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Save Our Swamp
To save our swamp (and many
other wetlands), Audubon targets wetland rules
The State of Florida has approved destruction
of more than 1,000 acres of wetland in the Cocohatchee Slough
near Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary over the past year. While Audubon
and its allies are challenging the federal versions of these
permits, clearly the Cocohatchee permits are not isolated
cases. Each year, thousands more acres of wetlands and endangered
species habitat are permitted to destruction, with negligible
mitigation, by state and federal agencies. This occurs despite
supposedly-strict national and state policies of “no
net loss of wetlands,” in effect since 1989.
Studies have recognized declines in water
quality and water supply, and significant loss of shallow
wetlands such as wet pinelands throughout Florida. Audubon
has embarked, with help from colleagues, on a detailed effort
to reform the state’s permitting process, and then tackle
the federal process. Senior agency officials have been receptive
in preliminary discussions of the problem.
Audubon’s wood stork and wetland
expert, Jason Lauritsen, just did a rigorous review of the
state’s principal wetland value assessment method. He
concluded that the fundamental cause of poor wetland protection
in state permitting is the bias of permit applicants, who
are doing the wetland value scoring themselves, even though
the law requires this to be done by state agencies’
staff. As Upton Sinclair said, “It is difficult to get
a man to understand something when his job depends on not
understanding it.”
The areas most impacted, now and in the
past, are shallow seasonal wetlands like pinelands, which
also harbor melaleuca and other invasive exotic plants. The
abundance of melaleuca trees in Southwest and South Florida
has led to a scientifically baseless discounting in the regulations,
and subjective scoring, of almost all functional values of
such wetlands. A growing body of scientific documentation
indicates that such assumption of devaluation is faulty. Yet
the policies continue to jeopardize populations of wood stork
and other imperiled species, and also affect water quality,
supply, and flood protection.
Lauritsen and Audubon staff presented
his wetland permit analysis results, and evidence of the threat
to water and habitat resources statewide, to the Governing
Board of the South Florida Water Management District in early
March 2008, and then to Florida Department of Environmental
Protection Secretary Michael Sole and his staff. Audubon encourages
a vigorous dialogue and aggressive effort to amend relevant
policies. It also hopes to involve all the permitting agencies
and stakeholders, and looks forward to positive federal action
on this issue.
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| © RJ Wiley |
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