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February 11, 2009 4:50 PM

South Florida Drought Damaging Economy

(AP)  South Florida is in the middle of one of its worst-ever droughts and everyone, from cane sugar growers, nurseries, fruit farmers and golfers, is suffering as a result.

"We can honestly say this is one of the most severe droughts that we have dating back to when records started in the early 1900s," said Randy Smith, spokesman for the South Florida Water Management District.

Lake Okeechobee, the region's primary reservoir, is down to less than half a foot above its record low. Farmers and the area's 600 golf courses are having to use 45 percent less water in the hardest-hit areas, and home sprinkler use is restricted to once a week.

Other Southeastern states, like Georgia, are also experiencing drought. Florida officials say theirs is comparable to one in 2001 that caused an estimated $400 million in agricultural losses.

The $15 billion landscaping and nursery industries, which comprise Florida's largest agricultural sector, may be the hardest hit. Most growers are concentrated around Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach counties on the rain-starved Atlantic Coast.

"We can make drought-tolerant and water-efficient plants, and we can put the right plants in the right place, but we have yet to figure out how to make it rain," said Ben Bolusky, executive vice president of the Florida Nursery, Growers and Landscape Association.

The cane sugar industry is also bracing for big losses. U.S. Sugar Corp. spokeswoman Judy Sanchez said crops were already worse than the 2001 drought, which caused $100 million to $200 million in damage around Lake Okeechobee.

The company is the nation's leading producer of cane sugar. A cold weather spell earlier this year didn't help matters.

"We had probably three freeze spells in winter that knocked some of the young cane back to the ground," Sanchez said. "It did not have adequate water, so some of the cane that was frost-damaged has not recovered its growth." Consumers may not see much change in sugar prices because producers elsewhere could fill the void.

Florida's citrus industry could also be affected, but consumers are unlikely to notice until next year. Much of the current harvest is already picked, but the dry weather stresses blooming fruit, said Mike Sparks, head of the grower's group Florida Citrus Mutual.

"When (the bloom) first came out, people said we're going to have a real good crop next year," Sparks said. "Now there's a little more concern in everyone's voice, how much of the crop is going to hold."

Voluntary water restrictions were recommended around the start of this year, and mandatory limits came in March. Tighter clamps were ordered in April, and on Wednesday the toughest restraints in history took effect in some areas, limiting home watering and cutting commercial use by almost half.

Golf courses are forced to spend most of their water on tees and greens, neglecting fairways and other areas.

The fairways are flecked, the greens mottled brown. PGA National doesn't look like a top golf course, as it suffers from the most severe water restrictions in South Florida history.

"We'll talk to people about it in the pro shop when they check in and say, 'You might notice things are a little bit browner today."' said Joel Paige, managing director at the course.

New rules will shut off 2 million gallons of water monthly from each of the two golf courses at Broken Sound Club in Boca Raton, director of golf maintenance Joe Hubbard said.

The drought has already taken its toll. One course is 75 percent brown, the other about 20 percent, Hubbard said. The club hosted a PGA Champion's Tour event in April.

Authorities hope the rainy season, which typically begins June 1, will wash away the trouble, but the area is so dry that even an average summer wouldn't break the drought.

"We've been getting little bits of rain here and there. Every drop helps," Sanchez said. "We're watching the weather reports with an avid interest every day."

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment
by dana417 May 20, 2007 4:46 PM EDT
Living in The Flori-duh Keys and many are ignoring the restrictions. The drinking water tastes bad and since we've switched to Spring the tennis elbow went away and we look and feel better. We don't have a lawn but the potted plants are thirsty and only getting it once a week. Cars and boat are dirty and we're doing our part to conserve.
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by j_flood May 19, 2007 11:07 AM EDT
EX-Floridan here...
Florida is the state that brought in the "love-bug" to eat the mosquito. Of course they never really tested their theory, just brought in the bugs from another ecos area - and they didn't eat the Florida mosquitoes. Since then twice a year the state is besieged with the highly acidic love bugs. When smashed on your windshield the milky fluid they excrete makes vision nearly impossible, and the acid from their bodies will eat away at your car's paint.

