Thursday, January 31, 2013

Seminoles fight Powerplant in Big Cypress but DCA sides with FP&L


Power lines criss cross U.S. 41 East of State Road 29 in Collier County. Florida Department of Transportation is preparing an environmental study for proposed safety improvements along U.S. 41 from State Road 29 to the Collier - Dade County line. FDOT is proposing to make improvements to the roadway shoulders and guardrail. Greg Kahn/Staff

Cross Posted from the Naples Daily News  by GREG KAHN 

Power lines criss cross U.S. 41 East of State Road 29 in Collier County. Florida Department of Transportation is preparing an environmental study for proposed safety improvements along U.S. 41 from State Road 29 to the Collier - Dade County line. FDOT is proposing to make improvements to the roadway shoulders and guardrail.  
A Florida appeals court on Wednesday denied a second attempt by the Seminole Tribe of Florida to quash a 2011 Hendry County ordinance that would enable FPL to build a massive power plant on 3,127 acres of panther habitat near its reservation.
"Though the circuit court incorrectly determined that the ordinance was not subject to certiorari review, we conclude that the circuit court ultimately afforded procedural due process and applied the correct law in denying the Seminole Tribe's petition," the Second District Court of Appeal in Lakeland wrote in its nine-page ruling.
The site for Florida Power and Light's proposed natural gas power plant and solar energy farm, which could generate 3,750 megawatts of electricity, borders the tribe's Big Cypress Reservation; the smoke stacks would be visible from two miles away.
West Palm Beach attorney Kenneth G. Spillias, who represents the tribe, could not be reached for comment.
However, the tribe and other groups have other appeals pending that affect the FPL project. Under the Florida Electrical Power Plant Siting Act, the tribe is considered a "substantially affected person" and also could ask for an administrative law judge to hear an appeal.
The tribe, which asked the appeals court in September 2011 to review the Hendry Circuit Court ruling, argued that Hendry County Commissioners' unanimous vote to adopt the ordinance, rezoning the land from agricultural to Planned Unit Development, violated the county's Local Development Code. The tribe also contended commissioners avoided their responsibility to review the project's compatibility with the reservation and determine if it's consistent with the county's comprehensive plan.
The tribe cited concern over the impact on ecotourism, water, and wildlife. The tribe, the Sierra Club, Conservancy of Southwest Florida and the South Florida Wildlands Association opposed the plant, arguing the land is a habitat for the endangered Florida panther, crested caracara, eastern indigo snake and wood stork. They also questioned the impact on air quality and water consumption, noting the plant would use up to 7.5 million gallons of water daily to cool each of the three units.
The tribe and Conservancy also argued commissioners rezoned the land prematurely, without sufficient information, noting the plant can't be completed until a lawsuit over ownership of land that's needed is resolved.
The DCA was limited in its review because the tribe had already appealed county commissioners unanimous May 24, 2011, vote. As a result, the appeals court could only consider whether the circuit court judge applied the correct law and if the judge gave the tribe "procedural due process" to determine if it had been deprived of life, liberty or property. In contrast, the circuit judge also had to determine whether commissioners followed the law and rule whether commissioners' findings and vote were supported by competent, substantial evidence.
The appellate panel agreed county commissioners satisfied their obligation to protect wildlife by requiring approval from state and federal agencies overseeing water, wetlands, and wildlife habitat, and that the judge ruled the county sufficiently addressed the water issue because the project must be approved by the state Department of Environmental Protection and the South Florida Water Management District.

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

$600,000 approved towards Island Way Road

Jupiter Town council Makes Steps Toward Building Road through Limestone Creek and Kennedy Estates Despite Opposition
 
Last night after 11:30PM the last item on the Jupiter Town Council meeting was a vote on the alignment of the island way road, which is slated to pass through Limestone Creek, Baker's Park and Kennedy estates. The  road which was stalemated in the Palm Beach County Board of Commissioners in mid-October in 3-3 locked decision, was unanimously passed last night by the Jupiter City Council. The decision specifically was to spend $600,000 to buy 7 parcels of property needed to install the road. This purchase will be fast tracked as a quick sale and is expected to be purchased no later than December 31st! There were only 6 people in opposition to the road present, one of which will have it right at his doorstep.

