Posted on 01/11/2018 2:47:03 AM PST by Oshkalaboomboom
It was a clear victory that most Floridians would celebrate.
President Donald Trumps administration vowed to spare the states waters from offshore drilling. Florida was off the table.
But a day after this extraordinary concession one that no other coastal state was awarded environmentalists, Democrats and other governors were questioning the way it all played out.
It turns out that Florida was the only coastal state that didnt take a clear stance on the drilling proposal when the Interior Department came calling this summer. Gov. Rick Scott, who has supported drilling in the past, publicly intervened only in recent days. Meanwhile, governors from other states firmly objected, and yet still face the prospect of oil rigs towering offshore.
Frank Jackalone, the Sierra Clubs Florida chapter director, called Scotts failure to oppose the plan sooner irresponsible. He said it bolstered his sense that the deal was just a ploy to secure environmental credentials for Scott ahead of an anticipated run against Democratic Sen. Bill Nelson, a staunch drilling opponent.
Scott jumped in Johnny-come-lately and now hes claiming all the victory for himself, Jackalone said. Everybody whos been fighting drilling for years is seeing Rick Scott in the period of a week change his tune on drilling and then emerge as the champion in a choreographed press conference.
Scotts office contends that the governor and his staff have often discussed their opposition to more drilling with the Department of the Interior. Communications director John Tupps said Scott raised the issue with Sec. Ryan Zinke in an October meeting. The two met again this week after Scott requested it.
When Zinke announced their deal on Tuesday, he said President Trump had encouraged him to consider the states perspective, and that Scott had made a case for Floridas unique status and reliance on tourism.
Senator Nelson and anyone else who opposes oil drilling off of Floridas coast should be happy that the governor was able to secure this commitment, Tupps said. This isnt about politics. This is good policy for Florida.
But congressional Democrats like Rep. Kathy Castor of Tampa questioned the timing of the announcement.
It was very disconcerting that Gov. Scott was the only governor who did not raise the red flag when the Interior Department said, Heres our plan for offshore oil drilling, Castor said Wednesday. It just seems disingenuous.
Other environmentalists said they, too, were skeptical about the motivations behind Tuesdays announcement.
Its surprising that it was as simple as Gov. Scott asking to be taken out of the drilling plan when really most of the other coastal governors have done the same, and theyre not out of the drilling plan, said Jennifer Rubiello, director of Environment Florida.
In a statewide race against a Democrat, Scott will tout his role in saving Floridas shores. Despite having reservations about the possible political motivations, Enid Sisskin of Gulf Coast Environmental Defense said the exemption will benefit the coast, for now.
We need it to be permanently protected so different administrations cant change it depending on how the wind blows, Sisskin said.
Details on the Florida exemption have been scant. In describing its terms, Zinke said simply, Florida will be taken off the table.
In a speech on the Senate floor on Wednesday, Sen. Nelson pushed for elaboration.
Well, what exactly does off the table mean? All of the Eastern gulf? Half of it? 125 miles off the coast? Nelson said. Right now his promise is just empty words.
Nelson doubled down on his characterization of the announcement as a stunt and asked Floridians to object to the federal plan.
Castor said she wondered whether Zinkes departure from the agencys formal public comment process could put the no-drilling agreement in a precarious place.
What I fear is, in their haste to make this very political announcement, they may have damaged Floridas legal position, she said.
Oil industry leaders also decried the departure from typical procedure.
I think its premature, said David Mica, director of the Florida Petroleum Council. We should be following the established process prior to coming to conclusions in all of our decisions.
As it applies to Florida, there doesnt seem to have been a formal process.
On Wednesday, Zinke told The Washington Post that it was a personal connection with Scott that led to their deal this week, not the process that his agency employed to survey what states thought of the drilling plan.
Zinke said he first met Scott during Hurricane Irma preparations, then again as they worked on Everglades restoration. When Scott wrote him objecting about the drilling plan, Zinke felt moved to respond.