I bring this up not for nostalgia, but rather an example of the thought processes of decision makers in Florida. What? Running out of water? Florida? Never happen. Did I show you this bug that eats mosquitoes?
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by coffeehead-2009 May 19, 2007 9:23 AM EDT
So this whole country needs to re-evaluate our priorities....
Money, pristine visuals and the appearance that all is well.

or -

give our resources the ability to try to heal.
You can't take nature from the side of a creek and expect it to stay beautiful and productive in a desert environment.


Jason and Lisa Spangler have been maintaining a garden of native wildflowers and other plants in their front yard for years. But they almost lost their native plantings in August 2002, when they received a violation notice on behalf of their HOA.

Jason told me, "Someone came by on a 'random inspection,' taking pictures, and thought it was some sort of grass and weeds." The Spanglers faced legal action if they didn't mow it all down.

At the meeting, characterized by Spangler as "very unpleasant," he and Lisa were asked how they could have something "so ugly" in their front yard. "One board member said she had an art degree," said Jason, "and she could see that 'texture' of our yard just didn't look right."

To the board's chagrin, the Spanglers had backed up their claims with extensive documentation from the Native Plant Society of Texas. Lisa says board members resented what they saw as an intrusion by out-of-towners: "They asked, 'How much did you pay these people?'" But, said Jason, the evidence was overwhelming, and "they had no choice but to approve the garden."
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by coffeehead-2009 May 19, 2007 8:45 AM EDT
Floridian here....
It's pathetic. Our tax dollars cator to the wealthy area's; covering everything from their business deals to rebuilding their oceanfront vacation homes after yearly hurricane disasters.

Honestly the average homeowner DOES get fined at the local level - and heavily but selectively and to certain residents (more of a retaliatory response from city hall)
Some of us have tried... this week we have two "homeowners" associations sueing residents for their natural gardens - which are very water reserving but apparently not "pretty" enough for their areas. The working class is just now getting to the point of not being ABLE to afford to water AND wash our clothes.
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by nothappyatall May 19, 2007 5:29 AM EDT
2 MILLION gallons of water a MONTH for a golf course????? Time to shut them down, what a waste of land and water.
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by beadazzle May 18, 2007 7:22 PM EDT
Hmm i use to live in florida and glad i don't now. If they would quit building in the everglades and swamp area and killing off all the critters that use to live there,then they would have an ample supply of water.

They are causing their own problems down there and whinning about it now. Florida use to be the place to retire now people are sorry they moved there for several different reasons water and taxes and such.

Maybe they should demolish the areas where they took from nature and give it back now before it gets any worse.
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by mdk2dude May 18, 2007 2:31 PM EDT
We in California will trade the people in Florida any day for the amount of rainfall you get and throw away. We have learned long ago that water is precious and you conserve all you can because there will come a time when there is none. Then watch the howls go up when it could easily been avoided by just conserving all year and not just when the golf courses go brown. We had a 3 year period when we had very little water and we did the thing Florida should do now. Make every drop count. People first, cars and lawns last. No automatic serving of water in restaurants unless it is asked for. Golf courses should restrict water to just greens, tees and half the fairway. No rough or areas off the teeing area should be watered at all. Then you will have plenty of water for people.
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by r2rickster May 18, 2007 1:16 PM EDT

Has it occurred to anyone that not once but twice the "mental giants" in charge of managing our state's water supply have taken it upon themselves to dump millions gallons of our precious fresh water into the ocean in preparation for the hurricane season of which no one even knows the outcome? These specific individuals are the reason for this entire fiasco. Why don't we name the individuals who are the real cause of the worst drought in Florida history?

We had a horrible drought several years ago for the same reason and here we go again.

What we need are scientists to control our water supply, not the uninformed officials who destroy our environment over and over again.
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