Amendment One would reserve a portion of tax money collected on real
estate transactions for the next 20 years, potentially raising $648
million to buy and maintain lands in its first year, increasing to
$1.27 billion by the 20th year, according to Florida’s Office of
Economic and Demographic Research.
Amendment supporters hope the money can be used to buy land north of
Lake Okeechobee, one of Florida’s largest fresh water sources, to
help filter out pollution from the Orlando metropolitan area, as
well as agricultural runoff south of the lake.
When Lake Okeechobee rises too high the Army Corps of Engineers has
to pump the excess out to sea. The polluted lake's untreated waters
cannot be diverted into nearby rivers or marshes that flow into the
Everglades and are lost.
“We’re wasting billions of gallons of fresh water every year,” said
Everglades Foundation Chief Executive Officer Eric Eikenberg.
Other land conservation concerns involve protecting iconic Florida
springs, limiting population density in fragile coastal eco-systems
such as the Florida Keys, as well as beach erosion, said Janet
Bowman, Florida director of legislative policy for The Nature
Conservancy.
“In Florida the environment is the economy,” she said.
But opponents ranging from lawmakers to a statewide business group,
say the amendment could tie the legislature’s hands should the state
experience another economic downtown.
“We could very well put ourselves in a place where the legislature
is forced to cut other programs or has to raise taxes during a
recession,” said David Hart, executive vice president for the
Florida Chamber of Commerce.
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Backers say the amendment is needed because Governor Rick Scott, who
has not taken a position on it, has failed to fund land programs
even as the economy rebounds.
Florida Forever, the state’s land buying program created by former
Governor Jeb Bush in 2000 and funded at first by $300 million in
bonds, was not funded in 2011 and received only $15 million to $20
million in the last fiscal year, according to Bowman.
“If the governor and legislature aren’t going to fund it, this is
the bill that will,” said Paula Dockery, a former Republican state
senator who authored Florida Forever.
(Editing by Cynthia Osterman)
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