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(Jeb) Bush letter to property rights group raises outcry
St. Petersburg Times ^ | June 22, 02 | Craig Pittman

Posted on 06/24/2002 9:10:41 AM PDT by laureldrive

Bush letter to property rights group raises outcry

St. Petersburg Times; St. Petersburg, Fla.; Jun 22,

2002; CRAIG PITTMAN;

Copyright Times Publishing Co. Jun 22, 2002

In Florida's courtrooms, the Pacific Legal Foundation has argued against dimming beach lights to help baby sea turtles. It has fought for the rights of boaters upset about manatee protection regulations. It has opposed the state Department of Environmental Protection over a land use case.

And it has won a notable fan: Gov. Jeb Bush.

The cover of the most recent newsletter from the foundation's Atlantic Center in Miami reproduces a letter from Bush in which he encourages potential donors to give to the foundation.

"I hope that your supporters, and those who have not yet made the decision to contribute to your effort, realize the extent to which PLF has become a voice . . . on behalf of limited government, private property rights, education reform and free enterprise," Bush wrote. "Keep up the good work."

Critics questioned why Bush would allow the foundation to use the prestige of the governor's office in a bid for financial support.

"I think it's inappropriate to send a letter saying, 'I hope people send money to your organization and join it,' " said David Guest of the Earthjustice Legal Defense Fund, which frequently sues state agencies to push for more environmental regulation. "It reveals something about Jeb that we've always known: He's a closet right-wing crazy."

One of the Atlantic Center's advisory board members said the foundation is not that far to the right.

"They represent, by and large, business interests and private landowners," said advisory board member Scottie Butler, who serves as general counsel of the Florida Farm Bureau. "They're not knuckle- dragging, off-the-wall, Genghis Khan-type conservatives."

Bush wrote the letter last year at the request of the sole attorney who runs the foundation's Miami office, known as the Atlantic Center. Bush press secretary Elizabeth Hirst said the governor and his legal staff were very familiar with the foundation, and that sending such a letter on the governor's letterhead is not unusual.

"On occasion the governor does write letters to support different organizations or causes when he sees fit," she said.

She offered three examples: a letter supporting a blood drive, one praising a Red Cross charity ball and a third congratulating a youth volunteer who had earned national recognition. None of those letters encouraged donations.

Bush's predecessor, Lawton Chiles, might have occasionally sent a letter of encouragement to various parties, "but I don't think we would've gone so far as to say, 'Hope your supporters will send you money,' " said Chuck Wolfe, who served as Chiles' director of external affairs.

Representatives of some organizations whose politics lean to the left joked that they will now approach Bush to help raise money for their groups.

"Looks like we may have found our honorary membership chairman - we'll get him to write a letter for us," joked Laurie Macdonald, a national board member of the Endangered Species Coalition.

Frequently labeled the nation's oldest conservative public- interest law firm, the Pacific Legal Foundation was formed in California in 1973. It has made a name for itself primarily by filing friend-of-the-court briefs, particularly in cases opposing affirmative action policies or endangered species listings. Its stated goal is "less government and the preservation of free enterprise, private property rights and individual liberties."

The foundation's Miami office is run by Frank A. Shepherd, 55, a Palm Beach County native who earned his law degree from the University of Michigan in 1972. He worked briefly as an attorney for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency during the Reagan Administration before returning to South Florida to practice.

Shepherd is "a very scholarly, soft-spoken, learned person," said Charlotte Greenbarg of Independent Voices for Better Education. She has worked with Shepherd on briefs supporting the state's voucher program. "He does his homework."

Shepherd said he has known Bush since before he was elected governor. He said he asked a Bush staff member to get the governor to write the letter in the hopes it would raise the Atlantic Center's profile.

He said the newsletter circulates to fewer than 1,000 people. So far, he said, the Bush endorsement on the cover has had little impact on the foundation's budget, which is expected to hit $500,000 next year. However, the foundation's Miami office is busy enough that it will soon move to a bigger office and add a second attorney and staff members.

In Florida, the foundation has gained little notice outside legal circles, a status Shepherd had hoped to reverse by taking the DEP case all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court.

The foundation represented Foster Burgess, who bought land along the Choctawhatchee River in 1956 but did nothing with it for decades. In the 1990s he applied for a DEP permit to build a camping shelter - something that would have been permitted in the 1950s, but is not now.

Shepherd contended the DEP had essentially taken Burgess' land without paying for it. The court rejected Burgess' case without a hearing.

Although Shepherd has tackled tort reform and voucher issues, the foundation's decision to open a Florida branch was driven by "the Endangered Species Act and its perverse implementation by certain federal agencies," according to the group's Web site.

