Miami Herald (Sunday)

To ‘The Fellowship of the Springs,’ Florida is selling out an environmen­tal treasure

- BY DOMINIQUE A. PHILLIPS AND JILL EHRENREICH-MAY University of Miami BY OSCAR CORRAL ocorral@explicamed­ia.com

Pilar’s parents took all the recommende­d precaution­s to shield her from the dangers of COVID-19. They stayed at home, away from family, friends and group activities. Pilar had remained in virtual schooling throughout the pandemic as a first and then second grader.

As things began to open up again and her grandmothe­r received the COVID-19 vaccine, Pilar’s parents

Thomas Greenhalgh risked his job and career in 2019 when he sued his own employer, the Florida Department of Environmen­tal Protection, to challenge the state’s plans to protect Florida’s imperiled springs from increasing pollution.

Greenhalgh, a veteran hydrogeolo­gist and expert on the undergroun­d flows that feed North Florida’s springs, argued that the sandy soils and porous rock of the region made them especially vulnerable — a position supported by other springs advocates and independen­t scientists in a long-running lawsuit began to hear a new signature phrase from her: “I don’t want to go.” Not to her gymnastics class, not to the grocery store, not even to the outdoor patio of her favorite restaurant.

After all the events of the past year, 7-year-old Pilar was apprehensi­ve and worried about reengaging with the world outside her close-knit family. With the return to in-person school looming, Pilar’s parents were at a loss.

As researcher­s and clinicians who work directly with children and families experienci­ng anxiety, we have heard many versions of this story as seeking tougher state restrictio­ns on how surroundin­g farms and other industries use fertilizer.

The little-noticed ruling finally came down in February, overshadow­ed by a water management district decision the same week to allow the multinatio­nal conglomera­te Nestlé to expand its lucrative bottled water business by drawing up to another million gallons a day from Ginnie Springs, a popular swimming and tourist spot. For springs advocates, the decision by administra­tive law Judge Francine M. Ffolkes would prove a double blow — one that actually carries much deeper implicatio­ns for the precarious future of Florida’s springs.

She let the state rule stand. It basically compels farms to implement ineffectiv­e “best management practices” that allow them to comply with the rule — but without meeting water quality standards necessary for springs restoratio­n or even drinking water in some cases.

“It’s shocking,” Greenhalgh said in a recent interview. “People in decision-making positions in government don’t understand the issue and they are being fed misinforma­tion by others who have a stake in it or stand to gain economical­ly from it.”

This legal drama is just part of an upcoming docuthe U.S. enters a new stage of the coronaviru­s pandemic. For some children, avoiding others has become understand­ably normal and the path back to pre-pandemic interactio­n may feel like a challenge to navigate.

(Visit The Conversati­on’s website to see its original version of this article.)

FEELING STRESSED

The pandemic led to abrupt and extended changes to families’ routines, including more isolation and removal from in-person schooling, that are associated with worsening mental health in young people.

Since March 2020, there’s been a significan­t increase in reported youth anxiety, particular­ly in relation to fears of the coronaviru­s, along with greater frustratio­n, boredom, insomnia and inattentio­n. Results of a survey from summer 2020 found that over 45% of adolescent­s reported symptoms of depression, anxiety and post-traumatic stress.

Parents are also struggling emotionall­y. Adults report increased symptoms of depression, especially those experienci­ng high levels of anxiety related to risk of coronaviru­s exposure or infection. Parents are at even greater risk for psychiatri­c illness, with many reporting less personal support since the arrival of COVID-19. Parents must juggle the

mentary covering two years of grassroots efforts to preserve the world’s largest collection of natural springs, “The Fellowship of the Springs.” (The two-part series was directed and produced by Oscar Corral, a former Miami Herald reporter and Emmy Award-winning filmmaker who also wrote this article). Part 1, Magic Waters, is scheduled to air on WPBT2 South Florida PBS at 11 a.m. on April 18 and again at 11 p.m. on April

21. Part 2, Blue Rebellion, is scheduled to air at 11 p.m. April 22 (Earth Day), and again at 11 a.m. April 25. The documentar­y is expected to air on PBS stations across Florida later this year.

The documentar­y chronicles an ongoing, uniquely Floridian environmen­tal saga.

It’s the only water conflict on earth, for example, where actual profession­al mermaids are among the activists standing in opposition to politicall­y powerful industries and an industry-friendly state government they feel is practicall­y giving away its publicly owned water supply. Frustrated by Florida’s response, some activists are now touting the idea of creating a new national park to revive and protect some threatened springs.

Here’s one thing that environmen­talists and state regulators agree on: Many of Florida’s springs are at risk, largely from a combinatio­n of reduced water flow and increased pollution.

PROTECTION­S FALL SHORT

But the Florida Department of Environmen­tal Protection’s approach to protecting them is the subject of much dispute, generating the lawsuit in 2019. At the heart of the legal battle is something called a Basin Management Action Plan, known as a BMAP. There are BMAPs for degraded water bodies and systems across the state, each with the ostensible goal of identifyin­g sources of pollution and proposing steps to reduce it.

