According to the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, by 2030, utility-scale solar could cover almost 2 million acres of land in the United States. The concern is that traditional solar development would monopolize this land for just one use: energy.
Join us on April 6 at 6:30 PM for an engaging discussion as we learn from Nancy Deren, a local advocate for clean renewable energy and sustainable agriculture, about the benefits of growing crops under the shade of solar panels. It's a Win-Win that is Made in the Shade!
This will be a hybrid event so if you are joining virtually, you will receive the Zoom link via email once your registration is verified to avoid disruptions. In-person meeting will be at Quaker Meeting House, 702 NW 38th St, Gainesville, FL 32607.
You may have heard the recent final warning from the IPCC stating that if drastic measures are not started right away to reduce greenhouse gases, conditions for life on earth will face dire consequences.
We are teaming with Alachua County to plan for a successful Climate Summit at Cuscowillain Micanopy on June 2. There are many opportunities for people to get involved and advocate for clean renewable energy and climate-resilient communities.
Please join us on March 29 from 5:00 - 7:00 PM at the Alachua County Library, Headquarters, 401 E. University Ave, Gainesville, as we form the team to deliver on this program.
We had a very productive Service Outing on Friday March 3, at Morningside Nature Center as you can see in the photo.
Six of us were separated in 3 teams and we painted markings on trees, so now when you walk at Morningside Nature Center, the hiking trails are all marked: Blue, White and Yellow, thanks to our teams.
The staff was very thankful and we all enjoyed the outing, on a sunny windy day!
April 22, is Earth Day and we are planning to have a booth at TreeFest from 12:00 PM - 5:00 PM to be held at Swamp Head Brewery, 3650 SW 42nd Ave, Gainesville, 32608.
VOLUNTEERS are needed to help with our booth and with parking. Please contact maryvonne.deven@gmail.com or register here if you can commit to a few hours. We greatly appreciate your help for that event.
Action Alert!
NO Radioactive Phosphogypsum in FL Roads
Florida is under a flurry of bad environmental legislation including the Phosphogypsum (PG) Bill, Senate Bill 1258 and companion House Bill 1191.
The clear beneficiary of this legislation would be the phosphate industry whose radioactive stacks are untenable and stand to profit from spreading their radioactive waste on our roads.
Phosphogypsum (PG) is the radioactive waste from processing phosphate into phosphoric acid for fertilizer. PG releases radioactive radon at very high levels of gross alpha and beta radiation (10 to 100 pCi/g) relative to levels in typical soils (approximately 1 pCi/g). PG also contains other toxic, heavy metals which are also carcinogens. PG is so toxic that the EPA requires that it be stored in piles called “gypstacks.” Currently more than 1 billion tons are stored in 25 stacks in Florida. The industry is under pressure since these growing stacks are untenable.
Selling PG as road material is not a new phenomenon.
Florida used PG In 1989 as an experiment run by the University of Miami and the Florida Department of Transportation. A two mile stretch of experimental road is in Columbia County known as the White Springs Road, located south of SR 136 between I-75 and U.S. 41. Monitoring was conducted by University of Miami of air, water and construction crew health. In 1992, shortly after this ‘experiment,’ the EPA “determined that using phosphogypsum in roads presents an unacceptable risk to public health and prohibited it.
More recently, in 2020 the Trump administration’s EPA reversed their policy. In 2021 the EPA withdrew its approval of the use of phosphogypsum in roads following a lawsuit and petition by a workers’ union, the Center for Biological Diversity, and other conservation and public health groups. In 2022 the fertilizer industry attempted to override EPA and the bill failed.
Here we are again in 2023 with Florida legislators Sen. Jay Trumbull (R-Panama City) and Rep. Lawrence McClure (R-Dover) reintroducing bills that would allow PG to be used in roads.
Currently the bill is in the Committee on Environment and Natural Resources. Here is a list of the members, their phone numbers and emails.
Action is needed to protect the Okefenokee Swamp, the largest blackwater swamp in North America and headwaters of the St. Marys and Suwannee Rivers, located in southeast Georgia. Twin Pines Minerals, LLC (TPM) is applying for permits from the Georgia Environmental Protection Division (EPD) to mine nearly 580 acres for titanium dioxide: only 3 miles from the Okefenokee Swamp and 5 miles from the main stem St. Marys River.
