8A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 5, 1996 NATION/WORLD Everglades water cleaner thanks to farmers' efforts Th Wahington Post M1lAMI - For the first time in yeas, the managers who monitor the health of the Everglades, one of the greatest and most imperiled marsh- lands on Earth, have some good news tortjeport - the water is cleaner. Farmers, most often viewed as envi- ropmnental villains, appear to have improved the quality of the water run- ni* off their land and entering the Everglades ecosystem. A report by the South Florida Water Management District indicates farmers hae achieved a 68-percent reduction intthe amount of phosphorus fertilizer discharged from their fields. 'Previously, many farmers argued that even a 25-percent reduction would bankrupt them. Phosphorus, used as a fertilizer on sugar and vegetable farms, is the chemical scourge of the Everglades, where it upsets the delicate balance and encourages an invasion of exotic pests and plants, such as cattails, which have choked thousands of acres of marshland. "We think it's good news," said Samuel Poole, executive director of the South Florida Water Management District, speaking of the phosphorus reduction. "But we're not out of the woods yet." That is the ultimate understatement. In the Everglades, perhaps the nation's supreme environmental battleground, nothing is simple. And everything is political. The massive restoration of the Everglades, which seeks to undo decades of human encroachment and meddling, may eventually take 20 years and $3 billion to complete. Plans for the restoration include not only forcing farmers to clean up their dirty runoff, but also the creation of at least 40,000 acres-an area the size of Miami and Fort Lauderdale combined- of so-called filtering marshes designed to clean the farm water even further. In addition to the challenges of water quality, the Army Corps of Engineers is planning to replumb the entire system of canals and pumps, altering water quantity and attempting to return a more natural flow of water to the Everglades. Yet ever so slowly, it appears progress is being made and the com- batants-the sugar growers, environ- mentalists, water managers, bureau- crats, taxpayers and scientists-are mov- ing toward consensus and results. "I think we're finally making some progress, said Ron Jones, an Everglades expert and director of the Southeast Environmental Research Program at Florida International University. Not only are the farms producing what appears to be cleaner water, but the first experimental filtering marsh is operating better than expected. Moreover, the scientists are moving ever closer to what aficionados of Everglades restoration call "the Number," the exact amount of phospho- rus - measured in the parts per billion (ppb) - that the glades can absorb without biological disruption. "Now I can suggest the number might be around 10 ppb and not be crucified," Jones said. "It's amazing what's happened over the last six months." While there is still argument, and much data to be collected, "there's the feeling that the arguments are more about posturing. Reality is starting to -settle in" Jones said. When reportssof phosphorus reduc- tion emerged, the region's powerful and politically connected sugar farm- ers, who account for about 80 percent of the agricultural lands north of the Everglades, seized on the report as proof that, for a change, they were the I AP PHOTO Robert Ramos (kneeling) and Marge Hamilton board up a property on the Isle of Palms near Charleston, S.C., yesterday. South Carolina coast evacuates as Huicane Fran approaches JUNIORS I CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) - South Carolina's governor called out the National Guard and ordered a half- million people evacuated from the coast yesterday as Hurricane Fran swirled toward land with 115 mph winds on a path alarmingly similar to Hugo's seven years ago. ager at the Home Depot building supply store in North Charleston. She said people were waiting in line for the arrival of a shipment of 260 gen- erators late yesterday. "I've ridden them all out, but I'm debating whether to go this time," 76- year-old Joe Lipsitz said as he stood rmnancej, %rea irt 3Tur Build up your resume Work 5-10 hours per week Flexible schedule good guys. "Farmers want the Everglades to be healthy and vibrant," said Bob Buker, vice president of US Sugar. "Cleaning up the Everglades is a moral require- ment. But so is staying in business. The farmers are required to employ a suite of techniques to clean up their field runoff called Best Management Practices. Among the BMPs, as they are called, are using new "smart farm- ing" equipmentto apply phosphorus fertilizers in narrow bands directly on the roots; leveling their fields; employing