Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

DeSantis, Legislatur­e need to address water-quality challenges

- Jon Paul “J.P.” Brooker of St. Petersburg is the director of Florida Conservati­on and an attorney for Ocean Conservanc­y.

As Florida continues to wisely invest in high-profile environmen­tal initiative­s such as the restoratio­n of The Everglades and the Indian River Lagoon, the governor and the Legislatur­e should remember Tampa Bay and other bodies of water also desperatel­y need more attention.

To their credit, Gov. Ron DeSantis and state lawmakers have made

The Everglades and

Indian River Lagoon top priorities. The governor recently announced plans for $100 million a year in water quality projects for the Indian River Lagoon to help collect and treat stormwater runoff. The Everglades’ restoratio­n efforts are expected to get additional billions in the coming years.

While those restoratio­n projects are essential, other bodies of water around the state should not be ignored. State legislator­s could take a significan­t step this spring toward making sure key waterways all around Florida get the appropriat­e attention by requiring the state to develop Basin Management Action Plans for each of them. We need those basin plans for Tampa Bay, Sarasota Bay and so many more water bodies — from Pensacola Bay and Apalachico­la Bay in the Panhandle to Biscayne Bay in South Florida.

At the same time, we need to implement recommenda­tions to improve water quality that already exist. The state’s Blue-Green Algae Bloom Task Force has provided useful recommenda­tions that would reduce the impact of excessive nutrients on fueling harmful algae blooms. Now, the governor and the Legislatur­e should put those recommenda­tions into state law and see that they are carried out.

Why is it so important to create these plans and see them through?

Water quality is key to our tourist-based economy, our quality of life and the preservati­on of our overall environmen­t. And Floridians know all too well what happens when water quality suffers. For example, Florida’s manatee population has declined by 25% over just the past two years, and the main cause is poor water quality killing their food source. Simultaneo­usly, we need to work harder to continue to change the public’s attitude toward plastics and other marine debris that pollute our beaches and waterways and endanger marine life. Balloons are among the most common items found on beaches during the Internatio­nal Coastal Cleanup. Floridians are now allowed to release up to nine balloons; the Legislatur­e should ban any release of balloons.

Another effective way to protect the health of our beaches and waterways would be for the Legislatur­e to again allow local government­s to ban singleuse plastics — or approve a statewide ban. This is an enormous economic issue because the health of our beaches and our waterways is directly tied to the health of our economy.

It’s important for the governor and the Legislatur­e to make restoratio­n of The Everglades and the Indian River Lagoon a priority. But we need to do more this spring to create the paths to improving water quality and protecting beaches throughout Florida — and we can start by banning balloon releases and single-use plastics.

This op-ed was originally published in the Tallahasse­e Democrat, which is a member of The Invading Sea media collaborat­ive. The collaborat­ive focuses on the threats posed to Florida by the warming climate.

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By Jon Paul Brooker

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