These permits are just for their phase 1 demonstration mine that the miners say will show that their plan can be conducted safely while protecting the environment. But miners don’t stop with just one bite, as evidenced by other titanium TiO2 mines in Florida and Georgia, on the same Trail Ridge as this site.
TPM’s original application submitted to the US Army Corps of Engineers back in 2019 spoke of 12,000 acres to be mined over 8 years.[1] Some of that turned out to be owned by Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association of America (TIAA), who insisted TPM remove it from their application.[2] TPM as Trail Ridge Land LLC still owns land extending north of the proposed mine site adding up to almost 8,000 acres, coming to within 400 feet of the Okefenokee Swamp, as the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service warned, also in 2019.[3] The miners withdrew their original application and reapplied for only the 582 acres, small enough that they could claim the site had no jurisdictional wetlands. By so doing, they violated a Federal policy against "segmenting" permit applications. So, the planned mining area has been in constant flux in response to permitting, legal, and marketing considerations.
People from around the world visit the Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge (ONWR) for its paddle trails, dark skies, and wilderness beauty. According to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the ONWR provides more economic benefit to each of Georgia and Florida than any other NWR.[4] The southeastern corner of the swamp feeds the St. Marys River which results in the river having zero flow during droughts and flooding during heavy rains. The St. Marys River is pristine due to the waterfront being entirely privately owned by timber plantations, conservation districts, and private citizens. With white sandy shores, blue skies, green trees, and the darkest blackwater, you cannot but be in awe of this spectacular place.
The mine is located within the St. Marys River watershed with the hydrologic divide at the mine site impacting both the swamp and upper St. Marys River to the west and the main stem of the St. Marys to the east.
There is no wall in the Okefenokee Swamp between the St. Marys and Suwannee River watersheds. Any change in the level or composition of the swamp water will affect all of the Okefenokee Swamp, and the Suwannee River, which drains about 85% of the swamp. Lower water levels would mean more difficult boating on the paddle trails and motor boat tour routes, affecting the economy as well as wildlife. There is scientific evidence that the swamp exchanges surface waters with underground waters all the way down to the Floridan Aquifer.[5]
All of south Georgia and north Florida drinks from that underground water, which also feeds the numerous springs along the Suwannee, Santa Fe, Withlacoochee, and other Rivers in the Springs Heartland of Florida. Any lowered water level or dewatering of the surface around the Swamp increases the risk of fires. The 2007 Bugaboo fire spread smoke west across the Suwannee River Basin, causing respiratory distress 80 miles away in Quitman, continuing 450 miles to Meridian, Mississippi. Southwards the smoke closed I-75 and went 370 miles to Fort Lauderdale, Florida. North it went 250 miles to Atlanta. What happens around the Okefenokee Swamp can have widespread effects.
TPM has a bad environmental track record eliminating confidence that they can do what they are saying without harming the surrounding ecosystem. TPM, while processing tailings at two of the four Chemours titanium mines on Trail Ridge in north Florida, spilled wastewater during Hurricane Irma. Because of that and other infractions, TPM is still under a Florida Consent Order.[6] Yet Twin Pines promises not to spill wastewater next to the Okefenokee Swamp or surrounding waterways. The people behind TPM also started two biomass plants in north Georgia, one of which caused a massive fish kill, and both of which caused the state to pass a law to stop them burning railroad ties. TPM proposes to use multiple experimental techniques to minimize environmental impacts including draglines, evaporators, and placing a layer of bentonite horizontally to name a few. This mine is not worth risking the swamp and its rivers or underground waters.
Although this is a state permit issue, we, the Waterkeepers of Georgia, are asking all Waterkeepers to:
File public comment expressing concerns and opposition for this mine specifically on the Mining Land Use Plan. https://epd.georgia.gov/twin-pines
Ask your elected officials to file comments to Georgia EPD in support of preserving the Okefenokee Swamp and surrounding waterways.
