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Letters to the Editor: Questions for the Fishing News
May 9th, 2004

Letters to the Editor: Local Girl Shines at State Meet
May 7th, 2004

Letters to the Editor: A Piece of Cedar Key History Up for Auction
April 25th, 2004

Letters to the Editor: Levy County Bombing Range
April 25th, 2004

Letters to the Editor: USS ISLE ROYALE AD29 Reunion
April 25th, 2004

Letters to the Editor: Ms Kitty Needs a Home
April 15th, 2004

Letters to the Editor: A Trip Down Memory Lane
March 24th, 2004

Letters to the Editor: Changing Parties
March 19th, 2004

Letters to the Editor: Update on "Sunset Park"
February 27th, 2004

Letters to the Editor: Preservation of Cedar Key
February 18th, 2004

Letters to the Editor: What A Year It`s Been!
February 3rd, 2004

Letters to the Editor: A Howling Good Time
January 26th, 2004

Letters to the Editor: Some Thoughts
January 17th, 2004

Letters to the Editor: Hero of Sturgis Circle
January 7th, 2004

Letters to the Editor: Clarification for the Record
December 12th, 2003

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Letter to the Editor

Letter to the Editor

As a recent resident of Florida and Cedar Key, I was disheartened to learn of the pollution threatening Cedar Key caused by Buckeye Paper as well as their proposed pipeline 'solution'.. Make no mistake; this WILL adversely affect Cedar Key and its aquaculture industry because of the prevailing Gulf currents.

I came from Michigan where this would never be tolerated today. Back in the 70s when its paper mills ranked with the auto industry and steel mills as major causes of pollution of its air and natural resources, Michigan passed tough Natural Resources legislation, backed by a courageous governor, legislators and Department of Natural Resources director.. This would normally have been considered unthinkable. Nobody ever fought the auto giants and won. Yet they did and once this behavior was firmly entrenched it became the norm.

In the 80s, I was vice president of engineering for a major auto industry supplier,. One of our divisions was a paper mill producing worse stuff than ordinary newsprint.. Yet the effluent leaving the plant had to be potable and the solids were strained out, compressed and used as fuel. When the painting vapors scrubbing system broke down in our body parts stamping division, we had the choice of shutting down Chevrolet – something a parts supplier never did if they wished to remain in business – or pay the $500,000 fine for each day we continued to discharge raw paint solvent fumes into the atmosphere. We had it fixed by the weekend.

The paper mill waste cleaning technology existing today is much more cost effective and efficient than it was in the 80s. In fact, studies have repeatedly shown that the payback of a paper waste treatment plant is excellent. The reason the industry doesn't do it is money. With a waste treatment facility, there are the continuing costs of maintenance and personnel. Dumping waste into a convenient river doesn't cost anything. A pipeline is a one time cost and they can discharge the effluent unabated forever. It is cheaper to buy off a few key politicians and DEP directors by either contributing heavily to their election campaigns, key projects or threatening their jobs. The paper industry is a major industry and its lobby is strong, well-financed and connected, and they are currently fighting, or ignoring, waste treatment legislation in several states. It appears that they have no intention of losing this fight.

Taking Buckeye Paper to court, while it must be done, serves their interests. They can fight this for years and, in the meantime, continue to dump their waste effluent into the Fenholloway River unabated. If they do get the pipeline, so much the better because it improves their processes and they get credit for cleaning up the river.

As Linda Young said in the recent meeting, the answer is people. While politicians will readily take Buckeye's money and their DEP directors will do what is necessary to keep their jobs, they still need people to get elected. All it takes is a governor, a few key legislators and especially a DEP director who have the courage to do the right thing.

Gene Malinowski
Cedar Key

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