Water managers warn that, unless consumption is drastically reduced, the taps could run dry

Lesley Blackner will be interviewed this week on Florida Matters, WUSF 89.7 Tampa Public Radio, to be broadcast this Friday May 18th at 6:30 pm, and Saturday May 19th at noon.  On the broadcast, she will be debating  Adam Babington – the Florida Chamber of Commerce’s top gun hired to take down the Florida Hometown Democracy movement. If you miss the broadcast, you can listen to it on the WUSF website:

http://www.wusf.usf.edu/WUSF-FM/Programs/Florida_Matters_pgs/Florida_Matters.cfm

 


Miami Herald.com

 

Posted on Sun, May. 13, 2007

Overcrowding? Nature will fix that

By CARL HIAASEN

In the absence of a sane growth-management policy, nature is becoming the great equalizer in
Florida.

 

A 17-month drought has made a puddle of
Lake Okeechobee and has parched the Biscayne Aquifer. Parts of the
Everglades are drying up, while advancing seawater endangers the well fields that serve hundreds of thousands of residents in Broward and
Palm Beach counties.

 

Water managers warn that, unless consumption is drastically reduced, the taps could run dry — or, at the least, start spitting salt — in several coastal communities. Forget about watering your lawn; you won’t be able to water your kids.

 

The emergency is so dire that even a busy hurricane season may not make it go away.
Florida, one of the wettest states in the country, is running dry.

 

Drought cycles here are nothing new, but this is the first one to occur with 18 million people encamped on the peninsula. They might cut back on sprinkling their geraniums, but they won’t stop taking showers or washing their laundry

Not many politicians are brave enough to cite overpopulation as a cause of the current crisis, though it is. There are too many people using too much water, but it’s easier to blame the weather.

 

The state’s primitive, low-tech economy revolves around cramming as many humans as possible onto every available acre. Few in
Tallahassee have the guts to admit that it’s time to change course.

 

This is where nature steps in. Try selling a new home or a condo when briny crud is dripping from the spigots.

 

Since its infancy,
Florida has had a contentious relationship with water. The
Everglades were diked and dredged to sabotage the natural flow, first for the benefit of agriculture and later for the benefit of land developers.

 

The
Everglades promptly began to die, and only when the financial ramifications became manifest did those same special interests rally behind the current restoration program.

 

Unlike
California and other fast-growing states,
Florida can’t hijack big rivers to supply its thirsty cities. Much of our water is pumped from porous rock underground and, without moderate rain, the levels keep dropping and salt intrusion progresses.

 

Building moratoriums

Once a contaminated well is shut down, it can take years to bring it safely back on line. Said Jesus Rodriguez, spokesman for the South Florida Water Management District, “The scenario is a grim one. We could be talking about bottled water for the municipalities for a long time.”

 

One way to gird for the future — and protect families who already live here — would be to impose building moratoriums in those counties where the water shortage is most acute.

 

This is way too simple and sensible. Moratoriums can’t be enacted unless local leaders are willing to stand up to developers, a rare occurrence indeed. The state is requiring counties to recycle water for nonpotable uses, but that doesn’t curb the liquid appetite of sprawl.

 

It’s lunacy to continue carving out subdivisions and erecting high-rises when the wells are drying up, but that’s the plan: Keep Florida growing, no matter what. Once the rainy season begins, everything’s gonna be fine, right?

 

Wrong. The state was soaked by hurricanes and tropical waves during 2004 and 2005, yet where’s all that water now?

As we all know, newcomers aren’t easily spooked away from
Florida. Despite predictions of another terrible storm season, the state’s population soared last year by nearly 431,000.

That’s the same as adding two more cities, each the size of
Orlando.

 

According to the

University of
Florida’s Bureau of Economic and Business Research, the state will have 20 million residents within three years, and almost 25 million by 2025.

 

Don’t let anybody tell you this is good news, unless you yearn for more taxes, higher insurance rates and water bills as hefty as your car payment. That’s the future, and it’s not so far off.

 

Encroaching saltwater

Rains will come this summer, as they always do, providing temporary cover for politicians who don’t want to confront the water crisis. Experts say it could take years of heavier-than-normal precipitation to restore safe levels in
Lake Okeechobee and saturate the aquifers sufficiently to stave off encroaching seawater.

 

Shortages will hit some communities sooner, and harder, than others. Eventually, state water managers will be forced to take action on a bolder scale than rationing sprinkler use.

 

Twice as many people are moving here as are moving out. The net population continues to expand at the dangerous rate of about 1,000 souls a day, and they’ll keep coming until there’s a full-blown water panic.

 

By then, we’ll all be sucking air.

 

HELP SAVE WHAT’S LEFT OF  FLORIDA…
LET THE PEOPLE VOTE to control growth! 

Help put HOMETOWN DEMOCRACY on the 2008 ballot

Please download and SIGN THE PETITION 

http://www.FloridaHometownDemocracy.com

PO Box 636, New Smyrna Beach, FL 32170-0636.  

One Response

  1. Florida voters should not sign any petition unless they know what they are signing. Paid, professional signature gatherers will say anything to get a signature.

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