With Reversal on Florida Offshore Drilling, Zinke Highlights His Selective Hearing

What's good news for the state can also be seen as yet another example of political favoritism by the current administration.

This week, Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke  Florida will be exempt from his plans to expand offshore oil and gas drilling. The decision most likely means a safer future for Floridians and its coastal wildlife, including Piping Plovers, Reddish Egrets, Roseate Spoonbills, and other winged inhabitants of the Sunshine State. 

Zinke's reasoning for the decision, however, has raised questions on how and why the current administration chooses to exploit or preserve natural resources. On January 4, Zinke for offshore energy development that would open more than 90 percent of the outer continental shelf to drilling, reversing an Obama administration order that blocked drilling in much of that same area. The proposal calls for 47 lease auctions from 2019 to 2024, including the Atlantic and Pacific coasts, which have been closed to oil and gas activity for decades. Then, just five days later, after a meeting with Florida Governor Rick Scott, who had concerns about drilling off his coast, Zinke announced that the state would be excluded from the plan, saying he did so out of consideration for 鈥渓ocal and state voices.鈥

But politicians all along the coasts spoke out against the proposal, citing an oil spill鈥檚 potential to devastate coastal ecosystems and tourism-dependent economies. Moreover, the appeal from Scott鈥檚 office came as somewhat of a surprise鈥攊t  from the drilling expansion last year when the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) asked coastal state leaders to help shape the plan. Governors of 12 states, including the Republicans from Maryland, Massachusetts, and New Jersey, used that opportunity to ask that their shores be kept off-limits. (The governors of Alabama, Alaska, Georgia, Louisiana, Maine, Mississippi, and Texas welcomed the proposal.)

鈥淥ffshore drilling is harmful in lots of places,鈥 says Julie Wraithmell, interim executive director of . She praised the Florida exemption, as well as the work done by Scott, Senators Bill Nelson and Marco Rubio, and the members of Florida's congressional delegation to make it happen. But she also adds her state isn't special. 鈥淚f the secretary鈥檚 office is saying directly that Governor Scott鈥檚 argument made a legitimate case for excluding Florida, there are certainly governors from other states with compelling arguments, and I hope they鈥檒l be given the same consideration.鈥

Indeed, since the Florida announcement, other leaders their states weren鈥檛 given the same treatment. Politics might be the biggest answer. Critics see Zinke鈥檚 Florida waiver as a handout to Scott, who is considering a run for the U.S. Senate in a swing state. Scott had  to the offshore-drilling expansion on Twitter and requested a meeting with Zinke, who promptly flew to Tallahassee, talked with Scott, and told reporters that鈥攖hanks to the governor鈥檚 leadership鈥攖he Interior would exempt Florida. Democratic incumbent Bill Nelson, who supported the moratorium against drilling in the Eastern Gulf and would be Scott鈥檚 opponent if he runs for Senate, 鈥渁 political stunt orchestrated by the Trump administration.鈥 The Sierra Club likewise said it was 鈥 to aid the ambitions of Rick Scott.鈥 Some even could be aimed at protecting the president鈥檚 Mar-A-Lago resort in Palm Beach.

This isn't the first time this administration has demonstrated selective hearing when it comes to voices that count toward natural-resource policies. President Trump disregarded when he signed a tax bill in December in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, breeding ground for the caribou herd that sustains the tribe鈥檚 way of life. Republicans in office the President for listening to local voices and input when he from Utah鈥檚 Bears Ears National Monument and nearby Grand Staircase-Escalante. But the rollback last month defied the wishes of area tribes, ran counter to the majority of Utahns in who wanted the monuments left untouched, and brushed aside of public comments that were opposed to shrinking or eliminating the monuments. Meanwhile, the administration has been a willing audience to fossil-fuel companies. Oil and gas executives have enjoyed face-to-face and , and President Trump has made his own. 

If the proposed drilling plan is upheld in other states, the program could have serious implications for birds. BOEM鈥檚 Pacific region, which encompasses California, Oregon, and Washington, is home to six federally threatened or endangered bird species, including the endangered Short-tailed Albatross and threatened Marbled Murrelet. According to , another five listed species live in BOEM鈥檚 Atlantic region, along with seven off Alaska鈥檚 coast and eight in the Gulf of Mexico. (All habitat would likely be subject to environmental assessments prior to leasing.) History further shows that oil spills can have lasting effects on wildlife. The 2010 Deepwater Horizon disaster in the Gulf of Mexico, for example, and . The survivors may face complications as well: Even on feathers makes birds burn more energy during migration, threatening their reproductive success.

Although Florida鈥檚 birds remain safe for now, Zinke鈥檚 decision to exempt the state might backfire. Some it could be ruled 鈥渁rbitrary and capricious,鈥 in violation of federal law. The secretary says he鈥檚 open to meeting with other concerned coastal governors, Republican or Democrat, and stresses that this is a draft drilling plan, subject to . If the past few days are any indication, he鈥檚 in for an earful. 

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