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Everglades Plan Needs a Do Over
By Sally Swartz,
Palm Beach Post Editorial Writer
Wednesday, December 31, 2003 -sally_swartz@pbpost.com
Elected officials and appointed public
servants this year made some decisions that weren't their best work. If it were
possible to turn back time, here are a few I would
nominate, on this last day of 2003, for do-overs.
Gov. Bush and the Florida
Legislature delayed Everglades cleanup by 10 years, to 2016, in legislation
hastily written by sugar industry lobbyists. They had help from South Florida
Water Management District Director Henry Dean and David Struhs,
who heads Florida's Department of Environmental Protection. Mr. Dean
and Mr. Struhs, officials we pay to protect the Everglades, helped persuade legislators and the governor to do
the sugar industry's bidding. Mr. Struhs later
compounded the insult by weakening water quality standards, which will allow
more polluted water to enter the Everglades.
The South Florida Water
Management District reprimanded, demoted and cut the pay of one of its top
scientists, Lou Toth, the man responsible for the
district's most successful, least controversial and widely admired project, the
restoration of the Kissimmee River. Mr. Toth directed a plan
that put the kinks and curves back in one section of the river and reflooded wetlands, which enticed long-absent fish, birds
and wildlife to return. His error? Telling
a reporter that the restoration is behind schedule.
The water district this year
qualifies for dozens of do-over decisions in its nightmare mismanagement of
Lake Okeechobee, the upper lakes chain north of it and the east and west coast
estuaries that take Lake O's overflow.
Among the worst: Keeping the lake
too high for too long killed off much of the underwater grass beds where fish
live and breed. Dumping too much water too late made the St. Lucie River and
parts of the Indian
River
look like root beer, chased away fish and birds and brought nearly a thousand
Martin and St. Lucie County residents to a protest rally.
Undaunted, the district began
removing water from Lake Tohopekaliga anyway, fueling fears that
the extra water sent to Lake Okeechobee later would be dumped in coastal rivers. After Indian
Riverkeeper Kevin Stinnette
filed suit against the Army Corps of Engineers, the district's partner in
managing the lake, the district decided to pay farmers to keep some of the
excess water on their land and store some on public lands. With those changes
to help keep water from overwhelming Lake Okeechobee and the rivers, the courts last week approved the
Lake Toho drawdown.
That's enough. Making a longer
list could get depressing. I might have to do it over.
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