Today December 26, 2005 Blue Spring, Orange City, Florida is effectively closed to scuba divers. We arrived at the gate at 8 AM for our dive and were told by the gate rangers that as of December 21st no diving was allowed as long as manatees were in the head springs. The exact wording of their announcement is:
*WARNING*
IF MANATEE ARE IN THE DESIGNATED SWIMMING AREA THEN DIVERS AND SWIMMERS WILL BE ASKED TO LEAVE THE WATER. DIVERS CAN EITHER WAIT UNTIL THE MANATEE LEAVE OR REQUEST A REFUND.
WE APOLOGIZE FOR ANY ICONVIENENCE THIS MAY CAUSE.
This effectively stops diving for the remainder of the winter season. This reason for this action appears to be that some individual harassed a manatee and now all divers and swimmers are to be controlled (punished).
This raises several issues: #1, if the diver/swimmer in question was observed harassing the manatee Federal Law protects the animal and the individual should be arrested and prosecuted. All divers sign an agreement upon entering the State Park stating that they know they are to stay 50 away from manatees. Swimmers sign no such document.
#2. Is this ban legal? What discretionary authority does the Park have to enact this law? When across the State Crystal River actively promotes Diving with the manatees?
#3: What is the economic impact to local Orlando area dive shops who rent gear, do air fills, and training dives at Blue Spring?
Finally, two thoughts, should this ban be allowed to stand we could find that Park closed to divers and swimmers from October to March (6 months). Secondly, couldnt a solution to the issue be found, such as placing a large net across the river run below the entry area to keep the manatees away from divers and swimmers? This net would allow the first 200 feet to the run from the boil to the entry area for human use and the remainder for animal use?
Now the question is what we as active divers can do to resolve this Park action? Do we have a diving attorney to contact versed in Park and Federal waterway issues? Would petitions to the State benefit this issue?
Its difficult to believe that a few individuals can effect the whole area diving community by their total disregard of environmental rules, but it happened. Now how can the responsible diving community acting together resolve this issue?
Lets keep the discussion to real solutions.