Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

DeSantis jeopardize­s our environmen­t, our health

- ByPamela McVety

In spite of his Ivy League education, Gov. Ron De Santis does not followthe advice of scientists and medical experts when it conflicts with his political agenda, and this hurts Floridians in many ways.

In response to climate change and the pandemic, DeSantis has made decisions that have cost lives and damaged the state. He has ignored the advice of profession­als and not followed the science.

He uses thewords “climate change,” which is an improvemen­t over his predecesso­r, and he hired a resilience officer. However, she left for a job in Washington in February after serving only six months.

This is an example of a politician simply paying lip service.

He could have dusted off Gov. Charlie Crist’s Climate Action Plan or even written his own plan. He could have rallied the state to cut its carbon emissions and educated Floridians on what we are facing. He could have started preparing our economy to weather the climate crisis and could have created good-paying clean energy jobs.

While he has done nothing to address the climate crisis, two major ice formations in Antarctica are destabiliz­ing. One is called the Doomsday glacier. And in Greenland, the largest still-intact ice shelf just lost a chunk of ice the size of two Manhattan islands. These losses contribute to serious sea-level rise for Florida, a problem that has gone from being a nuisance straight to our pocketbook­s.

Extreme heat is killing Floridians, especially the poorest among us. There have been almost 200 records for hot temperatur­es this year, and through June, it has been the hottest year on record.

Arecent study from the Union of Concerned Scientists warned that without drastic interventi­on, Florida temperatur­es will rise to life-threatenin­g highs over the next 16 years.

COVID-19 hit Florida like a Category 5 hurricane, killing more than 15,000 residents and making thousands more of them sick. It crippled the state’s economy.

Fromthe beginning, DeSantis did not follow CDC advice from the Centers for Disease Control on howto slow and stop the spread of an airborne virus by requiring everyone towear masks and keep a sensible distance fromothers.

He opened the state up while the virus was spreading, contrary to experts. He ordered teachers and children back into the classroom while therewas still a high number of daily new cases. Some teachers are quitting, preparing wills and at least one has written an obituary.

As a grandparen­t and the parent of a teacher, I have to quarantine myself from my own family because they are back in school. No hugs. No meals. No special trips for ice cream. No more physical contact until possibly next summer.

If DeSantis had listened to medical experts, much of this could have been avoided.

His Phase 3 reopening order allows large gatherings, opens many businesses and prohibits enforcemen­t of local mask ordinances. It’s a gamble that he is going to lose. Medical experts say he is putting more Floridians in harm’s way, especially aswe go into flu season.

Florida’s death toll fromthe virus is over 15,000. Let’s not gloss over this. People are dying unnecessar­ily because there is no mandate thatwe follow basic public health guidance.

We should consider all this health and environmen­tal damage when DeSantis runs for re-election in 2022. We need elected officials who follow the advice of scientists and medical experts.

Pamela McVety, a biologist and Florida native, worked in executive positions for the Florida Department of Environmen­tal Protection for 30 years dealing with water management, marine resources, ecosystem management and coastal zone management. She retired in 2003.

”The Invading Sea” is the opinion arm of the Florida Climate Reporting Network, a collaborat­ive of news organizati­ons across the state focusing on the threats posed by the warming climate.

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