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News: Better Cell Phone Service plus Revenue for the City?
December 18th, 2008

News: New Water Main Plan
December 15th, 2008

News: Santa in Cedar Key
December 9th, 2008

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December 5th, 2008

News: Area Authors Win Statewide Honors
December 3rd, 2008

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December 2nd, 2008

News: Fire-Rescue Boat Arrives
November 24th, 2008

News: Cedar Key School Speech Winners
November 19th, 2008

News: Garbage Billing Agreement in Flux
November 19th, 2008

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November 19th, 2008

News: Change Has Come
November 12th, 2008

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November 6th, 2008

News: Republicans Victors in Two Levy County Races
November 5th, 2008

News: Voting Results in Cedar Key, Nov. 4, 2008
November 4th, 2008

News: Tree Survey Being Conducted
October 31st, 2008

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Mill Waste Pipeline on a Snag

Mill Waste Pipeline on a Snag

Jim Hoy

The paper mill waste pipeline planned for a Perry paper mill got another delay and possibly fatal decision in federal court January 16. Buckeye Technologies' proposed fifteen mile pipeline that would send mill waste directly into the Gulf of Mexico wound up in federal court and was taken out of the hands of the Florida Department of Environmental Protection.

Judge Emmentt Sullivan made the U.S. EPA responsible for oversight of the pipeline plan in March 2006. Buckeye and the Florida EPA objected to Sullivan's ruling. Clarification of the ruling is expected by the end of January according to an article in the Gainesville Sun.

Linda Young, Director of the Clean Water Network of Florida told Cedar Key News that, "It was decided nine months ago, now it's final." When asked if mill waste will continue to be dumped in the Fenholloway River she said that Buckeye will need an EPA permit, adding,"We can get justice in a federal court." Young's comment stems from earlier support for the pipeline by the Florida EPA and a subsequent law suit in federal court.

The Sun article quoted a Buckeye spokesperson who claimed that only a pipeline will allow the Fenholloway River to be restored to "fishable and swimable standards." Young's position is that the river must be restored, but the pipeline is not the way to do it.

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