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Florida’s water: public resource, private profit “You’re giving away something that belongs to us,” a law professor says.

Jake ginnie colorFI In: Florida’s water: public resource, private profit “You’re giving away something that belongs to us,” a law professor says. | Our Santa Fe River, Inc. (OSFR) | Protecting the Santa Fe River

Jake ginnie color In: Florida’s water: public resource, private profit “You’re giving away something that belongs to us,” a law professor says. | Our Santa Fe River, Inc. (OSFR) | Protecting the Santa Fe River
Used with permission from Jake Fuller.

 

To bring this up to date, this lawsuit has now been filed, the second one in which OSFR is participating against the Suwannee River Water Management District regarding the water permit they issued to Seven Springs and thus Nestle.

This permit will draw even more water from the Santa Fe River which is officially in recovery, which means it has had so much water taken from it that it is significantly harmed.   The fact that now the State  will allow even more to be taken shows that they do not care that they are harming the river.  Their terminology and classification describing the river also show that they are aware that they are damaging the river, which the State  is supposed to protect from harm.

So how do they justify this?

Answer is they cannot.

Our state bullies badly need an attitude adjustment.

Read the original article here in the Tampa Bay Times.

Comments by OSFR historian Jim Tatum.
jim.tatum@oursantaferiver.org
– A river is like a life: once taken,
it cannot be brought back © Jim Tatum


Florida’s water: public resource, private profit

“You’re giving away something that belongs to us,” a law professor says.

BY ZACHARY T. SAMPSON

Times Staff Writer  Sunday, March 21, 2021

When water managers decided last month to let a private company pull nearly a million gallons a day from Ginnie Springs for a plastic bottling plant, environmentalists were outraged.

Some said they plan to file a lawsuit. Their novel argument is to ask, essentially: What’s in it for us?

The multi-year controversy over the permit application in High Springs has invigorated activists who say businesses are overusing the aquifer, to the detriment of the state’s sparkling rivers and springs. If private companies profit off Florida’s water, they say, then Florida should at least get paid.

“It’s a simple idea, but it’s a new idea,” said Joseph Little, a University of Florida law professor emeritus who is considering filing the suit. He wants residents to wonder: “Holy mackerel, who owns this water? It’s not owned by the person who happens to own a piece of land. The water doesn’t just fall on this piece of land. The water is flowing underground.”

Little and other advocates unsuccessfully fought a permit application by Seven Springs Water, which can pump up to 984,000 gallons a day from around Ginnie Springs for the next five years, to be sold to Nestlé Waters North America for bottling. Seven Springs is affiliated with the Wray family, which runs a popular camping and tubing resort and controls land along the Santa Fe River in High Springs. The bottling operation has been in place for years.

The company paid a $115 fee to apply for a permit, records show. Critics say that’s about all the public gets from the deal, while Seven Springs profits greatly through its contract with Nestlé.

“You’re giving away something that belongs to us,” said Little, who has represented Florida Defenders of the Environment, Our Santa Fe River, himself and another resident.

A representative of the Wray family did not reply to an email or phone call seeking comment.

In a petition filed to the district before its board unanimously approved the permit, Little cited state law to argue that letting a private company pump water without paying the state a fair rate does not serve the public interest. He asked regulators to stop approving such permits. A spokeswoman for the district said that request would require new legislation, which is outside the water board’s control.

Little did not recommend a price for the water.

How do you even begin to set a cost for a resource many environmentalists consider invaluable?

Two bills introduced by Democratic state lawmakers this year propose different fees. Sen. Annette Taddeo, D-Miami, has suggested a 12.5-cent excise tax on every gallon pumped for bottling. The revenue would go into a fund, she said, that would help pay for replacing leaky septic systems causing pollution across the state.

Taddeo said her rate is based on what a bottling company could pay if it were to get water from a municipal tap supplier. She compared taxing water to fees placed on some industrial rock minerals, like phosphate, and oil.

“Any single industry that gets any of our minerals, they pay,” Taddeo said. “Why is water — which is much more precious — why do we let them have it for free?”

Sen. Janet Cruz, D-Tampa, has pitched a 5-cent fee per gallon on water used for bottling. She said 10 cents would be too high for other lawmakers to support and 2 cents would be too low to encourage conservation, so she settled on a nickel. Her bill would steer the money to water management districts….

Taddeo’s proposal has been criticized by a national research group called the Tax Foundation. Ulrik Boesen, a senior analyst for the foundation, wrote that the bill would place an unfair cost on a small group of companies bottling water, while doing nothing to encourage conservation from far bigger users of water like farms that deploy it for irrigation. Unlike oil and natural gas, he said, some water can be a renewable resource that eventually returns to nature.

Seven Springs, in its original permit application, wrote that the amount of water pumped for the bottling plant each day is less than 1 percent of the flow of nearby springs. The company said local agricultural operations can use up to about 29 million gallons a day, according to district data, or potentially more than 20 percent of the flow.

“It’s one of those things where lawmakers are looking to the tax code for solutions, where if there are issues with the water table, issues with the sustainability of these activities, regulation is probably where you should be looking,” Boesen said.

Bottling companies, he said, already help the economy. Sprinkled among the many commenters who asked the district to deny the permit were a handful of supporters last month, including workers at the plant who said about 60 people could lose their jobs if the operation ends. A representative of Gilchrist County said the plant accounts for 7 percent of the ad valorem and property tax base.

Nestlé has argued a tax like Taddeo’s would end or limit the company’s work in Florida. When the same bill surfaced last year in the Legislature, a lobbyist for the company said the cost would make bottlers look elsewhere. In addition to High Springs, there is a major plant in Zephyrhills.

Both bills previously failed to get support. Taddeo said bottlers like Nestlé wield influence in Tallahassee.

“They got scared with my bill and totally lobbied up,” she said. “I’m realistic as to what the prospects are, but I do think it is outrageous.”

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