Florida Reconsidering Water Deal with Georgia

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    Florida Reconsidering Water Deal with Georgia

    November 2007 
     Florida is cooling off on 
    a water sharing agreement Governor Charlie Crist made earlier this month 
    that would allow Georgia to retain millions of gallons of water to ease a 
    potential drinking water shortage in the upstream state. 
    On November 1, the governors of Florida, Georgia and Alabama had met with 
    Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne and decisionmakers from the U.S. Army 
    Corps of Engineers, the White House Council on Environmental Quality and 
    several U.S. senators. 
    They agreed to a temporary compromise that would offer Atlanta, Georgia, 
    more water from its primary source, Lake Sidney Lanier, while protecting 
    water rights of communities and industries downstream in Alabama and 
    Florida. 
    But in a statement released Friday, Florida Secretary of Environmental 
    Protection Michael Sole said, "Florida is carefully reviewing the proposal 
    at this time." 
    "We encourage all stakeholders to review the opinion and provide feedback 
    to safeguard the ecosystem as well as the people and the economy of 
    Northwest Florida," Sole said. 
    In a letter to federal officials released Friday, Sole said the plan to 
    let Georgia retain more water would "starve the Apalachicola River and Bay 
    of freshwater flows needed to keep the ecosystems, species and economy 
    alive." 
    The Apalachicola River is formed on the state line between Florida and 
    Georgia by the confluence of the Flint and Chattahoochee rivers, which 
    flow in from Georgia and Alabama. 
    In Washington, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers proposed to incrementally 
    reduce the amount of water released from Georgia reservoirs into the 
    Apalachicola River from 5,000 cubic feet per second (cfs) to 4,150 cfs and 
    allow storage of excess inflows in the reservoirs. 
    The Corps issued a letter to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service requesting 
    a formal consultation for the proposal. 
    In an unprecedented commitment on turn-around time, the Fish and Wildlife 
    Service is expected to review the recommendation and make a ruling by 
    November 15. 
    Sole said the government of Florida is waiting on that biological opinion 
    from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service before making its final decision. 
    Upon his return from Washington, Governor Crist heard objections from 
    across the state to the agreement he had made with the other two governors 
    from people such as Tommy Ward. 
    Ward chairs the Oyster and Seafood Industry Task Force, appointed last 
    year by the Franklin County Board of Commissioners. He and his family have 
    been in the oyster business on Apalachicola Bay since 1957. 
    "It's going to affect the fishing, the crabbing, the shrimping and the 
    whole way of life down here for the seafood industry," he told the 
    "Gainesville Times." 
    The Apalachicola Bay and estuary produces 90 percent of the oysters 
    harvested in Florida and 13 percent of those harvested annually in the 
    United States. 
    Apalachicola is home port for a fleet of offshore and near shore Gulf 
    seafood vessels that daily bring in shrimp, grouper, and red snapper 
    shipped to upscale restaurants all along the Eastern Seaboard. 
    Meanwhile in Georgia, Governor Sonny Perdue has withdrawn the state's 
    motion for preliminary injunction filed against the U.S. Army Corps of 
    Engineers, that sought to force the Corps to retain more water in Georgia 
    reservoirs. 
    "With the recent intervention by President [George W.] Bush to compel our 
    federal partners to come to the table, I am optimistic that this matter 
    can be resolved outside of a courtroom," said Perdue on November 6. "I 
    never want to resort to legal action to settle disputes, but the 
    seriousness of this drought forced me to explore every option available to 
    protect Georgia's water resources." 
    Georgia reserves the right to re-file this motion or file a new motion for 
    preliminary injunction "if this new round of discussions and cooperation 
    fails," the governor said. 
    







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