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Poll: Most Floridians favor action on global warming
By
JENNIFER LIBERTO
Published May 14, 2007
St. Petersburg Times
http://www.sptimes.com/2007/05/14/Tampabay/Poll__Most_Floridians.shtml
Almost
three of four Floridians think state lawmakers should take
immediate steps to combat global warming.
In a St.
Petersburg Times/Bay News 9 poll, 71 percent of those polled
said they support immediate legislative action to cut green
house gas emissions.
More than
half - 54 percent - said they believe global warming has
contributed to an increase in the number and severity of
hurricanes over the past few years.
Pollster
Kellyanne Conway cautioned that the numbers might be inflated
given the trendiness of global warming as a political issue, but
she said it appears global warming has become a significant
issue in Florida.
"It's
their way of asking Tallahassee to get Mother Nature out of her
bad mood, " said Conway of the Polling Co. of Washington, D.C.
Democrats
and independents most strongly favored government action to curb
greenhouse gases, with 81 percent of Democrats and 83 percent of
independents agreeing, according to the poll. About 54 percent
of Republicans supported government action.
Also,
younger people, those 18 to 34, supported government
intervention to cut emissions more strongly than those older
than 65.
Scientists believe that the burning of fossil fuel has produced
atmospheric gases that trap heat near the earth's surface, which
in turn warms oceans. Some believe that the warmer oceans are
spawning more frequent and stronger hurricanes.
Florida
has lagged behind other states in coming up with ways to cut
greenhouse gasses. This year, the Legislature took a step in
that direction by passing a bill that creates a task force
focused on figuring out how to structure future energy policy.
The bill also orders the Public Service Commission to recommend
power companies produce some electricity using renewable fuels.
It also
gave $62-million for alternative energy programs, including one
that converts crops into fuel.
Energy
policy is also expected to emerge as presidential campaign issue
in Florida, as 67 percent of those polled said energy policy is
a "very important" presidential campaign discussion.
"Public
awareness and attitudes about energy policy and global warming
are growing at an increasing amount on the daily basis, " said
Susan Glickman with Natural Resources Defense Council, an
environmental nonprofit.
Some who
took part in the poll were interviewed by Times reporters, and
nearly all said they believe in state action on warming.
"I have
grandchildren, and if we don't do something soon there won't be
anything left, " said Marcia Burnham, 70, a retiree and
registered independent in St. Petersburg. "They need to
appropriate more money toward development (of new technology)."
Donald
Brown, a 65-year-old Republican retiree from Wildwood, said he
doesn't believe that human activity is the sole or even main
cause of global warming, but he also agrees that emissions
should be cut.
"I've
thought about a lot of pros and cons about it, and any cut in
emissions is good, whether it affects global warming or not, "
Brown said.
The
survey was conducted by Schroth, Eldon & Associates, which
traditionally works with Democratic candidates, and the Polling
Co., which mostly does Republican polling. They spoke to 901
Floridians from May 6 to May 9. The margin of error for
statewide figures is 3.5 percentage points.
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