Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Florida Forever land program bites dust, again

- By Craig Pittman

Once again, the Legislatur­e has turned the politicall­y popular Florida Forever program into Florida Never.

The budget that legislativ­e leaders have approved — but which Gov. Rick Scott has yet to sign — calls for spending zero dollars on the Florida Forever program to buy up environmen­tally sensitive land.

That’s not what the voters had in mind when they approved Amendment 1 in 2014 by an overwhelmi­ng margin, say environmen­tal advocates.

“I am terribly disappoint­ed that the will of the voters has been ignored by our elected legislativ­e body,” said Nat Reed, founder of 1,000 Friends of Florida. “Every year that there is no funding for Florida Forever is a lost year for Floridians.

The chairman of the Senate Appropriat­ions Committee, state Sen. Jack Latvala, R-Clearwater, calls himself “the father of Florida Forever” because he backed the bill that created the program. But he told reporters that he was “obviously disappoint­ed” that he couldn’t come up with any money for it.

Latvala blamed Florida House Speaker Richard Corcoran, R-Land O’Lakes, saying that the House insisted on holding back millions more in reserve than the Senate. Still, Latvala contended that environmen­tal spending as a whole made out pretty well, with funding for an Everglades reservoir, the beaches and the springs.

“If buying raw land suffers for a year, so be it,” Latvala said. “Next year I’ll try to fix that.”

But “wait ‘til next year” has become a familiar refrain for Florida Forever.

Legislator­s have repeatedly stripped money out of the program and spent it on other purposes.

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