From: Sarah.Fowler@ocfl.net on
behalf of Fred.Brummer@ocfl.net
Sent: Friday, February 05,
2010 1:52 PM
Subject: Nelson and LeMieux et al
oppose EPA Numeric Nutrient Criteria
February 04, 2010
Florida's
Congressional delegation sent a letter to EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson today
asking the agency to extend the comment period and expand public hearings on
its water
quality standards issued last month. The letter -- signed by U.S.
Sens. Bill Nelson
and George LeMieux
and 18 U.S. House members, led by Rep. Adam
Putnam -- follows the first detailed remarks from Florida
Department of Environmental Protection Secretary Michael Sole, who
told a state House committee Wednesday to "be afraid" of some
components of the new rules.
EPA is
hosting two public forums at three locations Feb. 16 (Tallahassee), Feb. 17
(Orlando) and Feb. 18 (West Palm Beach) and soliciting comments for 60
days.
Sole and EPA
critics -- including Gov. Charlie
Crist, Attorney General Bill
McCollum and Agriculture Commissioner Charlie Bronson --
were surprisingly quiet when the standards were released. But now the campaign
to fight them is gearing up. State lawmakers joined the chorus Wednesday with Rep.
Rich Glorioso,
R-Plant City, wondering aloud why the lawsuit against the federal government
isn't already filed. "What do we do other than seceding from the
Union?" he asked.
Find the
full text of the letter from the Congressional delegation below.
Dear
Administrator Jackson:
As you know,
the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has issued a proposed rule
establishing numeric nutrient criteria for Florida water bodies. As part of a
consent decree EPA entered into with several litigants, a commitment was made
by EPA to issue a final rule by October 15, 2010, for lakes and flowing waters,
and for estuaries and coastal waters by October 15, 2011. The proposed rule is
lengthy, technical, and will take time for experts, much less lay stakeholders,
to understand its implications. Moreover, there is some disagreement between
scientists at the EPA and at the Florida Department of Environmental Protection
(DEP) regarding the data each entity is using. It is our understanding the EPA
will accept comments for sixty days from the date of publication in the Federal
Register and has scheduled only three public hearings on the proposed rule to
be held in Tallahassee, Orlando, and West Palm Beach from February 16 -18.
These
regulations will impact every citizen, local governments, and the business
community. The more time and information the public has to understand these
rules provides more time to plan and consider the costs and benefits of
implementation. Hosting three hearings in a narrow time period, in a state with
more than 18 million residents is simply inadequate to review this complicated
proposal. Furthermore, a sixty day comment period, which expires forty days
after the date of the first public hearing, provides insufficient time for
stakeholders to submit meaningful and comprehensive comments.
Therefore,
we strongly urge you to extend the comment period and host additional public
hearings throughout the state. Florida residents deserve a full and thorough
public airing of these proposed regulations and adequate time to understand
what will be required of them when the rules are implemented. An administration
that has consistently advocated for more transparency within the governing
process should welcome the opportunity to provide more stakeholders with a better
understanding of these complex regulations in urban and rural areas alike.
Signers of
the letter include:
Senators Bill Nelson and George LeMieux, and Congressmen Tom Rooney, Allen
Boyd, John Mica, Alcee Hastings, Mario Diaz-Balart, Lincoln Diaz-Balart, Vern
Buchanan, Cliff Stearns, C.W. Bill Young, Connie Mack, Ileana Ros-Lehtinen,
Corrine Brown, Ander Crenshaw, Gus Bilirakis, Ginny Brown-Waite, Jeff Miller,
and Suzanne Kosmas.
Posted by John Frank at
05:24:43 PM on February 4, 2010
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