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Bonita Springs Fracking Ban Headed To Court

Environmentalists are bracing for law suits after Bonita Springs became the the first city in a drilling area to ban fracking, the controversial drilling technique.
Environmentalists are bracing for law suits after Bonita Springs became the the first city in a drilling area to ban fracking, the controversial drilling technique.

Bonita Springs activists are bracing for lawsuits now that the city council has passed a fracking ban, the first of its kind in Florida in an active drilling area. The  controversial oil and gas drilling technique was one of the hottest issues in the last legislative session.

Environmentalists are bracing for law suits after Bonita Springs became the the first city in a drilling area to ban fracking, the controversial drilling technique.
Environmentalists are bracing for law suits after Bonita Springs became the the first city in a drilling area to ban fracking, the controversial drilling technique.

Anti-fracking activist Karen Dwyer says heavy-hitters Earthjustice  and the Conservancy of Southwest Florida are prepared to slug it out in court with the drilling industry and landowners.

“On the one hand, we’re prepared for a legal battle if it comes to that, but on the other hand, we’re hoping that it just compels counties across the state, as well as cities, to enact these local bans against fracking.”

Bonita Springs has no active drilling in city limits, but it sits atop the Suniland Trend, a vast reserve. Collier Resources owns mineral rights in Bonita Springs and drilling occurs within 10 miles. The company is threatening to sue.

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Jim Ash is a reporter at WFSU-FM. A Miami native, he is an award-winning journalist with more than 20 years of experience, most of it in print. He has been a member of the Florida Capital Press Corps since 1992.