"Water managers releasing water from Lake Okeechobee to ease dike concerns" @pbpost

Water managers releasing water today from Lake Okeechobee to ease dike concerns
By: Christine Stapleton

With Lake Okeechobee almost 3 feet higher than a month ago, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers began releasing water from the lake this morning to ensure that its 75-year-old dike could safely weather another storm.

“Tropical Storm Isaac provided a classic example of how quickly the lake can rise,” said Lt. Col. Thomas Greco, the Corps’ Deputy District Commander in South Florida. Because the water level can rise six times faster than water can be discharged, “We’ve got to manage it in a manner where we have enough storage for the remaining two months of hurricane season, have enough water for the dry season and be sensitive to the delicate ecosystems in each of the estuaries,” Greco said.

The Corps is responsible for maintaining the Herbert Hoover Dike and managing Lake Okeechobee water levels. To do so, it must also balance the needs of flood control, public safety and navigation. The preferred water levels are between 12.5 and 15.5 feet. Levels above that can threaten the integrity of the dike. On Tuesday the lake stood at 15.1 feet.

Releases will be made to the Caloosahatchee River and St. Lucie Estuary, ecologically vital water bodies that provide habitat for plants and wildlife threatened by changes in salinity levels. Although no water has been released from the lake since Isaac’s record rainfall, salinity levels have already dropped in the St. Lucie estuary, said Mark Perry, Executive Director of the Florida Oceanographic Society.

Storm water runoff from the C-44 canal and the C-23 and C-24 agricultural canals have lowered salinity levels near the Roosevelt Bridge in Stuart to 6 parts per thousand, Perry said. The normal range is 24 parts per thousand. If levels drop below 5 parts per thousand for more than two weeks, the area’s oyster beds — revived by recent restoration programs — could be threatened, Perry said.

“We’re all kind of keeping track of what’s going on,” Perry said, referring to environmentalists who monitor the estuary. Without man-made wetlands or other storage south of the lake to handle storm water runoff, damaging releases to the estuaries will continue. “The Corps has no other place to put the water,” he said.

"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.

"Reservoir for #Everglades restoration to get pumps to clear out its salty water" @pbpost

Reservoir for Everglades restoration to get pumps to clear out its salty water

By Christine Stapleton

Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

Water managers approved a contract Thursday for $64 million to install six massive pumps in the controversial L-8 Reservoir — a move that will finally put the 10-year-old water storage system to use and jump-start new Everglades restoration projects.

The reservoir at a rock mine on Southern Boulevard, which figured prominently in two Palm Beach County corruption scandals, has been dormant for lack of a way to get the water out of the 60-foot deep holes. The pits have not been used because the water in them contains unacceptable levels of chlorides. Without the pumps, the district cannot flush the chloride-laden water out of the pits to see if, as expected, the chloride levels drop when the pits refill.

Making the 15 billion gallon reservoir operational is included in a suite of projects in the state’s $880 million plan to improve water quality in the Everglades. The pumps should be operational in May 2013.

"State formally approves Glades clean-up plan" @MiamiHerald

State formally approves Glades clean-up plan

Florida formally signed off on an $880-million slate of Everglades cleanup projects on Tuesday.

Gov. Rick Scott announced the state had signed water quality permits and a consent order negotiated with the federal government to expand efforts to stem the flow of polluted farm, ranch and yard runoff into the Everglades.

Scott, in a news release, called the plan he had championed during nine months of negotiations with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency “a historic step for Everglades restoration.’’

The plan commits the state to $880 million in new projects that will expand on an existing network of manmade marshes designed to reduce the flow of the damaging nutrient phosphorus into the Everglades. The state, under pressure from federal judges to speed up the pace of cleanup, has already spent some $1.8 billion to construct 45,000 acres of treatment marshes. The new plan calls for adding another 6,500 acres of marshes, along with large shallow water storage basins and other improvements.

Though most environmental groups have applauded the plan, the Miccosukee Tribe and Friends of the Everglades have been critical, arguing it will push back cleanup deadlines to 2025 — almost two decades beyond an original 2006 target — and questioning whether the state has a firm plan to pay for the work.

Scott, in the release, said the deal would be paid for with a combination of revenues from the state and South Florida Water Management District “without raising or creating new costs for Floridians.’’

