Transforming America: Everglades Wildlands
By Henry Lamb
Whether it's wildfires in the West, or floods in Florida, the
consequences of ill conceived land use policy is wreaking havoc in the lives
of too many citizens. Until the late 1900s, land use policies were based on
principles that included free enterprise, multiple-use of public lands, and
private property rights. These principles have given way, first to what has
been loosely called, "conservation,"
principles, and more recently, to what's called "sustainable development."
This "wrenching transformation," as Al Gore described
it in Earth in the Balance, has taken land use policy decisions away
from local elected officials, and empowered a hierarchy of bureaucrats, and
professional stakeholders, who mold policy to achieve an ideological agenda,
which is then promoted by willing media and by campaign-fund-seeking politicians
who are endorsed by environmental organizations.
Florida has been a high-priority target for transformation by
The Wildlands Project. Dr. Reed Noss, author of the plan, says that "
at least half of the land area of the 48 conterminous states should be encompassed
in core [wilderness] reserves and inner corridor zones...assuming that most
of the other 50 percent is managed intelligently as buffer zone."
A center-spread in the Patagonia catalogue in 1993, displayed
three maps of Florida. The first map showed only 10 percent of the state in
public ownership; the third map, illustrating the state when The Wildlands
Project is fully implemented, displayed 90 percent in public ownership, with
the remaining 10 percent of private land in the major
urban areas.
One of the primary tools to achieve this remarkable transformation
is the CERP--the Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan. None of the agencies
involved in the implementation of CERP will admit any relationship to The
Wildlands Project. Nevertheless, the result of the CERP will achieve many
of The Wildlands Project objectives.
One of the first objectives, is to move people out of the area
in order to "restore" the Everglades to its "natural"
condition. There is, perhaps, no better example of how land use management
principles have been transformed from free enterprise to conservation.
Devastating floods in the early 20th century resulted in a massive
federal program that constructed 1,700 miles of canals and levees to control
the floods and supply water to more than a half-million acres of newly-created
agricultural land. This project was clearly to benefit people engaged in free
enterprise.
The rising tide of environmental awareness in the late 20th
century blamed the project for "destroying" the Everglades.
Now, six million residents, and nearly 40 million tourists,
relay on the flood control system. No restoration plan can be devised that
will not adversely affect these people.
Madeleine Fortin lives in an "eight-and -a-half square
mile area" of Dade County, along with about 2,000 other residents. As
recently as 1989, Congress authorized and appropriated the funds to construct
the Modified Water Delivery System and the C-111 Canal. The legislation specifically
required the project to protect the private landowners from flooding.
Neither project has been constructed. Rather than protect the
private landowners, the Corps of Engineers now want to flood two-thirds of
the area. The value of the land has plummeted. Owners who want to sell, cannot
sell at a price that will cover their mortgage. Like Fortin, most of the owners
don't want to sell. They want the Corps to do what Congress instructed them
to do in 1989. But the CERP calls for removal of the people - consistent with
the objective of The Wildlands Project.
The CERP consists of 52 projects throughout South Florida. These
projects have already flooded 11,000 acres of prime farmland, according to
David Kaplan, President of the Dade County Farm Bureau.
In adjacent Collier County, the largest county East of the Mississippi,
nearly 87 percent is already in some form of "conservation"
protection, according to local resident, Cindy Kemp.
What started in 1994 with a plan to acquire 17,888 acres from willing sellers
in Southern Belle Meade and Southern Golden Gate,
turned into a 55,000 acre acquisition, and resulted in the destruction of
roads and filling of canals. But that was just the beginning. Some 200,000
acres are now targeted for removing the people to restore the Everglades.
Throughout the keys, people are being
moved out, and prevented from moving in. The Florida Keys National Marine
Sanctuary was proposed, and local residents said in a referendum that they
did not want the Sanctuary. It was imposed anyway. Now "No Entrance"
signs block public use of the public lands. Building permits require that
mitigation land be purchased and set aside for conservation - by the permitee
- as a condition for securing a permit. New FEMA requirements forcing some
homeowners to destroy homes that were properly permitted by the County years
ago.
CERP is trashing property rights in South
Florida, forcing people off their land, transforming the state into a vision
The Wildlands Project published nearly 10 years ago.
Trouble brewing in Florida's swamps
The Wildlands Project, published in Wild Earth in 1992,
chose a map of Florida to illustrate its concept of core wilderness areas,
connected by corridors of wilderness, all surrounded by "buffer zones,"
managed for "conservation objectives." What are conservation objectives?
