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Ebb and Fla.Reporter Michael Grunwald gabs about his new book on the Everglades27 Mar 2006
For about 5,000 years, the waters of the peninsula we now call Florida flowed south into the Kissimmee River. The Kissimmee emptied into enormous Lake Okeechobee, which in turn spilled over into a vast, shallow sheet that slid slowly along the nearly flat expanse of south Florida to the ocean. This was the complex and subtle ecosystem of the natural Everglades, a seemingly endless marsh replete with sawgrass, birds, bugs, and muck dubbed "Grassy Water" by the Seminole Indians. "No country that I have ever heard of bears any resemblance to it," wrote one 19th-century U.S. soldier in a local newspaper after he was sent to drive the Seminole out of the state. "It seems like a vast sea, filled with grass and green trees."
The Swamp: The Everglades, Florida, and the Politics of Paradise, by Michael Grunwald,
Simon & Schuster, 384 pgs., 2006.
Grunwald's in-depth reporting on the Everglades began in a Post series, which earned him a 2003 Society of Environmental Journalists Award. Approaching south Florida's waves of rogues and reformers with marvelous pacing and style, he avoids judging figures from the past on modern terms in favor of interweaving the ecological, social, and political histories of the Everglades into a cracking good yarn. Grist spoke with Grunwald recently as he drove along a Florida highway toward Orlando. The occasional dropped cell-phone connection didn't impede a lively conversation about restoration, resistance, and the perils of being misunderstood.
Michael Grunwald.
Photo: The Washington Post.
In my series, the Everglades was supposed to be the last part -- the happy good-news story. When I finally went down there, I realized that it was a lot more complicated. It's not exactly your grandfather's Corps of Engineers, but it's not a corps of biologists either. And there were some serious questions about whether this Everglades restoration project was actually going to restore the Everglades.
If the skeeters don't getcha then the gators will.
Photo: iStockphoto.
When I visited the Kissimmee [in 2002] it was my first time in the ecosystem. A [state biologist] named Lou Toth, who was really the guiding force behind the project, took me into this broad-leaf marsh, a bunch of scraggly vegetation and water up to your shins. He cut off the airboat and made his grand gesture, saying, "A year ago this was all a bone-dry cattle pasture." I looked around and said wow, if it's this good now, what will it look like in 10 years? Lou looked at me like I was a moron and said, "Like this. We're done. If you blow up a dam, if you get out of nature's way, nature comes back." And it's true. The fish, the birds, the dissolved oxygen levels, the sandbars are back. But the Everglades restoration is a lot more complicated, because there are 7 million people living around the Everglades, which is not true of the Kissimmee.
When I started writing about the Everglades in 2002, the Post ran a story with Lou basically trashing the restoration project, saying that if the Corps hadn't learned the lessons of the Kissimmee, they wouldn't get it right. He got into a lot of trouble. Lou had been the employee of the year at his water management district the year they started restoring the Kissimmee. A couple years later he was demoted.
In The Same Vein
Stormy Whether
Enviro issues play big in the race for Florida's electoral votes I'm about to marry into a developer family. My mother-in-law doesn't build houses because she's a bad person; she builds houses because there are millions of people in central and southern Florida because it's 70 degrees and beautiful, and there are millions more coming. The question is whether you can put them in the right places so you're not destroying the resources.
Water is going to be the oil of the 21st century. If we can't figure out a way to share it, you're going to see wars fought over water. Everglades restoration is an ideal way to demonstrate that we can manage our water so that there's enough for sustainable agriculture, and for the people who are going to continue to come, but also for a healthy ecosystem.
Recently in southeast Florida a bunch of developers, including a former business partner and others close to Jeb Bush, have been pushing for extending an urban development boundary. Jeb actually stepped in and said no, you're going to destroy Dade County's water supply. It shocked the enviros because he's made no secret that he's not a big fan of theirs. But it was an incredibly progressive decision.
Smith is the guy who, early in the book, is watching the oral arguments before the Supreme Court on Bush v. Gore with a very serious rooting interest. And suddenly he walks out in the middle of the most important Supreme Court case in decades, the case that would decide the leader of the free world -- and goes over to the White House to celebrate the passage of the Everglades restoration bill.
It's a little bit tragic, the story of the split between the enviros and the Clinton administration over the Everglades. To vastly oversimplify, the first issue that popped up was the Everglades Forever Act, which basically was about phosphorus pollution coming off the sugar fields. The Clinton administration cut a deal that involved Big Sugar paying a few hundred million dollars and effecting the largest nutrient pollution cleanup in the history of the world, and thought it had done a wonderful thing. But enviros said it was a horrible sellout. From that moment forward, Bruce Babbitt and some of his aides essentially decided the enviros didn't know what they were talking about and there was no point in listening to them.
The nutrient pollution cleanup has been a terrific project that has done a lot of good. It certainly wasn't a pure sellout. Yet the enviros were also right that it's not enough, that the Everglades is just being poisoned a lot slower.
By mid-century there was a realization that stopping hunters and fishers was not enough to save a place -- you've got to protect the land as well. Everglades National Park was actually the first one that was preserved not just for spectacular scenery, but also for its unique biology.
As the ecology movement sprang up, people realized that the health of national parks is affected by activities outside their borders, and simultaneously they realized that people really care about the air we breathe, the water we drink, the landscapes we like, the fish that we eat.
The best thing that environmentalists have on their side is the environment. People actually like it. One of the lessons of the Everglades is that when you don't write off one of the parties you can create a bidding war with both sides wanting to do the right thing. The idea that you should just say the Republicans hate the environment so screw 'em seems horribly counterproductive, particularly when people are starting to realize that their aquifers depend on conservation, that their ecotourism and fishing economies depend on it.
While I certainly understand this kind of complaint -- how come they're getting $160 million and we're getting bupkis -- I do think that everybody should care about the fate of that restoration plan. The Everglades is the world's most beloved, intensely studied wetland. If the Everglades restoration can work, the 21st century could become an era of ecosystem restoration. But it will send a really bad message if it fails.
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