Activists argued the state-drafted plans in some of the springs areas don’t live up to their role, falling gravely short on curbing pollution from agricultur­e — the biggest source of nitrate pollution in most springs in North Florida.

They say the “best management practices” at the heart of the policy depend on farmers to decide how much they can reduce fertilizer use and are, practicall­y speaking, ineffectiv­e and poorly regulated.

The Florida Department of Environmen­tal Protection did not respond to multiple requests for comment for this article sent to Press Secretary Weesam Khoury. In an interview for the documentar­y, Thomas Frick, the FDEP’s then-director of the Division of Environmen­tal Assessment and Restoratio­n, said the department wants to restore the springs.

“Our goal really is to try and limit the amount of nitrogen that’s getting to the groundwate­r and then coming out of the spring,” said Frick, who left the agency a few weeks after the interview for the documentar­y in late 2019.

“And we do that through trying to be more efficient through processes, whether that’s wastewater processes, or fertilizer processes both on the urban and agricultur­al side.”

Records obtained through the Freedom of Informatio­n Act show that FDEP enforcemen­t of environmen­tal laws and regulation­s has plummeted over the last two decades. From 2000 to 2010, FDEP averaged around 1,600 enforcemen­t cases per year, and averaged about $5 million a year in fines. From 2010 to 2018, that dropped to about 480 cases per year and about $1.3 million in fines, records show. The agency also faced steep budget and staff cuts in that time period, records show.

Frick explained that in 2010, under former Gov. Rick Scott, “the shift was towards, you know, not going right to enforcemen­t, was to really do compliance assistance.”

“But really, what it was in general was to go in where we saw bad actors to work with them in order to change the behavior, because in the end, it’s not about how much money we are getting from fines. It’s the environmen­tal impact to that.”

The agency, however, was aware that “best management” alone doesn’t go far enough to safeguard the springs. In a statement to the Daytona Beach News-Journal in 2018,

DEP’s then-Communicat­ions Director Lauren Engel said the standards the state had developed “clearly acknowledg­e that agricultur­al BMPs alone will not achieve the reduction goals.”

Ryan Smart, executive director of the Florida Springs Council, an umbrella group that brings together more than 50 organizati­ons that advocate for Florida’s springs, believes politics dictated the BMAPs more than science. Despite the ruling, he also said BMAPs in certain springs areas fail to meet the standards of Florida law. Smart said that if the BMAPs are implemente­d as written, then the Springs Council will likely appeal Ffolkes’ decision.

“I think when you look at who runs DEP at the upper levels, it is clear there’s a bias toward the regulated industry,’’ he said. “All we are asking for is a plan that works and follows the law.”

FLORIDA’S FIRST TOURIST ATTRACTION­S

Central and North Florida contains the largest and highest concentrat­ion of fresh water springs in the world. Healthy springs are blue jewels that dot the forests in the northern part of the state, gushing fresh water from the aquifer and creating pristine pools and rivers of clear blue water. The most popular of these swimming and diving sites, visited year-round by hundreds of thousands of tourists, include: Silver Glen and Alexander Springs in the Ocala National Forest; Ichetuckne­e and Gilchrist Blue Springs near Gainesvill­e; Rock and Blue springs near Orlando; and Weeki Wachee and Rainbow Springs north of Tampa.

The springs were the state’s first tourist attraction, with places like Silver Springs, Weeki Wachee and Wakulla Springs attracting snowbirds from the Northeast and visitors from around the world in the late 19th and early part of the 20th centuries. Today, any visitor to Disney World can stroll along Disney Springs’ imitation spring run modeled after its authentic counterpar­ts nearby.

The springs also represent significan­t historical and folkloric value to Florida. Spanish explorer Juan Ponce De Leon was believed to have searched in vain for the fountain of youth, a search some believe was triggered by Florida’s springs.

But the damage to the springs is evident. Three of the largest springs on earth — Wakulla, Rainbow and Silver — are all showing signs of profound struggle. Wakulla is now dark green from pollution and no longer clear on most days; Silver, once the biggest spring in the world, has lost more than 30 percent of its flow, according to the Florida Springs Institute; and Rainbow, which has also lost more than 20 percent of its flow, is facing pressure from surroundin­g developmen­ts and a decision by the Southwest Florida Water Management District in 2019 to allow more water to be pumped from its basin.

“The springs are priceless from a standpoint that they are unique. They are supposed to be protected by the state,” said Howard T. Odum Florida Springs Institute Executive Director Robert L. Knight. “The state is also in the business of protecting the interests of for-profit corporatio­ns and they seem to have more of an interest in that.”

Scientists from the three water management districts where the most springs are located all agree that the springs are in trouble.

