Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Fundamentally weak: Florida’s environmental movement by gimleteye


A group of native American Indians stood on a hill. In the distance they spied a man on a horse. A sentinel brave was sent out to see who was coming. The breathless Indian returned a short time later and exclaimed: “Chief, there is a white man. He is big and strong and carrying a weapon we have never seen before.” The chief squinted. Indeed, a man on horseback was approaching. Holding a thumb and forefinger apart, the chief replied before riding away, “Do not worry. He is only this tall.”

It is hard to quickly assess where Florida’s environmental movement went wrong.

In short, the persistent problem for environmental organizations that act as educators and sometimes lobbyists and advocates—is the imbalance between funding and need.

But that equation fails to capture the kernel of the problem: when money is scarce, what is the best strategy to engage the public and change, ultimately, the politics of environmental destruction?

Whatever strategies environmental organizations in Florida have followed, in concert or separately, have fallen far short. It is a failing grade based on results, not effort.

Millions of Floridians who do care about the environment assume someone else is doing the protecting. With threats multiplying--like global warming--a serious reckoning is long overdue. Let it begin, and, let the mainstream media pay attention.


In Florida, the golden years of the environmental movement were—very much like the national environmental movement—its first years.

The nation’s most important environmental laws—the Clean Water Act, the Clean Air Act, the National Environmental Policy Act—were passed by Congress during the term of a Republican president, Richard Nixon in the 1970’s.

Florida’s awakening on the role of government in environmental protection dates from the same era, when Nathaniel Reed acted as emissary to the environment for two Florida governors, Claude Kirk and Reuben Askew.

In the past 40 years, the only unqualified success has been Florida’s land acquisition programs, protecting millions of acres of land in perpetuity from development. But even then, there are serious problems.

Budgets to maintain public lands are woefully inadequate—from state parks to national parks. And there is more.

Protecting land in perpetuity, by mere ownership, does not guarantee that they will actually be protected. Watersheds that serve much of Florida’s fragile landscape have been badly deformed by groundwater mining, despite laws meant to protect the environment and environmental groups whose mission is to monitor this public trust.

Ground water withdrawals to irrigate farms and supply water to municipalities has had severe effects on public lands held in stewardship for future generations, draining wetlands and promoting the invasion of exotic species.

Most people trust Florida’s environmental groups to protect the environment. But today, Florida is literally awash in a sea of pollution. This happened in spite of the best efforts of environmental groups, and an honest discussion is due.

Have mainstream environmental groups failed Florida’s environment?

The movement is represented by charitable organizations. But only a few organizations that are incorporating according to IRS rules governing charities also engage in political activities, through separately incorporated affiliates.

Most people don’t understand the distinction. It is far easier to raise money from donors who receive a tax deduction for their contribution.

Environmental industry groups have proliferated in Florida: water works associations, “environmental” land use law, wetlands mitigation banking—these account for millions of dollars, if not billions, in income and profits for shareholders.

But the shareholders of the State of Florida are taxpayers, due the same access to clean water, clean air and natural resources as our predecessors.

Instead, the threats to the environment are multiplying: government agencies shirk their responsibilities, under the attentive eye of local legislatures and the state, to protect the public health and welfare of citizens—allowing toxins to proliferate, cutting budgets, re-assigning or firing dissenters, redrafting and honing legal language to always provide loopholes for polluters.

In a city like Miami, so many law firms and wealthy developers owe allegiance to profitable activities depending on exploiting the Everglades, that scarcely a peep has ever been heard from United Way or the Dade Community Foundation on funding for the environment. Why haven’t environmental organizations protested?

The most important feature of restoring the Everglades ecosystem has been on the table for many decades: to expand the volume of cleansing wetlands below Lake Okeechobee, in a region where sugarcane is grown by some of the wealthiest farmers in the United States.

But the debate about the future of sugar has thoroughly channeled environmental groups into “acceptable” forms of discourse, allowing decision-makers to dictate the terms of the debate. Since that debate is always according to the prerogatives of campaign contributions, is it any wonder that sugar barons get whatever they want, whenever they want it?

