Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Constitutional Amendment Proposed for Conservation

      Although almost all of us want pretty surroundings that are usually helped by conservation of trees, water and animals, a proposed constitutional amendment is not the way for Florida to achieve the next step, in my opinion.  That would lock us into a budget item that could not be changed by the legislature when circumstances showed a necessity to do such. If the amendment gets on the ballot, it will be difficult to defeat.  We may have another item as effective as the constitutional amendment passed in 2002 prohibiting pregnant pigs from being caged up in a certain way that was passed and is now on the books.  

      The country laughs at Floridians for that one, but the amendment requiring high speed trains from Miami to Tampa passed in 2000 is not going to be accomplished because it was repealed.  Which part do you have to obey and which may be laughed at?

See the article below.



Published: Thursday, April 4, 2013 at 8:39 p.m.
Last Modified: Thursday, April 4, 2013 at 10:51 p.m.
Supporters of an effort to amend Florida's state constitution to dedicate a stable supply of money for conserving land and water resources announced Thursday they've crossed a key threshold in their quest to be considered by Florida voters on November 2014 ballots.
Florida's Water and Land Legacy Campaign officials said they have collected enough signatures to ask the state's attorney general to forward the proposed ballot measure to the state Supreme Court for review.
The review requires at least 10 percent of the eventual 683,149 signatures required to get the measure on the ballot. Campaign officials said they've collected 116,573 signatures.
The secretary of state verified the effort has collected the required 68,314 signatures, said campaign chair Will Abberger of The Trust for Public Land. The state Supreme Court will review the measure to make sure it refers to a single subject and the proposed ballot language is accurate and concise.
If the court approves the language, the measure would be authorized for the ballot once state officials certify the campaign has collected the full required number of signatures, which must be completed by Feb. 1, according to the state elections website.
If voters approve the measure, it would dedicate one-third of the state's existing documentary stamp taxes on real estate transactions, organizers said, raising an estimated $5 billion over 10 years.
The amendment would provide the "necessary funding for us to exercise proper stewardship of our resources across the state," said Manley Fuller, Florida Wildlife Federation president.
Campaign manager Pegeen Hanrahan, a former Gainesville mayor, said 256 groups in Florida have partnered with the campaign so far.
Among the local groups who have endorsed the measure are all four Audubon chapters, the Native Plant Society chapters and scenic byway groups. She said the campaign has 3,600 people helping to gather petitions. That includes several local residents.

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