sediment traps and pump- ing water in more environmentally benign ways. This the farmers are doing. Buker and other growers, moreover, said that they hope to continue to reduce the phosphorus. "Fran is a large and she is not to be trifled with in any shape, way, fashion or form," Gov. David Beasley said. The storm is most likely to hit land tonight north of Charleston, the N a t i o n a l Hurricane Center said. That's and brutal storm, outside his store in "Fran is a large and brutal storm, and she is not to be trifled with" I Beaufort, about 70 miles south of Charleston. His son wasn't hesi- tating. "This one I'm getting out, after seeing what Hugo did to Charleston;' Neil Lipsitz said. Hugo caused almost $8 bil- lion in damage le as it tore through - David Beasley of South Carolina Governorc f l where Hurricane Hugo, packing 140 mph winds, came ashore with devas- tating effect in 1989. In Charleston, workers hurried to put plywood over the windows of the pastel-colored houses overlooking the harbor. Storm shutters were already closed on some buildings. Cars were lined up at gas stations while traffic on Interstate 26, the main road inland, was bumper-to-bumper. Batteries, flashlights and other sup- plies flew off store shelves as nervous residents prepared for the storm. "It's been pretty hectic. We've already sold four truckloads of ply- wood," said Wendy Coletrain, a man- the Caribbean and up the East Coast. Most of the damage was in South Carolina. At 8 p.m., Fran was centered 380 miles southeast of Charleston, wob- bling northwest at 12 mph, with hurri- cane-force wind - 74 mph or higher - extending 145 miles out. A hurri- cane warning was posted from north of Brunswick, Ga., to just north of Cape Lookout, N.C. Fran was about as large as Hugo and had the potential to become just as strong as it passed over warm water, the National Hurricane Center said. "I do believe this one is going to get and killed 35 peop I Th.JL' [EJ1T I us, that's the way it's heading,' said John Gallop, dockmaster at Beaufort's marina, where workers boarded up win- dows. In addition to announcing a mandato- ry evacuation of the South Carolina coast, Beasley declared a state of emer- gency and activated the National Guard. Guardsmen took up positions directing traffic, and at least 1,000 were arriving in the coastal towns. In Charleston, a sign on one restau* rant read "Scram Fran" and boat owners scrambled to get their craft out of the water or to tie them down. The Federal Emergency Management Agency sent crews to the Southeast. FEMA Director James Lee Witt said six tractor-trailors loaded with cots, tents, generators, blankets and other supplies were ready to go; the Agriculture Department has earmarked food; and eight medical teams were o alert. Earlier in the day, Fran brushed the Bahamas and the Navy ordered ships in Florida and Georgia out to sea to ride out the storm. At Cape Canaveral, Fla., NASA began moving space shuttle Atlantis from its seaside launch pad back to the safety of its giant hangar, and post- poned for at least two days its Sept. 14 liftoff on a mission to bring ShannG Lucid home from the Russian space station Mir, where she has lived since March. In North Carolina, a mandatory evac- uation was begun at 5 p.m. yesterday at Ocracoke Island. Senate keeps space programs WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate supporters of the international space station and another joint space project with Russia turned back attempts ye terday to kill funding for the two pro- grams. The Senate rejected, by 60-37, an amendment to eliminate all $2.1 billion allocated for the space station in fiscal year 1997. The funding was part of an $84.7 bil- lion bill for veterans, housing and inde- pendent agencies programs. Sen. Dale Bumpers (D-Ark.) a per- sistent foe of the space station, saidI was the fifth year he had proposed le islation to kill the project "in aneffort to stop what I consider is a disaster in the making" Bumpers argued that the 13-nation project to put a permanent manned sta- tion in orbit by early in the next decade will cost $100 billion through the life of the project, money that the United States can't afford as it tries to achieve fiscal integrity. "If we had a $100 billion surplus probably would vote for a space stag tion," said Sen. Paul Simons (D-ll.) another opponent. But supporters argued that the pro- ject, which NASA says will cost more thn t1 7 hillinin -_; rn andwtw, . t, a ' i to X- ... ... .. SE'"'' E22221ssE °t. ENEEEE gg, ..}v. ...1 . ..? _ "t:ii:i:?" ., r ir:a' -:k,;;J N~iE!E i~ a $k ami MENEE~isEE~iMExx m A-wj with the university's best staff and world class law students at: LAWYERS CW DINING SERVCES " start at $6.50/hr. 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