Talks of Alligator Alcatraz closure in the Everglades cheered by activists

Environmentalistsandother activistswho have aggressively fought to shut downAlligator Alcatrazcheered the news that it could finally happen.

USA TODAY

After news broke Thursday, May 7, that state and federal officials may be considering closing down thedetention centerfor illegal immigrants, due to the high operating costs,Friends of the Evergladesurged them in apost on Meta(Facebook), to "Shut It Down" for reasons of its own.

"We are not taking our foot off the gas until 'Alligator Alcatraz' is officially closed and the harm to the Everglades has been undone," the group stated.

The nonprofit environmental group continued: "We have been pushing to stop harm at 'Alligator Alcatraz' since Gov. DeSantis and his appointee, Attorney General James Uthmeier, announced it last summer with Kristi Noem and other federal officials. Our legal fight is moving forward, and we have strong claims to bring when we soon return to federal district court in Miami."

Friends of the Everglades, along with partners such as theCenter for Biological Diversityand theMiccosukee Tribe, have filed multiple lawsuits in an attempt to shut down the controversial immigration detention center inthe Everglades, alleging illegal construction and environmental damage, among other claims.

In its post, Friends of the Everglades suggested the unresolved lawsuits likely has something to do with government talks of closing the detention center.

The group stated: "The evidence our public records suit against Florida revealed – immense cost, harm to the surrounding Everglades, and lack of adherence to our bedrock environmental laws – brought pressure to close the facility."

Further, the group thanked those who have worked alongside it to "demand an end to this dark chapter in Everglades history."

"No airports, no rock mines, no prisons. Only Everglades," the group concluded in its post.

In a statement, Eve Samples, executive director of Friends of the Everglades, reiterated the group's thoughts shared on social media.

"The only acceptable remedy is shutting down Alligator Alcatraz and full remediation of the harm inflicted,” she said.

In a statement, Elise Bennett, Florida and Caribbean director and attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity, said: "This destructive detention camp in the middle of the Everglades should have never been built, but I’m glad it may finally shut down. Until it does, we’re going to fight on in district court with everything we’ve got."

She continued: "This destructive and pointless project has harmed some of Florida’s most vulnerable plants and animals and upended the lives of too many people. To even begin to set things right for Big Cypress and the Everglades, we'll spare no effort to shut the facility down and restore the site so nothing like this disaster ever happens again."

People gather in front of the access road into the Dade-Collier Training and Transition Airport to protest the construction of an immigrant detention center in the Big Cypress Wildlife Management Area on Saturday, June 28, 2025. The demonstration was led by Betty Osceola, an activist and a Miccosukee tribe member. A steady stream of trucks were seen going into the location. The location is being referred to as

Tania Galloni, managing attorney at Earthjustice, echoed those sentiments in a statement of her own.

“We will not rest until this harmful facility is shut down. If the state and federal governments had complied with environmental law, this facility would never have come to be. And if they don’t finally come to their senses, we are prepared to continue our battle in federal court to put an end to this madness."

Paul J. Schwiep, an attorney with Coffey Burlington and counsel for Friends of the Everglades and the Center for Biological Diversity, chimed in.

"The facility was an impractical and ill-conceived political stunt from the outset," he said in a statement. "The environmental damage it has caused must now be fully evaluated and remedied to ensure that this uniquely sensitive area is protected going forward."

He continued: "Since we first challenged this detention center last summer, it was clear that this was a federal project and the defendants are now effectively waving the white flag. We intend to closely monitor the wind-down process to ensure they fully remediate the environmental harms caused by this mean-spirited and costly boondoggle."

In a statement, Noelle Damico, director of social justice at theWorkers Circle, a national Jewish Social Justice organization that has been organizing vigils in opposition, outside of Alligator Alcatraz for 40 consecutive weeks, said: "Alligator Alcatraz is too expensive, and its cost is both financial and moral."

She continued: "The priorities of the DeSantis Administration and too many Florida lawmakers are clear. They are choosing the torture of immigrants 'arrested for working' over public education for Florida’s children and natural disaster protection for Florida families. They are making every Florida taxpayer — citizen and immigrant alike — complicit in their corrupt, cruel scheme that is separating families, terrorizing communities, and undermining the rule of law."

The group's vigils have been supported by many organizations. The stated purpose of the vigils is to fight for Alligator Alcatraz's closure, to denounce the inhumane conditions, to insist on Constitutional rights for all, to end the vicious ICE abductions, detentions and deportations of neighbors, friends and family.

