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The Everglades Restoration

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The Everglades Restoration Plan is the policy to increase the flow of clean water to the Everglades, in an effort to protect the environment, provide for recreational activities, and supply South Florida with a clean supply of potable water. At a cost of more than $10.5 billion and with a 35+ year time-line, this is the largest hydrologic restoration project ever undertaken in the United States. The Federal Government approved Florida’s landmark water quality project that, once constructed, all parties agree will provide the clean water the Everglades need (Scott, 2013). The Everglades restoration has been hampered by decades of futile bickering over how to decide the most rational approach to restoring the flow of water to the Everglades. …show more content…

To proceed incrementally with proposed decisions and to evaluate objectives as they process information from making decisions. By defining policy measures and using numbers to justify decisions that can define outcomes based on policy and measurement. Measuring a problem creates subtle pressure to do something about it, but at the same time, some level of the measure can become a norm and therefore an acceptable status quo (Stone, 2012, p. 188). To avoid costly delays in progress, by evaluating the measurements of a policy as it proceeds, policy makers can avoid such delays and change the course of action to find consensus on how to …show more content…

The plan had stalled due to partisan conflicts and various stakeholders not agreeing to any potential plan. The stakeholders agreed to a policy and proceed to initiate restoration of the Everglades. This was possible only through the hard work of our agencies’ scientists, and through input from Florida’s farmers and environmental groups (Scott, 2013). Agreement on the objectives was not obtained, but the policy itself was agreed upon. “It provides what [environmental groups] wanted, which is a stable source of funding. And it creates certainty for us, “said Gaston Cantens, vice president for sugar producer Florida Crystals. “We reached a level of consensus” (Reid,

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