2024 Legislative Priorities
- Protect wetlands: Reject any attempt to preempt local authority on wetlands, while safeguarding existing state-level protections.
- Get serious about toxic algae: With toxic algae now a perennial and worsening problem, Florida cannot wait any longer to take decisive action.<
- Fix our failing BMAPs: Update BMPs and toughen enforcement to meet pollution-reduction goals.
- Don’t ban fertilizer bans: County/municipal fertilizer ordinances are key to improved water quality. Any attempt to weaken existing ordinances or preempt local governments’ ability to enact such ordinances must be rejected.
- Smarter, controlled development: Re-strengthen the state’s role in growth management.
- Stop sugarcane burning: The outdated practice of pre-harvest burning must be phased out and growers required to transition to safer “green” harvesting.
- Send more clean water south: Acquire more land for Stormwater Treatment Areas to store water, clean it and move it south to rehydrate the southern Everglades.
Latest News –
Spotlight On: How the U.S. Farm Bill contributes to toxic algae in Florida
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QmfsR-k3SA8 Here’s how sugar supports in the U.S. Farm Bill create toxic algae blooms Big Sugar has a very sweet deal. U.S. Sugar and Florida Crystals — which grow hundreds of thousands of acres of sugarcane in Florida — [...]
DeSantis just signed “Sprawl Bill” 540 into law
This afternoon, Gov. DeSantis signed into law the worst environmental bill passed by the Florida Legislature during the 2023 session. Senate Bill 540, which will take effect July 1, is a death knell for smart growth in Florida. It [...]
How They Voted on Key Bills –
2024
2023
Key Players –
The following elected officials have an outsized influence on environmental decisions made by Florida’s Legislature during the 2023 legislative session.