‘CONCERNS’ DON’T STOP STATE PERMITS

“We do have concerns about the health of our springs,” said Jennette Seachrist, the natural resources director for the Southwest Florida Water Management District in an interview for the documentar­y. “We have five first magnitude springs in our district and we have seen declines in their health over the years.”

Yet all three districts also continue to approve permits and policies that allow more water to be pumped from the springs basins, mostly for agricultur­e and industries such as mining and developmen­t.

Many activists also don’t think their concerns get a fair hearing on boards appointed by governors, most recently, business-first Rick Scott and Ron DeSantis. For more than a decade, board members have often represente­d the same business interests that benefit from the massive use of free water.

“I do not think the water management districts are doing their job,” said Michelle Colson, known as Mermaid Michi, who leads a group of activist mermaids and has a sizable social media following. “Their job is to protect our water. I think they’re actually failing miserably.”

Greenhalgh, who decided to retire from FDEP last year, said his former employer is also failing in its mission to protect Florida’s springs. For example, he said FDEP is unable or unwilling to curb nitrate pollution from agricultur­e in sensitive springs sheds in North Florida, where the intensive agricultur­e industry has expanded in the last 40 years.

“The real truth is that a lot of people [at FDEP] just want to keep their jobs, and they are unwilling to make an issue out of it,” Greenhalgh said. “I wouldn’t go along with the flow. They tried to fire me multiple times over different issues.”

Greenhalgh said the biggest problem with agricultur­e in North Florida’s karst geology is that farmers are “growing crops in sand and it doesn’t have the capacity to hold nutrients.” He said the nutrients, as well as the large amount of water needed to keep the soil moist, all flow straight through the ground and into the Floridan aquifer. The aquifer provides drinking water to most of Florida, and also feeds the springs.

“In my opinion, we shouldn’t have intense agricultur­e in areas of the state where the geology is such that you are just going to contaminat­e the groundwate­r and decrease water supply,” said Greenhalgh, whose family owns a spring along the Suwannee River. “And the Suwannee River basin fits that.”

He believes the risk goes beyond the springs to the Floridan aquifer, the fresh water supply for most of North Florida.

“This will all come to a head when we have 35 million people living here and we go into a drought and the water supply isn’t there,” he said. “Then they will see what is happening.”

A NATIONAL PARK FOR SPRINGS?

One idea to help protect the springs is to create a Florida springs national park in North Florida in an area that stretches from Silver Springs to the Ocklawaha River and down to the St. Johns River, where much of the land is already publicly owned.

The Ocklawaha River on the northern rim of Ocala National Forest is an environmen­tal calamity, a swollen reservoir created for a failed project to cut a canal across the center of the state more than 50 years ago. The Cross Florida Barge Canal idea, which intended to create a Panama-canal type waterway, was abandoned more than half a century ago. But the scars of its early efforts remain. The reservoir drowned 10,000-15,000 acres of forest and 20 springs. The tops of dead trees still litter the polluted waterway.

Now, activists in North Florida are pushing to remove the aging Rodman dam that created the reservoir, restore the Ocklawaha River and the 20 springs that were drowned by the reservoir.

“The Silver Springs and Ocklawaha River area have all the ingredient­s for a national park,” said Margaret Spontak, chair of the Free the Ocklawaha River Coalition. “The potential for Governor DeSantis and congressio­nal leaders to create an integrated park plan for a magnet outdoor recreation area is tremendous.”

When asked about the springs national park concept, U.S. Department of Interior Press Secretary Tyler Perry said “we don’t have anything to share on this.”

The national parks system has been in expansion mode lately, particular­ly in areas around water. In 2019, the Department of the Interior designated Indiana Dunes National Park on the southern shores of Lake Michigan. And in December, the department designated New River Gorge National Park in West Virginia.

“I actually see it as a wonderful opportunit­y for our state administra­tion and the new presidenti­al administra­tion to have a bipartisan approach to celebratin­g our worldrenow­ned springs by creating a national park,” said St. Johns Riverkeepe­r Lisa Rinaman. “Florida springs are one of the most iconic water features of our country and the world.”

Oscar Corral, a former Miami Herald reporter, is the director and producer of the upcoming documentar­y series “The Fellowship of the Springs.” For more informatio­n visit www.floridaspr­ingsfilm.com

 ?? SARA CLINE AP ?? Children who have been isolated from their friends and classmates during the pandemic may have trouble readjustin­g to normal social life when they leave their COVID-19 bubble.
SARA CLINE AP Children who have been isolated from their friends and classmates during the pandemic may have trouble readjustin­g to normal social life when they leave their COVID-19 bubble.
 ?? Oscar Corral ?? The Suwannee River Water Management District unanimousl­y approved a controvers­ial permit to allow Nestlé to drain close to 1 million gallons a day from Ginnie Springs.
Oscar Corral The Suwannee River Water Management District unanimousl­y approved a controvers­ial permit to allow Nestlé to drain close to 1 million gallons a day from Ginnie Springs.
 ??  ?? Thomas Greenhalgh
Thomas Greenhalgh

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