Eco-Voice Digest
 
 Wednesday, Feb. 2nd,  2012 # 1200

 
ues 
 
In This Issue
Eco-Voice Facebook
Audubon Chapter Leadership Program
Audubon News
Loxahatchee Everglades Festival
With the Wild Things - Dr. Jackson
Pass the Restore Act
Florida Slime Tracker
Restore the Everglades
SFWMD meetings

 

  

 
This digest brought to you by a founding sponsor of Eco-Voice,  the
 

  http://www.audubonswfl.org/
 

 
   
                           Program January 12th at Shell Point - see website for details

 

 

  

Please post suggested content for Eco-Voice Digest to Facebook 

 

 Lots of interesting articles on Facebook that don't make the "Digest"

 

  

Sunrise ain't just for us
Do our feathered friends ever have transcendent moments?
Mark Renz photo 

Audubon Chapter Leadership Program 

This session is designed especially for active Chapter leaders within the Atlantic Flyway, to build and deepen your expertise and ability to enhance Audubon's effectiveness at all levels and connect your Chapter to the Atlantic Flyway.

Led by top-level State and National Audubon program staff and experienced Chapter staff and volunteers, participants will enjoy a combination of information-packed interactive workshops, special presentations, and lively discussions, as well as the traditional Maine boat cruises for puffins and other seabirds, island exploration, serenity and fine food that are hallmarks of the Hog Island Camp.
 

 

"In every way. I'm very impressed with the program. This was one of the best experiences I have ever had - I will be back." -Jill Palmer, Mecklenburg County Audubon

Daily sessions will include an in-depth focus on key Audubon conservation programs including beach and forest stewardship, tidal marsh protection and enhancement, IBAs, education and advocacy, as well as State-Chapter partnership opportunities, ideas for Chapter conservation projects, fundraising, leadership development and training. Take away great information, refreshed inspiration, and a strong connection with new friends and colleagues in the region!

See the 2011 program schedule for an idea of what to expect!
 

 

  

 


Audubon of Florida News
 
 
Dog Catcher
Dog Catcher
Mark Renz photo
 
  
 
Loxahatchee: Everglades Day Festival - "Mysteries of the Everglades"


Saturday February 11, 2012 8am-4pm rain or shine
Arthur R. Marshall Loxahatchee National Wildlife Refuge
10216 Lee Road, Boynton Beach
13th Annual Everglades Day Festival - "Mysteries of the Everglades"
Science, Literature, Historical, Water, Plant & Animal Mysteries !

This year we are focusing our speaker presentations and guided activities on mysteries within the Everglades or about the Everglades.

Most exciting, we have just confirmed that Jim Currie, producer and star of the TV Series "Birding Adventures" will present in the indoor theater at 1pm. If you've watched his show or heard him speak, you know that this is a treat not to be missed!

There will also be a panel discussion "MYSTERIES IN THE EVERGLADES" sponsored by Murder On the Beach Bookstore in Delray Beach. Confirmed authors to date are Jonathan King and Eliot Kleinberg.

Others on the Everglades Day program include
Lance Warley - photographer
Dr. Laura Brandt - Alligators
John Lopinot - Everglades Photography
Dr. Michelle Williams - Archaeology
Roadside Revue - Music
Live Animal presentations by the Busch Wildlife Sanctuary and Palm Beach Zoo
and much much more!

Come join us and wear your walking shoes for this free family fun and educational outdoor festival!

 

  

 

"With the Wild Things" is hosted by wildlife biologist Dr. Jerry Jackson and produced by the Whitaker Center in the College of Arts & Sciences at Florida Gulf Coast University. Funded by the Environmental Education Grant Program of the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, With the Wild Things is a one-minute look at a particular environmental theme. Dr. Jackson takes you through your backyard, and Southwest Florida's beaches, swamps and preserves to learn about "the wild things."
 Archive

 

  

 
What if? Cuban Oil Spill

Experts: U.S. ill-prepared for oil spill off Cuba
 

By ASSOCIATED PRESS



http://www.naplesnews.com/news/2012/jan/30/experts-us-ill-prepared-oil-spill-cuba/?print=1

 

Monday, January 30, 2012
 

MIAMI - The U.S. is not ready to handle an oil spill if drilling off the Cuban coast goes awry but can be better prepared with monitoring systems and other basic steps, experts told government officials Monday.
 

The comments at a congressional subcommittee hearing in the Miami Beach suburb of Sunny Isles come more than a week after a huge oil rig arrived in Cuban waters to begin drilling a deepwater exploratory well.


Similar development is expected off the Bahamas next year, but decades of tense relations between the U.S. and Cuba makes cooperation in protecting the Florida Straits particularly tricky. With memories of the Deepwater Horizon spill in the Gulf of Mexico still fresh, state and federal officials fear even the perception of oil flowing toward Florida beaches could devastate an economy that claims about $57 million from tourism.
Florida International University Professor John Proni told officials to be proactive. He is leading a consortium of researchers on U.S. readiness to handle a spill.
 

"For the last few years, my colleagues and I have been visiting Washington to say the best time to start preparing for an oil spell is before it happens," Proni told leaders of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, in a hotel-turned-hearing room overlooking the turquoise waters the group convened to protect. Proni said he has seen little action from officials in Washington, though they responded positively.


