Congratulations to DeKalb County for passing a resolution supporting the Okefenokee Swamp.
You can encourage your city council or county commission to pass such a resolutin.
Local government resolutions help encourage state legislatures to pass bills.
In addition to its usual business of roads and taxes,
the Clinch County Commission discussed with Suwannee Riverkeeper
outings, boat ramps, and a proposed resolution against the strip mine too near the Okefenokee Swamp.
Thanks to Chairman Henry Moylan and the Commissioners for their hospitality,
to
Clinch County Administrator Jaclyn James for ongoing communications,
and to WWALS member Etta Lee for talking to Commissioners and for being at the meeting; also for dinner.
Below are pictures, videos by Lowndes Area Knowledge Exchange of the relevant agenda item, and links to documents.
Florida registered voters, please sign the petition to get
a state constitutional amendment for Rights to Clean and Healthy Waters
on the ballot:
https://www.floridarighttocleanwater.org
This picture of
Mermaid Danielle Shmalberg with the RTCW petition and Suwannee Riverkeeper John S. Quarterman
was taken at the 2023 OSFR Songwriting Contest,
part of RiverFest by Our Santa Fe River.
Thanks to everyone who asked the Florida Governor
to veto the sprawl bill, HB 359 / SB 540.
But he
signed it anyway,
so now anyone who sues to stop a comprehensive plan change and loses
has to pay the other side’s legal bills.
Now we really need Right to Clean Water in Florida as a constitutional amendment.
Please sign the petition and ask all your Florida registered voter friends and relatives to do so.
https://www.floridarighttocleanwater.org/petition
With enough signatures, the RTCW petition can get a constitutional amendment on the ballot in 2024, and there is nothing the legislature or governor can do to stop it.
Georgians, please encourage Floridians to sign the petition.
Here’s an explanation of why other means won’t work,
“Floridians who’ve been following along know that we are not going to
achieve anything remotely resembling such protections through
legislative action, which is why supporting this amendment is a
no-brainer.”
The Valdosta-Lowndes Chamber of Commerce, host of One Valdosta-Lowndes (OVL),
invited WWALS to a reception for the new OVL Executive Director, Mary Beth Brownlee.
WWALS congratulates Lowndes County on winning a statewide award for their litter crew.
We can attest that boat ramps and other public access points to rivers in Lowndes County
are much cleaner since the county litter crew has been picking up there weekly,
both on the WWALS
Withlacoochee and Little River Water Trail
and the Alapaha River Water Trail.
We’d also like to thank Lowndes County Public Works for a longstanding agreement that they
pick up bagged trash that WWALS leaves at river access points.
As everyone knows, fertilizer nitrates leaching through the soil into our springs and rivers is the main cause of the algae blooms that crowd out native vegetation and starve fish and manatees in the Suwannee River Basin.
The state’s Basin Management Action Plans (BMAPs) won’t solve that problem.
Counties and cities can pass ordinances to address the problem,
but not so easily the relevant part of this bill becomes law.