For Immediate Release: March 3, 2005
Contact: Kirsten Stade (202) 265-7337
FLORIDA’S ENVIRONMENT - MORE VIOLATION NOTICES BUT LESS RESULTS — Cleanups and Civil Fines Down in ’04; “Traffic Ticket” Mentality Decried
Washington, DC — The Florida Department of Environmental Protection is taking more enforcement actions but having less effect, according to an analysis of agency data released today by Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER). Despite more notices of violations, civil fines and orders to clean up pollution continue to fall below historic averages.
“The basic problem is Florida DEP treats pollution violations like traffic tickets – the violator pays his fine and speeds off down the highway the same as before,” stated Florida PEER Director Jerry Phillips, a former DEP enforcement attorney. “In the vast majority of cases, there is no attempt to alter practices, remediate problems or even monitor whether promises not to pollute further are kept.”
Florida PEER analyzed the raw enforcement data from all of the Florida DEP districts in 2003 and 2004 and compared that data with previous years. The resulting analysis reveals that –
“The key is not the numbers but whether Florida’s environment is being adequately protected,” added Phillips, noting that assessments in areas critical to environmental quality, such as hazardous waste, industrial waste and dredge and fill all seem to be in decline. “It is difficult to see how Florida is being protected by a system that, in essence, just issues tickets to polluters but does not follow up to see if they have stopped polluting.”
The Florida PEER analysis breaks down the performance of each of DEP’s five regional offices (“districts”) by type of violation and includes comparisons of recent performance to historic averages. In this review, DEP’s Northwest District, located in Pensacola, has the weakest record while the Southwest District, in Tampa, has consistently had the strongest.
While the enforcement records are a matter of public record, the biggest data gap is that DEP does not appear to track the number of cases that inspectors deem worthy of enforcement, but are declined by management.
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Read
the PEER report on Enforcement Efforts by Florida DEP in 2003 and 2004
(raw data available upon request)
Look at Let’s Make a Deal, an analysis of the five-year trend in Florida environmental enforcement