Live Breaking News & Updates on ஏழு நீரூற்றுகள் தண்ணீர்
Stay updated with breaking news from ஏழு நீரூற்றுகள் தண்ணீர். Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.
It would be laughable if it wasn’t so insulting. But don’t take our word for it. It is crazy totally crazy, Robert Knight, executive director of the Florida Springs Institute, told Politico, which first reported the story. “It’s a ridiculous proposal from an environmental perspective and from a cost perspective,” Ryan Smart, executive director of the Florida Springs Council, told The Sun. Even members of the water district’s governing board questioned the idea. You just start to wonder when you start to mess around with Mother Nature like this what the unintended consequences are, board member Virginia Sanchez said. ....
Activist Groups Request Hearing Over Ginnie Springs Water Pumping Permit By Carolina Ilvento March 17, 2021 Two groups filed a legal challenge Tuesday to the Florida Division of Administrative Hearings contesting the Seven Springs Water permit to pump nearly a million gallons daily for Nestle’s bottling services. The petition contests the board’s decision on the grounds that Nestle can’t benefit from the permit as it is not an official applicant, and the board did not consider public interest in making the decision. The challenge argues the permit’s applicant, Seven Springs Water Company, does not have the right to conduct water use under district law, as it does not have control over the bottling facility pumping water. Because Nestle is not the official permit applicant, the suit alleges, the district would have no way to regulate its water use operations to ensure they are used in a reasonable manner. ....
Companies bottle and sell Floridaâs spring water. Should the state get paid? A debate around Ginnie Springs has invigorated activists who say Florida overuses the aquifer. Â Â Solomon McKinley, 56, an employee at a water bottling plant in Zephyrhills in 2007, inspects bottles moving toward a packaging area. [ Times (2007) ] Updated Mar. 11 When water managers decided last month to let a private company pull nearly a million gallons a day from Ginnie Springs for a plastic bottling plant, environmentalists were outraged. Some said they plan to file a lawsuit. Their novel argument is to ask, essentially: Whatâs in it for us? The multi-year controversy over the permit application in High Springs has invigorated activists who say businesses are overusing the aquifer, to the detriment of the stateâs sparkling rivers and springs. If private companies profit off Floridaâs water, they say, then Florida should at least get paid. ....
COVID-19 relief for women, no mask mandates, dirty water heraldtribune.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from heraldtribune.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.