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Nikki Fried, Michele Rayner-Goolsby Roll Out Clean Water Initiative

Raner Goolsby In: Nikki Fried, Michele Rayner-Goolsby Roll Out Clean Water Initiative | Our Santa Fe River, Inc. (OSFR) | Protecting the Santa Fe River

We have been skeptical of Nikki Fried’s latest advocacy of clean water as possible political campaign hype but the presence here of Center for Biological Diversity director Jaclyn Lopez gives her claims an added note of legitimacy.

As for the future bill by Rep. Rayner-Goolsby, we can say it sounds great but we will celebrate when the good results are in.  Environmental bills struggle to even make it to committee and when they do they are often adulterated to toothless nonsense.

Advocates have been severely burned by lying lawmakers such as Debby Mayfield, so caution is always present.

But for now we believe, support and hope for the best.

Read the complete article here in FloridaPolitics.

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


Nikki Fried, Michele Rayner-Goolsby roll out clean water initiative

b1c78e63449c026f7855cbf04a72b8ed?s=144&d=mm&r=g In: Nikki Fried, Michele Rayner-Goolsby Roll Out Clean Water Initiative | Our Santa Fe River, Inc. (OSFR) | Protecting the Santa Fe RiverKelly Hayes August 3, 2021

 

Rayner-Goolsby plans to sponsor legislation next year dealing with gypsum stacks.

Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried and state Rep. Michele Rayner-Goolsby rolled out plans Tuesday to revamp the state’s out-dated clean water policies, including with legislation that would help mitigate red tide outbreaks currently plaguing the Tampa Bay area.

Raner Goolsby In: Nikki Fried, Michele Rayner-Goolsby Roll Out Clean Water Initiative | Our Santa Fe River, Inc. (OSFR) | Protecting the Santa Fe River
Rep. Rayner-Goolsby

The announcements, one in Tampa and another in St. Petersburg, were part of Fried’s tour to promote the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Service’s Clean Water initiative.

The initiative seeks to update and strengthen the Office of Agriculture Policy’s water policies, which haven’t been revamped in more than a decade, Fried said.

“I came into office with commitments to further clean water efforts in our state, and today I’m here to announce that we have been working hard at the Department of Agriculture the last two and a half years we’re ready to roll it out now. We are rewriting the rules,” Fried said.

Fried was joined by state Rep. Michele Rayner-Goolsby, a Tampa Democrat, and Jaclyn Lopez, the Florida director with the Center for Biological Diversity.

At the press conference, Rayner-Goolsby announced she will put forth legislation in the 2022 Session to establish a task force designed to handle gypsum stacks in conjunction with the Agriculture Department. Gypsum stacks are giant retention ponds that hold waste from phosphate mining. The planned legislation comes in response to the Piney Point disaster, in which the Manatee County gypsum stack was breached, forcing the Department of Environmental Protection to pump more than 200 million gallons of wastewater directly into Tampa Bay by way of Port Manatee.

“When we saw what occurred in late March, April with Piney Point, it was very clear that this has already been an issue that many of us in our state knew about, but yet there was no accountability,” Rayner-Goolsby, who is also running for Florida’s 13th Congressional District, said. “I’m really proud that Commissioner Fried’s office is taking the lead on this, because as I was meeting with constituents — people who are directly impacted, not only their livelihoods, but where they live — it was very clear that they’ve been sounding the alarms for the past 10 to 20 years.”

Environmental scientists say the wastewater dump at Piney Point exacerbated this year’s red tide outbreak in Pinellas County, which led to more than 1,300 tons of dead marine life being removed from local waterways.

Lopez, who discussed water pollution, praised the new initiative, specifically for its goal of retooling protection programs and ending self reporting. Lopez called those steps “long overdue, and a significant development.”

“I grew up swimming and fishing in Tampa Bay, and it breaks my heart that I can’t do that with my children the same way as a consequence of water pollution,” Lopez said. “What’s most frustrating is that the problem itself is actually very simple, yet we continue to be plagued by it. We know what works. We know that the best way to prevent water pollution, like this, what we’re seeing with red tide, with harmful algal blooms, with finding fecal matter in our water, is to prevent the pollution from reaching the water to begin with and by holding polluters accountable….”

 

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