Gov. Crist: you must veto these two stinker bills: SB 360 and SB 2080
By Gimleteye at 20 May, 2009, 6:00 am
Budget woes tied to the collapse of the housing bubble sucked the oxygen from press accounts of the Florida legislature that preoccupied itself with irrelevancies and more monuments to failed economic policies. It is no surprise that the perpetrators in the Legislature used the crisis– the worst in Florida since the Depression– to pass two new bills that only compound the difficulty of reviving the economy unless they are vetoed by Gov. Crist. SB 360 is another attempt by the Growth Machine to hobble “management” of growth in Florida. Year after year, special interests go after the Florida Department of Community Affairs in the idiotic effort to pin blame on the economic mess caused by suburban sprawl. The bill is particularly toxic in an important respect: the conversion of rural lands to sprawl without state review. As Miami-Dade taxpayers know, it was only the state of Florida’s opposition to large scale developments outside the Urban Development Boundary that stymied powerful developers who control the county commission. SB 2080, if signed into law by Governor Crist, will cut the public out of key water decisions before Florida’s Water Management Districts. The legislature wants to turn back time to the days decisions were made behind closed doors, by bureaucrats safely protected by the revolving door between private industry and agencies. SB 2080 circumvents government accountability and Florida’s sunshine law. Under SB 2080, key permitting decisions regarding our water supply would no longer be made by a multi-member board in a public meeting. Instead, the districts’ Executive Directors will decide on requests to withdraw water from our aquifer, rivers, lakes and other sources. The story of water management in Florida for the past decade has been all about pipes and engineering: the more, the better. If SB 2080 passes, regulators and regulated will be indistinguishable. Email Gov. Crist today charlie.crist@myflorida.com or call 850-488-4441: there are only a few days left for Gov. Crist to act on these bills. Please do it, now. (click ‘read more’, for more detail on these bad bills.) Sierra Club Florida is urging the veto of CS/CS/SB 360, titled “The Community Renewal Act.” This bill would undermine the ability of the State’s Department of Community Affairs and our regional planning councils to regulate growth throughout Florida. Specifically, the bill would: 1) Create a distorted definition of dense urban land areas – In lines 235 to 242, the bill amends section 163.3164, Florida Statutes, to redefine dense urban land areas as a municipality or county that has an average of at least 1,000 people per square mile of land area or a county which has a population of at least 1 million. The definition is woefully inadequate; 1000 people per square mile is approximately one home per 1.5 acres. This would allow many low-density suburban communities and rural towns to fit into this generous definition of dense urban land areas. 2) Grant easily-obtained exemptions to State transportation concurrency requirements – In lines 472 to 687, the bill amends section 163.3180, Florida Statutes, to provide a transportation concurrency exception to any county or municipality that fits into the new definition of dense urban land areas. For a county or municipality that doesn’t qualify as a dense urban area, the bill would allow it to provide the designation to any land classified in its comprehensive plan as urban infill, part of a community redevelopment area or part of an urban service area. This new policy could encourage so many requests for exceptions that it would lead to a wholesale abandonment of state transportation concurrency requirements. 3) Gut the State’s Development of Regional Impact process – In lines 1145 to 1218, the bill amends section 380.06, Florida Statutes, to exempt from the development of regional impact process any proposed developments in those counties and municipalities that fit
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Gov. Crist: you must veto these two stinker bills: SB 360 and SB 2080
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