"Former water district director points upstream for cause of Apalachicola Bay's seafood woes"

Bruce Ritchie
09/17/2012 - 03:46 PM

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has been keeping a big federal reservoir on the Chattahoochee River relatively full while Florida has been receiving minimum flows downstream on the Apalachicola River, according to a former Florida state official.

Gov. Rick Scott on Sept. 6 requested a fishery disaster declaration from federal officials. The governor says an ongoing drought and over-harvesting of undersized oysters has left few oysters in Apalachicola Bay, with 2,500 seafood worker jobs in Franklin County at risk.

Former Northwest Florida Water Management District Executive Director Douglas Barr points to Army Corps of Engineers operating procedures that hold back water in reservoirs.

Likewise, the Los Angeles Times on Monday reported that unlike the drought four years ago, Georgia officials are acting like the drought now doesn't exist -- and they are not ordering significant conservation measures.

Barr said the Apalachicola River has been at or below a near-minimum flow 52 percent of days since May 2011. Since 1928, that low flow occurred only 2.6 percent of the time.

At the same time, the big Lake Lanier reservoir on the Chattahoochee River was on average 81 percent of full capacity and has not dropped below 70 percent this year. The Army Corps of Engineers can continue to restrict flows to Florida under its operating procedures while the reservoirs are being refilled, Barr said.

"The current situation clearly illustrates the problems with the (Corps of Engineers) interim operating procedures," Barr wrote in the email to Apalachicola Riverkeeper. "Releases to Apalachicola River are limited ... while simultaneously all demands in Georgia are met and reservoir storage is preserved."

A Corps spokesman in Mobile, Ala. responded Monday that the federal agency is using water from reservoirs to prevent Apalachicola water flow from declining even more. He also said the storage of all reservoirs on the Chattahoochee River is down more than 40 percent.

"In drought operations, we use storage to balance both current and future requirements," wrote Pat Robbins, chief of legislative and public affairs at the Corps' district office. "One never knows how long the drought may last and how long flow augmentation may be required."

Apalachicola Riverkeeper has asked Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal to enact water-use restrictions. The group also is asking the Corps of Engineers to release more water as reservoirs rise rather than waiting for them to refill, said Dan Tonsmeire, the group's executive director.

"The people that are managing and using water upstream are affecting the conditions in the bay," Tonsmeire said. "And we need them to help us out."

Jud Turner, director of Georgia's Environmental Protection Division, said his state's residents are using less water as a result of midday watering restrictions and stricter local regulations that are allowed under a 2010 state law.

"We really think we are seeing changes in behavior -- habit changes," Turner said. "When people aren't out there watering like that, you want to encourage that and not punish them unnecessarily."

Reporter Bruce Ritchie can be reached at britchie@thefloridacurrent.com.

"78,000 invasive #snails caught in Miami-Dade County" @miamiherald

 

In an aggressive effort to keep an invasive snail species from making a permanent home in Florida, 78,000 giant African land snails have been captured in the past year, state agriculture officials said Wednesday.

The infestation was discovered in September 2011. Officials hoped they could keep the snail from joining other exotic plant, fish and animal species that have found havens in the state.

"After one year of battling the giant African land snail with every tool currently available to us, we are still confident we can win this fight," said Richard Gaskalla, director of the Department of Agriculture's Division of Plant Industry. "However, we need the continued help of the public if we are to successfully eradicate this dangerous pest."

The snail has been found only in Miami-Dade County, but it poses significant risks to Florida's landscape.

The giant African land snail is considered one of the most damaging snails in the world because it eats at least 500 types of plants and can cause structural damage. It also can carry a parasite that can lead to meningitis in humans.

A program aimed at wiping out the snail's population has cost $2.6 million in state and federal funds so far, said Denise Feiber, spokeswoman for the Division of Plant Industry.

The last reported outbreak in Florida was in 1966 when a Miami boy smuggled three snails as pets. His grandmother released them into her garden and they multiplied. It took a decade and cost more than $1 million to eradicate more than 18,000 snails.

It's not known how the snail arrived in Florida this time, and there's no estimate for how many remain.

"We know they lay eggs, up to 1,200 a year, and they live for nine years. We're just one year into this," Feiber said.

