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The following is meant for the commissioners and residents of Gilchrist county,
Florida.
Several years ago, while enjoying a
day at Hart Springs, I picked up a Recreation Guide for Gilchrist county.
The vision statement for the year 2020 enlisted in the brochure caught my
eye. It read:
“Our vision for Gilchrist county in 2020 is rural communities working
to provide opportunities for all its citizens, through balanced growth and
enhanced education, while preserving our proud heritage, natural resources
and agriculture.”
Wow! What a place to live. Gilchrist county is full of stunning
rivers and springs, as well as quaint and friendly communities. To know,
that people were so concerned about preserving the beautiful natural
resources in this area, inspired me. My family and I have been visiting,
camping, and enjoying your hospitality for 25 years.
I have seen in my own community what is
happening in yours. We have experienced several years of drought,
sinkholes, dried up lakebeds and wells, and water bottling companies taking OUR
water to sell for profit. Now, more than ever, our springs are in severe
threat. On Rt. 340 outside of High Springs there have been signs stating
“Springs Protection Area”. Pumping water from our natural springs is in no
way preserving or protecting them.
Building a bottling plant at Blue
Springs may bring a few locals jobs, but at what cost? The noisy
trucks alone will emit high amounts of pollution into the air as well as
the added wear and tear on roads and the everyday eye sore they will bring
to this beautiful community. We won’t be the only ones suffering. The
animals and plant life in the area will feel the negative affects of this
bottling plant as much, if not more, than we will. This process may harm
springs and rivers, and may dry up home water wells and cause the formation of
sinkholes. The negative affects of this water bottling plant being built will far
outweigh the positive ones.
Think about all the water being
shipped out of Gilchrist county each year. This water is bottled and sold
for profit. This water belongs to us and the people of Florida need to
have a say in what is done with it. We need to stand up, speak out, and
put a stop to this before all of our beautiful springs are being pumped.
We owe this to our children and their children to make sure they will one
day have a clean environment to live in and beautiful natural springs to
enjoy.
All springs need to be classified as
environmentally sensitive so we will no longer have to deal with foreign
and domestic companies coming in and trying to take over and sell our
water. We need to preserve these natural springs to the best of our
abilities. We can’t afford to sit back and watch these pristine wonders be
destroyed because of greed and the almighty dollar.
With all due respect, a vote for any
bottling plant would be a vote against your vision. Please stand up and
help educate others so we can protect our springs now and forever.
Sincerely,
Jack Cuthbertson |
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High Springs
OK's giant expansion of city sewer
system HIGH SPRINGS -- The High Springs City
Commission never seemed so happy to spend almost $9 million. |
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Go to September 2008 newsletter to see article All Bottled Up by Merrillee Malwitz-Jipson Corrections to this article !!??........ The Santa Fe River is located in the SRWMD not SJRWMD as the article states. AND: I never wrote that SRWMD was "dragging their feet" on the MFL's. They have been working very hard on completion of the Lower Santa Fe River MFL's and they should be done by the end of this year. They already completed the Upper Santa Fe River and part of the Suwannee River. I really appreciate the coverage of this very important public meeting....Thank you! In the future however, if anyone plans to use my words or information from this e-mail exchange, I would appreciate a head's up by permisssion in advance if it is edited. |
Greetings:
The agenda for the
September 23, quarterly meeting of the Ichetucknee Springs Basin Working Group
is attached. We look forward to meeting with
you.
Jim
Stevenson
850 556-3072
Meeting Agenda
Ichetucknee Springs Basin Working Group
Tuesday,
September 23, 2008
Price Creek Water Treatment Plant (see
directions)
9:00 a.m. Welcome and Introductions Jim Stevenson
What’s New?
Columbia County Dale Williams
Lake City Scott Reynolds
News from Wakulla Spring
9:30 Springs and River Report Sam Cole
Ichetucknee Springs State Park
9:45 The Ichetucknee Partnership Cindy Johnson
Suwannee River Water Management District
10:00 Break
10:15 Protecting Water: Horticultural Tips John Piersol
Lake City Community College
10:45 Ichetucknee River Aquatic Turtle Survey Peter Meylan
Eckerd College
11:15 Economic Importance of Ichetucknee Springs Harvey Campbell
Columbia County Tourist Development Council
11:45 Group Discussion
12:00 Lunch (college cafeteria or bring your lunch)
1:00 Inventorying Septic Tanks as a Precursor to Initiating Local Ordinances
Columbia County Health Department Mark Lander
1:30 Water Quality Trends in Ichetucknee Springs Rick Copeland
Florida Geological Survey
2:00 Alligator Lake TMDL Terry Hansen
Department of Environmental Protection
2:30 Gimme Green
3:00 Adjourn
Directions: Lake City Community College entrance on U.S. 90, east of the airport. Timberwolf Dr. to Staff Way (first street on left) to Water Plant Rd. (386) 466-3350
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Gilchrist Vision Meetings
Greetings,
Attached are several documents
related to the Gilchrist County Visioning meetings. Included are the
results from the two exercises conducted at this week’s meeting, and the
original 2020 Visioning Documents, including the County’s Vision Statement.
The County’s webmaster has added a new link to the County’s website
homepage labeled “Gilchrist County Visioning Meeting” and is in the process of
making all of these documents accessible via this web link. http://www.gilchrist.fl.us/planning/Visioning.htm
Don’t forget to mark your calendars
for the next meeting on Tuesday, October 7, 2008 at 6:00
P.M.
