The J.E.D. landfill mountain of garbage, Holopaw, FL |
Since 2008, Osceola County Commissioner Fred Hawkins sat
silently as his district (District 5) turned into a huge dumping ground known
as J.E.D. Landfill under the control of a private corporation (1) where he has
employment ties.(*)
His nonchalant attitude about the dangers of waste has
everything to do with the fact that he works in the industry. He views garbage,
including coal ash, as a revenue source(2) rather than a toxic soup that has
potential to foul our drinking water and poison our environment. He systematically turned a blind eye and
remained silent to the changes that turned JED from the promised, small
regional landfill meant to serve county needs into "a million dollar”
industry(*). Revenue over health...when
it comes to Fred Hawkins, it's always about money.
It wasn't suppose to be that way. In 1998 (prior to Fred's tenure on the
Commission), the county elected to settle when threatened with a lawsuit(3) by
the landfill owners because they were denied Conditional Use Permits to locate
a landfill on certain Agricultural/Conservation lands.
It should be noted that the proposed 1999 agreement was for
a small regional landfill that had some beneficial cost savings components for
the citizens. But the promises that
placated the citizens and satisfied the County Commission into allowing it to
move forward slowly fell by the wayside.
This was what was initially pitched |
In 2004 Fred Hawkins, while employed by the company that
owned the landfill, received an appointment to the Planning Commission which
makes zoning and conditional use permit recommendations. Shortly thereafter,
the first condition of the initial landfill agreement which called for
accepting waste only from counties adjacent to Osceola was changed. Suddenly all Florida counties could dump at
the JED Landfill (CU04-00019). Coincidence? You decide.
In 2005 Conditional Use is changed from a maximum height of
178 ft. to 330 ft. (CU05-00054), negating the promise that it would never be
seen from the highway.
In 2011, while Fred Hawkins was a commissioner and while
employed at the landfill, CU11-00008 was issued which expanded the landfill
footprint from 264 acres to 360 acres and deleted certain conditions to
coincide with a new agreement being negotiated with the county.
While Fred can truly claim that he didn't vote for the 2008
and 2011 CU changes (since his family receives royalties and he has to recuse
himself), Fred's silence in fighting or relaying information on the impact
those changes would have on his constituency speaks volumes about his
character. He literally allowed District
5 to become a million dollar garbage dump and his family gets to laugh all the
way to the bank with their royalty checks.
More room for waste means more potential for royalty fees.
Our landscape is forever changed since he didn't speak up when
they requested a change in the conditional use permits from the 1999 pitched idea of 200 acres, 98ft height with a 30 year capacity to currently approved
massive 330 ft. height that in his own words “…my daughter's grandchildren
would not see the end of this landfill...”(*)
It is as visible as the NY World Trade Center is from New
Jersey. Our rural beauty has been
scarred and it all took place during Fred Hawkins tenure as Osceola County
Commissioner for District 5.
While he couldn't vote on the amended agreement that allowed
Coal Ash from outside the state, specifically Puerto Rico, based on documents
obtained from public records requests, he actively participated in the
negotiations via lunch meetings and conference calls. All to benefit the bottom
line of his former private sector employer.
Is this the person you want legislating your future? I don't. Can you just imagine Fred Hawkins having a say in the fate of biosolids
in Florida? Another reason I say #HellNoHawkins2020
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(1) The landfill has had many names and owners due to mergers
including Oak Hammock Disposal Company, LLC; Omni Waste of Osceola County, LLC;
Waste Solutions Inc.; Progressive Waste Solutions Ltd; and currently Waste Connections, Inc.
(2) Regarding the Coal Ash deal: “This is a way for the county to generate some revenue while making a smart agreement with a strong local business partner,” Hawkins said. Osceola News-Gazette, May 3, 2019
(3) Lawsuit filed 2000 CA 001123 OC - OMNI WASTE, LC vs.
OSECOLA COUNTY
(*) Fred Hawkins statements during May 6, 2019 BOCC meeting:"I am landfill certified"; "I worked for the company out there"; "...this landfill would do nothing to violate a permit that is probably worth...I say millions, but probably billions of dollars to them. ...Long life...I would think my daughter's grandchildren would not see the end of this landfill..."