Although the county did not pass it in October, it can be revisited by them since it was a tie and the Jupiter Town Council stated that they intend to urge them to revisit it. Last night Karen Golonka invited all the opposition to contact her as she would not tolerate the misinformation and insults that the Palm Beach County Board of Commissioners tolerated when they took the vote in October, so bring it to her folks!

Please call/send an e-mail to the council members of Jupiter and voice your opposition to this road!
(561) 746-5134
towncouncil@jupiter.fl.us

Contact PBC Commissioner Hal Valeche and encourage him to keep this off the PBCBC agenda!
(561) 355-2201
HValeche@pbcgov.org

Key Talking Points:

-The corporate welfare for biotechnology in the state of Florida must end. $600,000 towards land acquisition for a road that may or may not be approved and does not have the required approval of Palm Beach County Board of Commissioners is a wasted investment.

-It is irresponsible that the council put this item on as the last item at the peak of holiday season after a huge town issue that went on for 3 hours. Agenda items are only released 2 days before a meeting, so it is difficult to organize quickly around issue. In order for this road to be full steam ahead it must have the approval of Palm Beach County Commission and it does not.

-The road is slated to go through Limestone Creek a community that was founded by freed slaves and has been at the hands of colonialist decision making since its inception. This is no different. The residents of Limestone creek voiced their opposition to the road, and PBC Board of Commission was split because of this. The town of Jupiter should not ignore the concerns they had:

-increased risk of safety to pedestrians/children that walk and bike to school/work
-increased pollution, noise pollution, and traffic of 5,000 vehicles per day
-unidentified bio-hazardous waste will be transported on this road.
An accident transporting it is not if, but when.
-picking a historically black community to put this road through is a strategy that bodies of power often do to win their poisonous proposals: put the most toxic substances through the communities that are least empowered to fight. This is why it is considered environmental racism.
 
-As the project is slated now, it will result in further habitat loss of the Florida state listed threatened Gopher tortoise.

FURTHER READING:

PB Post Article about the vote before it happened. Please comment on article!

Jupiter Town Council Agenda for Dec 18th 2012- Item 100-12

Article on the PBC Board of Commission dropping the proposal in October of this year

Monday, November 5, 2012

Jim Stafford takes Lake Worth elections back to the dump

Jim Stafford joins the ranks...
Once again, a candidate for Lake Worth's City Commissionthis time it's Jim Staffordis taking dirty donations from Southern Waste Systems (SWS). This company, which also runs several other operations under different names (including "Sun Recycling"), has been a source of grief for residents in Lake Worth's Osborne Community, a historic black neighborhood, for years. SWS and Sun Recycling operate at all hours of the day and night disturbing residents on Truman Ave with noise, smells, lights and vibrations that have impacted the very foundations of their homes.

(For starters, try and imagine a couple dozen diesel dump trucks all firing up their engines in your backyard at 4am most every morning...)

The fight against the location of this waste dump and "transfer station" has been going on for decades, with the previous facility, owned by a company called Kimmins, being shutdown for creating a nuisance in the community.

The facility only exists because its zoning predates laws of equal rights and environmental justice which would very likely deem it illegal under current standards. It is a case of what can be called Jim Crow-era Zoning, and presents a blatant case of environmental racism.

According to the Environmental Protection Agency, 47 percent of all waste transfer stations in the U.S. are located within one mile of African-American and Latino neighborhoods. [Source]

Like candidates before him (Lisa Maxwell, Retha Lowe, Carla Blockson to name a few), Jim Stafford has decided to accept money from this company. [Have a look for yourself at his last quarterly report, titled 'G4' in this link.]