Officials credited homeowners for identifying and reporting most of the main infestation sites. The snails were collected from 350 properties, mostly in urban areas, Feiber said.

Hundreds of the snails, which can grow up to seven inches in length or more, are collected each week, officials said.

Giant African land snails originally come from eastern Africa. They are illegal to import into the U.S. without a permit. No permits have been issued.

The snails also have established a population in Hawaii over the last 40 years, but eradication efforts are focused on Florida to keep the infestation from spreading across the mainland, said Andrea Simao of the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service.

---

Online:

Florida's giant African land snail information page: http://www.freshfromflorida.com/pi/gals/

"Phil Lewis, former Florida Senate president who helped establish water district, dies at 82" in @pbpost

Phil Lewis photo

Richard Graulich
Phil Lewis, former Florida Senate president

By Ana M. Valdes

As a longtime legislator and president of the Florida Senate from 1978-80, one of Phil Lewis’ proudest achievements was helping create the South Florida Water Management District, the agency charged with restoring the Everglades and that played a key role in battling back last week’s flooding from Hurricane Isaac.

“It’s not something people necessarily think about or notice on a daily basis: you just turn a faucet or press a button and water pours out, right?” Lewis said in an interview several years ago. “We’ll it’s a lot more involved than that and it’s so vital to our way of life.”

Lewis died Tuesday morning at home in West Palm Beach after a brief illness. He was 82.

Those who served with Lewis in the Senate and others who knew him as a public servant even after leaving Tallahassee remember Lewis as a man of integrity, a devout Catholic and a tireless champion for the homeless.

U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla., who served with Lewis in the Florida Legislature, was at the Democratic National Convention in Charlotte, N.C., when he heard of Lewis’ death.

“We just lost one of the legends of the golden age of Florida politics,” said Nelson. “He was a dedicated and tremendous public servant who was admired and respected by folks on both sides of the aisle.”

Harry Johnston of West Palm Beach, also a former Florida Senate President said, “I knew him 53 years and in that period of time, I never heard him say anything ill about anybody else. He just tried to do his best for humanity.”

Johnston said Lewis’ regard for doing what was right was admired by both Democrats and Republicans in the legislature.

“I just recall that he had a sixth sense on how to get people to come along to his side and if they didn’t, he didn’t pout nor was there anything that he would do against them the next time,” Johnston added.

Palm Beach County Commissioner Karen Marcus, a long-time friend of Lewis, spoke highly of the senator’s public service as a Democratic a state senator from 1970 to 1980.

“He’s what’s missing from our legislative bodies these days: commitment to Floridians, as opposed to commitment to a party,” Marcus said, adding that flags at the Palm Beach County Courthouse and governmental center would fly at half mast until next week, in honor of Lewis.

At a tribute in March in West Palm Beach, Jeff Atwater, the state’s Chief Financial Officer, said Lewis earned a reputation as a “Mr. Fix-It” in Tallahassee and praised him for trying to streamline permitting and regulation.

“Phil Lewis’ life has stood the test of time,” former U.S. Sen. Bob Graham said. “He leaves us a proud legacy and model of what the ‘good citizen’ means in America.”

In addition to working to create the state’s water management districts, Lewis founded the nonprofit Florida TaxWatch.

He also remained active in public life after he left the legislature. He was appointed to more than 20 task forces and commissions, by four governors.

In 2007, Marcus appointed Lewis to the Homeless Advisory Board. In July the county opened the Senator Philip D. Lewis Center at 1000 45th St., a one-stop location for the county’s homeless to get food, shelter and services. The county spent $9.2 million to purchase an old office complex and renovate it to house the homeless center.

Although Lewis did not attend the opening ceremony, Marcus said his family drove him by the building so Lewis could see it.

Marilyn Munoz, executive director of the county’s Homeless Coalition, said the center would host a day of service this Saturday as a tribute. Participants will be cleaning the center grounds and serving food for center participants, Munoz said.

“I think that’s something (he) would have smiled about,” said Munoz, adding that Lewis was instrumental in the county’s plan to end homelessness in 10 years. “He’s just so deeply missed and we’ve lost a great leader and humanitarian today.” Munoz said.

