Bradenton Herald, neighbors give thumbs up to Mosaic Wingate Mine expansion

mosaic mine expansion

This week, the Mosaic Company is asking Manatee County commissioners to approve a zoning change that will allow the Polk County-based firm to expand its Wingate Mine property by more than 3,600 acres.

The request by the world’s largest manufacturer of phosphate-based fertilizers is garnering support from several of Mosaic’s residential neighbors, as well as the editorial board of the Bradenton Herald.

Linda C. Eneix of Myakka City wrote the commission in support, calling Mosaic an “exemplary” corporate neighbor.

“Mosaic Phosphates has impressed me as one of the most caring, responsive and community supportive institutions imaginable in today’s commercial world,” writes Eneix, a resident of the Winding Creek neighborhood adjoining the Wingate Mine site. “Mosaic is involved in everything — even to the point of sponsoring an annual weekend lunch meeting for their immediate neighbors, the Winding Creek residents, to personally address any concerns or questions.”

Another resident, Gary Reeder of Duette, wrote a letter to the Herald saying how important phosphate is to the agricultural economy throughout America and the world.

The fourth-generation Manatee County farmer, who is also president of the Manatee County Farm Bureau, said: “Anyone who argues against phosphate mining is also arguing against farmers, the jobs we create, and the abundant, affordable food we produce with the necessity of fertilizer.”

But for every Mosaic supporter, just as many are opposing the expansion; many of whom fear the potential damage to the Myakka River and nearby waterways.

“There can be no discounting the potential hazards or the environmental impacts,” the Herald editorial board writes. “Mosaic’s team of ecologists, engineers and biologists have proved to be creative in restoration and reclamation, as a tour of some projects indicates.”

The editorial then discusses some of the intricacies of fertilizer production, where phosphate ore is extracted through the application of sulfuric acid, creating a waste product called phosphogypsum, a byproduct that contains both uranium and radium.

This phosphogypsum was at the heart of the sinkhole in September at Mosaic’s New Wales fertilizer plant in Polk County, where some people worried that excess wastewater drained into the Floridan aquifer. Nevertheless, an investigation by both Mosaic and the Florida Department of Environmental Protection determined that all the polluted water had remained on company property.

The paper saw the New Wales incident as a “rare occurrence.”

“Certainly, there is the potential for other accidents,” the editors conclude, before calling for commissioners to approve the request, “but if that is the measure by which we judge projects, little would be accomplished.”

Peter Schorsch

Peter Schorsch is the President of Extensive Enterprises and is the publisher of some of Florida’s most influential new media websites, including Florida Politics and Sunburn, the morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics. Schorsch is also the publisher of INFLUENCE Magazine. For several years, Peter's blog was ranked by the Washington Post as the best state-based blog in Florida. In addition to his publishing efforts, Peter is a political consultant to several of the state’s largest governmental affairs and public relations firms. Peter lives in St. Petersburg with his wife, Michelle, and their daughter, Ella.


One comment

  • Glen Gibellina

    January 26, 2017 at 8:58 am

    Mining and neighbors are never compatibility
    If Manatee County approves Mosaic’s requests for a re-zone and Master Mining Plan at Wingate East, it will be sending 40 million tons of toxic and hazardous waste into communities outside the county over the years the mine is in operation.
    How can this be allowed to happen, you may ask?
    Surely there is some public benefit that offsets the potential for shipping a mountain of disease-causing waste to neighboring communities, contaminating the state’s drinking water, permanently destroying native Florida habitat, and turning the east county into a wasteland? Good question.
    The short answer is no.
    Phosphate mining is a net economic loss to the people of Florida, and a catastrophic loss of the ecological functions embodied in the 800-plus square miles of native habitat, home to many threatened and endangered species, ruined forever during the strip-mining process.
    Read more here: http://www.bradenton.com/…/opn-colum…/article126350574.html…

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