Sadly, but not surprisingly, Stafford shares many common campaigns contributors with the above list of former candidates in Lake Worth, the majority of whom are real estate investors, developers and your typical cast of Chamber of Commerce lackeys, with a smattering of right-wing Republican bigwigs. (You guessed it, Stafford is registered Democrat... His donors, not so much.)

Last year, SWS said they were scaling back their operation on the Lake Worth/Lantana border. Instead they appear to be moving forward with a plan to expand their operations (despite public outcry and city legal challenges against it.) How to most easily crush your opposition? It's a classic plan that never seems to get old: Buy their elected officials.

For a glimpse of the history of SWS and their shady dealing in Palm Beach County, check out a recent article in the Palm Beach Post, "Palm Beach County commissioners push bid change to help hauling company".

In case you're wondering, the Palm Beach County Environmental Coalition endorses the other guy.

Monday, October 8, 2012

Is Fracking on the horizon in Florida?

FRACKING CONFRONTS FLORIDA: Profitable but controversial technique of drilling for oil and gas proposed here.


By Mary Wozniak

mwozniak@news-press.com
South Florida may be ripe for fracking.

The controversial process of drilling for oil and natural gas is pumping billions into government coffers, residents' pockets and energy company bank accounts across the country, creating thousands of jobs, reducing reliance on foreign energy - and causing environmental concerns.

Fracking, formally called hydraulic fracturing, involves injecting a well with a cocktail of water, chemicals and sand at high pressure to fracture rock and access previously untapped reserves.

A fracking frenzy has swept through North Dakota, Pennsylvania, New York, Wyoming, Colorado, West Virginia, Louisiana, Arkansas, Ohio, Montana, Texas and elsewhere. In Williston, N.D., Mayor Ward Koeser said fracking brought the state $1.5 to $2 billion in the last year alone. 'It's been intense,' he said.

Fracking is inevitable in South Florida, maybe within a year, said Ed Pollister, owner/operator of a small company called Century Oil, with offices in Immokalee and Michigan.

Pollister said he's discussed his desire to frack with officials from the state Department of Environmental Protection.

'At some point if I don't do it, somebody else will,' he said.

Alico Inc. also could have a future in fracking. The company discovered as much as 94 tons of possible fracking sand in Hendry County.

Fracking fever is fueled by new technologies developed over the last 10 years that make it economically feasible and profitable to drill for previously untouchable sources of oil and gas.

Saturday, October 6, 2012

Updates on Scripps, Briger and the Ongoing Biotech Menace of Palm Beach County

Two new article were posted this week at ScrapScripps.info

They are essential reading for anyone looking to keep up with the latest news from the fight to protect what's left of the last remaining forests in the eastern corridor of South Floirda. 

 

The Battle Brewing in Limestone Creek

Environmental Racism, Endangered Species and the Biotech Nightmare

The threat of Scripps Florida reveals a new tentacle, as the Hawkeye biotech development plans unfold before us. The Palm Beach County Commission is scheduled to make a final vote on the road expansion, which is needed for the development to move forward, on Tuesday, Oct. 16, 9:30am, at 301 North Olive Ave (6th Floor).
[Help mobilize for this hearing, and educate yourself by reading the information at ScrapScripps.info.]
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Land cleared on the south end of Briger, along Hood Road.

By now, many have noticed that there is land clearing and development going on at the south edge of the Briger Forest. As it stands, the southwest corner of the Briger is the future home of a Jewish Community Center (JCC).
The legality and ecological impacts of this work is yet to be determined, as research is currently under way to investigate whether appropriate permits and approvals exist for this project. 
Nonetheless, we are getting organized to defend the forest from further incursion, in what the Palm Beach Post has called “The Building Boom on Hood Road.”

This Summer, the City of Palm Beach Gardens approved building plans for Franklin Charter School on the west side of the forest (also on Hood Road, west of I-95). This side of the forest was found by local volunteer research and the Treasure Coast Regional Planning Council to be even wilder and less impacted than east of I-95.