Member Portal

Some Are Criticizing the Red Tide Report From Desantis’ Algae Task Force for Not Going Far Enough

Barbara Kirkpatrick 1 In: Some Are Criticizing the Red Tide Report From Desantis’ Algae Task Force for Not Going Far Enough | Our Santa Fe River, Inc. (OSFR) | Protecting the Santa Fe River

Barbara Kirkpatrick 1 In: Some Are Criticizing the Red Tide Report From Desantis’ Algae Task Force for Not Going Far Enough | Our Santa Fe River, Inc. (OSFR) | Protecting the Santa Fe River
Barbara Kirkpatrick,  Task Force spokesperson.

One of the tasks assigned to the Task Force is to “…prioritize and recommend:”

  • actions to reduce excess loads of nutrients entering our freshwater and coastal systems developed in collaboration with the Blue-Green Algae Task Force, relevant entities identified in Executive Order 19-12 and other stakeholders;

Doing this one thing would go a long way to reducing pollution in our water.  These excess loads come mainly for agriculture and secondly from septic tanks.  There are other sources too but statewide, these are the foremost.  Our state is doing almost nothing to reduce AG nutrients and at the rate they are removing septics, it will take hundreds of years to remove that source.

Jaclyn Lopez’ comments about flexibility below are key:  DeSantis and our legislators continue to ignore ” the really obvious issue here.”

And that  obvious issue is that there is no political will to change what needs to be changed.

And that is why this Task Force is a waste of taxpayer money.

Read the original article here at WUSF.

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


WUSF Public Media – WUSF 89.7 | By Jessica Meszaros

A task force assembled by Gov. Ron DeSantis to study algae blooms recently released a red tide report on its progress and recommendations, but some advocates think the document is lacking.

The report expands on their original recommendations from January 2020, regarding public health, communications, and management and response.

The document also lays out what the Harmful Algal Bloom Task Force members have so far done. For example, in 2020, the FWC Center for Red Tide Research expanded a cooperative monitoring and research program for five years with Mote Marine Laboratory and the University of South Florida.

In 2021, they published a resource guide for public health response to harmful algae blooms in Florida, started work on a statewide public communications plan, and got multiple research projects funded.

 

jacklyn lopez
Jaclyn Lopez

Jaclyn Lopez, Florida director for the Center for Biological Diversity, said the report talks a lot about things we already know. She said rather than looking into acquiring funds for more research, the task force missed a chance to identify policies that are already in place but not being enforced. The document didn’t go far enough to uncover why the toxic blooms, which are fed by nutrient-rich water, can be so intense, according to Lopez.

“Where’s the piece that talks about how we have all of these existing policies and laws that are designed to keep nutrient pollution out of our water, and how those might be performing in light of all of the red tide that we’ve been experiencing?” she asked.

The red tide report does say a long-term focal area of the group includes “improvements to current policies and procedures that prevent or mitigate the impacts of harmful algal blooms.”

Lopez argues that the toxic blooms would not be fed by as much nutrient pollution if current policies were enforced, and then more resources wouldn’t need to be spent creating and enacting new policies.

The Florida Department of Environmental Protection, under DeSantis, is supposed to regulate nutrient pollution, but Lopez said certain entities continue to exceed their permit limitations and others may not have permits at all.

“So, if it’s the governor’s task force, I’m not sure how the task force appointed by and organized by the governor … how much flexibility they feel like they have to be calling attention to what’s the really obvious issue here,” she said.

Barbara Kirkpatrick, senior advisor for the Gulf of Mexico Coastal Ocean Observation System, is on the task force. She said the voluntary group advises and does not regulate.

“Our main role is to identify gaps and harmful algal bloom response and monitoring. And I think the frustration for people might be that the recommendations are pretty high level,” she said.

The task force is keeping a focus on red tide research, which she said is important because historically when red tide goes away for a while, so does the funding.

“I think one of our roles is to keep the need visible — both in Tallahassee and in Washington, D.C. — that these are not simple problems that are going to be solved in three or six months, that we need to keep smart people working on these,” said Kirkpatrick.

The red tide report says, “Florida is making progress, but much work remains. Problems will not be solved by a single ‘silver bullet.’ Instead, community leaders, industry leaders, regulators, policy makers, scientists, and citizens must resolve to work together on delivering a portfolio of innovations, science-based policy decisions, and financial investments that ensure Florida remains a world-class destination to live, work, and play.”

You might be interested in …

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Skip to content