50 Organizations and Businesses to Gov. DeSantis: Veto the Misnamed 'Clean Waterways Act'

50 Organizations and Businesses to Gov. DeSantis: Veto the Misnamed 'Clean Waterways Act'

A group of 50 organizations and businesses sent the following letter to Gov. DeSantis:

March 24, 2020
 
The Honorable Ron DeSantis
Plaza Level 05, The Capitol
400 S. Monroe St.
Tallahassee, FL 32399
 
RE: Veto SB 712
 
Governor DeSantis:
 
The Florida Legislature has passed CS/CS/SB 712, known as the "Clean Waterways Act," which will soon be sent to your desk. This bill is an endorsement of the status quo which has led to our current water quality crisis. It does nothing to reduce nutrient pollution to Florida's springs. Florida's waters are polluted because our regulatory system is broken and those in charge of protecting our waters are unduly influenced by polluters and their lobbyists. Far from fixing these problems, CS/CS/SB 712 is a symptom of them.
 
CS/CS/SB 712 relies on an ineffective water quality restoration program called Basin Management Action Plans (BMAPs). BMAPs for Outstanding Florida Springs have already been shown to be unable to achieve water quality goals. The Florida Springs Council and several springs advocacy groups are in active litigation against the Florida Department of Environmental Protect over these failed plans. As passed, CS/CS/SB 712 is based on a program that is designed to fail at achieving water quality goals.
 
CS/CS/SB 712 does nothing to prevent even one pound of agricultural pollution, the predominant source of nutrient pollution to Outstanding Florida Springs, from reaching our groundwater. It requires DACS to confirm that producers are implementing current best management practices, even though the Department of Environmental Protection has acknowledged in a court filing that current best management practices are not useful for achieving water quality goals. By law, as long as agricultural producers implement these ineffective practices, they are automatically assumed in compliance with water quality standards. CS/CS/SB 712 does not require the adoption or implementation of improved best management practices for agricultural producers, even though the need for such practices is almost universally recognized and many of Florida's impaired waters cannot recover without them.
 
CS/CS/SB 712 continues to allow foul sewage sludge from South Florida to be transported north and dumped into areas where it pollutes the headwaters of the St. Johns River and other important waterways.  It weakens efforts to regulate sewage sludge application and includes loopholes which will delay stronger protections indefinitely.
 
Ironically, while CS/CS/SB 712 relies exclusively on a broken and failed regulatory system to protect water quality, it preempts local governments from filling the vacuum left by a lack of leadership at the state level and addressing environmental issues in their own jurisdictions.
 
The shortcomings of CS/CS/SB 712 are many and various. We have provided specific recommendations for amendments and explanations of the need for these amendments to legislators, Secretary Valenstein, and Chief Science Officer Frazer to no avail.
 
Because this bill does literally nothing to protect or restore Florida's springs we ask you to veto CS/CS/SB 712 and demand that the Legislature return next year to pass bold effective water quality legislation before it is too late. If signed into law, CS/CS/SB 712 will only make our water quality problems worse in the long run. It provides political cover for a Legislature that refuses to make the tough choices necessary to address this crisis. And it guarantees another half-decade, or more, of inaction towards meaningful and effective water quality laws.
 
No one will remember what bills were signed, or how much money was proposed, when Florida's waters are more polluted in five years than they are today. Instead, the legacy left by CS/CS/SB 712 and those who championed it as a solution to our water quality crisis will be another generation of polluted waters.
 
Sincerely,
 
Apalachicola Riverkeeper
Georgia Ackerman, Riverkeeper and Executive Director
 
Aquatics for Life
Susan Steinhauser, President
 
Broward for Progress
Laurie Woodward Garcia, Co-Leader
 
Center for Biological Diversity
Jaclyn Lopez, Florida Director
 
Citizens for an Engaged Electorate
Barbara Byram, Co-Founder
               
Collier County Waterkeeper
Colleen Gill, Waterkeeper
 
Deep Spring Farm
Leela Robinson, Owner
 
Democratic Club of On Top of the World
Bob Troy, Director
 
Democratic Environmental Caucus of Florida
Janelle J. Christensn, PhD, President
 
Duval Audubon Society
Jody Willis, President
 
Earthjustice
Alisa Coe, Staff Attorney
 
Emerald Coastkeeper
Laurie Murphy, Executive Director
 
Englewood Indivisible
Jane Hunter, Leadership Team
 
Florida Paddling Association
Jill Lingard, President
 
Florida Poor People's Campaign
Dr. Carolynn Zonia, Leadership Team
 
Florida Springs Council
Ryan Smart, Executive Director
 
Florida Water Conservation Trust
Terry Brant, Legal & Legislative Chairman
 
Friends of the Wekiva River
Mike Cliburn, Secretary
 
Friends of Warm Mineral Springs
Juliette Jones, Director
 
Gullah/Geechee Nation
Queen Quet, Chieftess
 
Healthy Gulf
Christian Wagley, Coastal Organizer
 
Hernando Environmental Land Protectors
Charles Morton, President
 
Hillsborough Democratic Environmental Caucus
Russell Conn, Chair
 
Ichetucknee Alliance
John D. Jopling, President
 
IDEAS for Us
Clayton Louis Ferrara, Executive Director
 
Indivisible Clay County
Sandy Goldman, Chair
 
Indivisible FL13
Cynthia Lippert, Organizer
 
Indivisible St. Johns
Mary Lawrence, Founder
 
Indivisible Venice
Debra Schyvinck, Leadership Team
 
League of Women Voters Florida
Judith Hushon, Natural Resources Chair
 
Lee Weber Distribution
Lee Weber, Owner
 
Lobby for Animals
Thomas Ponce, President
 
Martin County Conservation Alliance
Donna Melzer, Chair
 
Miakka Community Club
Becky Ayech, President
 
Our Santa Fe River
Mike Roth, President
 
Pine Lily Chapter of the Florida Native Plant Society
Karina Veaudry, President
 
Rainbow River Conservation
Burt Eno, President
 
Rebah Farm
Carol Ahearn, Owner
 
Santa Fe Lake Dwellers Association
Jill McGuire, President
 
Save Orange County, Inc.
Dr. Kelly Semrad, Vice Chair
 
Save the Manatee Club
Anne Harvey, Esq., Acting Director of Conservation and Advocacy
 
Sierra Club Florida
Frank Jackalone, Chapter Director
 
Silver Springs Alliance
Chris Spontak, President
 
South Florida Wildlands Association
Matthew Schwartz, Executive Director
 
Space Coast Audubon
Matt Heyden, Conservation Chair
 
Speak Up Wekiva, Inc.
Chuck O'Neal, President
 
Stone Crab Alliance
Karen Dwyer, PhD., Co-founder
 
Visions Unlimited Productions, Inc.
Leslie Harris-Senac, Owner
 
Wakulla Springs Alliance
Robert Deyle, Chair 
 
Withlacoochee Aquatic Restoration
Dan Hilliard, President
 
Polluted waters

Related blogs:

Related content: