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For the Truth About the Springs, Don’t Go to DEP

bluespringssun 1 In: For the Truth About the Springs, Don't Go to DEP | Our Santa Fe River, Inc. (OSFR) | Protecting the Santa Fe River

 

bluespringssun 1 In: For the Truth About the Springs, Don't Go to DEP | Our Santa Fe River, Inc. (OSFR) | Protecting the Santa Fe River
Blue Springs, Gilchrist Co.

Yes, the State of Florida is killing off its unique treasure of iconic springs.  They are doing this by allowing way, way too much fertilizer to be used in agriculture and by not closer inspection of septic tanks and by allowing new development to use the septic tanks and the old type of tanks which do not filter out nitrates.  They are also allowing too much over-pumping of the aquifer, and they just  keep on giving out permits to anyone who asks.

To find out about our dying springs, Channel 10 did not go to the DEP in Tallahassee nor the SRWMD in Live Oak for lies and excuses.  They went to OSFR board member Merrillee Malwitz-Jipson who has devoted years to protecting the springs, and to OSFR advisor Bob Knight, who knows the science and does not use models instead of real data nor does he cheat in his conclusions as do the water districts.

Read the original article with photos here at WTSP.

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


Saving Our Springs: How Pollution, Pumping and People Are Destroying Florida’s Freshwater Treasures

Florida has the highest concentration of freshwater springs in the entire world, but the crystal-clear oases are at risk.

Emerald Morrow

Emerald Morrow, 10 Tampa Bay

  • Pollution problems Water looks clear, but it’s not pure.

    Published: 5:54 PM EDT August 31, 2022
Updated: 6:11 PM EDT August 31, 2022

On an early summer morning in Gilchrist County, Bob Knight and Merrillee Malwitz-Jipson took a leisurely paddle along the Santa Fe River.

“This has been called the last pristine river in Florida because there’s no wastewater treatment plants discharging into this river. There’s no pipes withdrawing water directly from this river,” said Knight, the executive director of the Florida Springs Institute. “But it’s not healthy because of the things that are happening around the river.”

More than 36 springs feed the Santa Fe, but many of them are polluted and have reduced flows.

“The springs are being loved to death,” Malwitz-Jipson said.

Ground pollution from nitrates, groundwater pumping by cities and businesses, and excessive recreation are the three main causes of impairment and decline in Florida’s freshwater springs.

Knight warns if nothing is done, healthy springs could vanish.

Pollution problems Water looks clear, but it’s not pure.

 

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