Fernery owners worry over future
Transcription
Fernery owners worry over future
3NJ0100A0523 FINAL 3NJ0100A0523 ZALLCALL 15 00:29:50 05/23/07 B ï PILOT FORCED TO LAND IN ORMOND AFTER FLYING OVER SHUTTLE LOCAL PAGE 1C News- TV’S DANCE CHAMPION The Daytona Beach Was it Joey the singer or Apolo the Olympian? NAMES IN THE NEWS, PAGE 2A Journal Dems drop withdrawal call from spending bill KIDS SET FOR LONGER VACATION Democratic leaders on Tuesday dropped their insistence that the Iraq war-spending bill include a timeline for U.S. troop withdrawal, clearing the way to end a lengthy standoff with President Bush. The measure will include benchmarks that the Baghdad government must meet to continue to receive U.S. reconstruction aid, although the president will be allowed to waive those requirements. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., characterized the compromise as progress in the Democratic drive to bring the U.S. combat role in Iraq to an end, saying the bill was not a ‘‘blank check.’’ The House and Senate are expected to vote on the approximately $120 billion bill, which funds military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, this week before they take a week off for the Memorial Day holiday. A number of strongly anti-war Democrats are expected to oppose the measure, so it will need Republican support to pass. ‘‘There has been a lot of tough A new pill that eliminates women’s menstrual cycles wins Food and Drug Administration approval. PAGE 11A Keep your visitors fresh Horoscope 11D Letters 4A Movies 4D Puzzles 6D,11D Records 6C Television 2D Vol. LXXXIV No. 143 4 Sections © NJ 2007 News-Journal Corporation Weathering The Numbers ENVIRONMENT WRITER Alfredo Amador hits his fifth-grade teacher, Christina Lang, with a whipped cream pie Tuesday. It’s an annual ritual in Lang’s class at Sugar Mill Elementary. Later start next year means more time off now By RAY WEISS STAFF WRITER A tidal wave of humanity today rolls out of Volusia County’s public schools and into neighborhoods, malls, parks and the ocean for another summer break. What’s perceived as freedom for 65,782 youngsters can be anarchy for parents, especially those trying to balance tight work schedules with their children’s open schedules. And this year, the scenario is even more dire, or dreamy, depending on one’s age and perspective. Schools will reopen two weeks later than in the recent past — Aug. 20 in Volusia County and Flagler County (where 12,209 pupils finished Monday) — because of a change in state law. But what youngsters gain this year they will lose next, when public schools won’t close until the first week of June. News-Journal/JESSICA WEBB SIBLEY That payback is a long way off, though, and everyone’s fo- Osceola Elementary Principal Earl Johnson grabs a rebound over Kayla cused on surviving until Chadwick as he joins in a basketball school bells again ring. game Tuesday with pupils celebrating at an end of school cookout. [email protected] Did You Know? No matter which weather forecast or model assesses the chances of a busy hurricane season this summer, they say the same thing: Be ready to ride out another conga line of tropical cyclones. Two forecasts released this week for the season that starts June 1 call for an above-normal season, especially in Volusia County. Volusia is among 20 counties in the Southeast facing the greatest risk of hurricane-force winds, according to a forecast from University of Central Florida statistics professor Mark Johnson and his colleague Chuck Watson. That’s not good news for thousands of oceanfront residents along eroded shorelines or folks still trying to get homes and property repaired from the 2004 75% chance of busier than normal hurricane season 1 in 6 chance of hurricane force winds in Volusia 13-17 forecast for named storms 7-10 hurricanes forecast 3–5 major hurricanes forecast 28 named storms in 2005, the busiest season on record SEE ’CANES, PAGE 13A SOURCES: NOAA; hurricane.methaz.org [email protected] MORE ONLINE: The latest NOAA hurricane predictions: news-journalonline.com Raulerson Rd. No. 1 Alice Cooper’s classic ‘‘School’s Out’’ is a favorite on the radio this time of year: 59, pictured, born Vincent Furnier, scored a top 10 hit in 1972 with his rebellious tune about the end of school. P According to Cooper’s Web site, the song was inspired by a line in a Dead End Kids