a PDF of the graphic
Transcription
a PDF of the graphic
A St. Petersburg couple follows smoke to find a horror in the alley. 3B On the radar BEADS ANYONE? For those who didn’t want to pay $800 to hobnob with the celebs in town this past weekend, you can party all you want for free Saturday at the Gasparilla Pirate Invasion and Parade. The flotilla of boats led by the Jose Gasparilla begins at 11:30 a.m. in Hillsborough Bay. The Parade of Pirates starts at 2 p.m. at Bay to Bay and Bayshore boulevards. IT’S A JUNGLE ON STAGE: It’s not as famous as that other European-style Cirque performance, but at Cirque Dreams: Jungle Fantasy you’ll still encounter an exotic performance inspired by nature’s unpredictable creations, brought to life by an international cast. The show’s run starts Tuesday night at 7:30 at the Mahaffey Theater, 400 First St. S, St. Petersburg. Tickets start at $30. FEELS SO GOOD: His voice is instantly recognizable and disarmingly soothing. As the host of public radio’s A Prairie Home Companion, Garrison Keillor shares stories from Lake Wobegon, Minn., a little town that time forgot. He will be on stage at the Van Wezel. 8 p.m. Wednesday at Van Wezel Performing Arts Hall, 777 N Tamiami Trail, Sarasota. Tickets start at $45. ON THE DOTTED LINE: It’s both the most important day in your football players’ lives, and one of the most boring to watch. But members of the University of South Florida coaching staff and local radio station WQYK-AM 1010, spirit squads and select members of the 2009 football team will try to get people excited about Signing Day on Wednesday at a special event at Splitsville. It starts at 5:30 p.m., 615 Channelside Drive, Tampa. Free. tampabay.com * * * * Monday, February 2, 2009 No return for Sansom Florida Republicans move to permanently remove House speaker from leadership. BY ALEX LEARY Times/Herald Tallahassee Bureau TALLAHASSEE — Three days after announcing he was temporarily stepping aside as speaker of the Florida House, Ray Sansom will be forced tonight to fully give up the job. Worried about the cloud of legal investigations surrounding Sansom and conceding that rules do not allow for a protracted speaker-in-limbo, top Republicans called a 9 p.m. meeting in Tallahassee to anoint a new leader of the GOP caucus. “We must not allow the turbulence of the past to damage our ability to focus on the tremendous challenges facing our state,” Majority Leader Adam Hasner, R-Delray Beach, wrote in a memo to colleagues. “There is too much at stake for Floridians for us to be distracted.” The move is designed to install Rep. Larry Cretul of Ocala as the permanent speaker when the regular 60day session begins March 3 and to Putnam vies for Cabinet U.S. Rep. Adam Putnam wants to be agriculture commissioner. Story, 3B bring order and focus as the House prepares for a difficult budget-cutting session. If it goes as planned, tonight will complete a swift and intense fall for Sansom, 46, who spent years working toward one of the most powerful political offices in Florida only to watch it crumble. From state mines to dead zone ERNEST HOOPER ehooper@sptimes.com Now, cops’ quarterback taking heat from inside 1 Phosphate is mined and made into fertilizer. 2 Fertilizer is shipped out of the Port of Tampa to farming regions. Roughly 75 percent of the phosphate fertilizer used in the United States comes from Florida. The phosphate industry, which once boasted 100 companies working in an area of Florida known as Bone Valley, has shrunk to just three, employing about 4,000 people. The Port of Tampa ships more phosphate and fertilizer than any port in the world. Crude fertilizers are the port's biggest output commodity. U.S. consumers used 8.5 million metric tons of fertilizer in 2007. Phosphorus sources in the gulf 20% 25% 37% 18% corn and soybean other crops pasture and range urban and natural Just days ago he was pledging to hold on and fight allegations that his six-figure job at Northwest Florida State College was a reward for millions in construction money and other favors he got for the school before taking an unadvertised $110,000 job there in November — on the same day he was sworn in as speaker. Among the questions raised in a series of articles by the St. Petersburg . See SANSOM, 7B St. Louis Memphis 3 New Orleans 4 Port of Tampa 2 1 200 miles 3 Excess fertilizer enters the Mississippi River system from farm runoff. Farmland and pasture Mississippi River basin In 2007, government support for ethanol production prompted Midwestern farmers to plant 20 percent more of their land with corn, producing a record 13.1 billion bushels. Last year they produced the second-highest amount, 12.1 billion bushels. That boosted the use of fertilizer, producing record profits for phosphate companies. But chemicals from excess fertilizer use flow into the Mississippi River system, which gets runoff from 31 states. 