View the forum held on October 8, 2015 - Mr. Reed comes online at the 2:14 mark:
University of Florida Forum on Critical Issues Confronting the 2017 Constitution Revision Commission
Thursday, October 15, 2015
Thursday, October 1, 2015
Monday, May 11, 2015
David Guest - Palm Beach Post - May 10, 2015
Commentary: Proposed bills entrust water protection to worst
offenders
The toxic green slime that killed pelicans, dolphins, fish,
and manatees in South Florida two summers ago is back, lurking in Lake
Okeechobee, where, as we all know, it will likely spread to the coasts once the
government starts releasing water to lower the lake’s level.
It is important to remember that Lake Okeechobee belongs to
all of us. But our lake has become a private sewer for agricultural
corporations. Instead of strengthening laws to keep agriculture’s polluted
runoff out of our water, some politicians in Tallahassee are trying to rescind
the currently required state pollution permits altogether. Their new scheme
would replace permits with — incredibly — voluntary compliance.
This is like some bad dream, and it will be a forever
nightmare for everyone who lives near the St. Lucie and Caloosahatchee rivers,
where the pollution flows to the coasts. We know this toxic algae kills
wildlife and makes people and animals sick, causing flulike symptoms, skin
lesions and respiratory problems. Why on earth would we make it easier for
these polluters to dump this stuff on us?
This is a get-out-of-jail free card for polluters, and the
public shouldn’t stand for it.
At Earthjustice, we have represented citizens groups for
decades in legal battles against polluters, trying to require common-sense
controls on the toxic slime that’s wrecking our natural areas. It is simply not
right for one class of water users to pollute the resource for the rest of us,
and then stick us with the cleanup bill.
The water policy legislation was near a vote in the
Statehouse right before the House abruptly adjourned. The lobbyists for these
big agricultural corporations created a world of double-speak to obscure the
fact that they are trying to get away with no regulation. This wholesale
destruction of the pollution permitting system was buried in a giant bill that
included many other aspects of state water policy, including protections for our
springs. It’s the old Tallahassee bait and switch.
Under the legislation, polluters would merely have to write
a plan that says they are trying not to pollute — no more permits, a mere
promise would be enough. The state admits that it has only a handful of
inspectors available to check up on these voluntary pollution plans, and the
inspectors would have to get special permission to come on-site to see whether
the company is actually doing what it said it would do.
Give us a break! This is a recipe for more green slime in
Lake Okeechobee, and more nauseating pollution and fish kills on the east and
west coasts.
The Big Ag lobbyists will be in the front row when the
Legislature reconvenes for its special session in June, trying to get this
nefarious legislation passed in a hurry. We need to tell our legislators that
we want them to protect our interests by stopping this political move to repeal
water pollution permits. When you think of the heartbreaking images of dead
pelicans, dolphins, fish and manatees we’ve witnessed in South Florida, think
about what the Legislature should be doing to stop it. Instead of controlling
pollution, these politicians are trying to legalize it.
We need to tell our legislators clearly and loudly: When our
water is at stake, a polluter’s promise just isn’t good enough. The state
simply has to be able to impose consequences when a polluter doesn’t comply
with clean-water requirements.
Thursday, May 7, 2015
Environmentalist Nat Reed Slams Rick Scott: "I'm Getting Scared About Our State"
By Jessica Weiss
Wednesday, May 6, 2015

Environmental activists say Amendment 1 must be implemented to protect the Everglades.
Photo by Flickr user Eric Salard
|
Legendary Florida environmentalist Nathaniel Reed has added his voice to the chorus of disapproval of Florida's Legislature. He says the body's failure to enact key legislation — as the house quit early over a Medicaid funding fight — has made the state “the laughingstock of the country.”
Among the many bills that died as a result were laws to put into motion Amendment 1, which dedicates millions of dollars to acquire and restore conservation and recreation lands. “We’ve never had such a nonfunctioning legislature as we have now,” Reed tells New Times.
Because of what many say are worrying trends in conservation across the state, 75 percent of Florida’s voters took matters into their own hands last year when they voted for Amendment 1, which would divert millions to Florida Forever, a fund for conservation land acquisition.
The program was approved in 1999 and envisioned to raise $300 million a year, but it has been a target of budget cuts over the years. Since 2009, the program saw a 97 percent drop in funding. So last year, a coalition comprising more than a dozen groups devised a way to fund the program through part of a state real-estate tax. They gathered enough petitions to put Amendment 1 on ballots, and on November 4, voters approved it — overwhelmingly.
Though environmental leaders had been preparing for cuts to the $750 million figure, they didn’t expect complete inaction in appropriations for the program.
Now, Reed says that progress made under the governorships of Bob Martinez, Bob Graham, Lawton Chiles, and Jeb Bush is being lost all too rapidly under the administration of Rick Scott — where “growth is God again.”