While Florida’s environmental groups have been engaged in a continuous dog-fight with government agencies and elected officials over Everglades restoration, wetlands elsewhere have been disappearing at a furious rate.

In 2005, Craig Pittman and Matthew Waite, reporters for the St. Petersburg Times, wrote an outstanding series how Florida lost 84,000 acres of wetlands during a period a no-net loss of wetlands policy by the federal government.

In an interview in Environment Writer, Matthew Waite had this to say, “… all we knew was that traditional reporting wasn’t going to get us to a “total acres lost” figure because the agencies that are supposed to track that don’t. And we learned that using permitting data to try and create that on our own was pointless because the permitting data is incomplete and flawed. Remote sensing seemed like the only way we could answer the question of how many acres have been lost. I started reading and researching, and I checked out classes at the University of South Florida. Through the Times’ tuition reimbursement program, I enrolled in a USF course… and started doing the analysis through what I learned on my own… I guessed early on that the satellite analysis, at the pace I was going, would take two months. It ended up taking ten… I figured that we could compare one image year to another and—Voila!—we’d have a total acres lost figure. When I did that, I found huge amounts of wetlands loss—way more than we ever expected.”

Two years have passed, and within the environmental community there has been virtual silence. not about the award-winning series per se—but about the failure of Florida’s environmental movement to match the threats and to claim good news and victories which are incomparably minor in respect to the awesome forces of industry that are deforming Florida’s landscape.

Have environmental organizations been so stretched and stressed, so boxed and cornered in fights on patches of ground that they’ve lost, completely, sight that the public imagination is only captured when the threats are clearly articulated?

Yes it is hard work against a ceaseless tide of disinformation and propaganda levied by well-honed public relations machinery. Exposing that, too, is the role of watchdogs or pitbulls as circumstances require.

Environmental organizations in Florida may not be able to do better than they are today, with limited funding and limited public support. Silence is no longer an option.


9 comments:

Anonymous said...

Go for it!

Geniusofdespair said...

You said:
Have environmental organizations been so stretched and stressed, so boxed and cornered in fights on patches of ground that they’ve lost, completely, sight that the public imagination is only captured when the threats are clearly articulated?

I said: Yes!

I think the public thinks the environmentalists ARE taking care of the environment. If they only knew how stretched thin these groups are in battles everywhere, be it rock mining, watershed protection, everglades issues, dredging, panther habitat, etc. too many battles.

Your article is on target.

Anonymous said...

where they went wrong....trying to appease the republicans in power rather than challenging them.

the middle of the road is a hard place to drive.

Anonymous said...

I have mixed feelings about environmentalist because as with any group there are extremes of people at each end of the spectrum. I’m not sure where I stand on all the issues involving growth, protection of wetlands, preservation of species and many other environmental issues.

I spend a lot of time in the keys and although I am for perseveration of the natural resources in the area. I have a problem with the way, using environmental concerns, the public has had property rites taken away by the effort to reduce environmental impact. There are people who bought and paid for land that at the time it was bought they could build on it. In an effort to control growth Monroe county continues to take away the right to develop their land. This is done without just compensation for the dollar loses on property value. I know of some whose only desire was to build their retirement home and live out their lives in the keys. All this in the name of environmental protection. Currently the way building is controlled in the Keys the rich appear to be able build whenever and wherever they want. The rich can “buy” points by buying up land from the people that have their building rites taken away and donate it to the county thus allowing them to build.

As a lifetime resident of Miami and a boater I have also see the right to boat and fish slowly be taken away and foresee the day when only non-powered vessels will be allowed on Biscayne Bay.

As for the “Fundamentally weak Florida environmental movement” I’m not sure what will help. I do know that trampling property rights is not a way to make friends and believers in supporting the movement. I do feel that what is missing is a “master plan” at the state and local level that is followed without changes every time someone with political connections comes along. I also feel that when people’s assets are taken away they should be justly compensated. Plans should be in place to allocate growth based on forecasted limits of critical resources such as water.