One of Lewis’ daughters, who did not want to be identified, said despite her father’s busy political career, he always found time for each of his children. “He taught tremendous social values to all of us. He taught us to take care of the poor, to give things away, to never fight over money, to do things for others just as he had done all his life,” she said.

Lewis was born in Omaha, Neb., but spent most of his childhood living in Chicago and Palm Beach. He graduated high school at St. Ann’s Catholic School and served with the United States Navy Seabees. Early on, he worked for his father in real estate development, and later owned Philip D. Lewis Real Estate in Riviera Beach.

He credited his mother, Julia, for his upbeat approach. “My mother could look at the devil himself and say, ‘He’s got nice ear lobes,’” Lewis said in a 1999 interview. “I tell you, you continue to look at the best side of people, you’re going to bring the best side out of them.”

Lewis is survived by his wife of 64 years, Maryellen Howley, seven children and 13 grandchildren.

Services will be held from 2-7 p.m. Sunday at Quattlebaum Funeral Home, 1201 S. Olive Ave., West Palm Beach. A mass will be held at 10 a.m. Monday at St. Julianna Catholic Church, 4500 S. Dixie Highway, West Palm Beach. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to the Homeless Coalition of Palm Beach County, the Diocese of Palm Beach’s educational fund, Hospice of Palm Beach County or any charity other charity.


Co-founder of the non-profit Florida TaxWatch, a research group that monitors the way taxpayer dollars are spent

Helped create the South Florida Water Management District

The county’s homeless shelter is named after his advocacy for the homeless

"Rising sea comes at a cost for South Florida cities" @MiamiHerald

A proposed $206 million overhaul of Miami Beach’s antiquated drainage system is just the first of many big-ticket bills South Florida faces.
   A Honda makes a big splash in South Beach at the MacArthur Causeway south exit onto Alton Road. Heavy rain caused flooding in South Beach and elsewhere in South Florida on April 12, 2010. Photo by Marsha Halper / Miami Herald Staff
A Honda makes a big splash in South Beach at the MacArthur Causeway south exit onto Alton Road. Heavy rain caused flooding in South Beach and elsewhere in South Florida on April 12, 2010. Photo by Marsha Halper / Miami Herald Staff
MARSHA HALPER / MIAMI HERALD STAFF

The Miami Herald
Posted Saturday 9.01.12
Climate change may be the subject of debate in some places but in South Florida it’s become a costly reality.

In Miami Beach, where prolonged flooding in low-lying neighborhoods has become the norm after heavy storms, city leaders are weighing a $206 million overhaul of an antiquated drainage system increasingly compromised by rising sea level.

The plan calls for more pumps, wells to store storm runoff, higher sea walls and “back-flow’’ preventers for drain pipes flowing into Biscayne Bay. Those devices are intended to stop the system from producing the reverse effect it often does now. During seasonal high tides, the salty bay regularly puddles up from sewer grates in dozens of spots, such as near the local westside bar Purdy Lounge. Extreme high tides — like one in October 2010 — can push in enough sea water to make streets impassable, including blocks of the prime artery of Alton Road.

“It’s the first time, as far as I know, that any community in South Florida and actually in the entire state of Florida is taking into account sea level rise as they plan their storm water infrastructure,” said Fred Beckmann, the city’s public works director, during a public hearing on the plan earlier this month.

It won’t be the last time.

South Florida counties and cities, as well as the South Florida Water Management District which oversees flood control for the region, all are beginning to draw up projects for keeping the coastline dry as sea level creeps up. The potential costs could be staggering.

The district alone has identified three flood control gates along coastal Northeast Miami-Dade — critical to draining storm water from Pembroke Pines and Miramar in southwestern Broward — in fast need of retrofitting with massive pumps. Rising seas threaten to reduce the capacity of a system that now depends on gravity, the storm water flowing downhill into the Atlantic. Cost estimates run $50 million or more for each pump alone and buying land for them could double or triple the bill. Nine other gates could need similar work down the road.

Fort Lauderdale, where high tides also push salt water up storm drains in the ritzy Las Olas Isles section, is also planning to install back-flow preventers, said Jennifer Jurado, director of Broward’s environmental protection and growth management department. Hallandale Beach already had to install pumps on storm-water injection wells, at about $10 million each, to combat increasing back-pressure, she said.