For instance, the foundation argued in a Daytona Beach case concerning baby sea turtles that county officials should not be required to enforce the federal law by ordering beachfront homeowners to dim their lights.

The Atlantic Center newsletter with the governor's signature on the cover contains a column by Shepherd's boss attacking the Endangered Species Act. The column contends that "what has become endangered are the rights of people to reasonable uses of their private property."

The column, by California attorney Robin Rivett, cites as examples the Florida cases involving sea turtles and manatees - which Bush once called "my favorite mammal."

- Staff researcher Caryn Baird contributed to this report.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Front Page News; Government; US: Florida
KEYWORDS: constitution; environment; propertyrights

1 posted on 06/24/2002 9:10:43 AM PDT by laureldrive
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To: laureldrive
a beter link:

http://www.sptimes.com/2002/06/22/State/Bush_letter_to_proper.shtml

2 posted on 06/24/2002 9:17:57 AM PDT by laureldrive
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To: laureldrive
Funny. If Gov. Bush had addressed his letter to enviro wackos they'd be singing him hosannas.
3 posted on 06/24/2002 9:19:17 AM PDT by goldstategop
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To: laureldrive
"They're not knuckle- dragging, off-the-wall, Genghis Khan-type conservatives."

No, but I am.

4 posted on 06/24/2002 9:24:55 AM PDT by G.Mason
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To: goldstategop
Shepherd of PLF also went to bat for the Boy Scouts in Broward County:

Judge: Schools can't bar Scouts

By BILL HIRSCHMAN

and TAMIKA SIMMONS Education Writers, South Florida Sun-Sentinel

Posted March 22 2001

The Broward School District can't stop the Boy Scouts from meeting in schools just because the district disagrees with the Scouts' ban on gay leaders and members, a federal judge ruled on Wednesday.

But the legal victory does not mean Scout troops will continue to meet in schools. That's because the district plans to charge a fee -- which the Scouts may be unwilling or unable to pay.

The ruling did not address the fee issue. Now, the Scouts meet for free in the schools, a deal that expires March 30.

... In a battle that received national attention, U.S. District Judge Donald Middlebrooks upheld the Scouts' contention that the School Board was interfering with its First Amendment right to act on its beliefs.

...Wednesday's ruling essentially bars the School Board from rejecting the Scouts' future application for leases.

Conservatives cheered the decision, especially the Pacific Legal Foundation, a Sacramento-based group that filed a friend-of-the-court brief.

"It's reassuring that the First Amendment applies to all persons in the United States including the Boy Scouts, which is not the way the Broward County School Board saw it," said Frank Shepherd, managing attorney of the group's Miami office.

"They were trying to besmirch the reputation of some 10,000 students. It took a United States district judge to teach these leaders of children this lesson of tolerance," Shepherd said.

Gay rights groups were disappointed.

Ray Rideout, co-chairman of the Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network, said he was sad that children are required to go to a school while groups that preach bigotry and discrimination are allowed to assemble there.

"It's sad when we make an example of our children," Rideout said. "When we practice discrimination, shame on us."

The complete ruling can be read on the Internet at www.netside.net/ usdcfls/publications/ casindex.html.

5 posted on 06/24/2002 9:25:35 AM PDT by laureldrive
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To: laureldrive
....on behalf of limited government, private property rights, education reform and free enterprise," Bush wrote. "Keep up the good work."

In related, not-forgotten news, Jeb Bush pushed for the legislature to pass a law barring HOA's from enacting rules prohibitng the flying of the American flag, thus making the people of Florida wonder what he means by "private property rights".

6 posted on 06/24/2002 9:25:53 AM PDT by FreeTally
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To: laureldrive
I labored under the obvious error that Governor Bush had free speech rights, just like the rest of us.

Does anyone know the truth behind the Manatee business? I saw a few in Sea World, and I thought it was a bizarre accident of evolution that the species was able to survive, powerboat accidents or no.

It seemed unfair to me that so much of the ICW is subject to draconian speed limits in the name of tha Manatee. Of course if those limits are really to protect coastal property, I have no problem with them, but it seems like a lot for one species that I never even saw in hours of boating.

D

7 posted on 06/24/2002 9:27:15 AM PDT by daviddennis
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To: laureldrive
Ray Rideout, co-chairman of the Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network, said he was sad that children are required to go to a school while groups that preach bigotry and discrimination are allowed to assemble there.

Oh, the irony of this statement. Its so thick, you could cut it with a knife.

Oh, and the guys real name can not be Ray Rideout. It just can't be.

8 posted on 06/24/2002 9:28:00 AM PDT by FreeTally
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To: summer
fyi
9 posted on 06/24/2002 10:25:09 AM PDT by Free the USA
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