Email insights: Say it ain’t so, Joe Negron

Joe Negron

Some people simply won’t take no for an answer, such as Republican State Sen. Joe Negron.

After the South Florida Water Management District rejected a land deal for the state to buy thousands of acres south of Lake Okeechobee for water treatment and storage, environmentalists and a handful of politicians – including Negron – are not letting go.

That prompted a recent email from the Miami Tea Party with an ominous warning: Will eminent domain be next tool used to seize this private land?

SFWMD, in what the group sees as a reasonable move, nixed the offer to buy as much as 46,000 acres south of Lake O. The land would be set aside to build a 26,000-acre reservoir to funnel water to estuaries south of the lake and into the Everglades.

The board saw the project for what it was: too costly, with too little return.

“Ultimately, we believe that history may show the water district made the right decision,” said an editorial from The Palm Beach Post. “Because, in the end, the details really did matter.

“The purchase apparently would have cost far more than contemplated, accomplished far less, and encumbered the resources needed to more quickly solve the system’s most pressing environmental problems.”

Apparently, that argument wasn’t what Negron wanted to hear as he campaigns to become the next Senate President.

In the past, Negron has been practical in such fiscal matters, friendly to the Tea Party in its push for responsible government.

So what happened, the email wonders?

Negron is pushing to amend the state’s budget during the upcoming Special Session to grab $45 million – and have the state borrow another $450 million – for buying private land south of Lake O.

Negron’s unprecedented action would essentially create new powers of eminent domain, allowing the government to seize that land from owners who do not want to sell.

The prospect of eminent domain has brought a chill down spines of landowners, not only south of Lake Okeechobee, but statewide. Few would be safe from seizure, if such vague terms as are included in Negron’s proposal are allowed to pass.

While the exact land under consideration isn’t specified, one thing is clear: Land would be taken, even while owners refuse to sell.

If accepted, the amendment could lead to a nightmare scenario for Floridians as well. Taxpayers would take on millions in new debt and private property seized from unwilling sellers, all for a land grab that experts believe would have minimal impact on the Everglades or overall water quality.

The email continues:

“Experts, including those managing the Everglades restoration program, agree that the solution to Lake Okeechobee and the estuaries water quality lies north of the Lake — not south. Negron’s amendment would force us to borrow millions to seize land from private property owners in the wrong place! Only a reservoir north of the Lake would serve to increase water flow in the Lake, the estuaries, and the Everglades.”

This is simply not the Joe Negron everyone knows, the authors of the email contend.

Florida already owns more land than any state east of the Mississippi: The government controls more than a quarter of the state’s land mass.

Also at issue is the scope of the proposal: U.S. Sugar-owned land under consideration would be bought piecemeal, is not contiguous, and only certain parts would be suitable for restoration.

For those reasons, the Tea Party says, lawmakers must give the people – including those who actually own the land – a damn good explanation why, particularly the real costs and viable use.

“The biggest and most useful part of the land could be made into a functional reservoir,” the Post writes, “but at an ultimate cost of $2.5 billion.”

A recent study projected 1 million acre-feet of water storage is needed south of the lake to hold 4 feet of Lake O water. Estimates of the proposed reservoir is that it would hold only 84,000 acre-feet, providing a relatively miniscule benefit.

Certainly not $2.5 billion worth.

Questioning Negron’s uncharacteristic actions, the Tea Party thinks his motivation might be more political than practical.

Somehow, someone pursuaded Negron – powerful special interests, the email suggests – to offer this ill-fated legislation, which would “increase debt, seize private property and add unnecessary land to the state’s already-ample real estate holdings.”

All of which leads the Tea Party, as well as many faithful voters, to proclaim: “Say it ain’t so, Joe!”

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

  • John Fleming

    May 30, 2015 at 6:38 pm

    When dealing with Joe Negron, make sure he keeps his hands where you can see them

Comments are closed.


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