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Introduction

Introduction. Everglades Litigation Collection 1994 - Donated by USAO to University of Miami School of Law Physical location - Law Library Special Collections and Archives Internet - www.law.miami.edu/everglades. Contents. 1 million pages of litigation and scientific documents

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Introduction

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  1. Introduction Everglades Litigation Collection • 1994 - Donated by USAO to University of Miami School of Law • Physical location - Law Library Special Collections and Archives • Internet - www.law.miami.edu/everglades

  2. Contents • 1 million pages of litigation and scientific documents • 50 cases from federal and state fora • 1 million frames of microfilm • 250 mb bibliographic database • Hundreds of deposition and hearing transcripts • Voluminous productions of scientific data and reports

  3. Parties Plaintiff Defendant Pleadings, documents Complaint Answer Deposition Orders Decision Civil vs. Criminal Statutes Caselaw Jurisdiction Federal State Administrative Legal overview

  4. Legal overview Trial Levels • Trial level court • Intermediate appellate level • Higher appellate level • Highest appellate level

  5. Legal overview Anatomy of Pleadings • Jurisdiction • Case Number • Style • Plaintiff • Defendant • Type • Complaint • Answer • Motion Summary Judgment • Appeal • Order

  6. Background • 1821 - U.S. buys Florida from Spain • 1845 - Florida becomes a state • 1850 - Congress passes Swamp Lands Act.Gives ownership of overflowed lands in the Everglades to Florida on the condition that lands might be drained and settled, or used for agriculture. State sells vast tracts of land at low cost to railroads. During Civil War railroads went bankrupt. • 1905 - Napoleon Bonaparte Broward elected governor • Drain the Everglades! • 1906 - 1929 - Everglades Drainage District. • Went bankrupt • 1941 - Publication of The Everglades: River of Grass

  7. Background • 1947 - Everglades National Park created by Congress • 1947 - 2 hurricanes hit south Florida, flooding • 1948 - C&S Florida Project for Flood Control and Other Purposes • CSFP - Prime Purpose - Flood Control • USAO built 1,400 miles of levees and canals so that flood waters pass around farms and cities, carried swiftly into the Everglades or the sea • Kissimmee River Channel • Lake Okeechobee dike expansion • Eastern perimeter leve • State lands made into conservation areas • CSFP - EAA • 700,000 acres drained, leeved. • Irrigation pumps

  8. Background • CSFP - Loxahatchee N.W.R. • To make up for harm project would do to wildlife habitat, northernmost WCA leased to Department of Interior • CSFP - completed on 1962 • Put an end to river of grass • cut off the flow of water from the north • water allowed to flow through canals and structures only • USACOE regulations determined timing and quantity of water flow • natural hydroperiod replaced by ACOE regime • CSFP - Local sponsor - CSFFCD • Florida passed legislation creating Central and Southern Florida Flood Control District • CSFFCD - Assembled land, operated pumps and canals under ACOE guidelines • Board of directors appointed by govenor • Authority to levy small tax over many counties in south Florida

  9. Background Emergence of the Florida sugar industry • 1959 - Revolution in Cuba. • U.S. embargo on Cuban sugar exports • U.S. quotas on sugar imports from other countries • Rapid expansion of farming in the EAA • 1960 - 1975 - Sugar acreage increased sixfold • 421,000 acres planted, sugar now primary crop in EAA

  10. Background The Intensification of Environmentalism in Florida • Roots in creation of ENP • Some environmental values in CSFP • Fight against jetport • 1960’S - changes to CSFP in response to concern about environment • 1967 - ACOE and CSFFCD built new canal to bring water arround levee on north boundary and into center of park • 1972 - congress passed legislation guaranteeing min flows of water from project’s canals and structures into ENP • 1978 - Florida proposed that Kissimmee River ditch filled, and old riverbed restored • 1972 - Flood Control District was given the responsibility for regulating water quality and administering new state laws re wetland drainage • 1976 - Flood Control district rebaptized as SFWMD

  11. Background Phosphorus problem • Water quality became an issue in the 1970’s. focused on Lake Okeechobee algal blooms • SFWMD scientists believed the largest cause was nutrients from dairy farms along Kissimmee • Water entering the lake from EAA contributed 14% phosphorus • 30% of water pumped from EAA went into lake, the rest pumped south • 1979 - district, state, ACOE stop pumping into lake, but increased pumping south into WCAs • 1974 - district scientists first warned about cattail infestation in WCAs as result of phosphorus loading would eventually reach the park and alter natural • Nothing was done due to powerful influence of sugar industry

  12. Background • SWIM Act • 1987 - state legislature passes SWIM Act, requires water management districts to prepare plans to avoid and reverse degradation of state’s waters. • Set targets for how much phosphorus might enter Lake Okeechobee • Required district to prepare a plan for the lake • Set up technical advisory council to study effects of phosphorus in WCAs, and other areas south of the lake • Included a provision which addressed issue of phosphorus in the park • “water management districts shall not divert waters to the park in such a way that state water quality standards are violated or that the nutrient in such waters adversely affect indigenous vegetative communities or wildlife.”

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