Thank you again for participating in
this important community planning process.
Taylor Brown, Planning
Director
Gilchrist County Community
Development Department
Phone (352)
463-3173
Fax (352)
463-3189
Email: tbrown@gilchrist.fl.us
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FHD
from: flhometown@yahoo.com
To: flhometown@yahoo.com
Sent: 9/3/2008 5:12:34 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time
Subj: Results of FHD federal ruling case and what's next!
Greetings to all FHD supporters:
Folks, although disappointed that Hometown Democracy won't be on the 2008 ballot, our dedication to getting our petitioning finished up and to be certified to be on the 2010 ballot is unwavering, and still our TOP Priority!
Basically the Federal judge has ruled that the citizens' initiative process is a State right and is not subject to Federal Constitutional guarantees, and so will not compel the State to put us on the 2008 ballot. It is a disappointing ruling, but nothing else has changed.
So, simply put, we must continue our ongoing effort to get certified for 2010 by the State standards, and to do so before the 2008 election. We are very close now, even by the State’s own numbers, and with the revocation issue still up on appeal, we are determined to meet the state requirement as is.
Here is our current standing by the State's calculations:
Required to have initiative on the ballot: 611,009
** Number currently valid: 619,350 (this is what we have without the revocations)
** Number currently revoked: 13,247
** Total number valid: 606,103
Folks, the hardest part is behind us, the MONUMENTAL task of getting over 840,000 petitions signed ! ! ! We have had more asked of us, more dirty tricks pulled on us, and more obstacles thrown in our way than any other citizen initiative ever has. And yet here we are in the final stretch - it is truly a WIN for us to have gotten where we are, and we will finish a WINNER!
We are truly appreciative for everyone’s contributions of time, effort and money to the HISTORIC campaign so far, and ask that we all now turn this energy and effort to the next stage of the campaign…to educate the electorate and have them prepared to vote FOR FHD at election. We are confident that Hometown Democracy will then take its hard-earned place in the Florida Constitution!
Yours, Lesley
TCPalm.com
Lesley Blackner: 'Big boys' have problems with FHD
By TCPalm Staff
Tuesday, September 2, 2008
Some people get paid to pick up garbage; some people get paid to spread garbage around. Ryan Houck, executive director of Floridians for Smarter Group, is paid a monthly salary to trash Florida Hometown Democracy, the statewide initiative to give voters the power to accept or reject commission-approved growth map changes.
What do you do?
Remember rule No. 1: The developer machine will say anything to get what it wants. Floridians for Smarter Growth is a political action committee cooked up by the growth machine a year ago to keep Hometown Democracy off the 2008 ballot and defeat it in 2010. In a little more than six months, the National Association of Home Builders, National Association of Realtors, Florida Chamber of Commerce, Waste Management, Florida Home Builders and U.S. Sugar (just to name a few) dumped more than $3.5 million into this endeavor.
Floridians for Smarter Growth spent most of this money last fall and winter floating a bogus petition designed to do two things: 1) suck away our paid petitioners and, 2) deluge certain county supervisors of elections so all petitions could not be timely validated. It worked.
Beginning last Jan. 2, Smarter Growth dumped more than 600,000 petitions in key counties around the state. Smarter Growth wasn’t on the ballot, but neither was FHD. That was the plan.
FHD has raised and spent about $1.8 million since it started in the fall of 2003. Yes, we’ve paid for petition collection and volunteers have sent petitions, like just about every other initiative campaign. But we never paid anywhere near $3 per petition like Mr. Houck alleges.
Mr. Houck calls me a “wealthy extremist” because I put my money where my mouth is. Fact is, I’ve spent my entire life watching the state I love paved over and ruined.
I and so many others waited decades for leadership and reform. It never came. In fact, Florida ’s deterioration intensified over the past 10 years because our elected officials let developers go wild. I finally decided to do something about it and am grateful to be in a position to do so. It’s a tribute to the power of Hometown Democracy that the big boys are compelled to pile on against it.
Over the past decade, developers built to their heart’s content, crashing our entire economy, not to mention Florida ’s natural heritage. Hopefully, everybody now understands that an economy run by and for developers sinks like the Titanic.
The current meltdown is such that even Mr. Houck admits “Our growth-management system is imperfect.” In reality, it works perfectly for the developer crowd. It gives them what they want: the control to build when, how and where they want. All they need is three votes out of five on the commission and they’re off to the races. That’s why they’re so crazed over FHD.
In full spin, Mr. Houck goes further and says we need reform, just not Hometown Democracy. The developer machine’s toy, the Legislature, chews new holes through our “growth management” laws every session. So don’t hold your breath for “reform.” And you’ll never see Floridians for Smarter Growth do anything other than bash FHD.
Hometown Democracy will grant people to vote on land use changes that change the face of their community forever. It will counterbalance developer control over local government and help ensure that growth truly reflects the public interest.
The developer machine knows that Floridians want voter accountability on land use. That’s why its mouthpiece, Floridians for Smarter Growth, will say and do just about anything to trash Hometown Democracy.
HELP SAVE WHAT'S LEFT OF FLORIDA...
LET THE PEOPLE VOTE to control growth!PO Box 636, New Smyrna Beach, FL 32170-0636.Pd.pol.adv.byFloridaHometownDemocracy,Inc,PAC