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Unconstitutional Laws Are Hampering Our Fight for Clean and Healthy Waters

littleriver springs moritz In: Unconstitutional Laws Are Hampering Our Fight for Clean and Healthy Waters | Our Santa Fe River, Inc. (OSFR) | Protecting the Santa Fe River

littleriver springs moritz In: Unconstitutional Laws Are Hampering Our Fight for Clean and Healthy Waters | Our Santa Fe River, Inc. (OSFR) | Protecting the Santa Fe River
Little River Springs on the Suwannee. Photo by David Moritz.

The following article outlines yet another manifestation of the State of Florida, under the direction of our anti-democratic governor and Legislature,  taking power from the people and reserving it for the select few.  Florida’s leadership has steadily eroded home rule just as its lawmakers politicians increasingly ignore the will of the people and endeavor only to self-promote.  Once in office, public service takes second place to campaigning for re-election.

Read the original article with photos here in the Gainesville Sun.

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


Unconstitutional laws are hampering our fight for clean and healthy waters

David Moritz Guest columnist
June 23, 2022
In response to ineffective actions by elected representatives and state agencies, the Florida Rights of Nature Network is working to amend Florida’s Constitution so citizens can hold state executive agencies accountable for the failure to protect our waterways, including springs, from further pollution and destruction.

This year, the network formed a political committee and registered an initiative called the Florida Right to Clean and Healthy Waters. We have begun to gather the almost 900,000 petitions required to add this amendment to the 2024 ballot.

Initially, we thought we had a great opportunity to make it onto the ballot and win a strong majority of votes, because Florida voters have consistently approved strong environmental protections and funding for environmental projects.

While researching what needs to be robust fundraising for petition gathering, however, I discovered that a new Florida law — Senate Bill 1890: Campaign Financing, approved by the Legislature and signed by Gov. Ron DeSantis in 2021 — restricts donors who support or oppose constitutional amendments from giving more than $3,000 until that amendment has received enough petition signatures to be placed on the ballot. In our case, we need 891,589 petitions.

More Messages from the Springs Heartland:

Why we need the Florida Right to Clean and Healthy Waters Amendment

ACT working to save springs by protecting land along Santa Fe, Suwannee rivers

By restricting such donations, the Florida Legislature seeks to actively discourage citizens from participating in political decision-making. For many years, no initiative has made it onto the ballot without paying professional signature collectors to obtain the vast majority of petitions needed to qualify. The only way petition gathering can succeed is through generous gifts to initiative committees.

I continued my research and learned from an ACLU staff attorney that, even given the injunction, the law technically still exists and that the injunction applies only to the clients who had challenged the law. The ACLU attorney told me that if the Florida Rights of Nature Network’s political action committee accepted more than $3,000 from one donor, it was unlikely a state attorney would prosecute a case against us since the District Court judge had found the law to be unconstitutional.

The word “unlikely” did not give me confidence. I could see the headlines: “Donor prosecuted for illegal gift to right to clean water initiative.” While we might eventually win in court, the only thing potential donors would remember is that a donor had been prosecuted for giving over $3,000 to our committee.

It may be nearly impossible for any initiative to make it onto the ballot with this unconstitutional law in place. The state Legislature and Gov. DeSantis have chosen to discourage citizens from exercising our rights, thus undermining grassroots democracy (note small “d”) in favor of autocratic, top-down state government control.

But wait, there’s more. In their zeal to restrict donations to initiative committees, the 2022 Florida Legislature passed and the governor signed into law another bill that restricts donations. This time they restricted out-of-state donations to $3,000 only to committees that support initiatives! Out-of-state donors may legally donate as much as they like to committees that oppose an initiative.

ACLU staff members tell me that this law is also unconstitutional but because it rewrites the same statute as the 2021 law, the new law effectively removes limits on the amount of money that in-state donors may give to a committee supporting or opposing an initiative. This confusion will, of course, need to be settled in the courts.

The sad truth is that our legislators and governor don’t like democracy very much. They want the power that the Florida Constitution guarantees to citizens in Article 1, Section 1:  “Political power — All political power is inherent in the people. The enunciation herein of certain rights shall not be construed to deny or impair others retained by the people.”

Those in power in Florida and many other states have a single goal in mind: to take away the power of the people, and along with it, our free will.

To find out more about the Florida Right to Clean and Healthy Waters state constitutional amendment effort, including the petition language, how you can sign and how you can help, visit www.floridarighttocleanwater.org

David Moritz is the North Florida director for the Florida Rights of Nature Network and has served as chairman of the Alachua County Environmental Protection Advisory Committee. He enjoys taking photographs of Florida’s natural areas and the wildlife they support. This column is part of The Sun’s Messages from the Springs Heartland series.

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2 Comments

  1. Have you guys been to the springs lately ? The results of wide open Southern Border is very obvious. All these new residents from south of the USA border are overwhelming. I was picking up trash in Ginnie yesterday behind a large family of migrants when I happened upon some white tissue paper…someone [defecated] in the woods. Trash, especially straws, wrappers, etc….Won’t this huge population shift contribute to the Nitrogen waste ? It’s unsustainable.

    1. We don’t approve of avoiding the provided bathrooms in favor of the woods, but overall the nitrates in the Santa Fe River are there mostly from agriculture, which tends to over-fertilize. Some are added by septics, but around Ginnie it is 80% agriculture, 10 % septics, 9 % urban fertilizer and 1% wastewater treatment. Pooping in the woods might go under septics or urban, but not ag.

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