Eco-Voice Digest
 
Monday, June 11th, 2012  #1333
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In This Issue
Climate Science 101
Florida Wind Farms?
Frog Watch
Is Dirty Water Making You Sick?
CREW
SFWMD land deal w/Putnams
Lake O Conference Call
CEPP PDT call/webcast
SNAKES
Like our Face Book Page
GB Meeting in Okeechobee
People for Trees

 

 

  
Brought to you by a sponsor of Eco-voice:
 
  Friends of the Panther Refuge

 
 
 
 
Friends of the Florida Panther Refuge
 

 
 
       

 

 

Apple Orchard
Apple orchard
Mark Renz photo

 

 

 

 

 

  • Climate Science
  •  

     

       A one stop link for resources that people can use to get up to speed on the issue of climate change.....

     

    Unlike our other postings, we'll amend this as we discover or are pointed to new resources. Different people have different needs and so we will group resources according to the level people start at.

    For complete beginners:

    NCAR: Weather and climate basics
    Center for Climate and Energy Solutions: Global Warming basics
    Wikipedia: Global Warming
    NASA: Global Warming update
    National Academy of Science: Understanding and Responding to Climate Change
    Encyclopedia of Earth: Climate Change Collection
    Global Warming FAQ (Tom Rees)
    Global Warming: Man or Myth? (Scott Mandia, SUNY Suffolk)

     

     

     

     RealClimate is a commentary site (blog) on climatology. The site's contributors are a group of climate scientists whose goal is to provide a quick response to developing stories and providing the context sometimes missing in mainstream commentary. The discussion is intended to be restricted to scientific topics and to avoid political or economic implications of the science.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     


    By Patricia Sagastume
     


    Giant power-generating windmills dominate the skyline south of Beaumont, Kan. Florida may soon get its first wind farm.
    When it comes to clean energy projects like wind farms, where people stand on a proposal sometimes depends on where they sit. Take the case of the late Sen. Edward Kennedy, certainly a champion of green causes - until someone proposed building a wind farm off Cape Cod, where the liberal lion liked to do his sailing.

    He fought the wind farm until he died.

    Now comes a proposal to build an electricity-generating wind farm in remote western Palm Beach County, near Lake Okeechobee. It would be the first in Florida - perhaps surprising considering the state is known for its powerful winds. (States like Texas, Iowa, California, Illinois and Minnesota are dotted with wind farms.) The operation would generate power that could be sold to Florida Power & Light. And it would generate jobs.

    The Palm Beach County Commission actually likes the idea, as do the nearby Glades tri-city communities of Belle Glade, South Bay and Pahokee.

    But there is a complication. The site, 13,000 acres of private sugar land between Lake Okeechobee and the Arthur R. Marshall Loxahatchee National Wildlife Refuge, is located in the main flight path for North American migratory birds. And that has led to opposition from an unlikely source: the nature-loving local Audubon and Sierra Club chapters.

    They fear that the whirring blades of the windmills would will turn migrating birds into tropical mincemeat.

    "If we lose 15 to 25 snail kites because of the turbines, it could mean extinction of these species," said Drew Martin Conservation Chair for the Loxahatchee group of the Sierra Club.

    Although the Sugarland Wind Project has won approval from the County Commission, it still faces a number of obstacles. The company needs state and federal environmental permits to proceed. There's also the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. And it's a given that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service will take a closer look at the impact on wildlife.

    "There needs to be a three-year study to account for the droughts and to get a baseline of what the birds are doing," said Steve Horowitz, president of the Friends of the Loxahatchee National Wildlife Refuge.

    Sugarland isn't backing down. It has hired its own professional ornithologists on the ground to study avian species and behavior.

    In a public relations brochure, Sugarland claimed cars and pets kill more birds than wind turbines. In a given year, the company says, a single wind turbine might kill three birds.

