The Gulf Restoration Network released its “Clean Up Your Act!” report card, which grades Gulf of Mexico states on how they implement the Clean Water Act and protect their state waters and public health. Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, and Texas all received disappointing and unsatisfactory grades for their failure to fully incorporate the Clean Water Act into state policies. The report grades the Gulf States on issues such as establishing water quality standards, policies to prevent Dead Zone-causing pollution, public health protection, and facilitating public participation in the policy-making process.
“Florida’s economy and future depends on our waters, and Florida’s failure to successfully implement the Clean Water Act continues to hurt our environment, public health, and our economy” stated Joe Murphy, Florida Program Director of the Gulf Restoration Network. “It’s time for Florida, and for Governor Crist, to step up and protect the lifeblood of our state’s future.”
The Clean Up Your Act! report card clearly establishes that the responsibility of maintaining healthy waters in the Gulf region has been neglected by state governments. In Florida that means more coastal pollution, degraded water quality, impaired lakes and rivers, and estuaries that struggle to survive. Florida’s coastal economy and state fisheries directly depend on clean, healthy rivers and estuaries.
Florida received a D+, the average grade among Gulf states. Florida received this grade because it failed to:
Set adequate, comprehensive standards to protect Florida’s waters for people and wildlife.
Use EPA-recommended standards for pathogen pollution.
The Report suggests Florida can raise its grade by:
Applying and maintaining standards to protect healthy waters and restore impaired waters.
Updating the criteria that it uses to test for polluted waters.
As Florida DEP moves towards a new classification system in terms of ensuring human and aquatic health in terms of Florida’s water bodies, many Floridians are asking why Florida does not first do the hard, critical work to ensure clean, healthy waters for Florida’s people, economy, and wildlife. “Florida DEP has had years to get this right and spends more time deferring to the regulated industries and polluters than boldly moving to make Florida’s waters fishable and swimmable for everyone. The Clean Water Act was passed in 1972, and 37 years later Florida is still struggling to get it right.” concluded Jerry Phillips, Director of Florida PEER.