“The overall issues are so much greater, I think we’re easily looking at hundreds of millions of dollars,’’ she said. That’s just for the next 20 to 30 years, to handle a moderate three to seven inch rise.

A study last year by the Florida Atlantic University Center for Environmental Studies found that the projected rise over the next 70 to 100 years would require one city alone, Pompano Beach, to spend from $500 million to $1 billion to overhaul drainage and water supply systems, as well as coastal roads and facilities.

“If 50 years from now we’re looking at a foot and a half or two feet and rising, our region is going to be confronted with some very serious problems,’’ said Barry Heimlich, an FAU researcher who co-authored the study. “It’s going to cost hundreds of billions of dollars.’’

Lawmakers in some states have blithely dismissed the threats of global warming, most notably those in North Carolina, where state lawmakers earlier this year passed a law ordering that only historic trends, not projections, be considered in coastal planning.

In South Florida, political leaders and planners aren’t in denial. In 2009, Miami-Dade, Broward, Palm Beach and Monroe counties formed a climate change “compact’’ to work together to confront a problem South Florida will see sooner than just about anywhere.

A string of studies by insurers, environmental groups and government and university researchers have singled out Miami-Dade County at the top of the list of at-risk cities, with tens of billions of dollars of property that could be damaged by heightened storm surge or flooding.

Earlier this year, a report from Climate Central, an independent research and journalism organization, suggested Miami-Dade and Broward counties alone have more people vulnerable to flooding than any state except Florida and Louisiana. Other studies suggest some of the lowest-lying Florida Keys may be the first to be inundated.

The compact’s draft projection of sea level in Southeast Florida — based on local trends and global forecasts — calls for a rise of three to seven inches by 2030 and nine to 24 inches by 2060. From there, many scientists predict the trend could accelerate.

Miami Beach and other low-lying barrier islands are particularly vulnerable to drainage problems but those are spreading to the mainland, said FAU’s Heimlich. The FAU study found a sea level rise of about six inches could cut flood-control capacity by more than half — with higher tides bottling up canals and structures that now drain with gravity as runoff flows downhill to the coast.

“This is a problem that is not far away,’’ said Heimlich. “It is already being experienced and will get worse in the next few years.’’

Broward and Miami-Dade counties both are doing more detailed analysis of how existing drainage systems might have to be retro-fitted or expanded.

Doug Yoder, deputy director of the Miami-Dade Water and Sewer Department, said sea level rise will also push more salty and brackish water into surface drainage and sewer systems, adding to the costs and volume of treating runoff. Worsening salt water intrusion, which can shrink and taint the underground Biscayne Aquifer, the county’s main source of drinking water, will also require more expensive treatment systems in the future.

Potentially, Yoder said, the county could have to move sewage treatment plants like the aging facility on Virginia Key inland and build them at higher elevations. Monroe County is already planning to do that with a new fire station in Key West, adding several feet to the ground-floor elevation.

While there are a wide range of potential costs, including raising roads, Yoder said solving drainage was critical. Without it, he said, “you wonder how long people will continue to live in a place that floods routinely.’’

James Murley, executive director of the South Florida Regional Planning Council, said Miami Beach is out front in accounting for sea level rise. On-going budget challenges could make it tough sell for some communities worried about spending too much to address impacts that might not come as soon as anticipated. Forecasts differ on the pace and impact.

The plan crafted by Miami Beach’s engineering consultant, CDM Smith, is intended to address sea level rise for just 20 years.

Environmentalists and other critics said that relatively short window, at least in terms of climate change impacts, seemed intended to minimize costs. But Mike Schmidt, a vice president with CDM Smith, said projects could be altered to account for faster or higher rises. More or larger pumps, for instance, could be added to force storm water out against the higher pressures of rising sea levels.

Much of Miami Beach’s drainage system dates back to the 1940s and there is limited data about how many outfalls were designed to remain above high tide or for how long. But an analysis performed by Coastal Systems International, another contractor assisting in the project, showed the ends of the drain pipes are spending more time submerged, with the mean high water elevation creeping up by about 1.68 inches over the last 14 years. The plan, which still must be approved by the Miami Beach Commission, is designed to handle another six inches by 2030

Beckmann, the public works director, said the city only needed to two pumps for stormwater when he started 11 years.