    And indeed, a U.S. Department of Agriculture report from 2005 seemed to bolster the claim that wind turbines aren't as bad for birds as some other things. The study, cited by the American Wind Energy Association trade group, said bird losses due to wind farms amount to about 150,000 a year compared to buildings (550 million), and power lines (130 million).

    Last July, environmentalists got a gigantic boost from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. In a carefully worded 15-page letter to the Wind Capital Group, which is behind the project, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service wrote that more time was needed to gauge the impact on threatened and endangered species of the wetlands area.

    One solution that might appease some environmentalist is for the Sugarland project to install a detection device on each turbine that would trigger an on-and-off switch when approaching flocks of birds and bats fly near the rotating blades. It's known as the Merlin system. It uses the same technology that NASA employed to ensure the safety of its shuttle missions from incoming flocks of birds.

    "We know it's a very expensive system but if Sugarland installed the system, then we would lead the charge to bring their wind farm ourselves, " Horowitz said.

    Sugarland has proposed something different - having section of the wind farm shut down during peak times for two months when birds flock to flooded areas.

    "The farmers do crop rotation every three years and flood the fields and grow rice to kill the nematodes [roundworms]. That's when we can curtail our operations" said Geoff West, Wind Capital Group Environmental Manager for the South East.

    But that option doesn't sit well with Audubon of Florida.

    Nationally, the Audubon Club supports wind energy as a means to protect bird species from the threat of global warming. But the national organization doesn't have a problem with local chapters going their own way on local projects.

    For Audubon of Florida, the risk is not only about direct bird deaths but the impact the 114 turbines spread across the environmentally sensitive area in the Everglades would have on the nesting and migration patterns of threatened and endangered wildlife.

    "If you draw a triangle around the proposed area for the wind farm, it will be right in between Lake Okeechobee, the Loxahatchee Wildlife Refuge and the Everglades. The truth is, bottom line, more data is needed," said Jane Graham, Everglades Policy Advisor for Audubon of Florida.

    Until recently, wind farm companies claimed Florida didn't have enough strong, predictable, on-shore winds to warrant the investment. But turbine technology has become more efficient.

    "We know the new generation of towers will absolutely withstand hurricanes and run efficiently. The problem is the massive turbine blades create a vacuum. The birds flying by can then be pulled into them," Horowitz said.

    The electricity produced from each wind turbine would travel through underground cables to a substation, where it would be boosted and hooked up to a transmission line and then to the Florida Power & Light electrical grid system serving the community.

    How much power would it produce? Enough to supply 60,000 homes with clean and cheap energy, Sugarland says. Looming over nearly all wind farms in the country is a federal tax credit, which is scheduled to expire Dec. 31.

    Known as the PTC (Production Tax Credit) it provides an income tax credit of 2.2 cents per kilowatt-hour for the first 10 years of electricity produced from utility-scale turbines. In the past, when the PTC wasn't renewed, the construction of wind farms was dramatically curtailed.

    Recently, President Obama urged Congress to extend the tax credits, saying that would save 37,000 jobs in the field of clean-energy production, an estimate that is based on reports from industry officials.

    Some in the area see the wind farm as a potential economic boon. Backers say they anticipate their $300 million dollar investment will create 250 temporary positions and about two-dozen permanent jobs, something much needed in an area where nearly half the population is unemployed.

    While environmentalist say those job numbers are relatively small in the grand scheme, that attitude has emboldened supporters of the project.

    "I got citizens that need jobs and clothes on their backs and health insurance and everything else," said Pahokee Mayor J.P. Sasser, "so birds don't make my top ten lists."


     

     

     

     

    DSC_0332ca
    Last waltz
    Leopard frog/Black racer
    Mark Renz photo
     

     

     

     

     

    Greetings Frog Watchers:

    The thirteenth season of monitoring for the Southwest Florida Amphibian Monitoring Network is about to begin. As before, we will monitor the third Wednesday of June - September.