Many people to not want to associate themselves with extreme groups and will not join or support such organizations.


I follow this blog because of my concerns about the way “we the people” of Miami-Dade County are governed and the way it is covered in the press. Although I am concerned about the environment I would not begin to know where I stand on all the environmental issues.

Anonymous said...

The environmental movement is weak in large part because hedge fund billionaire, David Gelbaum, acquired the Sierra Club's immigration policy in the mid-90s. More at susps.com. I appreciate eyeonmiami's efforts, but how different are they than law enforcement's prospects of curbing drug use? The source of all your problems, and ours here in California, is US population growth. And while we are powerless to stop the economic juggernaut that demands a huge supply of low-wage workers in general terms, we can well throw a wrench in the works and protect our lovely land and our working- and middle-classes by tackling illegal immigration and also our high level of legal immigration. Or am I mistaking your purpose?

Anonymous said...

The anti-immigration approach is a looser in a country of immigrants, esp one that is slated to become even more Latino. It comes off as racist. The problem with population growth is that it does not address consumption all over the industrial west, even in pop. stable W Europe. Moreover talk about nasty, the - I have mine you get lost - approach to the dreams of the developing world is a real big looser. No one should support that! This whole conversation is a distraction to the enviro. movement in FL.

To the writer concerned about property rights - one can only have a stable property rights system if the externalities of property rights are taken into account. If you polute my stream then you impact my rights thus my rights must include your responsibility to keep the stream clean. If that means that only the rich can afford to clean the stream on their own, well then the only way for the poor to live on the stream is to pool their resources to build cleaning plants on the on the stream or to get the government to clean the stream for them. To prevent the rich from cleaning the stream on their own is to take away the property rights/freedoms of the rich. Hence the same old problem with classical liberalism what do you do about the fact that the rich can always buy more rights than everynone else? Do you take away the rights of the rich to build in the keys? Do you get the government to build affordable housing? Do you let everyone build and let the environment degrade to the point that people no longer want to live there and thus remove the market incentive to build for everone except the very poor who cant afford to move? Really classicial liberalism offers no answers for the environment except those that favor the rich who can afford to polute, and hopefully afford to clean up after themselves.

Anonymous said...

To answer the question about why enviro's don't protest the lack of funding offered by Dade Comm. Foundation and others, is because people you attack won't customarily turn around and hand you dollars.

Anonymous said...

There are some very interesting comments here, to take up in further posts on the weakness of Florida's environmental movement.

"People you attack won't customarily turn around and hand you dollars..."

Environmental groups have never protested United Way or the Dade Community Foundation, of course.

But is it right that these major charitable organizations avoid "the environment" because of the influence of wealthy and powerful sugar barons or their lobbyists?

Will downtown Miami be under water before United Way acknowledges that the environment/global warming/Everglades is a serious humanitarian crisis, and that enviromental groups should be supported?

Does that matter to anyone?

Anonymous said...

"Will downtown Miami be under water before United Way acknowledges that the environment/global warming/Everglades is a serious humanitarian crisis, and that enviromental groups should be supported?"

You bet. I believe Miamuh will be under water in the next several years, albeit temporarily, with a direct hit Cat 5 hurricane. After that it will linger in the same state of disrepair and decay as New Orleans for decades.

But when the seas rise as predicted sometime in the next few decades, Miamuh will be lost; a complete and total write off. Big money people will be long gone and the little people still living there swarming like so many ants for higher ground, their homes and lives destroyed.

It would appear that no amount of environmental action can change what will inexorably happen to the planet in the 21st century. Unless you have some clout in China, India, Russia. What happens at the local level is entirely dependent on the larger scale of industrialization around the planet.

When it comes to creating environmental mayhem, I think we haven't seen anything yet.

Give it ten years. If you can still browse the Internet from southern Florida, from dry land, I bet you won't be able to breathe the air or drink the water.

Enjoy the temporary, it's all you have to work with.