to support citizens' right to health by
opposing the guidance. Please act today in the interest of public
health, our environment, and our clean water drinking sources and call
your Senators, urging them to sign-on to Senator Jeffords’ letter.
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Amelia River Basin - Support prevention of pollution of the Amelia
River. Rayonier reduced ammonia outflow by 85%. Callahan has received
state grant to repair their leaking sewage treatment plant. Sierra Club is planning
a river summit to develop actions to prevent further river pollution.
St. Marys River - Support protection of the St. Marys River. St.
Marys River Management Committee has developed a strategy for protection and received
approval from the four bordering counties (2 Georgia, 2 Florida). To learn more
Click here
Conservation Purchase
Plans & Grants - Advocate funding for conservation purchases or conservation easements in Nassau
County. County has hired a
grant writer. City referendum supported for Greenway conservation in 2001.
Aquifer - Protect aquifer from overuse, salinization and
pollution. Sierra Club has objected to the Rayonier mill request to increase
aquifer water usage based on aquifer salinization measures, opportunity for increased
water recycling, and U.S. drought conditions. St. Johns Water District in the
process of making decisions. Look at another threat to
our water source from the 1000 Friends of Florida
http://www.1000friendsofflorida.org/Council100.asp
Aquifer problems in south Florida a
warning to us?
The product
derived in South Florida is less glamorous than gold, but the lime rock
being blasted and shipped from Miami-Dade County's so-called "Lake Belt" is
being stripped from the "Sole Source Aquifer", the Biscayne Aquifer.
Industrialists are using the substance of the aquifer for road beds, cement
and concrete to create more sprawl and increase the likelihood of polluted
drinking water. The short-term enrichment of the rock miners is without
regard for the destruction of a unique geologic feature, formed over
countless centuries before man decided to "foul his own nest" in such
spectacular ways.
Not
many miles east, Miami-Dade Water and Sewer Department (WASD), for more than
20 years, has been "storing" its own rich deposits into underground
formations connected to other aquifers. Partially-treated municipal sewage,
about 35 billion gallons a year, is injected into 13 to 17 large diameter
wells. In violation of federal law, the "Safe Drinking Water Act" (??),
contaminated fluid is migrating upward into overlying formations. The EPA is
mulling over what to allow M-D WASD (and utilities in 23 other Florida
counties) to do, instead of cleaning the sewage sufficiently to render it
safe for general recycling. It's not expected that EPA will decide until
after the November elections.
Watershed Protection
- TMDL find out what it stands
for, and how badly our area is effected. Check out the State DEP and
Federal EPA web sites listed on our Links page
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