    2012 Monitoring Dates: June 20, July 18, Aug. 15, Sept. 19. 

     

     The Southwest Florida Amphibian Monitoring Network represents a diverse group of citizen volunteers organized for the purpose of monitoring amphibians (mostly frogs) in southwest Florida.

    Click here to learn about Frogwatch.net.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     




     
     
     

     
    Opinion by John Rehill

     

    Half of our streams and waterways are already unable to provide what a hundred million people in America rely on them for: clean water. So why would legislatures refuse to support environmental regulation that could remedy this growing problem? We can thank the congressional members of the "Dirty Water Gang," for shooting down another attempt to save our fouling waters.

    In a vote last Friday, Amendment 12 of the House "Energy and Water Development and Related Agencies Appropriation Act" (H.R. 5325), failed, 139 to 245, with 47 representatives not voting. The amendment was introduced by Congressmen Jim Moran (VA) and John Dingell (MI) with much effort by President Obama, and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), to safeguard against the growing number of endangered U.S. waterways.
     

    Americans have struggled for decades to get residuals from chemical plants, sewage treatment plants and other waste out of their surface water, yet 44 percent of our lakes, 37 percent of our rivers and 32 percent of our estuaries remain unsafe due to toxic water pollutants.

    Waterborne diseases generally fall into three categories: bacterial, parasitic and viral. Once a waterway's PH changes, suffers from dissolved oxygen, becomes septic, or is subjected to any number of other anomalies, the water quickly becomes dangerous. Millions of Americans fall ill to bacterial and chemical contamination they get from their drinking water. The cost to the public is in the billions annually.

    Arsenic is tasteless, so are protozoans, and the sicknesses that result due to their presence aren't easily diagnosed. Months or even years can go by before someone finds out they have been ingesting toxins from their everyday way of life.

    Heavy metals, parasites and or bacterium, seldom announce their arrival. Many impoverished people struggle with even greater discomfort, unable to afford a doctor appointment to find out what could be causing their hair loss, chronic pain or inability to keep food down.

    Worldwide, waterborne diseases are tied with cardiovascular diseases for the leading cause of death. Removing debilitating substances from our waterways will lower the cost of healthcare and improve the quality of life for those who live on the polluted side of the tracks.

    The "Clean Water Act" (CWA) remains under attack in the courts, endlessly fighting major polluters over jurisdictional classification. The CWA's intention was not to protect drinking water, but to protect navigable waters, which is the source of drinking water for more than half of all who live in the U.S.

    The question is: What's in the water in Washington?

    Thursday, Eco Watch.org reported the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee passed Congressman John Mica's (R-FL) "Dirty Water Bill" (H.R. 4965) by a 33-18 vote. This bill was targeted to block President Obama's proposed guidelines to restore Clean Water Act protection for America's waterways.

    The "Dirty Water Gang" doesn't think there's a problem; That's because these congressional leaders are puppets to the pockets that put them there. To earn their keep, they just reiterate some polluter-science and lie about some phantom jobs, in hope that the tit-for-tat gets them through another election.

    What the rest of us will reap isn't as rewarding: higher healthcare cost and loss of worker productivity, due to more waterborne diseases. Perhaps forcing legislators to drink only bottled "Potomac River" water when in Washington, might change their minds.

    Some of the diseases that can result from contaminated water include typhoid, cholera, bacterial dysentery, hepatitis A and amebic dysentery, to mention just a few. All of these can be life threatening and compromise function of the kidneys, liver, heart, lungs and other organs; ending many lives of even the healthiest individuals prematurely.

    Water was the first, and will be the last frontier fought on American soil, and there is not a more important subject than our use of it. Those who have bargained away what is essential to all of our wellbeing, for votes and a few bucks, will have to live knowing they betrayed their oath to the public and that they are responsible for many on the ramifications that occurred from their decisions.

