Eco-Voice Digest
 
  

Tuesday, Jan. 31st,  #1198
 
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In This Issue
Blue Revolution
2012 Everglades Restoration Fuding
New Forest Rules
Happy B'day DU
Watery Foundation Blog
Gardening Map
Everglades Tour
Cape Coral Friends Meeting
Big O Birding Festival
Everglades HUB website
WaterKeeper Alliance
Snook Season Opens - someplaces
Green News Links

 

 

 
SCCF is a founding sponsor of Eco-Voice
 by  the
 

 Programs

 

 

 

 

 
SCCF Conservation Forum Keynoter Jan. 31.
 

 

 

 In Blue Revolution, award-winning journalist Cynthia Barnett reports on the many ways one of the most water-rich nations on the planet has squandered its way to scarcity, and argues the best solution is also the simplest and least expensive: a water ethic for America.

 
 Cynthia Barnett will be on WGCU Gulf Coast Live to discuss her book, Blue Revolution, and the SCCF Conservation forum, 1/31, at 12:30 ! In recent news Blue Revolution was named one of the best science books of 2011! http://www.wgcu.org/

 

 

Time
Does it seem that the longer the clock ticks
the more distant is our connection
to humanity and other life forms?
Have we moved from wide-eyed innocence
to all-knowing arrogance
without truly knowing?
-- Old Man River

Mark Renz photo

 

 

 

2012 Everglades Funding

Seven million people living in South Florida depend on the Everglades for their drinking water. Water is vital to life, commerce and agriculture. The Everglades are visited by tourists from around the world for its many natural wonders. Florida is defined by its water resources, and its environment and economy depend on sound management of its fresh and salt-water resources. Please support the Governor's request for $40 million for Everglades restoration in the FY 12-13 state budget.

The Everglades needs your help. State funding to continue the restoration of the Everglades rests in the State Legislature. Governor Scott has pledged his support for the Everglades and put $40 in his budget. But now it is up to the legislature, and a few are talking about even more, although any funding is difficult this year.

 

Conservation land-buying cut out of House's proposed budget
Gov. Rick Scott included $15 million for land acquisition in his 2012-13 budget request along with $7.5 million in authority to spend federal dollars for buying land around military bases. But both spending items were cut from the proposed House budget released Friday. Florida Forever was the largest land acquisition program in the nation from 1990 until 2009, when its funding was eliminated.

 

 

 

 

 

Florida is known for its world-famous fishing destinations and natural wonders, especially Everglades and Biscayne National Parks. These parks are the key to preserving our economy and way of life.

Restoration of the Everglades is needed to ensure drinking water supplies for one in three Floridians, reduce the level of toxins found in Florida's fish, protect endangered wildlife like the Florida panther, and save jobs in the tourism, boating, and fishing industries. The state of Florida must continue advancing its commitment to restore our most treasured resource.

Take Action: Urge your state legislators to restore Everglades restoration funding of $100 million annually and ask them to vote to designate an "Everglades Day" annually so all current and future lawmakers recognize the importance of the River of Grass to our economy, our water supply, and our way of life.

Thank you for taking a moment to speak up for Everglades National Park, a Florida--and national--gem! Your action today helps preserve this one-of-a-kind place for future generations.

Sincerely,

Dawn Shirreffs
Everglades Restoration Program Manager
 

 

If Ben Franklin
Not Ben Franklin's first choice as a national symbol...

Mark Renz photo art


 

  

White House To Unveil New Forest RulesHouse To Unveil New Forest Rules

by The Associated Press

 

 The Obama administration says new rules to manage nearly 200 million acres of national forests will protect watersheds and wildlife while promoting uses ranging from recreation to logging.

The new rules, to replace guidelines thrown out by a federal court in 2009, are set to be released Thursday by Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack. A summary was obtained by The Associated Press.

Vilsack said in an interview that the rules reflect more than 300,000 comments received since a draft plan was released last year. The new rules strengthen a requirement that decisions be based on the best available science and recognize that forests are used for a variety of purposes, Vilsack said.

"I think it's a solid rule and done in a collaborative, open and transparent way," he said.

The guidelines, known as a forest planning rule, will encourage forest restoration and watershed protection while creating opportunities for the timber industry and those who use the forest for recreation, he said.

Vilsack, who has pledged to break through the logjam of political conflict over forest management, said the new regulation's emphasis on science and multiple uses should allow it to stand up to likely court challenges from environmental groups or the timber industry.

"I am hopeful and confident that it will stand scrutiny," he said.

Forest Service Chief Tom Tidwell said the guidelines would allow land management plans for individual forests to be completed more quickly and at a lower cost than under current rules, which date to the Reagan administration.

Several attempts to revise the 1982 planning rule have been thrown out by federal courts in the past decade. Most recently a Bush administration plan was struck down in 2009. Environmentalists had fought the rule, saying it rolled back key forest protections.

The Obama administration did not appeal the ruling, electing to develop a new forest planning rule to protect water, climate and wildlife.

Under the new rule, forest plans could be developed within three to four years instead of taking up to seven years, as under current guidelines, Tidwell said.

"We really can protect the forest at lower cost with less time," he said.

The new regulation also should give forest managers more flexibility to address conditions on the ground, such as projects to thin the forest to reduce the risk of wildfire, Tidwell said.

