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JUDAH
UNFAIR TO SUGAR FARMERS
Lee
County commissioner wrongly places blame for Lake O water problems
Publication:
News-Press
Printed: Monday, January 22, 2007
Written
By: Rober E. Coker |
Lee
County Commissioner Ray Judah ought to make a New Year's resolution
to get his facts straight. It is not in anyone's best interest for
Judah to continue his radical agenda by misrepresenting the truth in
public presentations.
There are very serious issues involving Lake Okeechobee water quality
and the impact of flood control releases to the coastal estuaries.
But Judah's insistence that the Caloosahatchee River and estuary
problems
can be solved by shunting the polluted lake water south to the sugar
farming area is dishonest. Both the South Florida Water Management
District and The News-Press have pointed out that more than half
the dirty water
flowing down the river is local basin runoff.
Yet, during the Nov. 30 Nine-County Coalition meeting, Judah ignored
that fact and claimed that "absolutely" Lee County's runoff
meets all current water quality standards. Rather than rely on water
quality studies that point to local runoff as some of the most polluted
water in the river, Judah sticks to emotional and political rhetoric.
Rather than deal with water quality problems at the source, Judah
wastes taxpayer time and money fixating on sugar farms south
of Lake Okeechobee.
Judah blames sugar farmers for the poor water quality in Lake Okeechobee,
but the fact is, farms to the south were never more than 9 percent
of the inflow to the lake and today represent less than 3 percent.
It is also a fact that the Everglades Agricultural Area is the only
part of the 16 counties in the South Florida Water Management District
that
has been responsible for cleaning its own water. More than 100,000
acres of formerly productive farmland has been taken to provide water
storage
and treatment for farm water and lake water before it flows into
the Everglades. It is disingenuous for Judah to demand we be responsible
for storing or treating more water at the expense of the Everglades
for his benefit.
Lee County is represented far better by the officials who are working
to find ways to deal with local runoff and participate in a reasonable
fashion with large stakeholder groups to find ways to store and treat
vast volumes of water north of the lake. That makes sense. When more
storage and treatment areas are built north, east and west of Lake
Okeechobee similar to those in the southern farming area, both water
quality and
quantity will be greatly improved throughout the system.
Robert E. Coker is the senior vice president of
U.S. Sugar Corp.
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