movie. P ‘‘School’s Out’’ has been featured in movies as well as in a 2004 television commercial for Staples in which Cooper appeared. P Cooper, known for his shock-rock performances, is a bornagain Christian who is addicted to golf. Properties part of proposed land-use change Active fernery Former fernery P Cooper, Compiled by News Researcher Karen Duffy from alicecooper.com, usatoday.com Extended Summer Recess: What They’re Saying ACCENT, PAGE 1D Abby 6D Accent 1D Business 7A Classified 8D Comics 5D Deaths 6C Experts agree: ’Canes coming By DINAH VOYLES PULVER News-Journal/DAVID TUCKER Birth control BUSINESS, PAGE 7A Forecast shows Volusia at risk for wind damage SEE WITHDRAWAL, PAGE 11A Who are your choices for athletes of the year? THE SCORE Will small bottles pack same punch? HURRICANE SEASON 2007 LOS ANGELES TIMES Coming Thursday: Cast your vote! COMPACT DETERGENTS 50 cents WASHINGTON — Congressional Keeping you on track for today, tomorrow TODAY’S FORECAST Can’t tap dance around rain chance. High: Lower 80s. Low: Upper 60s. PAGE 8C FINAL EDITION By RICHARD SIMON THE FAST LANE MAY 23, 2007 THE INDEPENDENT VOICE OF VOLUSIA & FLAGLER COUNTIES www.news-journalonline.com THE WAR IN IRAQ WEDNESDAY ‘‘It’s good because you get to play more. Nope, I won’t miss school.’’ ‘‘I think it’s great. I get to stay in Montana longer. We go fishing and camping.’’ ‘‘It gives me two more weeks to earn some money. I’ll work until school starts.’’ ‘‘I just found out about it the other day. I think it would be better to have an extra week at each end (of the school year).’’ HAYDEN BIERI, 8, Palm Coast STEPHON BLAND, 6, DeLand GREGG LAMB, ERAU student MELISSA LARGE, 37, DeLand Cow Pond Rd. Cow Pond Prevett Rd. 17 VOLUSIA COUNTY To Seville Map Area Miles News-Journal 0 1/4 News-Journal Fernery owners worry over future By JAMES MILLER STAFF WRITER SEVILLE — Bill Keebler brings his Range Rover to a stop on a sandy track known as Cow Pond Road. Ten acres of his plastic-shaded ferns sit to the north. One day, they might be gone, replaced by homes. After half a century in farming — more than 20 years of it in the fern business, Keebler is ready to make an exit. Growers here in what’s been known as the ‘‘Fern Capital of the World’’ are badly and maybe fatally pressed, he says, largely by overseas competitors who benefit from lower costs and looser regulations. On Thursday, Keebler and three neighboring property owners plan to ask the Volusia County Council to let them take the first step toward what they think might be a better use for some wellplaced land off U.S. Highway 17: a partially lakefront subdivision of 2 1 ⁄ 2 -acre lots. SEE FERNERY, PAGE 14A [email protected] ï Magenta Cyan Yellow Black 3NJ1402A0523 NEWS-JOURNALÀ 3NJ1402A0523 ZALLCALL 15 22:26:21 05/22/07 B ï CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A 14A Wednesday, May 23, 2007 The Daytona Beach News-Journal FERNERY: Proposal points out problems with fern industry CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A ‘‘We’re not developers,’’ Keebler said. ‘‘We’re not about to start building houses. We just want the entitlement if we can get it.’’ County staffers have recommended against the request — a change from the agricultural limit of one home per 10 acres — saying it’s county policy to protect agriculture and citing potential lifestyle conflicts between people who might move to the area and remaining farms. There are also concerns about what type of precedent an approval would set. But, while the proposal would impact only about 33 acres of the thousands of acres of active ferneries in Volusia, it also highlights what experts say are serious problems facing growers. Those problems could be a factor in the council decision. ‘‘I do understand the argument that staff has, but I also understand what the future holds in that area,’’ County Chairman Frank Bruno said. ‘‘It’s a beautiful area, and I think a lot of people would love to have that lifestyle.’’ In 2004, Volusia County had almost 11,000 acres of cut foliage, which includes popular leatherleaf fern, as well as other ornamental plants used in floral arrangements, said Dana Venrick, commercial horticulturist with the University of Florida/ Volusia County Extension Service. He estimated the acreage had been reduced by 20 percent County Council Meets P WHEN: Thursday, 9 a.m.; public participation for items not on the agenda starts at 8:30 a.m. P WHERE: Thomas C. Kelly Administration Center, 123 W. Indiana Ave., DeLand. P AUDIO: Real-time audio of the meeting is available through the county’s Web page: Connect to www.volusia.org/ countycouncil/ info.htm#audio. P ISSUES: ACT BUILDING: Purchase of Act Corp. residential treatment facility, $2.8 million, 9 a.m. HOMESTEAD: Increase homestead exemption for low-income people over 65 years old from $50,000 to $75,000, 11:20 a.m. SCHOOLS: Adopt ordinance creating school planning requirements for local governments and developers, 11:25 a.m. OFF-BEACH PARKING: Purchase land for 73 offbeach parking spaces in Ormond Beach and Wilburby-the-Sea, $1.8 million, consent agenda. since then, largely because of the 2004 hurricanes which ripped apart the plastic shading houses that protected many ferneries. Many owners, including one News-Journal/PETER BAUER Bill Keebler, along with fellow landowners, wants to change the Comprehensive Land Use designation of several parcels along Cow Pond, north of Seville, from agriculture to rural. Doing so will allow a single-family home on a 21⁄2-acre parcel fronting the prime waterfront of Cow Pond. going before the council Thursday, didn’t find it economically viable to continue, though Venrick said he thought the industry’s struggles would work out and the majority of growers would stick to an industry that had treated them well. Still, sales have generally declined. In 1999, Florida growers — in Volusia, Lake and Putnam counties — sold almost $63 million of leatherleaf ferns, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. In 2005, the figure was almost $48 million. ‘‘A lot of it has been due to import competition from Central America and the Caribbean,’’ said Alan Hodges, an associate extension scientist in food and resource economics at UF in Gainesville. Imports of ornamental foliage and branches have increased from $76 million in 1998 to $114 million in 2005, he said. Other factors could include such things as steeply increasing land costs and concerns that immigration policy changes ‘‘could limit the availability of immigrant workers legal or otherwise,’’ Hodges said. County planner Ron Paradise said he could not think of any recent large requests for rezonings or land-use changes involving ferneries, though he said some property owners had done larger lot-size subdivisions allowed with less regulation under county rules. But Bob Stamp, a professor of environmental horticulture at the University of Florida’s MidFlorida Research and Education Center, said there are trends toward developing fernery lands. ‘‘If you were to go to Lake County, which was probably in recent times the second-largest county for cut foliage production, almost all that land has been sold for development now,’’ said Stamp, who has studied the fern industry for 28 years. ‘‘Most of those folks have gotten out of the business.’’ That could be where Bill Keebler is headed. ‘‘It’s not like (the local fern business) is going to disappear overnight like the citrus industry did with 10 degrees,’’ he said, referring to freezes that devastated that industry in the 1980s. The first freeze drove Keebler from citrus to fern. ‘‘It’s a little bit like emphysema,’’ he said. ‘‘It takes a long time to die. You get squeezed in prices and you cut back and you cut your expenses as much as you can. You try to get a grip on it and go one more year, but the pressure gets more and more.’’ 0000615652 PDFA-0000612553 CRIMINAL RECORD? WANT IT ERASED? PROBATION EARLY TERMINATION Call Thomas R. Mott, Attorney 386.257.2400 www.ForTheInnocent.com Main Office Daytona Beach ARRESTED? FELONY? DUI? 0000603508 HURRICANE SHUTTERS 763-1709 Licensed & Insured We’ll Beat Any Competitor’s Written Quote! PDFA-0000617832 KICKOFF Kenneth Cole Reaction “Pow Wow.” $39. Crocs™ “Athens II.” $29.99. APPLY TODAY! Say Hello “Flip Out.” $15. Michelle D. “Confetti.” $39.99. Earn Dillard’s Reward Points Make Shopping More Rewarding Every Time You Shop $ Receive Reef “Slap.” $38. 20 SUMMER SHOP OUR HUGE SELECTION OF LADIES’ FLIP FLOPS FEATURING FUN COLORS AND PRINTS. SHOWN ARE JUST A FEW FROM OUR COLLECTION WHICH VARIES BY STORE. Rocket Dog “Jelly.” $29. Say Hello “Flip Out.” $15. BCBGirls “Fun.” $29. Kenneth Cole Reaction “Wow Now.” $39. †Subject to credit approval. 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