Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Florida Legislatur­e may make it more difficult for us to demand clean water

- By Joseph Bonasia Joseph Bonasia of Fort Myers is chair of the Florida Rights of Nature Network.

I had never seen anything like it when it comes to petition-gathering: Volunteers hurriedly handing out multiple clipboards and clusters of six, seven and eight people intently signing petitions at the same time.

Over 1,600 registered Florida voters at a recent arts and crafts festival in Cape Coral signed petitions, wanting to qualify a “Right to Clean and Healthy Waters” constituti­onal amendment for the 2024 ballot.

Democracy doesn’t get more democratic than this.

Petitionin­g was “so cherished” in the 18th century, the American Bar Associatio­n says, that framers included a right to petition our government for the ‘“redress of grievances” in the First Amendment of the Bill of Rights, where our freedoms of speech, religion and assembly are also enshrined.

Amending Florida’s Constituti­on should not be easy, of course, and it isn’t. By Nov.

30, 891,589 signed and verified petitions are needed to get the issue on the ballot. Once there, it will likely need millions of dollars to advertise the amendment and educate the public on what it will do. It’s a daunting challenge.

But the Florida Legislatur­e may make that challenge more difficult still.

Currently, 60% of voters are needed to turn a proposed amendment into law, a threshold much higher than most other states, and 10% higher than it had been in Florida prior to 2006.

Now, however, HJR 129, has been introduced in the Legislatur­e by state Rep. Rick Roth, R-West Palm Beach. It would require 66.67% of voters to pass the amendment.

Worse, this bill is part of a disturbing pattern on the part of our Legislatur­e.

Gathering nearly 900,000 signed and verified petitions in four years is challengin­g. To do so within two years is significan­tly more so, and in 2011, the Legislatur­e reduced the petition circulatio­n period from four to two years.

FloridaRig­htToCleanW­ater.org, the political committee sponsoring the “Right to Clean and Healthy Waters” amendment, is, so far, a completely grassroots, volunteer effort. But we recognize the limits of volunteer efforts and the benefits profession­al petition-gathering would bring. Getting paid per signature incentiviz­es petition-gatherers to higher levels of productivi­ty. However, in 2019, the Legislatur­e banned pay-per-signature petition-gathering, handicappi­ng citizen initiative efforts.

In 2020, tired of polluted water, 89% of Orange County residents passed their historic Right to Clean Water charter amendment. Ignoring the will and clear mandate of the people and disregardi­ng home rule principles, the Legislatur­e preempted the authority of local government­s to pass laws granting citizens “any specific rights relating to the natural environmen­t not otherwise authorized in general law or specifical­ly granted in the State Constituti­on.”

Legislator­s were more interested in protecting special interests than in protecting Florida waters and the health, safety and welfare of citizens. Their preemption did what it was meant to do: It snuffed out similar local efforts elsewhere in Florida.

Trampling the will of the people and the public interest, it was this preemption that spawned the drive to amend our constituti­on with a “Right to Clean and Healthy Waters.”

In Florida, 80% of our approximat­e

1,000 springs are impaired. Nearly a million acres of estuaries and 9,000 miles of rivers and streams are contaminat­ed with fecal bacteria. Seagrass beds are nearly in a death spiral, which is a primary reason why manatees have recently died in record numbers.

Red tides have increased dramatical­ly in frequency, duration and virulence. Bluegreen algae blooms are common and present the threat of neurodegen­erative disease. No state has more acres of polluted lake water than does Florida. No state has lost more acres of wetlands than has Florida.

No state, it seems, champions the rights and freedoms of its citizens as proudly as does Florida, but we don’t have a constituti­onal, fundamenta­l right to something as critical to our well-being as clean water, and our freedom to swim, fish, boat, shell, paddle, work, live and breathe is curtailed in polluted, unhealthy natural environmen­ts.

We have grievances with our government that need redressing: an environmen­tal regulatory system that fails to protect us and Florida waters, and the preemption of local government authority to provide adequate environmen­tal protection­s in light of that failure.

Exercise your First Amendment Right. Speak truth to power. Go to FloridaRig­htToCleanW­ater.org to sign and mail the petition.

“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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