Quite frankly, Gov. Scott called me and [also] expressed in writing a desire to have a meeting, Zinke said, according to the Post. That meeting was the first in what I believe will be a series of conversations with other state leaders, the secretary said. I will no doubt talk to every governor. It doesnt matter to me whether youre Republican or Democrat. This is going to be a long process.
But in the actual process that could be reviewed by the public, neither Florida nor Scott volunteered an opinion.
Over the summer, the Department of the Interior asked states for information/comment on its drilling plan. Florida officials outlined serious concerns, including drillings impact on military training, marine life and tourism, but ultimately expressed no position for or against.
It is imperative that safety and environmental protection be paramount in conducting (Outer Continental Shelf) oil and gas activities, stated an Aug. 17 letter from a Florida Department of Environmental Protection administrator.
In a statement Wednesday, spokeswoman Lauren Engel said that the DEP clearly communicated a plethora of concerns.
But no objection was made, either.
While three states didnt respond to the agency at all, 19 others made their positions obvious.
Texas and Louisiana, for instance, said they supported the plan, while the governors of California, Oregon and Washington, all Democrats, jointly said they opposed drilling. The California Fish and Game Commission even passed a resolution supporting a ban on oil and gas leasing.
Now, leaders in some of those anti-drilling states have been crying foul.
Gov. Andrew Cuomo, a Democrat, tweeted, New York doesnt want drilling off our coast either. Where do we sign up for a waiver @SecretaryZinke?
California Rep. Adam Schiff tweeted, Dear Secretary Zinke, California like Florida, has hundreds of miles of beautiful coastline and a governor who wants to keep it that way. Or is that not enough for blue states?
“Just how exactly did Florida get excused from oil drilling?”
Er....a note from home?
“Just how exactly did Florida get excused from oil drilling?
Er....a note from home?”
Because the GOP can’t win a national election without Florida. Dems have a lock in NY and Cali. Thereby, GOP must carry Texas and Florida to off-set.
I’m no environmentalist but it seems odd that Florida would be a state producing oil. It’s not known for its oil and it’s seasonally unstable and it’s big draw are the lush beaches on the west coast and east coast.
I would hate to see it go big in the oil production business.
South Carolina, Georgia, and California can say the same thing. Should they be excluded as well?
No, they are not the same thing. *phone hangs up*
Given what’s off Florida, it’ll probably never be big business. Good call by Trump.
It’s always a cost/benefit analysis. Which grade oil, how much will it cost to get it, refine it, to sell it where for how much. There’s a time the nation might need whatever the east coast could bring, but it’s not now. If we’re talking nat gas, however, that’s a different kettle of fish.
...Scott jumped in Johnny-come-lately and now hes claiming all the victory for himself...
Democrats get out maneuvered again.
Um, Mar-a-Lago?
And Drill CA right through Jerry Brown’s head.
Just incase FL ever thinks of becoming a blue state... Trump will have you surrounded by oil rigs and windmills
So what.
Just a little payback for Obama sending the jihadis en masse to every red state in the country. heh
:)
The Gulf is loaded with oil
“Just how exactly did Florida get excused from oil drilling?”
Isn’t Mar A Lago on the Florida coast?
Just sayin.
>The Gulf is loaded with oil
Bingo. Course, most Floridians think their A/C runs off unicorn farts and their hybrids recharge from sunshine. I mean, those YUGE rigs just *FEET* from the shore....
Unfort. Scott’s of the pandering type (P.R., illegals in schools, big $$ in ‘education’). He’s pulled his head out of his ass long enough to go brown nose to D.C., as the story correctly surmises, leading from behind.
IMO, sad to see so many approving of the D.C. centrist philosophy; where’s all the States’ Rights crowd now?
Sorry, the State, along w/ the drillers/scientists/etc. should be making the decision.
Florida’s economy is dependent on tourism. It is also home to the most 1st magnitude fresh water springs in the world. World famous beaches and world class resorts, fishing, hiking and the best rated state park system.
People come here for vacation. Florida doesn’t need oil drilling to sustain its economy.
The supposed States Rights crowd is having orgasms at the thought of screwing California and the west coast, hypocrites.
States rights ends 12 miles off the coast.
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