4 Chemical runoff results in a “dead zone” in the gulf. Dissolved oxgyen, 6 June and July 2008 0 mgl Phosphate in river water leads to huge algae blooms in the gulf delta. The algae die and decompose on the sea floor, where they deplete oxgyen. Fish know to swim away, but slow-moving shrimp and crabs can't escape. That's why the dead zone threatens the gulf's $2.6 billion-a-year fishing industry. As the zone grows, the size of the annual shrimp catch shrinks. Sources: National Research Council, Gulf Hypoxia Watch, USGS, Times archives T DARLA CAMERON | Times F BY CRAIG PITTMAN | Times Staff Writer or a good example of the law of unintended consequences, look no further than the nationwide push to promote ethanol. ¶ Ten years ago, federal officials became concerned that a common gasoline additive called MTBE, which reduces air pollution, turned out to be a carcinogen, causing major water pollution problems. The Environmental Protection Agency recommended phasing out MTBE, so many states ordered refineries to switch to ethanol. Meanwhile, Congress in 2005 mandated an increase in using renewable fuels A scandal has crippled Speaker Ray Sansom’s viability. Chicago Phosphate fertilizes corn used for ethanol and kills gulf fishing. he debate regarding St. Petersburg police Chief Chuck Harmon reminds me of arguments about quarterbacks, who get a little too much credit when things go right, and perhaps too much blame when things go wrong. The difference this time: It’s the players themselves, not necessarily fans, questioning Harmon’s approach. Patel Conservatory student Ryan Desort wrote an essay about his drug problem. His mother, Karol, a choreographer and dance instructor, drug him from performance to performance. The essay helped Desort, 14, earn a spot on the Broadway League’s Kids Advisory Board. He leaves today for New York after becoming one of only 30 kids to earn the honor. … Seen on a bumper sticker: I’m Not Paranoid. Why? What Have You Heard? … Kudos to Vince Monticciolo, the founder of Dentistry from the Heart. The nonprofit has enlisted hundreds of dentists across America to provide free care to more than 5,500 people. On Friday, Monticciolo celebrates eight years and 4,000 smiles saved, by providing a free day of dental care for up to 600 Tampa Bay area residents at his practice in New Port Richey. … I appreciate that State Vacuum owner David Epstein doesn’t want the two University of Tampa students who stole Pickemup, his beloved faux gorilla, punished, but I think it would be appropriate if they had to vacuum a building. That’s all I’m saying. | 1B such as ethanol. Now each gallon of gas sold in Florida contains up to 10 percent ethanol. Because most ethanol is made from corn, the increased demand spurred Midwestern farmers to increase their corn production. That led to an increased demand for fertilizer. Most fertilizer in the United States comes from phosphate mined in Florida and shipped through the Port of Tampa. The ethanol boom led to big profits for phosphate companies that run mines near Tampa. But more fertilizer led to more nitrogen and phosphorus polluting the runoff flowing into the Mississippi River. They boosted an area in the Gulf of Mexico called “the dead zone.” The dead zone, which appears every summer, is an area where the water lacks oxygen. Nothing can live there. First mapped in 1985, the dead zone has grown steadily. Last year it was nearly as big as New Jersey. As it has grown, the gulf ’s fishing industry has shrunk. Last year the EPA issued a plan that talked about reducing the dead zone, but the plan “contained very few actions with time lines attached,” said Matt Rota of the Gulf Restoration Network. A month ago, an arm of the National Academies of Science issued a report blasting the EPA and the U.S. Department of Agriculture for failing to deal with the problem more quickly, “given that it will require years, if not decades,” to start seeing results. Another treasure ship found Teens arrested in Tampa’s Odyssey Marine Exploration may recover 4 tons of gold. Associated Press TAMPA — Deep-sea explorers who found $500 million in sunken treasure two years ago say they have discovered another prized shipwreck: a legendary British man-of-war that sank in the English Channel 264 years ago. The wreckage of the HMS Victory, found below about 330 feet of water, may carry an even bigger jackpot. Research indicates the ship was carrying 4 tons of gold coins when it sank in a storm, said Greg Stemm, co-founder of Odyssey Marine Exploration, ahead of a news conference today in London. . See TREASURE, 6B vehicle, house fires Two 16-year-olds face felony arson charges after 15 fires were set early Sunday morning. BY RITA FARLOW Times Staff Writer Odyssey Marine Exploration So far, two cannons have been recovered from the wreck, Odyssey said. The company said it is negotiating with the British government over collaborating on the recovery project. ST. PETERSBURG — Cassandra Cushing has been using her 2007 Toyota Solara to get to job interviews since she was laid off in November. Sunday, she awoke at 6 a.m. to find her white, two-door, soft-top convertible had been set on fire. “It’s my only way of transportation,” said Cushing, 47. “It’s just been a terrible day.” Cushing’s was the last of 14 vehicles to be set on fire over a two-hour span early Sunday. A final arson occurred at a home. No injuries were reported. Police arrested two 16-yearold boys Sunday and charged them each with four felony arson charges. They were identified as Mathew Pineda Kiernan and Francis Huy Du, both of whom live in central St. Petersburg. Police said they are still looking for “a few more juvenile sus. See ARSON, 7B