“Right now, we have 17 and we’ll probably call for another 14,’’ he said.

Schmidt said rainfall still accounts for 95 percent of the flooding in Miami Beach but in century or two, the city could be more like New Orleans, sitting below sea level with its safety dependent on sea walls and pumps. “Eventually, if the projections are true, you’re facing a position where the sea level rise would go above the land surface and then you’re raising critical infrastructure,’’ he said. “Your sea walls are going higher, you’re putting in locks and dams and you’re pumping almost everything.’’

For now, Miami Beach Mayor Matti Bower said her biggest concern was figuring out how to pay for the projects, saying she didn’t think it was fair for the city alone to be tackling the expense.

Normally, the city would issue a bond and raise stormwater rates to cover costs but because the drainage project is also designed to reduce environmental impacts to the bay, the city will explore options including seeking federal grants or money from other state or county agencies.

“I’m not even worried about 25 years from now because I’ll be 100 then,’’ Bower said, “but I do worry for the children and grandchildren.’’

Miami Herald staff writer David Smiley contributed to this report.

 

"Officials anxious to move forward with next phase of canal project in Indiantown" #AudubonFlorida

By Sade M. Gordon
Posted August 29, 2012 at 7:30 p.m.

INDIANTOWN — With over a quarter of the first phase of the C-44 canal's construction complete, Martin County commissioners and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers are even more anxious for the scheduled approval of the second contract for the canal's restoration project.

The first contract, which Congress funded as part of the Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Project with more than $32 million in 2011, includes an intake canal, access roads, drainage canals and a new bridge on Citrus Boulevard. But it's the second contract, which kicks off construction of a huge stormwater reservoir, that Mark Perry, executive director of the Florida Oceanographic Society, says will start making the big changes the St. Lucie Estuary needs to restore its natural balance of fresh and salt water.

Perry cited the recent Tropical Storm Isaac as clear proof of how necessary the reservoir is.

"Water shouldn't be pouring into the St. Lucie Estuary," he said. "It should be stored here."

Project Engineer Paul Sadowski of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers said he estimated the first phase of the project to be "26 percent complete." The area has been cleared of trees and top soil, he said, while work on the bridge for the intake canal and relocation of the drainage canal are under way. There are about 120 workers on hand for the restoration project, but Sadowski couldn't confirm whether or not they were hired locally.

If all goes as planned, the first phase will be done by early 2014.

By August 2014, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the Martin County Commission hope to be awarded $270 million by Congress for the second portion. The second phase is a three-year endeavor that will result in 12,000 acres of above ground storage that would collect excess water from four different canals.

Perry expressed concern that the reservoir was going to store water above ground, however. The danger of above-ground storage is the weakness of the dikes that surround the water. He gave Lake Okeechobee's deteriorating dike as an example of what could eventually happen to the projected 2014 reservoir. Instead, he suggested using the surrounding orange groves upstream and making deals with farmers to create on-site underground storage and treatment.

Even so, he said, it was "critical that storage be put in place."

Eric Draper
Executive Director
Audubon of Florida         

"Palm Beach County endorses $55 million Mecca Farms deal" in @sunsentinal @abreidnews

Falls short of taxpayers' more than $100 million investment

By Andy Reid, Sun Sentinel
7:57 PM EDT, August 14, 2012

Six years ago, environmentalists warned Palm Beach County commissioners that water, not development, belonged on taxpayer-owned Mecca Farms.

Now after a failed "biotech village" soaked taxpayers for more than $100 million, a new deal would transform Mecca Farms into water storage needed for Everglades restoration.

The County Commission on Tuesday endorsed a $55 million deal that would allow the South Florida Water Management District to acquire the 1,919 acres west of Palm Beach Gardens, once intended to become home to The Scripps Research Institute.

While the deal leaves county taxpayers far short of getting their money back, it would provide water storage vital to a new $880 million Everglades restoration plan.

"We see this as just a great end to the saga of Mecca Farms," said Lisa Interlandi, of the Everglades Law Center, who represented environmental groups that waged a legal fight against the Scripps deal.

