Friday, April 18, 2008
Odds and ends, by gimleteye
Good to read in the Herald that the rock miners didn't get what they wanted out of the Florida Senate: a plan to circumvent local control of permits to build new mines. But with rock miners influence of the legislature, and its army of lobbyists who need to be fed, the miners will not go away.
In 2005 Miami-Dade rock miners, with the help of local attorney Miguel DeGrandy, pushed through a last minute, midnight express that capped its liability for the cost of new water treatment plants that will have to be built, because of threats its activity pose to nearby drinking water wellfields; as in "worried about your drinking water, you should be."
Now, a comment on "Push made to refurbish old stadium", relative to the Miami Marine Stadium off Rickenbacker Causeway on Key Biscayne.
The stadium is a relic of the long-gone age of local tourism. Once upon a time, Miami was a place where visitors experienced the novelty of the tropics in winter, with water-ski shows at the stadium showing, no doubt, the marvels of balance and skill. Now some rowers use the lagoon. The stadium is an eye-sore. On the other side, Seaquarium staggers along.
Surely there is a passive, public use-- like waterfront access available to people for free that makes more sense.
The Marine Stadium will never have an audience, any more than Parrot Jungle does in its new location no one visits.
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They need to keep as many waterfront areas open and affordable to the public. Especially when boating is concerned. A typical boat trip out to Key Biscayne starts with either a $9.00 or $11.25 (3 or 4 axles) toll to roll through the Rickenbacker then they fleece another $12.00 for a ramp fee to dump the boat in. Between gas, tolls, food, and bait a little trip on the water easliy passes the $100 mark. I'm talking about a small boat - less than 18 ft here BTW. I'm not even taking into account boat registration fees, fishing license fees, required safety devices cost, constant harassment by law enforcement on the water and exorbitant fines. The situation is coming to a point that only the uber rich can afford to enjoy the water while the poor guy only catches glimpses of it on TV while eating fish sticks.
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