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While folks are distracted with a crummy economy and war, it's
always good to see that little brother Jeb is looking out for our local water
supply. I thought the Inter Basin Transfers of Water was considered a bad
idea? You only need to read the first few lines to understand what this is
about....
...Detch, 8/15/03
Some of Florida's most influential business leaders have spent the past
year meeting behind closed doors to divvy up the state's water supply.
Developers, agriculture executives and sugar growers - all with their own
interests to protect - have been meeting at the behest of the governor's chief
fundraiser to craft new water policies for Florida.
They have come up with a potentially controversial idea: to upend state law
and redirect Florida's most precious resource from water-rich and slow-growing
North Florida to thirsty, booming Central and South Florida, according to
documents obtained by the St. Petersburg Times.
"Water-poor areas and water-rich areas have a lot to offer each other," said
Lee Arnold, the Clearwater developer spearheading the water task force of the
statewide business group, the Council of 100. Arnold pitched the
recommendations to Gov. Jeb Bush on July 29, and the governor "has no
objections to any of what we have proposed," according to a Council of 100
memo. Arnold promised to unveil the recommendations next month.
Experts Arnold has relied on contend that the state's water managers are too
focused on protecting the environment, and not doing enough to find new water
supplies for the state's booming population. This new approach would ensure an
abundant supply of water so the pace of growth in South Florida could continue
unabated.
But critics warn that quenching the thirst of one region with water from
another could spark a statewide version of the Tampa Bay water wars of the
1980s and '90s.
Back then, cities and counties battled one another for water with lawsuits
that cost taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars. The environmental costs
may have been even higher.
"We had swamps that had been there for centuries that were dying," said Roy
Harrell, who was chairman of the Southwest Florida Water Management District
when it put an end to the wars. "Is that what we want?"
Instead of building pipelines carrying water across Florida, Harrell said, "We
need to really bear down on what this growth is doing to our state."
Although his recommendations would require legislative action and public
money, Arnold refused to discuss in detail what he presented to the governor.
Still, he acknowledged the task force favors transferring water from more
rural areas north of Interstate 4 to fast-growing areas south of that Central
Florida dividing line.
"Do we have enough water in the state and it happens to be in the wrong spot?"
Arnold asked. "Some counties are rich. Eighty percent of the consumption is
south of I-4. Eighty percent of available supplies are north of I-4."
But the growth isn't. Naples, for example, is the second-fastest growing
metropolitan market in the country. Collier County grew from 160,000 residents
in 1990 to more than 275,000 in 2002. The population is projected to grow to
nearly 550,000 by 2030.
In recent speeches, Arnold singled out the Suwanee River region as a potential
water source for growing South and Central Florida.
"They're sitting in the Saudi Arabia of water," Arnold said in one speech. In
return for their water, he suggested, they could get money for improving their
schools.
But the sheiks of the Suwannee have no interest in cutting any deals for their
water supply. If the council pushes the idea, "I'm sure there would be an
uproar," said Suwannee River Water Management District director Jerry
Scarborough.
"We have no water to give away, and we're not interested in selling any," said
Suwannee County Commissioner Douglas Udell.
Nevertheless, he figures Central and South Florida will come take it. Some
compensation for the struggling county - it has a population of 37,000, a per
capita income of $14,000 and 800 miles of unpaved roads - would take the sting
out of it, Udell said.
Still, the commissioner said, "If you pump us dry, then what?" There has been
talk for at least 30 years of piping water from the Suwannee to quench thirsty
lawns and residents elsewhere. During the Tampa Bay water wars, as Pinellas
County and St. Petersburg drained the lakes and swamps of Pasco and
Hillsborough counties, one Pinellas commissioner announced: "Keep the Suwannee
River cold, because we're coming for it."
Pinellas officials were driven to take water from other counties by political
pressure from developers eager to keep building, according to a new book,
Water Wars: A Story of People, Politics and Power, by Honey Rand, the
spokeswoman for the Southwest Florida Water Management District then.
Rand's book quotes another former Pinellas commissioner, Steve Seibert: "When
Lee Arnold comes into my office and says, "Where's my water?' I have to give
him an answer."
Arnold, 53, is founder, chief executive officer and chairman of the board of
the Arnold Companies, a powerhouse in commercial real estate and a developer
of residential projects in Pasco and Hillsborough counties.
He is not some deskbound paper-pusher. A licensed commercial pilot, Arnold
flies his company plane. In 1996 he climbed to Mount Everest's base camp. He
was reached for comment last week during a scuba trip in the Bahamas.
Arnold has developed political clout by donating thousands of dollars to
Republican candidates and the Republican National Committee.
For years he has been a member of the Council
of 100, a group of business leaders that has advised Florida governors
since 1961. Bush has enlisted the council's help selling controversial
overhauls of the education and civil service systems.
Each member is approved by the governor, pays $3,000 in annual dues and covers
the cost of a staff and a suite in a riverfront office building in Tampa.
The council's chairman is Al Hoffman, an avid polo player and developer from
Fort Myers. His company, WCI Communities, is the largest master-planned
community builder in Florida. He also enjoys enormous influence as national
finance chairman for the Republican National Committee, and chief fundraiser
for Jeb Bush's 1998 and 2002 campaigns.
According to council documents, Hoffman established the water task force in
May 2002 after he had "had several conversations with members of the Council
of 100 about the water supply and distribution issues facing Florida."
