How would you like your government to tell all of the major
polluters in your community (sewage plants, paper mills, phosphate facilities,
chemical plants, etc.) that they can dump their pollution in your local waters
forever and never have to account for what comes out of their pipes?
It sounds kind of crazy, huh? What if the
free-for-all was limited to just the most troubling chemicals for Florida
waters? Would that help? What if the state and federal government agreed
that this is a good idea and that the cost of dealing with the most polluting
chemicals would be spread out for everyone
to pay, so our biggest polluters would not be troubled with the problem? Well, the owners of those big discharges into
our streams and bays would certainly like that, but what about the rest of
us? Are we ready for socialized pollution? Is more corporate
welfare one of your top priorities in these tough economic times?
This is not a theoretical scenario. This is what is happening in Florida right
now. The federal government has already
made it so. The state has an opportunity
to fix this very bad idea and take steps to protect us and our waters from even
more pollution in the form of nitrogen and phosphorus (nutrients), which are
already choking our waters with toxic algae.
You won’t need to go far in Florida to find a spring, lake, river, and
bay that is suffering from too much nitrogen and/or phosphorus. The result is fish kills, respiratory
problems, and slimy, stinky waters. Even
so, the Florida Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) is determined to
protect politically powerful polluters in Florida and make the rest of us pay
for their pollution.
On December 1st, the Florida DEP will ask the
Environmental Regulation Commission to approve new rules that not only
reinforce the new federal law for Florida, but take state waters even closer to
destruction. While the new state and
federal pollution rules have numeric limits for the first time, the numbers
actually mean very little. No pollution
pipes in the state will be required to meet these numeric limits. Agriculture is exempt as well Each water body will be sampled throughout the
year in various locations. All the
samples will be combined to find an annual geometric mean for each water body
(lake, spring, river, etc.). If the
geometric mean is too high for a whole year, then . . . no problem. If it’s too high for a 2nd year
then the federal rule offers numerous ways to change or ignore the limits or
simply delay doing anything at all. The
state and federal rules are clear that at no time will discharge pipes be
required to meet the new pollution limits.
In simple language, our rivers and estuaries will become
automatic “mixing zones” (places in the water where pollution laws aren’t
applied) for every polluting industry and sewage plant. If our waters ever get cleaned up, it will be
up to local governments and individual taxpayers to make it happen. This is socialism at its worst and the exact
reason that so many Americans are marching in the streets across our country
right now. If the state of Florida wants
to protect its waters from excess nutrients, then it must make sure that every
industrial and sewage pipe meets Advanced Wastewater Treatment (AWT) standards
for nutrients, at a minimum.
Now is the time to speak out for the waters that you love
and rely on for drinking, fishing, swimming, etc. Contact your elected officials and let them
know how you feel about socialized
pollution. You can also follow this
link for more details and a quick and easy way to take action: http://www.cleanwaternetwork-fl.org/actionalerts.php
The Clean Water Network of Florida is 300 environmental, civic and
recreational organizations working together to better protect Florida’s waters
through implementation and enforcement of the Clean Water Act. Its mission is to help citizens have an
effective voice in decision-making that affects their communities. Linda Young is the director and can be
reached at llyoung2@earthlink.net
or 850/322-7978.
2 comments:
Why are we letting this happen?Our elected officials are bribed by big business period.They go to Tallahassee each year and pander to some right wing cause then they wave at you with one hand and slap the crap out of you with the other.We have let this happen Most people will not even trouble themselves to go to a county commission meeting let alone the SFWMD.Hell is to good for elected officials and we give them a free pass everyday................
This is an important issue, but if you care about the environment and pollution prevention on a local level, keep a close eye on what is happening with the County environmental regulatory agency formerly known as DERM. Now that it has been merged with the building department and is headed by the former building department director and his deputy, be prepared for its systematic dismantling and the elimination of its core missions. Though not what it once was, DERM has always been one of the County’s most well-respected departments, the one agency that does what the State and Feds consistently fail to do when it comes to environmental protection in South Florida. Together, Carlos Gimenez and Lynda Bell may destroy in a year an agency and professional culture that has been protecting our environment for over 30 years.
Post a Comment