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The dry times were apparent in
the skies of Miami as smoke from various brush
fires filled the air, Tuesday. Photo by Mitchell
Zachs/MagicalPhotos.com |
We are besieged this week by water
issues. A deep drought afflicts us throughout the state,
with the smoke from brush fires at the edges of the
Everglades stalling traffic on I-95. County Mayor Carlos
Alvarez is threatening hefty fines to scofflaw lawn-waterers
and car-washers.
At the same time, an out-of-season storm named Andrea
tore up the coastline, much to the delight of local
surfers, who braved a concentration of sharks that had
moved close to shore. One lifeguard speculated aloud
that the sharks were chasing small fish into the sand
because their natural food sources farther out had been
depleted.
In some places along the coast, the waves actually
washed over the road. Not far from where I live, the
lifeguard shacks were standing in shallow pools of water
as the beach was ripped out from under them. Meanwhile,
in Fort Lauderdale, a confused Arctic seal flopped
exhausted onto the banks of the Tarpon River. He was
captured by well-meaning interventionists and died at
Sea World in Orlando. It was like watching
a Carl Hiaasen metaphor spin through its inevitable life
cycle.
Hurricane experts have been quoted by various media
predicting 17 named storms for this season, which, by
the way, doesn’t officially start for another three
weeks. Global warming alarmists, among them Miami Mayor
Manny Diaz, are predicting big problems if we don’t make
serious efforts to fight, as he said in a recent State
of the City address, “rising sea levels, a threatened
water supply and a threat to one of the most fragile
eco-systems in the world — our Everglades.”
“The water level doesn’t have to rise too much for us to
be riding around Miami in canoes,” Manny Diaz quipped to
Newsweek not long ago.
Last month (as reported by Emily Witt of the Miami
New Times), University of Miami geology professor
Harold Wanless told a new Miami-Dade County group called
the Climate Change Advisory Task Force, all about how a
good chunk of prime real estate will be under water by
the end of the century, if not sooner. I’m having
visions of all the buildings along our sparkling shore
becoming the new Great Condo Barrier Reef.
As if all this was not enough to make you realize that
we exist on this little sandbar only by the grace of
meteorology, on Tuesday the County Commission considered
something called the South Miami-Dade Watershed Study
and Plan.
The watershed study concerns 370 square miles roughly
bordered by Biscayne Bay, Tamiami Trail, the Monroe
County line and Krome Avenue. This area is where much of
the sprawl growth is occurring, and where the impacts on
Biscayne National Park, as well as water supply, roads,
schools, fire and safety infrastructure, are greatest.
Of late the state has been squeezing the county because
we don’t adequately conserve our shrinking water supply.
A consultant spent several years juggling these
considerations, and growth projections that have the
population in that area doubling to 1.5 million by 2060.
(See the study here: www.southmiamidadewatershed.com.)
For nearly six years, an advisory committee comprised of
various environmental, agricultural, development and
residential interests met to react to the plan and offer
its own recommendations for the county to include in its
comprehensive plan. In that time, the group was unable
to come to enough consensus to actually recommend
anything.
So what they did was have each member of the group vote
individually on each of 68 proposals the
consultants came up with to guide county decision-makers
in channeling growth in that area. “The idea that
consensus will be reached in that community is like
utopia,” allowed Commissioner Katy Sorenson. “I don’t
think it’s going to happen in our lifetime or ever.”
On May 8, activists had their hackles up over the
prospect that County Commissioner Natacha Seijas, who
has been known to trash manatees in public rhetoric,
would somehow manage to kill the watershed study before
it threatened the economic interests of her supporters.
The activists pointed to a tricky little “whereas”
clause inserted in the resolution that pointed out the
advisory committee couldn’t agree on anything, so the
plan itself “is not satisfactory or appropriate for
approval ….” But at the meeting, Seijas voluntarily
removed that clause. The commission unanimously approved
the study/plan, whatever it is, and sent it to the
Planning Department, where, Seijas said enigmatically,
it would be “shredded” by county staff who would pick
out the stuff they found useful.
Commissioner Dennis Moss, on the other hand, implored
“that we don’t just let this $3 million study sit on the
shelf.”
Meanwhile, those pot-stirrers at the FIU Research
Institute on Social and Economic Policy just today (May
10) released a study of likely voters in Coconut Grove,
downtown, Midtown, Allapattah, Morningside and Little
Haiti.
The FIU researchers asked focus groups of these voters
about their feelings on a host of development issues,
and found that most were “highly dissatisfied with the
development planning process, the level of oversight by
government, and accountability of developers and
government officials.”
One of the researchers, Marcos Feldman, told me they
were trying to get a sense of what people in different
neighborhoods and economic classes of Miami were
thinking about development. While there were many
different issues and opinions expressed, Feldman said
there was “a striking convergence of opinion that
crossed socio-economic lines.” Regardless of background,
these voters felt excluded by the development process
and disappointed in the accountability of their local
government in protecting their interests.
To recap: Arctic seals, drought, fires, traffic, sea
level rise and hurricanes. What are we going to do?