Governor Crist Unveils Momentous Strategy to Save
America’s Everglades, Preserve National Treasure
~Water managers to negotiate buy-out of U.S. Sugar Corporation;
Governor's Press Release, June 24, 2008
Massive environmental acquisition to provide
“missing link” for reconnecting Lake Okeechobee and the Everglades and
reviving fabled River of Grass~
WEST PALM BEACH, FL – Governor Charlie Crist today stood at the edge of the
Arthur R. Marshall Loxahatchee National Wildlife Refuge, joined by Florida’s
top elected leaders, the United States Sugar Corporation and a host of
environmental advocates, to unveil a momentous strategy that could bring
about one of the largest environmental land acquisitions in the nation’s
history and provide “missing link” needed to protect Florida’s coastal
estuaries and better revive, restore and preserve one of America’s greatest
natural treasures – the Everglades. The announcement kicks off the 2008
Serve to Preserve Florida Summit on Global Climate, which begins tomorrow in
Miami.
“Sixty years ago, President Harry Truman came to South Florida to dedicate
Everglades National Park. Today, we follow in the great footsteps – and in
the tradition of the great conservationist President Teddy Roosevelt. We
continue their legacy of permanent preservation of the one of the most
unique landscapes of our country – and on the planet,” said Governor Crist.
“We have an opportunity to provide the critical missing link in our
restoration activities. I can envision no better gift to the Everglades, or
the people of Florida, or to our country than to place in public ownership
this missing link that represents the key to true restoration.”
Announcing a new partnership to revive the River of Grass, Governor Crist
called on the South Florida Water Management District to begin negotiating
an agreement to acquire as much as 187,000 acres of agricultural land owned
by the United States Sugar Corporation. The vast tracts of land would then
be used to reestablish a part of the historic connection between Lake
Okeechobee and the fabled River of Grass through a managed system of storage
and treatment and, at the same time, safeguard the St. Lucie and
Caloosahatchee rivers and estuaries.
Governor Crist Unveils Momentous Strategy to Save America’s Everglades
“This is a watershed event in national conservation history, and a paradigm
shift for the Everglades and the environment in Florida, one that would have
been inconceivable in years past. Yet, here we are,” said Robert Buker,
president and CEO of United States Sugar Corporation. “We look forward to
continuing to work with the Governor and the District in the cooperative
spirit with which we have begun, in order to make the dream represented by
the Statement of Principles that we sign here today a reality for Florida
tomorrow.”
The proposed agreement between the South Florida Water Management District
and the United States Sugar Corporation involves the public purchase of
nearly 300 square miles spanning four counties in South Florida – a land
mass as large as New York City. The District will also take ownership of the
company’s assets, including 200 miles of railroad, a state-of-the-art sugar
mill, sugar refinery and citrus processing plant. Subject to independent
appraisals and approval by the District’s Governing Board, water managers
will invest $1.75 billion in cash and certificates of participation to
finance the acquisition.
“America’s River of Grass sustains life for so much and so many. Today it
receives its lifeline,” said Everglades Foundation Vice Chairperson Mary
Barley. “A restored and sustained Everglades is no longer a dream. History
will record this action as the point that brought it within our reach.”
Acquiring the enormous expanse of real estate offers water managers the
opportunity and flexibility to store and clean water on a scale never before
contemplated. Water managers expect that dedicating significantly more land
in the Everglades Agricultural Area to restoration will build upon and
enhance the 30-year state-federal Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan
and the State of Florida’s Northern Everglades program to restore and
protect Lake Okeechobee, the St. Lucie and Caloosahatchee rivers and their
respective estuaries.
Benefits from the land acquisition will allow for the following:
Huge increases in the availability of water storage, significantly reducing
the potential for harmful discharges from Lake Okeechobee to Florida’s
coastal rivers and estuaries when lake levels are high.
·
The ability to deliver cleaner water to the Everglades during dry times and
greater water storage to protect the natural system during wet years.
Preventing thousands of tons of phosphorus from entering the Everglades
every year.
Forever eliminating the need for “back-pumping” water into Lake Okeechobee
from the Everglades Agricultural Area to augment the water supply needs. The
District’s Governing Board this year voted not to back-pump into the lake
during the ongoing water shortage to protect water quality.
Additional water storage alternatives, relieving some pressures on the
Herbert Hoover Dike while
the federal government undertakes repairs.
·
Sustainability of agriculture and green energy production.
“The significance of this moment will forever be recorded in Florida’s
environmental history,” said South Florida Water Management District
Governing Board Vice Chair Shannon Estenoz. “Today, we offer the Everglades
restoration opportunities once thought impossible; environmental progress
once considered unachievable; and protections just a decade ago believed
unattainable. History will mark today as a watershed event for restoring our
beloved national treasure – the Everglades – and generations will thank the
Governor for his leadership in making it happen.”
To mark the occasion, the Governor stood as official witness as South
Florida Water Management District Governing Board Vice Chair Shannon Estenoz
signed a “Statement of Principles” with United States Sugar Corporation
President and CEO Robert H. Buker. The Statement of Principles provides the
framework for the potential acquisition of property. Negotiations on the
final agreement will take place over the coming months, with a closing on
the real estate anticipated before the year’s end. As part of the proposal,
United States Sugar Corporation will continue to farm and manage the land
consistent with its previous business practices for the next six years.
Construction of any new water treatment and storage projects on the
agricultural land would likely begin following the six-year transition
period.
As the agreement is finalized, the Governor directed the District to work
closely with interest groups, the Florida Department of Environmental
Protection, the Florida Legislature, United States Congress and federal
agencies on the future use of the land and any effects to the planning,
design and construction of Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan or
Northern Everglades projects. The Governor also called upon the Office of
Tourism, Trade and Economic Development and the Agency for Workforce
Innovation to work with United States Sugar Corporation, local governments
and area businesses on an economic transition plan for the area.
About the Everglades
America’s Everglades once covered almost 11,000 square miles of south
Florida. Just a century ago, water flowed down the Kissimmee River into Lake
Okeechobee, then south through the Everglades to the Florida Bay – the
ultimate destination of the pure sheet flow. Because of efforts to drain the
marshland for agriculture, development and flood control, the Everglades is
today half the size it was a century ago.
Dubbed the River of Grass for the sawgrass that
flourished throughout the marsh, the Everglades
is a mosaic of freshwater ponds, prairies and forested uplands that supports
a
rich plant and wildlife community. Known throughout the world for its wading
birds and wildlife, the Everglades is home to
dozens of federally threatened and endangered species, including the Florida
panther,
American crocodile, snail kite and wood stork. The mix of salt and
freshwater makes it the only place on Earth where alligators and crocodiles
exist side by side.
About the 2008
Serve to Preserve Florida Summit on Global Climate
Governor Crist’s monumental announcement kicks off the 2008 Serve to
Preserve Florida Summit on Global
Climate this week, June 25-26, 2008, at the Intercontinental Miami. Building
on
the foundation for Florida’s energy future that began at last year’s summit,
the 2008 summit will focus on
stimulating economic development in clean technologies as well as “greening”
Florida’s
business community. By encouraging companies to invest in our state’s energy
future, Florida
will transform its energy marketplace to enhance fuel diversity, lessen
dependence on foreign sources of oil and reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
For more information on restoration of America’s Everglades, visit
www.myflorida.com.
For information on the 2008 Serve to Preserve Florida Summit on Global
Climate Change, visit ww.myfloridaclimate.com or www.myflorida.com.
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