The new deal calls for the water management district to get Mecca Farms in exchange for $30 million and a land trade valued at $25 million.

The land the district proposes to trade includes property at Riverbend Park near Jupiter as well as farmland and other land west of Delray Beach.

The district's board last week agreed to proceed with trying to acquire land that now figures prominently into a revamped state Everglades restoration plan.

Likewise, the County Commission Tuesday approved the general terms of the deal, allowing negotiations and land appraisals to proceed. Final approval of the deal could come by November.

"We have a conclusion, an ideal conclusion, to a problem that has existed for a long time," said County Commissioner Jess Santamaria.

The county in 2004 paid $60 million for Mecca Farms and spent about $40 million more in planning, permitting and initial construction for Scripps. In addition, the county built a $51 million water pipeline to supply development expected on Mecca Farms and surrounding farmland.

The idea was that Scripps would attract spin-off businesses and new jobs to farmland pegged for development.

But environmental concerns in 2006 moved Scripps to Jupiter and left taxpayers with a more than $6 million in annual debt payments for Mecca Farms along with maintenance of Mecca Farms.

The water management district now plans to build stormwater storage and treatment areas on Mecca Farms and then use the land to help restore water flows to the Loxahatchee River.

Selling Mecca Farms would be good for taxpayers, but the county should be trying to get more in return, according to Fred Scheibl, of the Tea Party spinoff Palm Beach County Taxpayer Action Board.

With a new development proposal in the works for the Vavrus Ranch that borders Mecca Farms, as well as the water pipeline the county invested in, the county should be angling for more cash than land in return for the property, he suggested in an email to county commissioners.

"Disposing of Mecca for a fair price is a good thing, but how can we be sure that this is a fair price?" Scheibl asked.

abreid@tribune.com, 561-228-5504 or Twitter@abreidnews
Sun-sentinel.com/news/palm-beach/fl-mecca-commission-vote-20120814,0,59902.story

 

"Governor appoints 13 to new study committee on investor-owned water utilities"

Gov. Rick Scott on Friday appointed 13 members to a new committee established by the Legislature to study investor-owned water and wastewater utility systems.

Legislation dealing with the utilities has been filed the past two years amid complaints from customers about poor service and poor water quality.

HB 1379 by Rep. Jason Brodeur, R-Sanford, would have limited the amount utilities can seek to recover during rate hike requests and would have provided financial penalties against utilities that provide inadequate service.

Brodeur said complaints about Aqua Utilities Inc. contributed to his filing the bill. The utility has 23,000 water customers, with most of its water systems located in Central Florida, according to a Public Service Commission report.

But Brodeur scaled back his bill to provide only for language establishing a study committee. The bill passed the House 115-0 but died in the Senate. The language establishing the study committee was amended onto HB 1389, relating to agricultural water storage, which passed and was signed into law by Scott on April 27.

In 2011, SB 950 would have allowed water companies to recover up to 8 percent of their revenue through surcharges imposed on customers for water system upgrades.

Sen. Mike Bennett, R-Bradenton and sponsor of SB 950, said the legislation was needed to help utilities make timely water system improvements before going through the rate-setting process at the PSC. But the bill faced opposition from Aqua Utilities customers although Bennett said the bill didn't involve the utility.

PSC Commissioner Julie I. Brown will serve as chairman of the 18-member Study Committee on Investor-Owned Water and Wastewater Utility Systems. Other members include representatives of the the secretary of the Florida Department of Environmental Protection and the Office of Public Counsel and members appointed by the House speaker and Senate president.

In his July monthly newsletter, PSC Chairman Ronald Brise said the committee will "now have an excellent opportunity to research innovative strategies that will strengthen Florida’s water industry."

"Pumping polluted water OK'd for #LakeOkeechobee" - @SunSentinel @abreidnews

Water District agrees to lift "back-pumping" ban

August 10, 2012|By Andy Reid, Sun Sentinel

An old source of Lake Okeechobee pollution could return after South Florida water managers Thursday opened the door to renewed "back-pumping."

In a bid to boost water supplies, the South Florida Water Management District board agreed to explore pumping some of the polluted stormwater that drains off South Florida farmland back north into Lake Okeechobee for storage.

