Eco-Voice Digest
 Jan. 9th,  2012 #1177 
In This Issue
Legislative Session Begins
Sen. Nelson promises 'Glades progress
Everglades Park Center
Save our Shores
Space Coast Birding
Wind Turbines for EAA
Tast Force Meeting
Florida Icon. Sen. Graham
SFWMD meeting 1/12
Great Backyard Campout
Green News Links
Big Cypress Hydrology

 

 

 

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Palm Alley
Glades mirage
Mark Renz photo art

Business lobby is poised to pounce as Tallahassee legislative session begins
 

 

 

As session begins on Tuesday, business lobby is poised to pounce

The 2012 legislative session will be preoccupied with the once-a-decade chore of redistricting, but a broad spectrum of trade groups and lobbyists is still hoping to capitalize on its probusiness momentum from 2011 with an aggressive agenda.

Several powerful lobbying groups have laid out legislative wish lists in slick publications that tout their roles as "job creators" and call on lawmakers to fight the state's high rate of unemployment. With jobs still ranking as the top priority of Gov. Rick Scott, several of those wishes are likely to be granted.

When the nine-week legislative session opens Tuesday, lobbyists will be out in force to support business-friendly bills that range from education to taxes and business costs.

 

  Redistricting, budget to dominate Florida 2012 legislative session 

 

By Steve Bousquet, Times/Herald Tallahassee BureauTampa Bay Times
 

TALLAHASSEE - The Florida Legislature convenes Tuesday for an unusual and unpredictable 60-day session that will be dominated by two highly partisan subjects: the redrawing of political districts and yet another round of budget-cutting.

As lawmakers pack their bags for the next two months, they are adding sweaters and heavy coats to ward off the biting chill of a January in North Florida. The state Constitution requires that a reapportionment session must begin in January, not in March as it usually does.

Beyond redistricting and the budget, legislators are expected to search anew for a way to curb rampant fraud in the state's no-fault car insurance system; debate the creation of three new casino gambling resorts; and consider applying the sales tax to online consumer purchases of books, clothing and other items.

Gov. Rick Scott wants legislators to find another $1 billion for public schools, even in a year when they must close a projected budget shortfall of up to $2 billion.

"That we need to do ," Scott said of the school money in a Times/Herald interview. He has threatened to veto a budget that doesn't include that money - a risky tactic because senators in particular don't like receiving ultimatums of any kind.

Scott's path to that $1 billion for schools hinges on big cuts in Medicaid payments to hospitals, which would have a major impact in urban hospitals in South Florida and Tampa Bay that treat large numbers of Medicaid recipients.

Democrats are angry with Scott's approach, which they describe as pitting schoolchildren and teachers against pregnant women and sick kids, two groups most dependent on Medicaid.

But the remapping of districts to reflect population growth and demographic shifts will be the central theme of the 2012 session from the outset.

It is tense and exhausting work, made more complicated and unpredictable this year because of two voter-approved constitutional amendments that prevent the Legislature from drawing districts to help or hurt a political party or incumbents.

Republicans, aided by emerging technology, have posted extensive amounts of redistricting data online, and the hard-edged, me-first machinations of previous decades have not surfaced. Not yet, anyway.

"I think personally that it's coming together smoother than the session of 10 years ago," said Sen. Jack Latvala, R-Clearwater, who in 2002 was in charge of re-mapping congressional districts in the Senate. "The redistricting process in the Senate has been very well-managed."

Latvala said he agrees with lawmakers who say they should delay action on the new budget until the middle of March or later when a new estimate of projected - and hopefully for lawmakers, more - tax revenue will be available.

Democrats have a more jaded view of reapportionment.

"It's a free-for-all," said Rep. Jeff Clemens, a first-term Democrat from Palm Beach County. "The weight of redistricting is going to put a strain on everybody." Clemens is already troubled by House maps that chop his hometown of Lake Worth into four different districts.

The Legislature is controlled overwhelmingly by Republicans, who hold majorities of 28-12 in the Senate and 81-39 in the House. The GOP's principal goals are to draw redistricting plans that can quickly gain approval by state and federal courts and to pass a state budget without raising any taxes.

"No new taxes. No new fees. A balanced budget," said Senate President Mike Haridopolos, R-Merritt Island, succinctly stating his overarching goals.

History suggests a session long on rhetoric and short on results. One reason is that it's an election year, when legislators typically avoid taking controversial positions that will alienate voters back home.

One influential lawmaker said redistricting and the budget are the only must-pass issues.

