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On Thursday, a judge ordered longtime Everglades scientist Tom Van Lent to surrender in a case that shocked the normally tight-knit Everglades community.
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This coming Wednesday, Oct. 16, the University of Miami’s Rosenstiel School and its signature Climate Café series will feature the first of two panel discussions on the award-winning SA¹ú¼Ê´«Ä± podcast, A Bright Lit Place, reported by Jenny Staletovich.
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SA¹ú¼Ê´«Ä± has been examining what happened to Florida’s promise to restore the Everglades with a massive plan approved in 2000. These are some of the people who’ve spent decades waiting for progress. Those hit hardest measure losses in their checkbooks and family businesses — or even their homelands. Others have devoted their careers to getting restoration done right.
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Judge Carlos Lopez ordered longtime Everglades scientists Tom Van Lent, 67, to spend 10 days behind bars for violating a court order stemming from a bitter court battle with the influential nonprofit Everglades Foundation.
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Perhaps the biggest obstacle to the massive Everglades restoration project dissected in the SA¹ú¼Ê´«Ä± podcast Bright Lit Place is the water polluted by phosphorous and other nutrients that run off from sugar cane farms.
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SA¹ú¼Ê´«Ä± environmental editor Jenny Staletovich and Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer Patrick Farrell talk about what it was like to wade through the muck of the Everglades to check on the decades-long battle to make the River of Grass work as nature intended.
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SundialWe listen to the part of the first episode of Bright Lit Place, a new SA¹ú¼Ê´«Ä± podcast distributed by the NPR Network. It was reported by SA¹ú¼Ê´«Ä±'s environment editor Jenny Staletovich. We also hear behind-the-scenes stories from Jenny and Patrick Farrell, the Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer who worked on the project.
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In 2000, the U.S. set out on one of the most ambitious environmental projects ever attempted: to wind back the clock and make the Everglades function like it once did — in 1900. The plan could have given Florida a 20-year head start on climate change, but that didn't happen. Listen to SA¹ú¼Ê´«Ä±'s new podcast series Bright Lit Place.