The district stopped that controversial practice five years ago because of environmental concerns about sending water containing polluting phosphorus as well as pesticides into the lake.

 

 

But the district, now under new leadership, has agreed to pursue a watered-down back-pumping proposal that would redirect less farmland runoff water back into the lake than in the past.

Supporters say back-pumping during the rainy season would make more water available for agricultural and environmental needs during droughts.

"Let's look at every option," said district Board Member Daniel DeLisi, who pushed for the back-pumping measure. "We can not back down from looking for a solution."

Environmental groups and the U.S. Department of the Interior counter that the potential increase in pollution isn't worth the water supply boost that comes from allowing back-pumping.

They favor cleaning up the water and using it to replenish the Everglades, instead of pumping it north.

Twelve environmental groups, including Audubon Florida and the Sierra Club, signed a letter opposing the back-pumping proposal.

"The lake is a lake. … It's not to be used as a reservoir," said Mark Perry, of the Florida Oceanographic Society. "[Back-pumping] adds pollution to the lake and to the estuary downstream."

More phosphorus, nitrogen and other nutrient-rich pollutants that result from farming would flow into the lake if back-pumping resumes. That can lead to algae blooms, fish kills and other damage to the lake's ecosystem.

Back-pumping also seems to run counter to multibillion-dollar Everglades restoration efforts aimed at getting more Lake Okeechobee water flowing south to Everglades National Park.

"Anything that takes water supply from the Everglades is not a good thing," said Joan Lawrence, of the U.S. Department of the Interior. "I'm just skeptical."

District officials say their proposal makes use of water that otherwise would get drained out to sea for flood control and would not lessen water going to the Everglades.

They plan several more months of computer modeling to try to gauge the water supply and water quality effects of back-pumping. The district also still needs state and federal approvals before it can resume back-pumping.

The goal of getting the board's OK Thursday was to revive back-pumping as an option, according to district Executive Director Melissa Meeker.

"Let us go down that path to see if it's possible," she said.

Decades of draining land for farming and development eventually led to corralling Lake Okeechobee with a dike for flood control. It also turned the once free-flowing lake into South Florida's primary backup water supply.

That water supply has been strained more than usual in recent years, because the Army Corps of Engineers has been keeping the lake about a foot lower year round due to safety concerns about the lake's dike, which is in the midst of a slow-moving rehab.

District officials bill back-pumping as a way to find more freshwater that could be stored in the lake and help the Caloosahatchee River during dry times, without lessening the amount of water that Big Sugar and other South Florida agriculture rely on for irrigation.

Sending Lake Okeechobee water into the Caloosahatchee River during droughts provides an infusion of freshwater needed to help protect West Coast water supplies and fishing grounds.

During recent years, West Coast communities have periodically cut off from those lake water releases due to South Florida water supply concerns.

Back-pumping supporters say it provides an interim water supply solution while waiting for long-term fixes that include building costly new reservoirs.

"This is a good plan," said Tom MacVicar, a consultant for South Florida growers. "It's a very targeted, sophisticated … limited pumping plan."

Environmental groups say there are other water supply-boosting options to back-pumping. That could include more limits on how much lake water agriculture gets in order to make more water available to the Caloosahatchee.

"We've tried [back-pumping] before, and we know the result," said Cara Capp, of the Clean Water Action environmental group. "We need to try something different."

abreid@tribune.com, 561-228-5504 or Twitter@abreidnews

 

"Martin Commission to keep pressure on congressmen for rest of funding for water cleansing project " in @tcpalm

STUART — Construction of the massive C-44 Reservoir and Stormwater Treatment Area is on schedule, but the completion of the $364 million project depends on congressional funding, federal officials said Tuesday.

The Martin County Commission voted unanimously Tuesday to approve a resolution asking Florida's delegation in Congress to continue to support funding for the rest of the project.

"We want to be on our toes so that we are not waiting, waiting, waiting, but we're pushing, pushing, pushing," Commissioner Ed Fielding said.

However, Michelle McGovern, a regional director for U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson, said it has become more difficult for Congress to appropriate money for projects in recent years.

"The federal government is having to do what you all have been having to do for a long time; cut back on budgets in places that are painful," McGovern said.