"I, for one, would be satisfied if little else occurred," said Rep. Denise Grimsley, R-Sebring, the lead budget writer in the House.

Another unique twist to reapportionment is that all 160 legislative seats will be up for election next fall, all of them in newly drawn districts with new constituents. Many lawmakers will be eager to get home to start campaigning and raise money, which they can't do when they are in the capital.

If the early maps as drawn are approved, it will pit some incumbents against each other or force some of them to move to new communities - a jarringly uncomfortable prospect.

 
 

Five key issues

Redistricting:

 After dozens of hearings statewide, legislators must redraw the lines for all 160 legislative and 27 congressional seats. They must adhere to federal and state legal standards and protect minority power, not to mention the selfish re-election interests of lawmakers themselves.

 

Budget:

A year after lawmakers cut state spending by $4 billion, they're sharpening the budget-cutting knives again to cover a projected shortfall of up to $2 billion because of slack tax collections. The math is made even more difficult because Gov. Rick Scott is demanding a $1 billion increase in spending for public schools.

 

Gambling:

Here's a way to create lots of jobs and revenue for the state: Build three new $2 billion "destination resort" gambling casinos, and limit future expansion of gambling. But opponents say more casino gambling is a dangerous roll of the dice that would harm the state's family-friendly tourism image.

 

Insurance fraud:

Tampa and Miami are two hubs for staged car accidents, overused procedures such as massages and other types of fraud in the no-fault car insurance system. With fraud pegged at $900 million a year, lawmakers are under pressure to find a fix. But they don't have an obvious one; the last legislative repair job, in 2007, only made things worse.

 

Online sales:

For years, retailers have complained of an unfair double standard: Florida stores collect the 6 percent statewide sales tax on purchases, but out-of-state retailers don't. Business support is growing to tax online sales, but Gov. Rick Scott insists the tax must be "revenue neutral," meaning no additional money for government. The tax's timing isn't good: In an election year for all lawmakers, opponents could easily portray support as a vote to raise taxes.

 

Five key players

JD Alexander:

 The Senate budget chairman controls the purse strings, and most colleagues respect or fear him too much to challenge him. A Republican and citrus grower from Lake Wales, the senator universally known only by his initials is in his last year in the Legislature.

 

Dean Cannon:

The House speaker, a Republican from Winter Park in his final session, exerted strong control over his highly partisan GOP caucus last year, and he likely will again, even if it antagonizes his Capitol counterpart, Senate President Mike Haridopolos. Watch Cannon's role in the emerging casino gambling debate in which he, like much of greater Orlando, views casinos as detrimental to Disney's family-friendly image.

 

Don Gaetz:

 Poised to preside over the 40-member Senate next fall, his power would be on the rise anyway. But the retired health care executive from Niceville also directs legislative and congressional mapmaking as chairman of the Senate Reapportionment Committee.

John Thrasher:

 A former House speaker turned lobbyist, he earned millions as head of the powerhouse lobbying firm Southern Strategy Group, then re-entered the Capitol's revolving door as a senator from a St. Augustine-area district and now has his eyes on a possible future Senate presidency.

 

Will Weatherford:

The always-upbeat Pasco County lawmaker, at 32, is on track to become one of Florida's youngest House speakers next fall. As chairman of the House Redistricting Committee, he, like Gaetz in the Senate, will shape the political composition of his chamber for the next decade.

- Steve Bousquet, Times/Herald Tallahassee Bureau

 

 

Rays in flight
Rays in flight
Mark Renz photo art

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Sen. Nelson promising legislation to speed up Everglades restoration promising legislation to speed up Everglades restoration

By Tyler Treadway

Saturday, January 7, 2012

STUART - U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson asked the members of the Everglades Coalition to "imagine what Florida looked like" when the first Spanish explorers saw it: pristine beaches, verdant forests and water flowing from the Kissimmee River into Lake Okeechobee and south through the "River of Grass" into the Gulf of Mexico.

"Why we're here today," the Florida Democrat told the coalition, "is that we want to preserve what the good Lord has given us, and what those early explorers saw, ... so that our children can inherit these natural wonders."

Speaking at a luncheon Saturday during the 27th annual conference of the Everglades Coalition, a group dedicated to restoring the Everglades ecosystem, Nelson also said he's "developing legislation to speed up the restoration process, to eliminate the hurdles projects are now facing. The need and the benefits are so great that restoration can't wait for permission at each step along the way."

