Sink Hole Florida: Miami-Dade County Votes Unanimously to Ban Fracking, Citing Multiple Environmental Concerns; More than 80 Florida cities and counties have banned or expressed opposition to fracking

Miami-Dade County Bans Fracking, Citing Multiple Environmental Concerns by Kate Stein, October 10, 2016, wlrn.org Miami/South Florida

Fracking is now banned in Miami-Dade County, thanks to an ordinance passed unanimously last Wednesday by county commissioners.

 The Miami-Dade ordinance says fracking could contaminate county water supplies, including the Biscayne Aquifier, where many South Florida residents get their water.

“The risk of leaching of those chemicals into the aquifer is very real,” said District 8 Commissioner Daniella Levine Cava, the ordinance’s sponsor.

“Just imagine that our water supply is put in jeopardy. What a nightmare it would be.”

In addition to concerns about possible water contamination, the Miami-Dade ban also reflects concerns that fracking pollutes air and soil and increases seismic activity. It notes the chemicals used in fracking are usually kept as trade secrets and are not well-regulated by the state of Florida or the federal government.

Levine Cava said the Miami-Dade ban took about two years to come about [While Albertans got and continue to get no consultations, instead get polluted and sickened, gag orders, bullying, Charter violations, lies, secrets, fraud and cover-up], but was buoyed by a fracking well being operated in Collier County, and by the Florida Legislature’s decision to not implement statewide fracking regulations.

“I was very distressed about it, as were many others,” she said of the legislature’s decision. “We’d like to see Florida ban fracking… we’d rather be safe than sorry.”

Levine Cava said that although Miami-Dade is a relatively urban county, she feared fracking might occur in or near the Everglades if there weren’t regulation.

The new Miami-Dade fracking ban is written into the county zoning code, so even if the Florida Legislature decides to allow fracking statewide, the ban would likely hold in Miami-Dade. [What industry force the Florida government

Still, it’s possible to get an exception from the Miami-Dade ban. Applicants for exceptions would have to show their fracking plan poses no threat to the environment, the water supply or the population. They’d also have to disclose the chemicals they would use.

Levine Cava said she thinks the county’s ban creates a “nearly impossible” burden for individuals and companies interested in fracking. “The burden is on the applicant… to prove there is no harm,” she said.

More than 80 Florida cities and counties have banned or expressed opposition to fracking. [Emphasis added]

[Refer also to:

2016 09 17: And they want to frac Florida? Massive sinkhole causes vast waterfall of wastewater into Floridan drinking water aquifer ]

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