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Gov. DeSantis' veto of beach bill roils environmentalists

One of the results of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis' veto of the Clean Beaches Act is no additional help from the Florida Department of Health in terms of improved water quality testing or beach closure signage, even in case of fecal pollution or a blue-green algae or red tide outbreak like the one in 2018 that killed this goliath grouper and tens of thousands more fish that washed up on Southwest Florida's beaches
Captains for Clea\n Water
One of the results of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis' veto of the Clean Beaches Act is no additional help from the Florida Department of Health in terms of improved water quality testing or beach closure signage, even in case of fecal pollution or a blue-green algae or red tide outbreak like the one in 2018 that killed this goliath grouper and tens of thousands more fish that washed up on Southwest Florida's beaches

Environmentalists remain perplexed by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis' recent veto of a wildly popular bipartisan bill to safeguard the state鈥檚 coastlines and protect the health of beachgoers because he found the measure 鈥渋ll-advised.鈥

DeSantis said he vetoed the Clean Beaches Act because he believed it gave the Florida Department of Health too much power over local governments.

鈥淭his bill would have kept beachgoers safe and informed regarding the risks of swimming when recreating in Florida's beach waters,鈥 said Emma Haydocy, Surfrider鈥檚 Florida manager. 鈥淪urfrider Foundation and its Florida network (are) deeply disappointed by Governor DeSantis鈥檚 decision.鈥

READ MORE: In the south, sea level rise accelerates at some of the most extreme rates on earth

The governor鈥檚 veto comes as Southwest Florida鈥檚 beachgoers are facing respiratory hazards from airborne toxins released by harmful algae blooms, diseases caused by human waste oozing into coastal waters from tens of thousands of abandoned septic systems in Lee County alone, and deaths from so-called flesh-eating bacteria.

DeSantis said in a statement that the legislation 鈥渟uffers from a fatal infirmity,鈥 because the DOH 鈥渟hould not be vested with the power to supersede local jurisdictions regarding the operation of beaches.鈥

The measure passed unanimously in both chambers of the Florida Legislature, a rare moment of complete agreement in Tallahassee.

The Republican governor鈥檚 veto was even more confusing due to his pattern of centralizing authority at the state level, often at the expense of local control.

Representative Lindsay Cross, a Democrat from St. Petersburg who sponsored the bill, said the governor鈥檚 decision left her in disbelief.

"I thought there was no way the governor would veto something that was sponsored by a bipartisan slate of elected officials with unanimous approval in both chambers that would protect people's public health".

Tom Bayles
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