Reed stresses the critical importance of funding a range of projects, such as getting more fresh water to flow south to the Biscayne Aquifer, the vast basin beneath South Florida that supplies drinking water to a huge portion of the state’s population. Because of development projects in the path of the water’s flow, not enough fresh water is getting to the aquifer. As sea level continues to rise, the drinking water of South Florida’s 7 million people is at risk.
Reed says we should all be worried about the “growth-at-all-costs” mindset of the current administration.
“To them, whatever green land is left is developable,” he says. “I’m getting scared about our state.”
Lawmakers still have a chance to address Amendment 1 funding during the special session of the legislature that will begin at some point this spring.
Tuesday, April 21, 2015
Friday, March 27, 2015
Palm Beach Post - Frank Cerabino: Did you vote to protect Florida’s environment? Who cares?
Posted: 3:33 p.m. Wednesday, March 25, 2015
If you were one of the 4,238,739 Floridians who
voted for an environmental protection measure four months ago, I have news for
you.
You don’t matter. Your vote was meaningless.
It’s not supposed be that way, but welcome to
Florida.
The vote on Amendment 1, the Florida Water and
Land Conservation Initiative, was the biggest vote-getter on Florida’s ballot
in November, with a 74.9 percent approval rate.
It was 1.3 million voters more popular than Gov.
Rick Scott, who was re-elected on the same ballot.
But Scott, the state’s big business interests
and the state legislature had nothing to do with Amendment 1, and in many cases
actively opposed it.
Amendment 1 was on the ballot because Florida’s
leaders had all but abandoned Florida Forever, a $300 million-per-year state
program to purchase environmentally sensitive land.
The program started by Gov. Jeb Bush was nearly
wiped out under Scott and state legislators. So environmentalists brought the
land preservation issue directly to voters through a ballot referendum.
Florida’s Water and Land Legacy, an
environmental group drawing members from the 1000 Friends of Florida, Audubon
Florida, Defenders of Wildlife, Everglades Foundation, Florida Conservation
Coalition, Florida Land Trust Alliance, Sierra Club and other state
environmental groups, collected over 1 million signatures to get the amendment
on the ballot.
The ballot question asked voters whether they
were in favor of funding the Land Acquisition Trust Fund to “acquire, restore,
improve and manage conservation lands including wetlands and forests; fish and
wildlife habitat; lands protecting water resources and drinking water sources,
including the Everglades, and the water quality of rivers, lakes, and streams;
beaches and shores; outdoor recreation lands; working farms and ranches; and
historic or geologic sites.”
The funding source for this wouldn’t be a new
tax, but a dedication of 33 percent of the net revenues from an existing excise
tax on real estate deed and loan documents, commonly known as doc stamps. These
doc stamps are a huge source of state revenue, bringing in about $2 billion a
year.
So the voter-approved Amendment 1 made close to
$700 million available each year for the acquisition and protection of
environmentally sensitive land in the state.
Theoretically. That’s because the buying and
protecting is still in the hands of the people who gutted Florida Forever to
start with, and have little to no interest in protecting environmentally
sensitive land from business development.
And there’s the rub, as Shakespeare would say.
Despite the windfall of money available to
preserve this land, Scott put $100 million for Florida Forever in his budget
this year — $200 million shy of the traditional level.
But his intent to shortchange the will of the
voters is minor compared to the Florida Senate’s budget, which includes just
$22 million in environmental land acquisition, with $20 million of that money
going to Kissimmee River restoration land and $2 million going to Florida
Forever.
So to recap, to restore the previous $300
million-a-year program to buy environmentally sensitive land in Florida, voters
approved a measure freeing up an estimated $700 million a year for that
purpose.
And despite this vote, the most popular
vote-getter on the ballot, Florida lawmakers are doing other things with the
money and proposing to spend a measly $2 million on Florida Forever this year.
“There’s no way that anyone could have read the
amendment and consider this budget to be adequate,” said Aliki Moncrief, the
executive director of Florida’s Water and Land Legacy.
But it gets worse. The Associated Industries of
Florida has begun a radio and television campaign to give lawmakers cover by
trying to persuade voters that Amendment 1 was not about buying environmentally
sensitive land, but about protecting existing water supplies.
“Lawmakers are now deciding how to spend
Amendment 1 money,” the ad said. “And special-interest groups want the lion’s
share for their pet projects.”
So the 14-year-old Florida Forever program has
become a “pet project” and you have become a special-interest group.
All 4,238,739 of you.
You’re a bothersome distraction from the
sideline, one that must be ignored by the Floridians who really matter.
So stop getting in the way of the real business
of lawmakers, which is finding a way to serve the Associated Industries of Florida
and any other business group that might want to, as Joni Mitchell once sang,
“pave paradise and put up a parking lot.”
Tuesday, March 10, 2015
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)