The Miami Herald

"Flood control costs may be forced on rural Palm Beach County residents" @pbpost

Isaac Aftermath photo

Palm Beach Post Staff Writer
Residents of flooded western communities who for decades have refused to pay for public flood control projects may be forced to do so.
County Administrator Bob Weisman has asked the County Attorney to research the legality of a “mandatory assessment” to construct and maintain flood control projects in communities near the Acreage. In an email to County Commissioner Jess Santamaria on Wednesday, Weisman said the neighborhoods “have refused to to participate in an improvement project with Indian Trails Improvement district (ITID) even though they are part of ITID.”
“This means there is no government entity and apparently no property owners association to build and maintain drainage and road infrastructure,” Weisman said. “This means the property owners are also not paying any tax assessment for these benefits in these areas. There is no publicly owned road or drainage infrastructure.”
As of Wednesday, some yards were still flooded and mail service had not yet resumed since Tropic Storm Isaac’s record rainfall eight days ago. Some of the neighborhoods that do not participate suffered some of the heaviest flooding, including Deer Run and other areas near the L-8 Canal and Lion Country Safari.
The ITID provides drainage and road maintenance for participating neighborhoods within the district’s 110-square-mile footprint. However, participation is not mandatory.
Residents in participating neighborhoods pay an assessment based on the amount of land they own. The district in turn maintains canals, pump stations, flood gates, culverts, roads and pumps. The district releases and retains water depending on the weather.
In neighborhoods that do not participate, maintenance, including grading dirt roads, is left up to the residents. Many of the homes do not have swales to collect stormwater runoff.
“It raises the question of do we need an assessment without the approval of the residents and that is a radical thought,” Weisman said.
“If you are not part of an overall managed system, when excess rainfall events occur there is limited to no relief,” said Lisa Tropepe, ITID’s engineering consultant. “People that pay into the system, we manage to accommodate them through a series of canals, pump stations and flood gates.”
Residents of the Acreage have earned a reputation for being fiercely independent and devoted to maintaining a rural way of life. In 2010, some complained so loudly about bright streetlights that the county installed on a 1.5 mile stretch of road that the county switched to lower wattage bulbs.
“They like limited government,” said Michelle Damone, President of the ITID’s Board of Supervisors. “I feel for them but the district cannot legally spend our assessments to provide them drainage. It’s kind of like car insurance — you pay for it in case something happens.”
John McMillon, who lives on 206th Terrace North, a street not protected by ITID, said people don’t want to pay more taxes and many couldn’t if they were forced to pay.
“If we were forced to, a lot of us wouldn’t make it out here,” McMillon said.
Santamaria said residents approached him several years ago about joining the district. He supported their cause but in the end, residents narrowly voted against joining. As for the cost, Santamaria said the communities would likely be eligible for an advance from the county which residents could pay-back over 20 years with installments on their tax bills. Engineering studies would have to be performed before residents would know their estimated annual assessment.
“My hope is that this time, since the flooding has been worse, they will get more concerned,” Santamaria said. “I would rather not have to force anybody to do anything but sometimes it comes down to a life-or-death situation.”
During the worst of the flooding, there were “a lot of discussions” about which agencies should provide services to these neighborhoods, said Assistant County Administrator Vince Bonvento, who oversees the county’s public safety department.
“Obviously, because of the public safety element, we decided that we needed to provide assistance,” Bonvento said.
Also on Wednesday, Weisman sent an email to other top county officials and Tanya Quickel, the district’s administrator, with an update of flood relief efforts near the J.W. Corbett Wildlife Management Area. Water seeping from the Corbett and the risk of a breach in the berm that prevents water from flooding nearby neighborhoods have prompted the ITID and the South Florida Water Management Area to begin efforts to replace the berm with a new dam.

"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

Two #AudubonOfFlorida Legal Success Stories..."Agreement ends decade-long fight to preserve north Collier wetlands" in @naplesnews

By ERIC STAATS  


Wednesday, August 22, 2012
 


http://www.naplesnews.com/news/2012/aug/22/Mirasol-develop-wetlands-north-collier-agreement/
 


NORTH NAPLES
— A longstanding fight between developers and environmental groups over saving key wetlands in a northern Collier County slough has come to an end. 

 

The final piece of the preservation puzzle fell into place when a coalition of five environmental groups reached a deal with landowner IM Collier Joint Venture over plans for Mirasol at the northwest corner of Immokalee Road and Collier Boulevard, the groups announced Tuesday. 

