The next round of oral arguments in the
nearly 30 year long water war between Florida and Georgia has been
rescheduled again.
Paul Kelly, the Santa Fe-based senior
judge the Supreme Court appointed as the case’s special
master, announced this week that he will hear oral arguments on
November the 7th.
Initially they were scheduled for
December the 16th ans were then rescheduled for October the 17th.
The most recent change was done after
attorneys for Florida said they had a conflict with arguments in
another case.
This case revolves around how water in
the Apalachicola Chattahoochee Flint River system is shared by
Georgia, Florida and Alabama.
The State of Florida filed suit in the
US Supreme Court in 2014 to try to reduce the amount of water Georgia
is taking from the River System.
Until recently, Apalachicola Bay
accounted for approximately 10 percent of the nation’s Eastern
oyster supply.
The oyster industry in Apalachicola
collapsed in 2012 leading to a Commercial Fisheries Disaster
Declaration from the U.S. Department of Commerce in 2013.
Florida believes that Georgia’s water
consumption has brought historically-low water flows into the
Apalachicola River and Bay and has caused oysters to die because of
higher salinity, increased disease and predator intrusion.
Florida says Georgia's “largely
unrestrained”agricultural consumption of water as a major factor on
the basin water flow.
The number of acres Georgia farmers
have under irrigation has soared from 75,000 acres in 1970 to more
than 825,000 today.
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