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TIME: Almanac of the 20th Century
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TIME, Almanac of the 20th Century.ISO
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1990
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93
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apr_jun
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0621330.000
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1994-02-27
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<text>
<title>
(Jun. 21, 1993) A Deadline To Save The Everglades
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Jun. 21, 1993 Sex for Sale
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
ENVIRONMENT, Page 56
Facing A Deadline To Save The Everglades
</hdr>
<body>
<p>The fate of Florida's famous wetlands could be decided this
week
</p>
<p>By PHILIP ELMER-DEWITT--With reporting by Cathy Booth/Clewiston
</p>
<p> Near the western edge of the Everglades, there's a quiet spot
where Gene Duncan goes to unwind. It sits at the junction of
two canals, where a stand of willows and pond-apple trees provides
a bit of shade. When Duncan, a water-quality expert working
for the local Indian tribe, cuts the engine of his airboat,
he can hear bullfrogs croak from the water lilies and the tails
of Florida garfish slap the water with a noise like popcorn
popping. A pair of white ibis watch warily as alligators--half a dozen of them--drift toward the boat, lured by a man-made
gulping sound that Duncan calls an alligator distress call.
When they realize they have been fooled by a human, the giant
reptiles turn tail and submarine silently into the canal.
</p>
<p> From Duncan's little corner of paradise, the Everglades doesn't
seem endangered. But just 40 miles to the northeast, the picture
changes abruptly. Here there are no game fish, no white ibis
and hardly any alligators. Where once a complex ecosystem flourished,
there are only cattails, acre upon acre of them, stretching
as far as the eye can see. Cattails are taking over the eastern
Everglades, crowding out the saw grass and choking the algae
at the base of the ecosystem's food chain. Cattails now cover
20,000 acres of what was once pristine wetland. Grown thick
and tall (some more than 8 ft. high) in the phosphorus-filled
runoff of nearby sugar and vegetable plantations, they stand
as a symbol of the decades of mismanagement that have brought
the famous region to the brink of environmental collapse.
</p>
<p> The fate of the Everglades could be decided this week. A $465
million restoration plan, originally hammered out in the late
1980s, has emerged from nearly five years of litigation and
faces a mediator's June 21 deadline. Federal and state officials,
environmentalists, Native Americans and farmers are still haggling
over who will pay for the cleanup and the timetable. If no settlement
comes this week, the issue is likely to go back to court--where it could linger for years while the ecosystem deteriorates.
"What's at stake is the biological future of the Everglades
and the Florida Bay," says Dick Ring, superintendent of the
Everglades National Park.
</p>
<p> The battle to save this southern jewel of the National Park
System has stirred national concern. Interior Secretary Bruce
Babbitt visited the park in February and came back "absolutely
appalled." Since then he has endorsed the idea of reclaiming
thousands of acres of private property to protect this prime
parcel of public land, an approach that could signal a fundamental
shift in the way U.S. parkland is managed. "We can't defend
the Everglades--or Yellowstone--just at their boundaries,"
says Jim Webb, regional director of the Wilderness Society.
"We have to deal with the whole ecosystem."
</p>
<p> The ecosystem in question once covered the entire tip of Florida--about 4 million acres of wetland stretching from Lake Okeechobee
in the north to the Gulf of Mexico in the south. For centuries
it was treated like a huge swamp to be drained, farmed and,
ultimately, paved. Now the acreage has shrunk to 2 million,
and what remains is under pressure from a population growing
by 600 people a day.
</p>
<p> It was not until the middle of this century that the nature
of that ecosystem was understood. The Everglades, it turns out,
is not a swamp at all but a shallow, sheetlike river, about
50 miles wide, flowing almost imperceptibly from Okeechobee
to the sea. It is a leisurely process, a self-perpetuating
cycle in which clouds draw moisture from the slow-moving stream,
blow north and then rain down on the lakes and rivers that drain
into the Okeechobee and back to the Everglades.
</p>
<p> By the time hydrologists figured this out, it was almost too
late. A huge earthen dam had been thrown up along the southern
lip of Lake Okeechobee and a great swath of the northern Everglades
transformed into prized farmland--source of most of the U.S.'s
cane sugar and 10% of its winter vegetables. To speed development
and protect those farmlands from flooding, the Army Corps of
Engineers in the 1950s began laying down a system of ditches
so vast that astronauts can spot its outlines from space: 1,400
miles of levees, pipes and canals. Today nature's cycle had
been largely replaced by a man-made plumbing system that is
polluting the Everglades with the phosphorus-rich runoff that
cattails find so nourishing.
</p>
<p> The restoration project being debated this week is nearly as
ambitious as the plumbing it is trying to fix. The driving forces
behind it included former acting U.S. Attorney Dexter Lehtinen,
who filed the first lawsuit, and Carol Browner, who headed Florida's
Department of Environmental Regulation from 1991 through '92
and is now chief of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
To purify the runoff and restore some of the sheetlike flow
of the original ecosystem, the state of Florida proposed setting
aside around 35,000 acres of cropland to act as "filtering marshes."
Irrigation water drained from the fields would be held in the
treatment areas until natural action of plant life lowers the
phosphorus content to acceptable levels.
</p>
<p> For the past five years, the big sugar companies and vegetable
growers of central Florida have fought the cleanup plan at every
turn, filing about three dozen suits, appeals and challenges.
(Browner used to refer to these actions as the "suit du jour.")
The sugar growers complained that they had been turned into
scapegoats and that the water-purity standards were unrealistically
strict. A series of advertisements sponsored by U.S. Sugar argued
that the restoration plan would spend half a billion dollars
making swamp water cleaner than Evian bottled water.
</p>
<p> The confrontation eased dramatically in May, when the sugar
farmers, as part of an "environmental peace proposal," put their
lawsuits on hold and agreed to pay for some of the cleanup costs.
Perhaps it was the election of Clinton and Gore--and the elevation
of Browner to the EPA--that changed their mind. Maybe they
feared that they were losing the public relations battle and
that their federal agricultural subsidies might be at risk.
Or maybe they sincerely saw the need for compromise. Says Robert
Buker Jr., a senior vice president at U.S. Sugar: "You can't
shut down farming, but you can't destroy the environment either.
They have to coexist." The growers have offered to put up $120
million toward the cost of pollution control in return for a
new arrangement of filtering marshes that would take only 28,000
acres out of production (7,000 less than originally proposed)
and supplement them with 12,000 acres of public land.
</p>
<p> The negotiations could still hit a snag. Environmentalists already
complain that the state is letting the sugar companies off too
easily. Some growers could decide that it is cheaper to sue
than to capitulate. And the Miccosukee Indians, who hunt frogs
and give tourists boat rides in the Everglades, may insist that
water-purity standards be raised, not lowered. But for the first
time in five years, a solution is in sight that all parties
could live with--even the alligators circling Gene Duncan's
airboat.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>