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Seafood workers and environmentalists party over DeSantis signing anti-oil drilling bill

Two men in casual dress, one holding a microphone, with palm fronds behind them
Margie Menzel
/
WFSU Public Media
Franklin County Sheriff A.J. Smith and Franklin County Commissioner Ottice Amison speaking at the rally

Residents of Franklin County continue to celebrate a new state law banning oil drilling within 10 miles of the Apalachicola River Basin. A weekend party in Apalachicola marked the moment.

The people at the party had lobbied hard for Governor Ron DeSantis to sign the bill banning drilling, exploration, or production of petroleum products within 10 miles of a national estuarine research reserve—such as the Apalachicola river basin.

The bill followed the application by a Louisiana-based company, Clearwater Land and Mineral LLC, for a permit to drill in the river basin last year.

Adrianne Johnson of the Florida Shellfish Aquaculture Association says it was a community effort to pass the bill.

“Really coming together to say, ‘We want to protect our bay. We want to protect the livelihoods who depend on it.’ And so, being able to take stock of the moment, I think, was a really critical part of all of the energy and time that went in over this last year of trying to make this happen, of really, finally getting protections enshrined in law,” she said.

Johnson says it was a hard-fought battle to get the bill into law. 

“It was no easy feat. I felt like it was a blockbuster movie in the sense of twists and turns and not knowing for sure the outcome," she said. "And there was a lot that hung in the balance that people felt very passionate about making sure that we as a community could stand up for the bay and for our jobs – and make sure the powers that be heard.”

Supporters of the bill remember the impact of the 2010 B.P oil spill and worry that allowing drilling so close to the bay could open the door for another disaster.

Follow @MargieMenzel



Margie Menzel covers local and state government for WFSU News. She has also worked at the News Service of Florida and Gannett News Service. She earned her B.A. in history at Vanderbilt University and her M.S. in journalism at Florida A&M University.