Ask your Congress members to urge the U.S. Interior Department to list the Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge as a candidate for designation as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Photo: Gainesville City Mayor Ward addressing the Legislative Delegation over management of Gainesville regional Authority (GRU) Photo Credit: David Hastings
SSJ Sierra Club testifies to oppose efforts to take local control of GRU away from residents
Representative Chuck Clemons introduced legislation that would create a state appointed Authority to manage our municipal utility, Gainesville Regional Authority (GRU), with members appointed by Governor DeSantis, taking control away from the City of Gainesville. Instead of going before the voters, Rep. Clemons is pushing it through using an arcane process that sends it to the legislature on a consent agenda, avoiding the normal legislative process. Since it is happening in Tallahassee there will be little or no significant input from Gainesville residents, the owners of GRU.
With little notice, the bill was brought before the Alachua County legislative delegation for approval, meeting in the state capitol. Several SSJ Sierra Club members travelled to Tallahassee along with members of Alachua County League of Women Voters, and NCF Labor Council to express opposition to the bill.
We had a very good turnout at the hearing with most speaking against the bill, but the legislative delegation moved to advance the bill to committees, 5-1, along party lines.
SSJ Sierra Club, and many other community groups in Gainesville, are extremely concerned about this legislation. GRU’s rates for electrical service are being used as the reason for replacing local management with outside control. However, there is no guarantee that rates will be lower if the legislation passes. There is nothing in the bill that addresses rates. In fact, an appointed board can increase rates just as large rate increases for investor-owned utilities have been allowed.
Gainesville residents have consistently defended public oversight of our utility. The proposed legislation is, in fact, the same bill that was soundly rejected in 2018 by 60% of voters who voted to keep GRU under local control. Since it is a public utility, Gainesville residents own GRU, and Gainesville should continue to manage it.
State legislators may be motivated to eventually sell our public utility to an investor-owned utility, such as Duke or FPL, which would transfer profits to the investors rather than the city. Our residents our far better served by a locally controlled utility compared to one controlled by a state appointed authority with no clear ties to the community.
This legislative action is exceptionally dangerous. It is a significant threat to the financial strength of Gainesville, and sets a dangerous precedent for other municipalities.
We are exploring various strategies and working with other community organizations to defeat this legislation. However, the super majority in the House and Senate makes more common approaches less likely for success.
What you can do: Even if you don't live in Gainesville, we need your help. If you want to join us in defeating this legislation, join our action team for updates and action alerts by filling out this short form. Thank you!
Photo Credit: Rethink Energy Florida Facebook page
SSJ supports Clean Energy Lobby Day
The 2023 "Reclaiming Florida's Future for All" lobby day on March 22 was a success as residents from all parts of Florida came to the State Capitol to advocate for clean renewable energy.
Pictured here are many of the attendees who participated in the Light Brigade on the State Capitol steps the night before the lobby day.
Photo Credit: Jim Tatum
In front of the Florida Senate Chambers, Senator Berman addresses the state's largest delegation of youth advocates for clean renewable energy. This Legislative Session Senator Berman has introduced Senate Bill 178 "Upgrades to Education Facilities as Emergency Shelters" that would assist schools to save money on energy costs by installing solar systems. These savings could then be invested back into the classroom.
Photo Credit: Jim Tatum
"Reclaiming Florida's Future for All" Northeast Delegation members urge Senator Perry to add Senate Bill 178 "Upgrades to Education Facilities as Emergency Shelters" to the agenda of the Appropriations Committee on Education where he serves as Chair.
Senator Keith Perry represents District 9 which covers Marion and Levy, and portions of Alachua County.
Photo Credit: David Hastings
Pictured here the Northeast Delegation meets with Rep. Bobby Payne, District 20 which covers Palatka, parts of Clay, Marion and St. Johns Counties.
"Reclaiming Florida's Future for All" Northeast Delegation met with many legislators and their staff throughout the day. In addition to solar resilient schools, they advocated for Senate Bill 680/ House Bill 293 "Energy Transition Task Force" to ensure clean energy is adopted equitably throughout the state.
The team scored a win when an aide affirmed Rep. Nixon's co-sponsorship of House Bill 195, the companion bill to Senate Bill 178.
You can now direct donations through Cash App to support the Sierra Club Suwannee-St. Johns Group by using our CashTag$:
$SSJSierra
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