"We'll be able to get more work done get more out of the forest and create more jobs," while at the same allowing greater recreational use, Tidwell said. Recreational use of the forest has grown exponentially in recent years.

Like Vilsack, Tidwell said he is optimistic the new plan will stand up to scrutiny from environmental groups and the timber industry, both of which have challenged previous planning rules in court.

"I'm optimistic that folks will want to give it a shot," Tidwell said.

The 155 national forests and grasslands managed by the Forest Service cover 193 million acres in 42 states and Puerto Rico. Balance between industry and conservation in those areas has been tough to find since the existing rules went into effect three decades ago.

At least three revisions of the rules have been struck down since 2000.

The planning rule designates certain animal species that must be protected to ensure ecosystems are healthy. However, the rule became the basis of numerous lawsuits that sharply cut back logging to protect habitat for fish and wildlife.

Meanwhile, the timber industry has continued to clamor for more logs, and conservation groups keep challenging timber sales, drilling and mining projects.

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 Today is Ducks Unlimited's 75th anniversary, and we're excited to kick off an entire year of celebrations. We invite you to visit the 75th section of the DU website to watch a special video message from our CEO and president. While you're there, be sure to check out a variety of exclusive content, including:

We'd also like to invite you to join us in Nashville this May for our biggest anniversary celebration of the year, the 75th DU National Convention! This year's convention will be better than ever, with an exclusive Grand Ole Opry, Jack Daniel's distillery tour and more. You won't want to miss it!

DU's 75th anniversary is a monumental moment in conservation history, one we want to share with all our volunteers, supporters and partners that have made DU's conservation mission a success since 1937. This celebration is as much yours as it is ours.

Happy Anniversary to our DU family!

 

 

Day flying moth
Day flying moth
Click Mark Renz photo art for my identity and bio
 
 
 

It's official: Gardeners and farmers can count on warmer weather. If that's you, it might be a good time to rethink those flower and vegetable beds for this year's growing season.

 

  The new map shows that in much of the country, winters aren't as cold as they used to be, and spring planting comes earlier.

 


 

 

 
 


 Join us for a day in Everglades National Park, where we will stop at several scenic spots including the Anhinga Trail, Mahogany Hammock and Pa-Hay-Okee, before arriving at Flamingo, where we will board a boat and enjoy a picnic cruise on Florida Bay.
 

 

 

 
 
 Cape Coral Friends of Wildlife Meeting 2/14
 
 
CCFW Logo
 
Burrowing Owl Festival Feb. 25th

 

 


March 31 deadline for 7 'Ding' student scholarships
"Ding" Darling Wildlife Society-Friends of the Refuge (DDWS) is committed to training today's youth as conservation stewards of the future. To that end, the Society works with various local businesses and individuals to provide annual scholarships to students engaged in the study of conservation, biology, and the environment.
Application deadline for seven separate scholarships amounting to $6,000 is March 31, 2012. High school seniors or college students in Lee, Collier, and Charlotte counties intending to pursue degrees in environmental-related studies can apply.
Tarpon Bay Explorers Scholarship for Environmental Studies for the seventh consecutive year will award scholarships to two students. The Jane Werner Environmental Scholarship, DDWS' first endowed scholarship, awards one scholarship each year to one student. Other scholarships this year include the Jack & Dolores Clarke Scholarship, Richard Bailey Scholarship, Barbara Jean Keller Memorial Scholarship, and Bill Lipman Memorial Scholarship.



The scholarships will be awarded at the inaugural "Ding" Conservation Education Awards on May 8 at Broadway Palm Theatre in Fort Myers.



Interested students can find more information and printable application forms at www.dingdarlingsociety.org
. Click on "Student Scholarships" on the home page under "Inside the Society."

 

  

Wanna race
Wanna race?
Black racer - Mark Renz photo

Big "O" Birding Festival

MARCH 28-31, 2012

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Join

 

 

 

 

 

Everglades HUB - online info

www.evergladeshub.com

 

 

Independent information source on all matters concerning Florida Everglades, "the world's largest ecological laboratory". Look up new scientific literature, press news,
main issues and more -
 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Snook Foundation
 
The recreational harvest season for snook reopens on Feb. 1 in Florida's Atlantic coastal and inland waters, including Lake Okeechobee and the Kissimmee River.
Anglers may keep one snook between 28 and 32 inches total length per day in the ...allowable harvest areas only. Fishermen targeting snook must have a snook permit as well as a saltwater license unless they are exempt from having a license. Using snatch hooks and spears is prohibited.
It is illegal to buy or sell snook.
The harvest of snook remains closed in all of Florida's Gulf of Mexico state waters, including Everglades National Park and Monroe County, until Aug. 31. Anglers may still catch and release snook during the closure, but the FWC encourages everyone to handle and release these fish carefully to help ensure their survival upon release.
This Gulf closure went into effect Dec. 15, 2010, after the population was impacted by prolonged cold weather. The closure will give the Gulf snook population time to rebound. A stock assessment completed by the FWC's Fish and Wildlife Research Institute is due to the Commission in 2012.
 and click on "Saltwater" for more information on snook.

 

 

Alternative to big city skyline
Alternative to big city skyline
Mark Renz photo art

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