 

Mirasol came to epitomize a decade-long push to stop new subdivisions that developers proposed putting in the middle of a flowway the groups wanted to protect for the sake of nearby Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary and foraging habitat for endangered wood storks that nest there. 

 

Since 2006, the groups filed a string of lawsuits and administrative challenges over Mirasol and two other projects, Parklands and Saturnia Falls, that together would have taken a 1,200-acre bite out of wetlands in the Cocohatchee Slough. 

 

The groups came to a truce with G.L. Homes in 2010 over Parklands and Saturnia Falls after the developer agreed to cut back its development footprint and boost its wetlands preservation plans. The deal over Mirasol found similar common ground. 

 

"I think this is a good ecological outcome for the region," said Brad Cornell, policy advocate for the Collier County Audubon Society, one of the groups in the coalition.

Other groups involved were the National Wildlife Federation, Audubon of Florida, the Conservancy of Southwest Florida and the Florida Wildlife Federation.

The groups were preparing to go back to court over Mirasol's new federal wetlands permit, issued in 2011 after a judge revoked an earlier version of the permit in 2009.

The deal averts another lawsuit and paves the way for IM Collier Joint Venture to sell the land for Mirasol to another partnership led by development company Taylor Morrison. Development is expected to start in 2013.

"We felt we could solve these issues if we put our heads together in a positive way and in the end we came up with a solution that was acceptable to everyone," said Dennis Gilkey, who has a minority interest in the new partnership and spearheaded negotiations with the groups.

Landowners are petitioning Collier County to amend its approvals for Mirasol to reflect the deal; state and federal permit modifications also are pending.

Mirasol, which will be renamed, is adding 80 acres to its 1,800-acre project, dropping one of two planned golf courses and building 1,121 units instead of the original 799 units, Gilkey said.

The new project still will destroy more than 550 acres of wetlands, but the project will preserve some 1,100 acres of wetlands.

The deal calls for a net increase of 170 acres of wetlands to be preserved on site and funds restoration of another 1,000 acres of off-site farm fields to the kind of shallow wetlands that are important for providing food to trigger wood stork nesting at Corkscrew. A decline in those wetlands has been blamed for wood storks not nesting at the sanctuary for five of the past six years.

In all, the settlements with G.L. Homes and IM Collier will protect 3,500 acres of wetlands and wildlife habitat in the Cocohatchee Slough, according to the groups' figures.

 

Case #2 -
 

Earlier this year, in Friedman/Starkman v. SFWMD, Audubon Florida supported the Defendant SFWMD through a brief amicus curiae.   In this case, Plaintiff landowners had filed suit against the SFWMD, claiming that they had lost nearly all value of their land and should be compensated for the value of their property.  The arguments in support of this claim were, among others, that their properties had been identified on maps showing potential future restoration projects and other property nearby had been purchased by the SFWMD from willing sellers.  There was also an attempt to set a new precedent in Florida for compensating landowners under a theory of “precondemnation blight.”  We felt strongly that establishing this cause of action in Florida would impact the ability or willingness for agencies and local governments to participate in proactive land use planning and made the decision to support the SFWMD. More information about the facts of the case can be found in the attached memo.

 

Recently, the 5th District Court of Appeals agreed with the lower court and ruled in favor of SFWMD.  The good news is that after some additional motions by the landowners, their motion for rehearing was denied and a mandate was issued effectively dismissing the appeal. 

 

Thank you for your support, that enables us to participate in this important matter and help make sure this case didn’t open a new door of “precondemnation blight” litigation in Florida that would have severely hindered the ability to proactively plan for future land conservation and ecosystem restoration projects.

"Officials capture 11-foot python in Fla. Keys"

Florida Fish and Wildlife Officers Jason Rafter and Kip Hoover with an 11-foot snake found in Key Largo.
( Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission, Courtesy / September 2, 2012 ) Florida Fish and Wildlife Officers Jason Rafter and Kip Hoover with an 11-foot snake found in Key Largo.

The Associated Press

Officials have captured an 11-foot python after it slithered across a busy highway in the Florida Keys.

Monroe County Sheriff's Deputy Bryan Cross spotted the reptile Friday as it crossed the Overseas Highway. He followed the snake into a heavily wooded lot and called the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission.

The Sun Sentinel reports that officers captured the snake without incident.

Officials believe the snake is not an escaped pet but one in a growing population of exotics in the area.

The python was turned over to the U.S. Coast Guard.

"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.