Reed Noss, author of The Wildlands Project, says "....the collective
needs of non-human species must take precedence over the needs and desires
of humans....."
The humans who live in South Florida are seeing the needs of
non-human populations being given priority over the property rights and livelihoods
of the people who live there. The entire Everglades is shown on the Wildlands
map as a core wilderness area, surrounded by buffer zones that reach from
Miami to Key West.
The initiative was launched by environmentalists who convinced
the politicians that the Everglades has been destroyed, and must be restored
to save biodiversity in the ecosystem.
Among the organizations that are promoting the restoration project
are: The Nature Conservancy, which received more than $136 million in federal
grants between 1997 and 2001; the Audubon Society, recipients of $10 million
in federal grants during the same period, and the Words Wildlife Fund, which
has received more than $70 million in federal grants.
The Nature Conservancy and the Audubon Society funded the writing
of The Wildlands Project, according to its author, Reed Noss.
Politicians, however, depend on votes and money from industry,
as well as from environmental organizations, so the plan necessarily included
input from the business community.
When the plan finally came together, it was supposed to achieve
three equal priorities: expand water supplies for South Florida's exploding
population' control water flows and prevent flooding; and provide sufficient
water flows to restore the Everglades. This tenuous agreement was the basis
on which President Clinton and Governor Jeb Bush launched the $7.8 billion
project on December 11, 2000.
From day one, the project was in trouble. While the U.S. Corps
of Engineers is the agency with overall responsibility, there are several
other federal agencies, state agencies, and county agencies - all with turf
to protect, and agendas to advance. Riding herd on all these agencies, is
a network of environmental organizations, each with their own interests and
agendas. Then comes the powerful industries, that employ people and pay taxes.
A the bottom of the list, are the landowners - those who are most directly
affected by the restoration plan.
At the moment, everyone is unhappy. The environmentalists are
threatening to withdraw support if higher priority is not assigned to Everglades
restoration. Scientists within the implementing agencies have no idea whether
the plan will work. And the landowners are finally organizing to say enough
is enough.
According to an extensive report in the Washington Post, Stuart
J. Appelbaum, the Army Corps of Engineer man in charge, says "We have
no idea if this will work." The EPA's South Florida Director says of
the the project, "It's falling apart before my eyes." And Fish and
Wildlife Service biologist Bob Gasaway, says "I don't see a shred of
evidence that all this money will help the environment."
Shannon Estenoz, an engineer for the World Wildlife Fund, says
he is getting angrier by the day, and thinks his organization may have been
"suckers" for having supported the CERP.
All these problems with the CERP may be dwarfed by the trouble
that is now brewing in the Florida swamp. The landowners are getting tired
of seeing their property flooded, or condemned and taken, or devalued by the
threat of future projects.
Homeowner associations, property rights groups, and legal defense
funds have sprung up all across South Florida. Edmund W. Antonowicz, Secretary
of 15,000 Coalition, fired off a letter to President Bush, urging him to step
in and prevent the massive land grabs that are going on. Madeleine Fortin's
Legal Defense Foundation sued the Corps of Engineers, charging that the Corps
lacked legislative authority to condemn land outside the original "footprints"
authorized in 1989. A preliminary ruling finds in favor of the the landowners.
These efforts have attracted the attention of the Paragon Foundation
in Alamagordo, New Mexico, who sent Jay Walley, to meet with more than 40
representatives of area organizations in Homestead on June 29. The meeting
produced a skeletal plan to create a broad coalition to guide a national effort
to stop the erosion of private property rights in South Florida, and restore
some semblance of sanity to the CERP.
We've had enough!
Who could have guessed that South Florida's swamps would become
the staging ground for what is shaping up to be the biggest battle for property
rights this country has ever seen? The immediate target is the CERP - The
Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan. The bigger target is The Wildlands
Project, but the real target is the basis on which land use management regulations
are formulated.
The national grassroots plan of action is not limited to
the Everglades, but is being constructed to address similar issues in every
community. No longer will the environmental organizations go unchallenged.
No longer will so-called "stakeholder" councils be dominated by
professional environmental organization employees and government agency officials.
No longer with the affected landowners be the last to know what others have
planned for their land.
Collectively the people of America are saying "We've had
enough!" And their voices may be heard the loudest, echoing through the
swamps of South Florida.
Henry Lamb is the executive vice president
of the Environmental Conservation Organization and chairman of Sovereignty
International.