Earth Island Institute: Don’t Buy A Ticket: Sign our Petition to Stop Captive Dolphin Programs

Earth Island Institute says:  OUTRAGEOUS!
SeaWorld is blaming the victim — their trainer who let her ponytail swing into the water — while the real negligence lies with them. They knew the whale Tilicum had a history of attacks against people, but they chose profit over the safety of whales and people.

It is time for a federal investigation of their actions, and time to force them to return orcas to the wild and stop the cover-up. We know this can be done, because we have done it with Keiko, the whale from Free Willy.

As Ric O’Barry states well in The Cove, “Don’t Buy A Ticket”! Join our petition against the cruel captivity industry at:

http://www.thepetitionsite.com/5/stop-dolphin-captivity
Check out our call for a federal investigation at:  http://apps.facebook.com/causes/331088/80397156?m=621bc82a

Remarks by Congresswoman Ileana Ros-Lehtinen In Support of Greater Regulatory Flexibility for Florida Fishermen

http://www.youtube.com/user/IleanaRosLehtinen#p/u/0/Km9i1dc5cLs
 
 
Remarks by Congresswoman Ileana Ros-Lehtinen
IN SUPPORT OF GREATER REGULATORY FLEXIBILITY
FOR FLORIDA FISHERMEN
   Mr. Speaker, this week I met with commercial and recreational fishermen from my Congressional district of the Florida Keys. These hardworking men and women have taken time out of their busy season to travel up here to Washington, D.C., to protest the latest round of onerous and unfair Federal fishing regulations and closures.
   Florida’s recreational fishing industry is the largest in the Nation. It’s economic impact to our State exceeds $5.3 billion, and more than 54,000 jobs are generated by this industry. Similarly, Florida’s commercial fishing industry is nearly 13,000 strong and contributes a staggering $1.2 billion to our economy.
   Our fishermen understand that maintaining a robust, healthy fishery through appropriate regulation is the key to their economic success. However, the recent fishing bans on red snapper and shallow water grouper enacted by the South Atlantic Fisheries Council are devastating to our Florida fishing industry. The bans not only threaten the jobs of recreational and commercial fishermen, but also the small business owners that support and economically benefit from these industries.
   Local restaurants will look to carry more cost-affordable fish from countries such as Mexico and the Dominican Republic, as opposed to featuring fresh, Florida-caught fish, crab, and lobster. Hotels, dive shops, and other tourist attractions will also continue to suffer as fishing enthusiasts decide to travel elsewhere.
   The impact of this multibillion dollar industry on the State of Florida cannot be overstated. And yet, one by one, these fishermen are being regulated out of business.
   I’m a cosponsor of a bill known as the Transparency in Job Loss from Fishery Closures Act, and this is a bill introduced by my colleague, Congressman Henry Brown. This bipartisan bill instructs NOAA to reverse the harmful fishing closures and calls for stricter policies before implementing further closings.
   In particular, this bill requires that NOAA conduct a comprehensive review of recent fishery closures and provides sufficient updated research showing that a closure is the only option to maintain the fishery. In this review, NOAA must consider the impact of each closure on the coastal communities being regulated, including the impact on their small businesses and the losses of the jobs that would entail these closures.
   I also support efforts to increase fisheries research to improve enforcement systems and to reform the flawed Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Act.
   I’m a cosponsor of a bill introduced by Congressman Frank Pallone, which would amend Magnuson to provide greater flexibility to State regulators and fishery managers.
   The process of collecting data utilized by Federal regulators in determining fishing closures also needs to be revisited.
   The Scientific and Statistics Committees need to conduct their business in an open, transparent forum that also considers input from the fishing industry. What a concept. Opening up this committee to stakeholders’ feedback and congressional oversight will go a long way in repairing the trust between regulators and local fishermen.
   In this stagnant economy, Mr. Speaker, it is imperative that we do all that we can to protect a historic and much needed industry from economic disaster. Our Nation’s fishermen deserve and require our immediate action.

Palm Beach Post: Florida a Conspicuous No-Show at Annual Coral Reef Summit in Washington

http://blogs.palmbeachpost.com/seeinggreen/2010/02/23/florida-a-conspicuous-no-show-at-capitol-hill-coral-reef-summit/

by Paul Quinlan

Florida takes great pride in its copious coral reefs, which rival even those of the Caribbean, the state’s environmental agency boasts on its website. Imagine, then, the surprise among delegates at this week’s annual gathering of the U.S. Coral Reef Task Force in Washington that the state of Florida — for the first time in anyone’s memory — was a no-show.

“Florida didn’t even send anyone at all – not even a staff person,” marveled Dan Clark, of South Florida reef conservation group Cry of the Water, in a telephone interview from the meeting.

An higher-up at the Florida Department of Environmental Protection, which usually sends a top staffer to task force meeting, told Clark that Gov. Charlie Crist had cut travel for state workers because of the state’s budget woes. But the feds even offered to pick up the tab for whomever Florida would be willing to send, a surprised task force staffer told Clark at the meeting.