The statement drew applause from the audience. Afterward Melissa Meeker, executive director of the South Florida Water Management District, said, "That's huge. To cut through all that red tape would be fantastic."

 

 

 

20 years after Congress promised new Everglades Park center, plans being made 

 

By ERIC STAATS

 

EVERGLADES NATIONAL PARK -More than 100,000 adventure-seekers use Everglades City as their gateway to Everglades National Park every year.

The Gulf Coast Visitor Center is the put-in spot for canoers and kayakers paddling the park's Wilderness Waterway and the place to hop on a tour boat to explore the park's unique coastal vistas.

Federal budget cuts and sea level rise have the National Park Service rethinking its plans to redevelop the popular visitor center in Everglades City, some 20 years after Congress promised to build a new one and name it for Everglades champion Marjory Stoneman Douglas.

Project manager Fred Herling said the visitor center "will not go away" but planners are looking at scaling back improvements and maybe moving some of the visitor center services to other spots in and around Everglades City.

"We're kind of going into it with a pretty open slate," Herling said.

The existing visitor center was built in 1966 and has undergone minimal change since then. The Park Service considers the buildings obsolete and even structurally unsound.

Visitor center functions are different these days, with visitors getting much of the information they need to plan a trip to a national park on the Web or using smartphone applications, Herling said.

In 1989, Congress directed the Interior Department to speed up construction of a new visitor center, but it has yet to be funded.

Redevelopment at Everglades City and at the park's Flamingo entrance, near Homestead, once was estimated to cost $80 million to $100 million, Herling said.

"Those number don't make sense anymore," he said, adding that the Park Service "hasn't gotten to the money part" for any scaled-back plans.

While the government needs to watch its budgets in tight fiscal times, the new visitor center should provide at least the same quantity of visitor services while improving quality, National Parks Conservation Association regional director John Adornato said.

"It doesn't need to be the Taj Mahal," he said.

The Park Service doesn't plan to rebuild hotel-like accommodations destroyed by hurricanes at its Flamingo visitor center near Homestead. The Conservation Association opposes that decision.

In Everglades City, planners are considering ways to provide visitor services given the site's vulnerability to hurricanes and flooding. That might mean hurricane-proofing structures or using units that could be moved out of harm's way, Herling said.

Under one alternative, the Park Service would require the next boat tour concession to have its own location rather than being located at the park's visitor center. The current concession contract runs out in 2018.

Longtime Everglades City mayor and concession operator Sammy Hamilton couldn't be reached for comment despite repeated attempts.

Herling said spreading the Park Service's presence to other parts of Everglades City would spread visitors to other parts of the town and help its tourism economy.

Changing the spot the boat tour business holds in the park's host community could be a tough sell for some locals, though.

"I don't see what's wrong with where it's at now," Everglades Chamber of Commerce President Gene Wooten said. "I just think it's already in a good spot."

 

Snakes of a feather
Snakes of a feather...
Banded water snakes
Mark Renz photo art

 

   

 

Save Our Shores! Florida is a statewide marine research and advocacy organization. We work to protect Florida's beaches and coastal environment through research, public education, advocating effective policy solutions, and calling on citizens to take direct action in defense of the environment.

By combining independent research, practical ideas, and effective grassroots action, we help to overcome the opposition of special interests and win real results for Florida's environment.

 

 

As the debate continues over the potential of allowing offshore drilling in Florida's state-controlled waters, which extend 3 miles into the Atlantic Ocean and 10 miles into the Gulf of Mexico, it is important that the public be made aware of not only the environmental consequences of offshore drilling, but also potential economic implications.

These pocketbook issues tend to be a driving force behind voter opinion on the subject, so it is important for us to ensure the public is well-informed. Here we have laid out some of the basic facts about Florida's economy as well as the economic potential (both 'positive' and negative) from allowing drilling rigs near our shores.

Based on these findings, we can say with absolute confidence that the risk of damaging Florida's tourism and fisheries far outweighs any value that could be gained by lifting the current moratorium banning exploration and drilling in our state waters.

Florida's Tourism Industry:

* Tourism brings in nearly $60 billion to Florida each year, which amounts to $3.4 billion in state tax revenues, and directly employs over 900,000 people. It is the state's largest employer.

 

 

  

 Space Coast Birding and Wildlife Festival

Jan. 25-30th, 2012

- Titusville, Florida

 

 

More than 200 exceptional field trips, seminars, photography workshops, kayak trips, exhibitors and family activities from Titusville, Florida.

