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More Than 11,000 Acres Saved From Oil Drilling in Everglades City

evergladeswetlandspubdom In: More Than 11,000 Acres Saved From Oil Drilling in Everglades City | Our Santa Fe River, Inc. (OSFR) | Protecting the Santa Fe River

Very happy news that our State has had the foresight to purchase this acreage which will now be protected not only from oil drilling but also from development that was sure to come in the future.

Our favorite columnist Craig Pittman has chosen as his topic this week the controversy over public access to this land tract.

Read the original article with photos here in WINK News.

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


 

More than 11,000 acres saved from oil drilling in Everglades City

Reporter: Michelle AlvarezWriter: Matias Abril
Published: Updated: 

More than a quarter of the land is mangrove habitat, which is crucial for water quality and storm protection.

It’s also home to black bears, Florida panthers and 37 other federally listed species in our region.

“When you look at the need for that connected landscape to fulfill the full Florida wildlife corridor, this is a key piece,” said Meredith Budd, Director of External Affairs at the Live Wildly Foundation.

Also known as the Green Heart of the Everglades, the Collier County property is west of State Road 29 and south of U.S. 41 running south to Everglades City.

“I applaud the groups that have been directly involved, and it’s a great win for the state,” Budd said.

Budd is talking about a multi-million-dollar deal by the Collier Family, the nonprofit Wildlandscapes International, Family Lands Remembered by the Florida legislature, the South Florida Water Management District and more.

“Florida, specifically, we have a very unique geology and hydrology, and we depend on our underground aquifers for most of our drinking water,” Budd said.

Budd said not having these lands protected from oil drilling can have an impact on our water, air quality and more.

“When you’re talking about recovery of an endangered species, having a connected landscape through this area, which is their core habitat is important when we’re talking about dispersal and having those panthers moving northward for recovery,” Budd said.

Chad Evers with Florida Gulf Coast University’s Water School said it’s important to understand that we do have a growing human population, but…

“I think it’s, you know, really important to protect those things for just the sake of protecting them, but also the sake of future humans having the same equitable access to nature that we’ve had, in our lifetimes in previous generations,” Evers said.

Evers said there are two sides to every story. He knows there’s an economic value in oil drilling, but he believes saving the Everglades and any land like this is far more important for us and the environment.

 

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