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Introduction
August 9 and 10, 2007 - The
Blob has come to Florida
By Hardy Jones
The federal government spends $2-billion dollars a year
to subsidize an industry which causes massive environmental
damage to a vast area of Florida and its coastal waters,
destroying fisheries and now threatening real estate values
and the tourist industry on the Gulf Coast. The Feds (and
that means out tax dollars) then spend billions of dollars
more to try to alleviate this unfolding catastrophe. The
industry receiving our tax dollars in such profligate abundance
is sugar – always referred to in Florida as “big
sugar” because of its huge political clout.
Of course sugar can be grown more economically in nations
that really need a sugar industry. But vast swaths of Florida
north and south of Lake Okeechobee have been subjugated to
this crop and the pesticides and fertilizers required to
grow it. The consequences for other parts of the state are
calamitous.
On August 9 and 10 I drove around, flew over and traveled
by boat around Lake Okeechobee, down the Caloosahatchee River,
through Pine Island Sound and Red Fish pass and out into
the Gulf of Mexico, returning through San Carlos Pass. At
Lake O I saw mountains of contaminated muck just dredged
from drought-lowered lake, endless fields of sugar cane and
ultimately fifty square miles of the Gulf covered in an algal
bloom that a hydrologist said seemed on the verge on developing
into highly toxic red tide.
Thursday Aug. 9
Greg Rawl, an independent water consultant, and Andy Powell,
head of a construction company that had just finished demucking
parts of Lake O, guided me by road along the Calahoosahatchee
pointing out the vast engineering works that have distorted
the historical flow of water from the big lake, creating
land dry enough for residential housing, farming and other
human enterprise.
Lake O, today suffering through one of its worst droughts
in memory has seen its water levels drop to their lowest
levels since recording began in 1932 – 8.8 feet at
on July 1. The low water levels exposed large areas of the
lakebed and made it easy to bring conventional earth moving
equipment in to remove two million cubic yards of sludge
that had accumulated on the natural lake bottom. The idea
is that by removing the muck they will restore natural sandy
bottom that will support move natural vegetation and fish
life.
At first they thought they would give the sludge to farmers
but then learned a lot of it contains pesticides - arsenic
and other heavy metals - so piles of the stuff just sit around
the circumference of the lake. No one is quite sure what
to do with these mounds. Some have suggested they may spontaneously
combust, eliminating the problem on the ground but transferring
it to the air.
The other great problem of Lake O and waters downstream
is that fertilizers used in agriculture and droppings from
cattle have rendered a phosphorous poor environment, to which
plant life had adapted, into a phosphorous rich water system
which promotes the intrusion of exotic vegetation such as
cat tails which wipe out the native flora. Removing the muck
removed some of the phosphorous.
Nitrogen also adversely affects the waters of Southern Florida,
fresh and marine.
Friday Aug. 10
I met Greg at his Cessna 182 and we took off heading back
over the land we had seen by road the previous day. Flying
conditions were ideal, the sky a blazing blue, few cumulous
clouds in the distance – not even hinting they might
produce rain. From the air you get a sense of the massive
engineering that has gone into bending nature’s design
to something more amendable to human demands such as agriculture,
housing and marinas.
There’s a lot of algae on the lake and the area devoted
to sugar cane is staggering.
We then flew the Calahoosahatchee past Fort Myers over Pine
Island Sound and out into the Gulf. We flew for miles north
and south seeing blotches, rafts and strands of an algae
called Tricodesmium covering fifty square miles of water,
some of it reaching with two miles of the shoreline of Sanibel
Island.
In the afternoon Lee County Commissioner Ray Judah joined
us on a boat provided by Sanibel – Captiva Conservancy
Foundation and we ran through Pine island Sound, and thru
Red fish pass on the course we had followed by air earlier
in the day. Greg spoke of the days when one of the world’s
largest Tarpon fishing tournaments took place near here.
No more – the tarpon are gone because of poor water
quality.
We easily found the algae Tricodesmium matted into huge
rafts on the surface of the bay and when we had cleared Red
Fish Pass and run a couple miles out to sea we hit the heavy
concentrations.
We also found an algal form called Lyngbia. Gary and Ray
were appalled at the size and density of the algal blooms
and both felt a red tide would follow bringing fish kills
such as happened last year.
They’ve been fighting to improve waters quality in
the area for years and lately have achieved some successes.
They have strong allies now – owners of very expensive
homes who have seen their property values drop as masses
of Red Tide accumulate on the beach, giving off noxious odors
and a gas byproduct which stings the eyes and burns the lungs. And
tourists are now abandoning the lovely islands along Florida’s
Gulf coast because of the foul waters.
How bad do things have to get before societies take remedial
action. It would seem that if a harmful algae was growing
out of control producing noxious gasses harmful to large
numbers of people that citizens and government would act
to restore a healthy eco-system. But that doesn’t seem
to be the way humans work.
What has happened in Florida as in so many other places
in the world is that immediate profit on the part of short
term interests of a few prevails over long-term interests
of the many. The huge federal subsidies to Florida Big Sugar
have led to the destruction of habit supporting fisheries
which has in turn contaminated fish and driven the price
of fish in general up several fold. Who hurts from that – the
fishermen and the consumer. Not to mention all the other
animals who depend on fish for food, dolphins for example.
And by the way, there is an algal bloom on the east coast
of Florida off Palm Beach threatening plants, deep water
reefs and marine life.
Meanwhile the Bush administration has had The Everglades
removed from the UN’s World Heritage Committee endangered
list and the president has announced he will veto a $21-billion
water preservation bill that contains $2-billion dollars
for Everglades restoration.
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