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Workers Circle plans to continue the vigils until the detention center is shut down.The group stated: "Alligator Alcatraz is immoral, inhumane and un-American. It is also a blueprint for detention across the nation. If this center is finally closed, our nation must end the replication of this model elsewhere and a full investigation must be undertaken into the corruption, abuse, and profiteering that has happened so that appropriate authorities are held accountable."

Police officers park outside Alligator Alcatraz in Ochopee, Florida, during the vigil Aug. 10, 2025.

In a statement, Sam Lester, Immigrants' Rights Staff Attorney for theAmerican Civil Liberties Union of Florida, agreed the detention center should have never opened in the first place.

"This hastily constructed, makeshift facility has caused irreparable harm to thousands of people and their families. From inhumane conditions and medical neglect to the unlawful denial of access to legal counsel, this cruel facility has violated basic standards of dignity and due process from the start," he said.

He continued: "Taxpayer dollars should never fund facilities that inflict harm while denying people their fundamental rights and basic human needs. While we welcome reports that this center may finally be shut down, accountability cannot end there. We remain deeply concerned that detained people could be transferred to other ICE detention facilities with similarly horrific records of abuse and rights violations. That is why our work must continue. We remain committed to maintaining vigilant oversight of how people are treated in detention facilities across Florida."

Carmen Iguina Gonzalez, deputy director for immigration detention at the American Civil Liberties Union's National Prison Project, added that since the detention center opened it has become "notorious for the denial of access to counsel, horrific conditions, and the reckless destruction of fragile wetlands."

"It’s past time that it was shut down,”she said. "Still, these conditions are not unique to ‘Alligator Alcatraz’ and reflect systemic patterns of abuse at other ICE detention facilities across the country. We remain concerned about the possibility of detained people being transferred to other ICE detention facilities with track records of horrific conditions and rights violations.”

TheFlorida Immigrant Coalitionsaid it hasn't received an official confirmation on a closure, nor has it seen mass transfers of detainees related to recent rumors of closure.

"The Administration has been trying to backtrack from its aggressive immigration enforcement tactics," FLIC spokesperson Thomas Kennedy told The News-Press & Naples Daily News, adding that political backlash and growing criticism from immigrant communities and elected officials may be contributing factors.

Kennedy also argued the facility is financially unsustainable, saying officials initially indicated the operationwould be fundedthrough theFederal Emergency Management Agency, but that emergency response funding has instead been tapped to support it.

"There’s been so much grift put into this," Kennedy said. "This is unsustainable."

President Donald Trump visits a temporary migrant detention center, known as Alligator Alcatraz, in Ochopee, Florida, on July 1, 2025.

The strong and passionate reactions came after theNew York Timesreported, based on unnamed sources, that federal and state officials were preliminarily discussing shutting down the detention center, located between Miami and Naples, which costs about $1 million per day to operate.

The Homeland Security Department said Thursday that it is not seeking immediate closure of the site.

At a Lakeland press conference May 7, DeSantis said DHS hasn't "said they want to wind it down." But the governor still left the door open.

"This was always designed to be temporary," DeSantis said of Alligator Alcatraz. "It served a good purpose. We're totally willing to continue that happening in the future."

In an email after the New York Times story broke about a possible closure, John Mullins, a spokesman for Collier County – in which the detention center is located – said: "The County has not been informed of any closure of the illegal immigration detention facility."

Curt Anderson, a Policy and Politics Reporter for The USA TODAY NETWORK-FLORIDA, contributed to this story.

Do you have an opinion about this topic? Write a letter to the editor and send it toletters@naplesnews.comand/ormailbag@news-press.com. Keep it to 250 words or fewer and include your contact info. Have more to say: Send a guest column of no more than 600 words.

Mickenzie Hannonis a watchdog reporter for The News-Press and Naples Daily News, covering Collier and Lee counties. Contact her at 239-435-3423 ormhannon@gannett.com.

Laura Laydenis a senior business and government reporter. Reach her by email atlaura.layden@naplesnews.com.

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This article originally appeared on Naples Daily News:Alligator Alcatraz closing? Shutdown talks cheered by activists

Talks of Alligator Alcatraz closure in the Everglades cheered by activists

Environmentalistsandother activistswho have aggressively fought to shut downAlligator Alcatrazcheered the news that it could finally ha...
Where are fires burning in Florida this morning? Affected roads

Recent rain may have helped some areas of Florida, but the drought continues and wildfires continue to burn.

