"In the U.S. Senate, Florida and Alabama are pressuring Georgia to join a water-sharing compact for the Apalachicola-Chattahoochee-Flint river system. But it could be too late downstream for scores of families who earned their livelihoods from the dying Apalachicola River.
The sun hasn’t been up long, but a quarter of a mile off East Point, veteran oysterman Eugene King and his wife Dalene are already close to their four-bag limit.
Dalene sits on the open deck of a 20-foot skiff, methodically sorting shells and hacking rhythmically at the biggest ones with a worn knife. Eugene leans on the long wooden handles of his oyster tongs and pauses to talk about the old days."
Jim Ash reports for WFSU May 20, 2016.
"After 30 Years, Apalachicola Water War Still Rages"
Source: WFSU, 05/27/2016