U.S. officials have turned their attention to preventing future spills since the Deepwater Horizon rig leased by BP blew up in April 2010, causing the well to blow out and unleashing millions of gallons of oil in the Gulf of Mexico. Crude washed up on pristine shoreline, soiled wildlife and left a region dependent on tourist dollars scrambling to rebuild its image.
Coast Guard officials said Monday they did not know if Cuba had started drilling. Experts testified current estimates have surface oil from a spill moving as quickly as 3 miles an hour due to the Gulfstream, but that the fast-moving current would make it difficult for the oil to quickly cross the Florida Straits.
Rear Adm. William Baumgartner, commander of the Coast Guard region that covers the Florida Straits, said a likely scenario would have the oil spreading and reaching U.S. waters in six to 10 days.
 

Proni said that lack of specificity is the problem. He wants a system that can monitor changes in underwater sounds to immediately alert U.S. officials to a spill or other unusual activity. He also wants the U.S. to invest in developing better computer models to predict oil movement and to do an assessment of the existing ecosystem and the type of oil Cuba possesses. That way, experts can better pinpoint any damage and find out if it came from Cuban wells.


Proni said the fast-moving water would make it difficult to burn the oil or strain it, as was done to halt the spread of the Deepwater Horizon spill. He added that more research is needed on the risks of using chemicals that break down the oil into tiny droplets.
 

Baumgartner said his agency has been working to develop a response plan. The Coast Guard and private response teams have been granted the required visas under the U.S. embargo to work with the Cuban government and its partners should a problem arise. Since March 2011, the agency has been working with Repsol RDF, the Spanish company leasing the rig off Cuba, and inspected the rig earlier this month.


The rig was given a good bill of health. Asked Monday about the rig's readiness, though, Baumgartner said inspectors found some minor problems with the safety systems that would have kept the ship from being allowed to drill in U.S. waters. He said it was unclear whether the required repairs had been made.
 

U.S. Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart, one of three South Florida Cuban-American lawmakers who attended the hearing, said he hopes the Obama administration will quickly respond to the consortium's concerns. He added that Proni's proposals could be applied to the Gulf of Mexico, where many more rigs are already drilling for oil in U.S. waters.


Meanwhile, U.S. Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, has authored a bill that would sanction those who help Cuba develop its oil reserves.
"We can't stop Repsol from drilling now, but we can act to deter future leaders to avoid the Castro brothers becoming the oil tycoons of the Caribbean," she told the committee.
Fellow South Floridian U.S. Rep. David Rivera is proposing to expand the 1990 Oil Pollution Act to fully cover companies operating outside U.S. waters, in the event oil reaches U.S. territory. The 1990 law requires oil companies to repay government agencies for any cleanup costs for spills; it also requires that companies have plans for preventing and cleaning up spills.
But Chairman John Micah, R-Fla., questioned whether the U.S. could enforce any law outside its own waters.

 

Can you imagine
Can you imagine living in a place
where your feet never touch the ground?

Mark Renz photo art 

 
 

  Gulf Oil Spill Restoration

 

 

 Ads in favor of the RESTORE  Act have hit Florida's airways, playing on radio stations in most of Florida's major media markets have hit Florida's airways, playing on radio stations in most of the state's major media markets. What do you think of this spot?

 

Listen: RESTORE Act January 2012

 

 

  

 
 Florida Slime Crime Tracker

Florida's waterways are plagued by slime caused by fertilizer, sewage and animal manure. 
 

Have a photo to add? Comments? Want to help fight slime crime?

Contact us at slimecrimes@gmail.com

 


 

  

 
 
 
 

 

The Everglades is recognized both nationally and internationally as one of the world's most unique natural and cultural resources.
 
Task Force
www.sfrestore.org/tf/
Home · Task Force · Membership » · Meeting ...
Calendar
www.sfrestore.org/calendar/index.html
Calendar · Documents · Links · Site Map · Disclaimer ...
Working Group
www.sfrestore.org/wg/index.html
Home · Task Force · Working Group · Membership ...
Science Coordination Team
www.sfrestore.org/sct/docs/
NEW!! SCT Flow Paper - Final - January 17, 2003 · SCT ...

 

  

 

Who's Water Is It?

 

In a recent article, Audubon's Mary Jean Yon was quoted asking an important question regarding Florida's magnificent natural water resources: "Who's water is it?"

From the Orlando Sentinel:

"Whose water is it?" said Audubon of Florida legislative adviser Mary Jean Yon.

Already, serious tensions over scarce supplies span the state, including a Panhandle fight over proposed wells, Jacksonville's contested pumping of the Floridan Aquifer, Orange County's quest to tap a reservoir on remote ranchland and high-stakes competition over South Florida's Lake Okeechobee.

Former Gov. Bob Graham recently launched the Florida Conservation Coalition to thwart what he calls the "privatizing" of water supplies.

Graham said he is concerned in part because of actions by Gov. Rick Scott and lawmakers this year to shrink and weaken state-watchdog agencies and a proposed law that would give utilities greater control over sources.

...But Audubon's Yon said expecting utilities to manage water more efficiently than the state is a "troubling" sign.

"There are a lot of signals coming out of the Legislature that, when combined, make one worry about whose water is it," Yon said.

What do you think about this bill? How will it affect Florida's water resources? Let us know in the comment section below or join the conversation on our Facebook Page Page.

 

 

  

 

 

 

 http://www.sfwmd.gov/portal/page/portal/xweb%20about%20us/meetings

 

  

 

  
STA 5  2012 Birding Tour Schedule

 

 
 

 
Hendry-Glades Audubon will lead escorted tours to Stormwater Treatment Area 5 (STA-5) south of Clewiston his season. Tours are open to anyone, but participants must register to reserve a space on the trips. To sign up  contact : Margaret England, at sta5birding@embarqmail.com  or 863-674-0695 include your name and contact information including an emergency cell number for the tour day.

 

  

Fishing without a license
Fishing without a license
Mark Renz photo art

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