USA TODAY

Visibility on some roads has been affected in some areas early May 8.

The air quality has diminished in a few counties, especially in Northeast Florida.

➤Weather alerts via text:Sign up to get updates about current storms and weather events by location

Here's a look at current conditions.

Current drought conditions in Florida

TheU.S. Drought Monitoron May 5 provided the followingbreakdown on how bad the drought is in Florida:

Drought and dryness categories:

  • Abnormally dry: 1.3%

  • Moderate drought: 4.3%

  • Severe drought: 12.4%

  • Extreme drought: 56.9%

  • Exceptional drought: 25.0%

Total area in drought: 98.7%,impacting 17.9 million Florida residents.

Burn bans in effect in 50 Florida counties

Burn bans are in effect in 50 of Florida's 67 counties, as of May 6.

What is a burn ban?

The Florida Forest Service tries combines allcounty-enacted burn banson its website.

A burn ban typically prohibits the outside burning of yard trash and vegetation, as well as campfires, bonfires and burn barrels, but can vary by county.

➤Current Florida fire danger map

Burn bans are issued when there's a high risk for wildfires and include such conditions as:

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What is the Keetch-Byram Drought Index?

TheFlorida Forest Serviceand U.S. Forest Service use theKeetch-Byram Drought Indexto measure the risk of wildfires based on soil moisture, how dry fuel is, and precipitation.

Thescale ranges from 0 to 800,with 0 indicating saturated soil and 800 representing extreme drought with a high potential for "intense, deep-burning fires."

Where are wildfires in Florida today?

According to the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services,between Jan. 1 and May 3in Florida:

  • Acres burned: 120,515

  • Number of wildfires: 1,980

Are any roads closed due to smoke?

According to theFlorida Highway Patrol, at 7 a.m. May 8, wildfires have been reported near these locations. See if they're affecting visibility:

  • Putnam County: South State Road 19 at East Peniel Road near Palatka. Smoke in the area; use caution.

  • Columbia County: I-75 northbound at mile marker 423 near Lake City. Use caution; possible smoke in the area.

  • Alachua County: State Road 25 at Southwest 103th Avenue near Micanopy. Visibility reduced to 100 feet.

    • U.S. 301 at Southeast 122nd Lane near Hawthorne. Light smoke in area but no visibility issues reported as of 4:23 a.m.

  • Lafayette County: North Fletcher Avenue at East Main Street near Mayo. No visibility issues as of 3:39 a.m.

  • Volusia County: Wildfire reported at Tomoka Farms Road at State Road 415 near Port Orange. No reported issues.

  • Hernando County: Commercial Way at Glen Lakes Boulevard near Brooksville. Smoke in the area; use caution.

See latest reports on air quality around Florida today

Air quality in Florida May 8 ranges from good to unhealth for sensitive groups.

➤Where is smoke in Jacksonville coming from?

The worst conditions are reported in Northeast Florida in Jacksonville.

Florida weather alerts issued by National Weather Service

Interactive map: Enter your address to find closest wildfire risks

Will it rain anytime soon in Florida? See the radar

How can you conserve water while it's dry in Florida?

Here are some suggestions from the Florida Department of Environmental Protection and Florida's water management districts on how you can save water both inside and outside your home:

  • Install high-efficiency showerheads, faucets and toilets.

  • Check faucets and pipes for leaks.

  • Use your dishwasher and washing machine only for full loads.

  • Use the shortest clothes washing cycle for lightly soiled loads.

  • Minimize use of kitchen sink garbage disposal units.

  • Thaw frozen food in the refrigerator or microwave, not under running water.

  • Scrape, don’t rinse your dishes before loading in the dishwasher.

  • Add mulch to reduce evaporation.

  • Harvest rain to water flower beds, herb gardens and potted plants.

  • Choose native plants adapted to the area and needing less water.

  • Check hose and sprinkler connections for leaks.

  • On slopes, plant native species that will retain water and help reduce runoff.

  • Irrigate your lawn with reclaimed water.

    • To find out if reclaimed water is available in your neighborhood, contact your utility company.

  • Do not water the lawn in rainy weather.

  • Use a hose with a shut-off nozzle when washing the car.

Stay informed. Get weather alerts via text

What's next?

We will continue to update our weather coverage as conditions warrant. Download your local site's app to ensure you're always connected to the news. And look for ourspecial subscription offers here.

Cheryl McCloud is a journalist for the USA TODAY Network-Florida's service journalism Connect team. You can get all of Florida’s best content directly in your inbox each weekday day by signing up for the free newsletter, Florida TODAY, athttps://jacksonville.com/newsletters.

