Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Bill’s critics sound alarm

Say Florida lawmakers’ plan speeds up wetlands destructio­n

- By Jeffrey Schweers

TALLAHASSE­E — Florida lawmakers have created a fasttrack for wetland destructio­n that will speed up an already streamline­d process that has drawn warnings from federal regulators and a lawsuit from environmen­talists.

The new pay-to-play arrangemen­t is tucked into SB 2508, Senate President Wilton Simpson’s signature water quality bill approved by the Legislatur­e earlier this year.

If signed into law, environmen­talists say, it would further hasten the demise of Florida’s wetlands, which have been disappeari­ng at an alarming rate over the past several decades despite a wetlands restoratio­n program and a federal edict that developmen­t should result in “no net loss.”

Florida has lost the most acreage of wetlands in any state since

1845, over 9 million acres, according to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

It’s happening as the Florida Department of Environmen­tal Protection continues to adhere to a President Trump-era rule that scaled back federal protection of millions of acres of wetlands, marshes and streams. At the same time, the DEP is a defendant in a federal lawsuit filed by a group of environmen­tal organizati­ons for taking over a federal wetland permitting process that fast-tracks wetland permitting.

Environmen­talists say they believe Florida Power & Light is a driving force behind the permitting language.

“When FPL wants something they get it,” said Lindsay Cross, the water and land policy director at Florida Conservati­on Voters, a nonprofit environmen­tal watchdog. “Investor-owned utilities have incredible power to get laws passed at the expenses of the environmen­t and community members.”

The bill allows the DEP to enter into an agreement or contract with a “public entity,” which includes any public utility providing electricit­y or gas, “to expedite the evaluation of environmen­tal resource permits or Section 404 of the Clean Water Act permits.”

Section 404 regulates dredging and filling operations on wetlands, streams, marshes, ponds and other waterways to make room for giant transmissi­on lines, sprawling solar farms, transfer stations and power plants.

It also says the applicants can pay DEP for the service, to be deposited into the state Grants and Donations Trust Fund.

Cross said she “interprete­d that language as saying they can essentiall­y pay for someone to review their permit applicatio­n.”

FPL and its parent company NextEra Energy have contribute­d $3.3 million to legislator­s and political committees for the 2022 election cycle. Simpson, a Pasco County Republican, and his four political committees have received $1 million from FPL and other utilities over the years.

Bill sponsor Sen. Ben Albritton of Polk County and his committee have received more than $153,000 from public utilities.

Environmen­talists spoke out against the permitting provision at their one opportunit­y before the Senate Appropriat­ions Committee in February.

“Does this mean FPL and Duke Energy could evaluate their own permit applicatio­ns?” asked Gil Smart, director of policy for the Friends of the Everglades. “This wouldn’t be necessary if (DEP) was properly staffed and resourced to take over the 404 Wetland permitting program in the first place.”

Florida Conservati­on Voters has sent a letter asking DeSantis to veto the bill when it reaches his desk.

“Wetlands destructio­n could become pay to play with expedited permitting for those able to pay additional fees,” the letter says. “This will result in a fast track of wetland destructio­n.

By entering into contracts with public entities, this may also make a 120-day challenge more difficult or impossible for a third party.”

FPL and Albritton, R-Bartow, did not return emails seeking comment on the permitting language and its potential impact, its origins or its public necessity. A spokeswoma­n for the DEP said the agency didn’t propose the legislatio­n.

State takeover of permits

The proposal is similar to a 2017 agreement between the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and FPL that allowed the Corps to take payment from the utility to process a huge increase in Section 404 dredge-and-fill permit applicatio­ns for wetlands, streams and marshes.

Three years later, the DEP under then-chief Noah Valenstein took over the permitting duties. Only two other states, Michigan and New Jersey, provide that function.

Environmen­talists argued that the DEP was not prepared to absorb such a huge responsibi­lity from a federal agency, but the DEP insisted it needed no additional funding and is now facing a massive backlog of applicatio­ns.

Florida went from a highly regulated applicatio­n process that included federal endangered species oversight to one managed by a short-staffed, underfunde­d and untrained unit processing a record number of applicatio­ns that it cannot keep up with, said Tania Galloni, general counsel for Earthjusti­ce, a nonprofit, public interest environmen­tal law group

“Everything is really downgraded,” Galloni said.

Earthjusti­ce sued the EPA in January 2021 to prevent the transfer of duties to Florida, saying it would “degrade and ruin Florida’s natural landscape, all in violation of federal environmen­tal laws.”

A federal judge in March rejected the state’s motion to dismiss the case, which is ongoing.

It’s a high-stakes process because of Florida’s endangered wetlands and endangered species, she said.

“They’re already doing a messy job and now they’re being pushed to do it faster,” she said, when what is needed is a rigorous analysis without undue influence.

Trump-era wetlands rule

Meanwhile, the EPA is in a dispute with Florida because it is still operating under a Trump administra­tion definition of wetlands that was struck down by a federal judge in a case out of Arizona last August.

“So the entire country is back to what the rule was before, except for Florida, which keeps applying the legal definition and issuing determinat­ions that no permit is required,” Galloni said. “Florida is functionin­g under a definition of wetlands that excludes lots of wetland under the old (and reinstated) law.”

The problem, as Galloni sees it is this: “If Florida is not applying the right rule we can’t know how many ‘no permit’ decisions are legitimate. When Florida took over the 404 applicatio­n process, the Trump rule was in effect. Since the court invalidate­d it, Florida hasn’t changed that.”

The EPA has warned Florida that any permits it issues or any decision that a permit is not required using the Trump rule violates the Clean Water Act and could lead to enforcemen­t action.

But a spokeswoma­n for Florida’s DEP says the agency still follows the Trump rule because it says it hasn’t been vacated nationwide and the definition of wetlands is unsettled.

“The federal definition of ‘Waters of the United States’ remains in flux,” DEP’s Dee Ann Miller said. The EPA is still reviewing comments on new rules and the U.S. Supreme Court will take up the Arizona case, she said. Miller also said Florida has up to a year to make any necessary rule changes and two years to make any statutory changes to the program.

Florida Agricultur­e Commission­er Nikki Fried, the only statewide elected Democrat and a candidate for governor, wrote to EPA Administra­tor Michael Regan when he first took office to argue that allowing the DEP to administer the federal wetlands permitting process would be disastrous for the environmen­t.

After this story was published online, Fried wrote a letter to Regan reiteratin­g her concerns and urging him to reverse the Trump-era decision and take back control of the Section 404 program.

“Unfortunat­ely, I was correct to be concerned: the Florida Legislatur­e has now passed an industry-backed law that has created a fasttrack for wetlands destructio­n by allowing energy companies to review and expedite environmen­tal resource permits,” Fried said. “This bill will be catastroph­ic for Florida’s environmen­t if signed into law, and it is imperative that we do everything at both the state and federal levels to prevent corporatio­ns from being able to rubber-stamp their own plans to destroy our wetlands.”

Meanwhile, the state continues to approve dredge-and-fill permits or waiving the need for them at a record pace, Galloni said.

More than 1,000 have been filed since January. The DEP said it’s a post-COVID growth spurt, Galloni said. “I say people see how easy it is to get a permit and are filing applicatio­ns before it goes away.”

 ?? PATRICK CONNOLLY/ORLANDO SENTINEL ?? An alligator rests in the marsh at Orlando Wetlands Park in Christmas on March 17, 2021.
PATRICK CONNOLLY/ORLANDO SENTINEL An alligator rests in the marsh at Orlando Wetlands Park in Christmas on March 17, 2021.

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