 

 
 

 

 

 

 By Mike Vogel - 12/14/2011
 

 

Wind Capital Group hopes to obtain building permits in a few months for a wind plant in western Palm Beach County, the first in the Southeast U.S.

"In the state of Florida, this is going to be some of the best wind you're going to find," says program director Robin Saiz in Jupiter. Federal Energy Department resource maps show mainland Florida's wind energy potential is mediocre with the exception of east of Lake Okeechobee.

Meanwhile, however, concerns over the turbine's impact on wildlife raise the question of whether any Florida location will be viable for wind generation. The company has commissioned a 50-week study of birds and bats to plan a layout that would minimize the impact on wildlife. The industry reports that on average turbines kill three birds per year per megawatt, far fewer than deaths caused by cats, transmission lines or crashes into buildings and cars, Saiz says.

But environmentalists say the study isn't long enough to capture fluctuating bird migratory patterns. The area is critical habitat for native avian species and migrating birds, which stay over land as long as possible. Bird populations from Latin America to Canada could be affected, they say. "The impact is going to be very negative," says Drew Martin, conservation chair for the local Sierra Club chapter.

Similar concerns led environmentalists to oppose FPL's plan for wind generators near its nuclear plant on Hutchinson Island in St. Lucie County. FPL put those plans on hold and now is evaluating sites in western St. Lucie.

Wind supporters, Martin says, may have to look offshore.

"Of course, we support renewable energy. The important thing is they be sited appropriately," says Julie Wraithmell, wildlife policy director for Audubon of Florida, which wants a three-year study. "Florida has some very unique concerns, and as a result, it's important we do our due diligence before siting these things. Once they're up, the damage is done."

Harvesting the Wind

Wind Capital Group of St. Louis is targeting Palm Beach County for a wind farm.

  • The farm: 80 to 100 turbines - each 40 to 50 stories high
  • Where: 13,000 acres of leased farmland in the Everglades Agricultural Area
  • Power: Combined generation of 150 megawatts, enough to power 35,000 to 40,000 homes
  • Jobs: 250 to 300 at peak construction; 12 to 15 to operate the turbines
  • Cost: $300 million

 http://www.floridatrend.com/a56015_wind-capital-group-to-build-plant-in-jupiter

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
    

 

 

  

 

  
South Florida Ecosystem Restoration Task Force - Science Meeting  Jan. 13th  
 

District Headquarters - B-1 Auditorium

3301 Gun Club Road

West Palm Beach, FL 33406


www.sfrestore.org
    

 

 

 

 

 

Bob Graham is a Florida Icon

 

U.S. senator, 1987-2005; governor of Florida, 1979-87; founder, University of Florida Bob Graham Center for Public Service; Miami Lakes; age 75

by Cynthia Barnett

 » When I went to the Senate in 1987, I would estimate from 100 senators, one-third of them were centrists - Republicans and Democrats. They were a little left or right of center, but were close enough that they could sit down and have a serious discussion and frequently find common ground. Today, I would say that number has declined to less than 15.

 

 

 SWFLRPC

 


Monday, Jan. 9th @ 9:30am -

 

Estero Bay ABM Meeting

   

 
Estero Bay Agency on Bay Management

Negotiations over the permit issuance for the Florida Gulf Coast University led to a Settlement Agreement that called for the creation of the "Arnold Committee" and an assessment of overall land uses and natural systems, environmental protection and mitigation tools in the Estero Bay watershed. Upon completion of the Assessment and its adoption by the Arnold Committee in October of 1996, the Council established and began providing Staff support to the Estero Bay Agency on Bay Management (ABM).

The ABM is a non-regulatory advisory committee to the Council. Its directive is to make comments and recommendations regarding the management of Estero Bay and its watershed. 

 

 

 

 

 

Board Meeting Thursday - Webcast

 

Agenda: http://my.sfwmd.gov/gb/doc/2012-01_Agenda_Short.pdf

 

 

  

 

 

Save the Date: NWF's Great American Backyard Campout 2012

 

 

Now is the time to mark your calendars for National Wildlife Federation's 2012 Great American Backyard Campout! Camping out with friends and family is incredible-these testimonials from our campers say it all:
 

"As a family we camp out often, but this time we camped with a purpose!"


"We had a wonderful time and will make this an annual tradition."
 

Great American Backyard Campout is coming to a neighborhood, campground or park near you! Be sure to stay tuned for registration information and

website updates.

 

 
Long road home
Long road home
Mark Renz photo

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