This article originally appeared on Florida Times-Union:Florida wildfires and smoke map, locations, road closures, air quality

Where are fires burning in Florida this morning? Affected roads

Recent rain may have helped some areas of Florida, but the drought continues and wildfires continue to burn. Visibility on some ro...
Zack Polanski says no country has right to exist when asked about Israel

Green PartyleaderZack Polanskifaces fresh controversy after questioningIsrael’s right to exist as a nation.

The Independent US

Mr Polanski told ITV’sRobert Peston: “I don’t believe any country has a right to exist. People have a right to exist.”

He claimed “semantics about whether a country has a right to exist” was the root cause of the “mess” of the current Israel-Palestinian conflict.

Zack Polanski does not ‘believe any country has a right to exist – people have a right to exist’ (Getty)

The exchange followedMr Polanski’s poll ratings plummeted after he shared a postcriticising police officers’ treatment of a suspect accused of stabbing two Jewish men in Golders Green last week, and after he admitted falselyclaiming to have once been a “spokesman” for the British Red Cross.

He was challenged over his stance on Israel in an interview on ITV’sPestonin which he described Israel as a “genocidal apartheid state” over its war on Gaza.

Mr Peston asked him: “Israel has a right to exist? Yes or no?”

Mr Polanski replied: “I don’t believe any country has a right to exist. People have a right to exist. The Israelis have a right exist; the Palestinians have a right to exist.

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“I think it is our role as a third country to make sure there is fairness, transparency and accountability about a peace process (in the Gaza conflict).

“I always think these semantics about whether a country has a right to exist just ends up in gatekeeping, which is how we ended up in this mess in the first place with the Balfour Declaration.”

Mr Peston responded: “The implication of that is that Britain doesn’t have the right to exist, which also carries quite heavy connotations.”

Mr Polanski’s reference to theBalfour Declarationrelates to the statement in 1917 by British foreign secretary Lord Balfour, which promised a “national home” for the Jewish people.

It is seen as paving the way for the creation of Israel in 1948 and the removal of large numbers of Palestinians from their homes.

Mr Polanski’s reference to gatekeeping relates to the concept of “colonial gatekeeping”, whereby the fate and borders of post colonial states are dictated by its former colonial rulers.

The Balfour Declaration led to the so-called “British Mandate” in Palestine, established in 1923 by the League of Nations (the precursor to the UN) and which resulted in Jewish immigration overseen by the British authorities in the run-up to the creation of Israel after the Second World War.

The mandate has been criticised for sowing the seeds of the bitter ongoing conflict between Israelis and Palestinians.

Zack Polanski says no country has right to exist when asked about Israel

Green PartyleaderZack Polanskifaces fresh controversy after questioningIsrael’s right to exist as a nation. Mr Polanski told ITV’s...
Iran update: Here's when Trump says gas prices will come 'crashing down'

As Americans continue topay more at the pump,PresidentDonald Trumpis doubling down the cost of fuel will drop quickly after the conflict with Iran comes to an end.

USA TODAY

The cost of a gallon of gas is $4.558 as of Thursday, May 7 — about a 40-cent increase in a month and more than a dollar from a year ago.

A few days earlier, in a news conference on May 4, Trump said he expects the price of gasoline to drop "substantially" following the end of the Iran war, reported USA TODAY.

"I see it going down very substantially when this is over, I think very rapidly too, at levels that you've never seen because there's a lot of energy out there, ships all over the world that are loaded up with it," Trump said. "They can't do much with it because they got kidnapped by a pretty evil place. But we're taking care of it."

Earlier, on May 1, Trump said gas prices would "come crashing down as soon as this war is over."

In an interview with Fox News, U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent also said gas prices would fall once the war in Iran came to a close.

“We are cognizant that this short-term blip up in prices is affecting the American people, but I am also confident, on the other side of this, prices are gonna come down very quickly,” Bessent toldFox News.

Iran war update today

Iranian officials are reviewing a U.S. framework for peace talks after Trump again threatened to resume airstrikes on the Middle Eastern country unless it agrees to a deal that would reopen the Strait of Hormuz, reported USA TODAY.

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"If they don't agree, the bombing starts, and it will be, sadly, at a much higher level and intensity than it was before," Trump said on social media on Wednesday. He has not described the American proposal.