It’s not clear why Crist didn’t take them up on the offer, and a spokesman for the governor would not return calls for comment. Was it in protest to the tougher pollution limits the EPA wants to impose on state waterways? An attempt to duck the debate over whether to protect reef habitat at the expense of future beach replenishment projects? Simple oversight?

“It’s politics, no doubt,” said Clark, suggesting the Crist doesn’t want to appear to be cozying up to environmentalists as the gap between him and front-runner GOP Senate rival Marco Rubio grows. “I hate to read too much into it, but I’ve got to wonder if the governor is distancing himself from environmental issues.”

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This entry was posted on Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010 at 7:53 pm and is filed under Charlie Crist, Oceans/Reefs, Politics, State government. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

Capitol News Connection: Proposed Water Rules Face Resistance In Florida

http://www.capitolnewsconnection.org/node/13907

The Environmental Protection Agency wants to protect Florida bodies of water like Lake Okeechobee.

Manuel Quinones, CNC News | 16 February 2010

Environmental attorney Ralf Brookes has enjoyed scuba diving in the Florida Keys for the past 20 years.  He recalls gin-clear waters and healthy reefs.  But Brookes says he’s seen first hand how pollution has jeopardized the area’s beauty. 
 
“The turtle grass is all covered with brown algae and it’s smothering it to death,” Brookes said.  “Most of the corals in the patch reef are smothered or are dying or dead.  When you get out to the main reef, it’s just tragic, you feel like crying because it’s probably ten percent as good as it used to be.”
 
Brookes says he’s encouraged by a new plan by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to lower phosphorous and nitrogen levels in lakes, rivers, streams and canals. 
 
The agency is getting tough after environmental groups sued back in 2008. 
 
But the proposed EPA action is also causing controversy.  It’s the first time the agency seeks to override Florida’s water quality standards, which is setting up an unprecedented showdown between local businesses and Washington bureaucrats.  Earthjustice lawyer David Guest says the pollution comes from untreated sewage, cow manure and fertilizer.  He says it’s an especially big problem with the Miami-Dade canal systems.

“If you spray liquid fertilizer on your grass, the grass will grow like crazy and it will turn this crazy green color, well you spray that same fertilizer on the water, which is what happens when it rains, then you get this crazy growth of algae in the water,” Guest said.

Ephraim King, director of the EPA’s Office of Science and Technology, says the pollution caused by population growth is outpacing Florida’s attempts to regulate it.

“While that process probably works well when you only have a few impaired waters, in Florida, they’ve got over 850 waters that are impaired, and 60 percent of those are impaired due to nutrients,” King said.

Fighting back is a coalition of 75 business and utility groups.  They’ve formed an organization called “Don’t Tax Florida.” 
 
That list includes peanut and row crop farmers from the Panhandle. Larry Ford has run a farm in Jackson County for 40 years. He’s concerned the new caps would restrict fertilizers that make his fields more productive.

“For instance, say that we’re putting out 180-200 units of nitrogen on corn and they tell us you have to cut back to half that, the impact on yield is going to be dramatic,” Ford said.

Both Florida Senators and 18 House members, including Republican Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen and Democrat Rep. Allen Boyd, say the new rules would hurt Florida’s already struggling economy.
 
Sen. George LeMieux calls them “draconian.”

“We already have a very difficult economy,” LeMieux said in an interview outside the Senate floor.  “We don’t need to put up anymore roadblocks that are going to keep people from having jobs. I’m very concerned that this policy would be devastating to the building and construction industry.”

The new rules would require utility companies to re-use all of the wastewater generated in each community, according to Paul Steinbrecher, vice president of an industry coalition that represents utilities and local governments.
 
“I think the cost factor is important and I do think when the citizens of Florida realize this is going to more than double the average water and sewer bill, they’re going to be interested in that,” Steinbrecher said.

But King says clear Florida waters are good for boaters, scuba divers and the state’s recreation industry.

“We think it’ll make it stronger, and it’ll increase its prosperity and we actually think working with farmers and working with the stakeholders,” King said.  “We’re pretty confident that we’re going to be able to find a path through this.”

Public hearings on the new rules begin Tuesday in Tallahassee.  There is another one Thursday in West Palm Beach.
 
EPA officials must finalize the proposal by October.  
 
Ralf Brookes
Ralf Brookes Attorney
www.RalfBrookesAttorney.com  
1217 East Cape Coral Parkway #107
Cape Coral Florida 33904
Phone (239) 910-5464
Fax (866) 341-6086
Ralf@RalfBrookesAttorney.com

Board Certified in City, County and Local Government Law
by The Florida Bar

PLEASE NOTE if you are writing to me in my capacity as a City Attorney: Florida has a broad public records law and all correspondence, including email addresses, may be subject to disclosure.

The Environmental Protection Agency wants to protect water bodies such as Lake Okeechobee.