After Bush approved that as a topic for study, Hoffman says he picked Arnold
to head the 30-member task force, which Arnold describes as "made up of every
walk of life."
The members include Fred Bullard, developer of Feather Sound in mid-Pinellas;
Gary Morse, developer of a retirement community south of Ocala called the
Villages; and Llywd Ecclestone, developer of PGA National Resorts in Palm
Beach.
Other prominent members include citrus magnate Ben Hill Griffin III; sugar
mogul Alfy Fanjul, chairman of Florida Crystals; former Florida Attorney
General Jim Smith; the publishers of the Lakeland Ledger and Jacksonville's
Florida Times-Union; and Andrew Barnes, chairman and chief executive officer
of the St. Petersburg Times.
Barnes said last week he did not know what Arnold presented to the governor.
Task force members have not had discussions since the full Council of 100
gathered in May at the $200-a-night beachfront WaterColor Inn in the
Panhandle.
During a two-hour task force meeting there, Arnold presented a series of
proposals for approval but did not ask for a formal vote.
"It was more like, "Here's what we've got, here's where we're going, if you've
got problems with it, speak up,' " Barnes said.
The most far-reaching proposal, Barnes said, "was to trade North Florida water
for mid Florida money." Out West, water is a commodity to be bought and sold
like oil. Property owners can pump as much as they like. California moves
water all over the state - even from other states - to high-growth areas.
But Florida law says water belongs to the public. Utilities can charge for the
cost of delivering water to your tap, but the government protects the resource
by regulating how much can be pumped.
Barnes said Arnold suggested a way around that: "You can't sell water, but you
can pay people for providing transportation of water."
Paying a poor county a water transportation fee would likely cost a booming
county less than building desalination plants or cutting growth, Barnes said.
The money "could be a huge boon for an unpopulated area," Barnes said.
"Assuming you can persuade people to sit still for that."
Florida is not the only place where moving water around could make a lot of
money. In Texas, oil man T. Boone Pickens wants to pump water out of the rural
countryside and pipe it to Dallas. But Rep. Nick Lampson, D-Texas, said the
fear that water could be taken from his district to supply Dallas "moves the
emotions of people to the point that they say they're going to get their guns
and protect their water."
Making money off America's insatiable thirst has attracted foreign
entrepreneurs. The three country's largest private water companies - USFilter,
United Water and American Water Works - are owned by French and German
conglomerates Vivendi, Suez and RWE.
Until recently a fourth big player was Azurix, a subsidiary of scandal-plagued
Enron Corp. Azurix attempted to gain a foothold in Florida, offering to take
over the $8-billion restoration of the Everglades in exchange for the right to
sell the water it recovered. State officials rejected the idea.
Lobbying for the Azurix plan were two former South Florida Water Management
District officials, Jim Garner and Cathy Vogel. Both lobby for Hoffman's WCI
and the Association of Florida Community Developers, and are listed as
advisers to Arnold's task force.
In 1997 Vogel wrote a paper for Bush's private think tank, the Foundation for
Florida's Future, in which she argued the state should allow booming coastal
counties to pay rural inland counties for their water. Such an arrangement
would be mutually beneficial, she wrote.
Instead of taking Vogel's advice to let the market control Florida's water, in
1998 the Legislature passed a law mandating "local sources first." That means
cities and counties must exhaust all reasonable possibilities for water within
their borders before attempting to get it elsewhere.
The law was an attempt to ensure nothing like Tampa Bay's water wars ever
occurred again. In June, Vogel moderated as several "water experts" met with
Arnold. They were Jake Varn and Eric Olson, lobbyists for the Florida Home
Builders Association; Seibert, the former Pinellas commissioner and former
head of the state's planning agency; Doug Manson, a lawyer who has represented
utilities and bottled water companies; Tom MacVicar, a consultant for sugar
growers; and Pete Dunbar, who lobbies for the state's largest wholesale water
utility, Tampa Bay Water.
A report on the meeting says, "there was unanimous agreement that "local
sources first' is a bad idea . . . (but) it was agreed that any effort to
repeal it would be political suicide."
But there could be a way around it. For 30 years, Florida's water has been
governed by its five water management districts whose boundaries are drawn to
follow the state's hydrological features. The districts control who pumps
water out of the ground and how much can be pumped. The Southwest Florida
Water Management District oversees water for the Tampa Bay area.
Arnold's experts complained that the water management districts were not doing
enough to find new sources of water because they were too concerned with
protecting the environment.
"In essence, the evolution of environmentalism has seriously detracted from
our focus and responsibility to ensure adequate water supply," a report on the
June meeting said.
The task force recommended a statewide board to "put water supply on an equal
footing with environmental protection and restoration." Such a board would
oversee the local districts and, the experts said, redefine local sources
first, pushing for "regional water supply solutions and the transport of water
from water-rich areas to water-poor areas."
The task force had approved such a recommendation, and Arnold even mentioned
establishing a state water authority in recent speeches. But last week he said
that wasn't in his pitch to Bush.
"The concept of a state water authority is different from where we landed,"
said Arnold. He would not explain what he meant "because I don't have to at
this point."
Hoffman, who has also discussed the water problem with Bush, promised the plan
will not reignite the water wars. "You only have water wars when water is
scarce," he said. "Water in Florida is not scarce. We don't have a water
shortage problem in Florida. We might have a water distribution problem."
- Times researchers Kitty Bennett and John Martin contributed to this report,
which also includes information from the Fort Myers News-Press, Washington
Post and Florida Today.
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