"Assuming Iran agrees to give what has been agreed to, which is, perhaps, a big assumption, the already legendary Epic Fury will be at an end, and the highly effective Blockade will allow the Hormuz Strait to be OPEN TO ALL, including Iran," Trump wrote.

Oil prices today

U.S. crude oil plunged by as much as 15%, to $88 per barrel, and international Brent crude oil fell as much as 11%, to $96 per barrel on May 6, as reported by CNBC, though prices rose to about $95 a barrel by Thursday morning.

Are gas prices going to go down?

Trump said that once the war with Iran is over, prices at the pump will drop "substantially."

USA Today contributed to this story.

Natassia Paloma may be reached atnpaloma@gannett.com, @NatassiaPaloma on x; natassia_paloma on Instagram, and Natassia Paloma Thompson on Facebook

More:'We've got to do better' congressional members demand at Camp East Montana

This article originally appeared on El Paso Times:Iran news today: Trump addresses gas prices as Iran reviews deal

Iran update: Here's when Trump says gas prices will come 'crashing down'

As Americans continue topay more at the pump,PresidentDonald Trumpis doubling down the cost of fuel will drop quickly after the conflic...
Michael Conforto comes through in a pinch as streaking Cubs rally in 9th for 5-4 win over Reds

CHICAGO (AP) — Pinch-hitter Michael Conforto capped a two-run ninth inning with a solo homer, and the Chicago Cubs rallied to beat the Cincinnati Reds 5-4 on Monday night for their sixth straight victory.

Associated Press Chicago Cubs' Michael Conforto, center, celebrates with teammates after hitting the winning solo home run during the ninth inning of a baseball game against the Cincinnati Reds in Chicago, Monday, May 4, 2026. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh) Chicago Cubs' Michael Conforto, center, celebrates with teammates after hitting the winning solo home run during the ninth inning of a baseball game against the Cincinnati Reds in Chicago, Monday, May 4, 2026. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh) Chicago Cubs' Seiya Suzuki, of Japan, celebrates as he rounds the bases after hitting a three-run home run during the fourth inning of a baseball game against the Cincinnati Reds in Chicago, Monday, May 4, 2026. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh) A rainbow occurs while a tarp covers the infield during a rain delay before a baseball game between the Cincinnati Reds and the Chicago Cubs in Chicago, Monday, May 4, 2026. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh) Cincinnati Reds starting pitcher C. Petty wipes his face after Chicago Cubs' Seiya Suzuki, of Japan, hit a three-run home run during the fourth inning of a baseball game in Chicago, Monday, May 4, 2026. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)

Reds Cubs Baseball

Seiya Suzuki hit a 455-foot home run for the NL Central leaders, who improved to 23-12 with their 16th win in 19 games. Chicago has won 12 in a row at home, the team’s best streak at Wrigley Field since a 14-game run in 2008.

The Reds took a 4-3 lead in the eighth when Spencer Steer lined an RBI single against Ben Brown, only to drop their fourth straight.

Pete Crow-Armstrong tripled leading off the ninth against Emilio Pagán (2-1) on a ball that popped out of center fielder Dane Myers’ glove as he tried to make a leaping catch against the wall. Crow-Armstrong scored one out later on Nico Hoerner’s sacrifice fly.

Conforto, batting for Matt Shaw, then drove a 3-2 pitch to center and was mobbed by happy teammates as he crossed home plate.

The teams waited out a delay of 1 hour, 40 minutes at the start because of a thunderstorm after the game was initially moved up a half hour.

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The Cubs trailed 3-0 in the fourth before Suzuki tied it with a three-run drive off Chase Petty, Chicago’s longest homer of the season.

Edward Cabrera went six innings, allowing three runs and nine hits. He gave up a homer to JJ Bleday leading off the third and a two-run drive to Ke’Bryan Hayes in the fourth.

Ryan Rolison (2-0) worked the ninth.

In his first major league start this season, Petty gave up three runs and four hits in 5 2/3 innings. The Reds recalled the right-hander from Triple-A Louisville prior to the game.

Up next

Cubs RHP Jameson Taillon (2-1, 4.41 ERA) looks to win his second straight start, while LHP Andrew Abbott (1-2, 5.97) gets the ball for the Reds. Taillon tossed seven solid innings at San Diego last week.

AP MLB:https://apnews.com/MLB

Michael Conforto comes through in a pinch as streaking Cubs rally in 9th for 5-4 win over Reds

CHICAGO (AP) — Pinch-hitter Michael Conforto capped a two-run ninth inning with a solo homer, and the Chicago Cubs rallied to beat the ...

 

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