Monday, March 30, 2009

Help Save Egmont Key


--- On Mon, 3/30/09, Mariella Smith <insightgraphics@earthlink.net> wrote:
From: Mariella Smith <insightgraphics@earthlink.net>
Subject: Help Save Egmont Key


Please e-mail state legislators to save Egmont Key. 

You can use the sample letter at the very end of this e-mail. Just copy and paste the addresses into your "To" field, all as one paragraph, then copy the message or write your own.

Please forward this message to anyone who might help.

See my article below for more info. It is posted online at SticksOfFire.com, where you can add your comments and find photos and links to more info:
http://tr.im/egmontsticks

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Battle to Save Egmont Key
By Mariella Smith

Saturday's Tribune carries a passionate call to arms asking citizens to help save Egmont Key. Bay Soundings editor Mary Kelly Hoppe writes,

"It's time to call in the cavalry. Deliberations in Tallahassee may seal the fate of this beloved historical island. Letters and calls to legislators are needed now if we are to muster the support to save Egmont Key."

Florida's legislators are on the verge of removing this park from the state park system, ceasing state oversight & management, and eliminating the position of the one ranger who patrols and protects the park, its considerable wildlife, and its historic lighthouse & fort.

Egmont Key attracts 100,000 visitors a year. At a cost of only $140,000 per year, this park's management is a sensible investment in a prime tourist attraction. The value of the site's historic artifacts and wildlife habitat are, of course, priceless.

"The national wildlife refuge is recognized as one of the most significant bird nesting colonies in the southeastern United States. Last year, nearly 1,000 brown pelicans nested on the island, along with 25,000 laughing gulls, 5,000 royal terns, 1,000 sandwich terns and 165 black skimmers.

"The island also is recognized as a major nesting habitat for loggerhead sea turtles. In 2008, there were 50 sea turtle nests, with about half returning some 2,500 hatchlings to the sea. Poaching is negligible, as nests are monitored around the clock by volunteer interns. Year-round residents include about 1,800 lumbering gopher tortoises."

A couple of months ago, when the state first considered cutting ranger service at the park, protests came from many groups and individuals including the Florida Lighthouse Association, Rough Riders, Kathy Castor, Sam Gibbons, various environmental groups and others, rallied by the volunteers of the Egmont Key Alliance. In early January legislators removed Egmont Key from the list of items to be cut during the legislature's special session, and supporters breathed a sigh of relief. More recently, during this current session of the legislature, citizens were reassured that Egmont Key remained safe. As U.S. Congressman Bill Young wrote in a letter to Jim Spangler, Past President of the Egmont Key Alliance:

"on March 6th, Governor Charlie Crist announced that all nineteen state parks threatened with closure as a result of the budget cuts being put into place within the state will remain open. Money from the state environmental trust fund will be utilized to ensure the continued operations of these parks, including Egmont Key."

Three weeks later, legislators have turned against the park once more.

This is yet another sign of our legislators' misplaced priorities as they narrowly focus on their own petty short-term agendas rather than offer long-term vision and real solutions to our problems. Faced with today's economic challenges, they mindlessly suggest ways to transfer more of the costs of development from developers to taxpayers — claiming we need to support development as an economic stimulus.

They fail to see that tourism is a more sustainable revenue source than their Ponzi scheme of cancerous overdevelopment, and so they miss the value of this park as a tourist attraction. Furthermore, they are too shortsighted to preserve our legacy of historic and natural resources.

They will only act in our interest if we demand this of them.

Jim Spangler has once again issued a plea for help, asking people to urge our leaders not to abandon this valuable Tampa Bay asset. I've written a sample letter, with e-mail links for some of the relevant lawmakers, to make it easy for you to ask them to continue to keep this park safe for wildlife as well as Florida residents and visitors.
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Sample letter to legislators:

[Just select the whole list of e-mail addresses below, all at once, and copy and paste it into the "to" field of your e-mail program. Include your senator & representative if they are not listed below. Hillsborough County residents can send a copy to the Hillsborough county legislative delegation.]

To:

Subject: Please continue funding for Egmont Key within the State Park system


Dear Legislators & Governor,

Please maintain funding for management and ranger service for Egmont Key, and retain it as a State Park within the state Parks Department.

 

Egmont Key attracts 100,000 visitors a year. At a cost of only $140,000 per year, this park's management is a sensible investment in a prime tourist attraction. The value of the site's historic artifacts and wildlife habitat are priceless. Without the constant supervision of a state ranger, looters, vandals & partiers would soon destroy the park's historic & natural resources which belong, not only to us, but to future generations.

Please protect our environment, our wildlife, and our heritage; and continue to keep this park safe for wildlife as well as Florida residents and visitors.

Sincerely,
[Your Name & Address here]

PS: See this March 28 Tampa Tribune article for more information about the park.
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