    There is one language that all representatives speak -- the language of the vote. Whether they understand it or not, the ballot has the last say. Let your representatives know if you think they have underestimated how essential water remains to us all. Tell them in the mail, and if they don't listen, tell them at the ballot box.

    John Rehill is a local government and environmental journalist for The Bradenton Times. He can be reached at john.rehill@thebradentontimes.com.

     

     

    Harvester
    Harvester
    Male Everglades Snail Kite
    Mark Renz photo

     

     

     

     
    Crew

     

     

     

     


    The CREW Land and Water Trust is a private, non-profit conservation organization dedicated to the preservation and stewardship of the water resources and natural communities in and around the Corkscrew Regional Ecosystem Watershed (CREW). We do that by coordinating the land acquisition, land management, and public use of this 60,000-acre watershed in partnership with the South Florida Water Management District and the Florida Fish & Wildlife Conservation Commission. CREW is the largest intact watershed in southwest Florida, straddling Lee and Collier Counties. CREW's majestic 5,000-acre sawgrass marsh is the headwaters for the entire watershed which includes the National Audubon Society's famous Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary directly to the south.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Ex-congressman got millions in land deal

     

    Current Ag chief Putnam got rich in '05 selling land $20 million above appraised value. 

     

    By Christine Stapleton

     

    Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

     

    Adam Putnam - former congressman, current commissioner of agriculture and widely viewed as the future of Florida politics - became a very rich man in 2005 when taxpayers spent $25.5 million on 2,042 acres of his family's ranch that had been valued at $5.5 million a year earlier, The Palm Beach Post has learned.

    The South Florida Water Management District needed only 600 acres of the ranch in Highlands County for environmental purposes. But it bought all 2,042 acres and did it in a way that arranged for the Putnams a lucrative tax break, while allowing the family to continue grazing cattle on the land rent-free until the district needed the land. After paying the family's attorney $3.9 million in legal fees, the total deal cost taxpayers nearly $30 million.

    Seven years later the district has used only 150 acres and has no plans for the rest. The Putnam cattle graze on, courtesy of Florida taxpayers......

     

     

     

    Lake O Scientists' Conference Call: Estuaries/releases 


    Periodic Scientists Conference Call -
    Lake Okeechobee/Estuaries
    The next conference call is scheduled for Tuesday, 10:30am.
    The call-in number is (877)322-9654 and the code is 842466.

    Members of the public can "listen in" but are not participants in the discussion.
    Public comment is accepted at the conclusion of the representatives' discussion.
     

     

     

       
      Moving water south
       

        Central Everglades Planning Project

        Project Delivery Team Meeting - No. 9
        Agenda

        Monday June 11, 2012                                                                    10:00 AM - 12:00 PM

         

        Meeting Location:

        Telecom and Web Only

         

        Call-in number:

        USA Toll-Free: (888)273-3658

        Access Code: 6161951

        Host Code: 8281

        Security Code: 1234

         

        Web Meeting Address:

        https://www.webmeeting.att.com

         

        Meeting Number: 8882733658

        Access Code: 6161951


     

     



      U.S. Rep. Alcee Hastings, D-Miramar, has introduced the Stopping Non-Native Animals from Killing Endangered Species (SNAKES) Act that
      sounds crazy but he insists could work: it would send specially trained
      dogs into the Everglades to sniff out, track down and direct hunters to
      the Burmese pythons and other non-native constrictor reptiles that are
      proliferating in the Glades.
       

     

     

     

     

    http://www.facebook.com/pages/Eco-Voice/191319904225035?ref=tn_tnmn

     

     

     

     
    South Florida Water Management District
    GOVERNING BOARD MEETING AGENDA
    This meeting is open to the public/webcast
    June 14, 2012, Okeechobee Court House
     

     

     

     

     
     
    or phone Alice White @426-9752 for more information. 

     

     

    Lazy
    The Gods must be lazy
    Mark Renz photo art

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