The $32 million first phase of the project is expected to be completed in early 2014, said Orlando Ramos-Gines, a senior project manager with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

However, Congress has not allocated money for the $270 million second phase, Ramos-Gines said. The contract for that work is set to be awarded in August 2014.

The project is being built in three phases because of the funding challenges, Ramos-Gines said. The $60 million contract for the third phase is set to be awarded in April 2017.

The project is designed to store and clean water draining from western Martin County into the C-44 Canal, which also is known at the Okeechobee Waterway and the St. Lucie Canal.

The goal is to reduce the flow of pollution, such as fertilizer from farmland, into the St. Lucie River and Indian River Lagoon.

Commissioner Sarah Heard said completion of the C-44 Reservoir project would set the stage for other projects in the Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan.

"We need to show completed projects that are working, that are helping, that are implementing CERP," Heard said.

Mark Perry, executive director of the Florida Oceanographic Society, said Martin County's contribution of $27 million in sales tax money from a voter approved referendum shows strong public support for the project.

"We're in this for the long haul," Perry said. "We want this project to continue. If we don't keep it rolling, it's just going to kind of die on the vine."

This is just the beginning of a long term investment needed in our water and sewer infrastructure! "Opinion: Fix this stinky mess" in @miamiherald

The Miami Herald EditorialPosted on Sun, Jul. 29, 2012

A broken water line in Little Haiti floods homes and some streets waist-high. The aging wastewater treatment plant on Virginia Key spills 19 million gallons of untreated waste into the ocean. A water main break in Hialeah creates a sinkhole. A burst pipe pours untreated sewage straight into Biscayne Bay.

Over the past two years broken sewer pipes have spewed 47 million gallons of stinky waste onto roads and homes and into Miami-Dade waterways all the way from farmlands in the southern tip of the county to the northern border with Broward, which also is facing major sewer system breakdowns.

With 7,500 miles of sewer lines built into Miami-Dade County’s antiquated system, which is a half-century old in some sections, and with 15 municipal water and/or sewer utilities and the county’s Water and Sewer Department responsible for the upgrades, there has been a lot of finger-pointing but little action to tackle this billion-dollar mess. Indeed, 20 years ago a Miami-Dade grand jury warned that “the Miami River and Biscayne Bay would experience the worst environmental catastrophes in modern history” if nothing got done.

Now, the Environmental Protection Agency is demanding action and the county is in negotiations with federal authorities to come up with a solid plan to fix the treatment plants and faulty pipes.

The last time EPA stepped in because of the county’s neglect was in 1996 when stormwater drainage problems were harming the Miami River and Biscayne Bay. The county has spent $600 million over that time, saving about 100 million gallons of water a day.

Yet the sewer part of the job keeps getting put off — at residents’ peril and with great economic risk to the area’s vibrant tourism industry. Instead of having a pro-active program that repairs aging pipes and upgrades wastewater stations, the county for years used excess money from the residents’ sewer fees to balance the county’s overall budget.

It’s time to increase fees and target that money directly to the repairs that are needed. As it is, the fees county water users pay are among the lowest of any comparable-sized area.

Whether Miami-Dade Mayor Carlos Gimenez is re-elected or Commission Chairman Joe Martinez gets the voters’ nod, the most important issue affecting the health, safety and economic well-being of the county’s residents is the antiquated water and sewer system.

Last year, Mr. Gimenez offered a budget that took $25 million from the sewer funds as a “loan” to balance the county’s books — an effort aimed at not having to lay off more county workers or reduce crucial services to residents. This year’s budget proposal does not dip into the sewer funds and the loan will start getting repaid in 2014. That’s the right thing to do.

Complicating the problem are about 100 miles of substandard piping laid out by a now-defunct company, including the sewer main running under Government Cut to Virginia Key — a potential catastrophe for this area’s tourism.

Mr. Gimenez and Mr. Martinez have pledged to work on a solution, and Mr. Gimenez’s proposed budget includes fee increases that would be staggered over several years to help pay for the upgrades. The mayor also says the county can bond about $300 million and is working with the EPA to come up with a plan to meet federal clean water requirements. Good.

True, this is an inherited mess. Past administrations delayed the inevitable. But no more excuses. Let’s fix this economic disaster in the making. It’s past time.