"Rains raise water levels throughout South Florida" @miamiherald

With rainfall at a record pace in some places, water managers are struggling to lower water levels in Lake Okeechobee and the Everglades.

   A man makes his way along Washington Avenue in South Beach Aug. 25, 2012 as outer bands of Tropical Storm Isaac reach South Florida.

From Lake Okeechobee to the marshes of the Everglades, South Florida has been saturated by what is shaping up as the wettest of wet seasons.

Water managers are struggling to deal with high-water concerns across a region left brimming by Tropical Storm Isaac and stubbornly steady storms that have followed in its drenching wake. Some spots are on pace for the rainiest year on record, with Miami leading the list at 79.51 inches through September.

On Wednesday, federal engineers ordered the drainage gates cranked open even wider on Lake Okeechobee, where water levels have climbed nearly a half-foot despite two weeks of release intended to slowly lower them. The decision by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to double the flow is primarily intended to ease pressure on the aging and leaky flood-control dike that rings the massive lake, but it will have a side-effect of pouring billions of gallons of polluted water into sensitive river estuaries on both coasts.

In the swollen marshes of the Central Everglades north of the Tamiami Trail, there are no similar relief-valve options to help deer and other wildlife, which have already spent the last month mostly confined to levees and small tree islands, shrinking swaths of high ground where starvation from dwindling food supplies, and diseases like hoof rot, are a growing threat.

Even without more rain, it could take another three weeks to a month for the water to drop to normal seasonal levels, said Michael Anderson, regional wildlife biologist for the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission.

“Quite frankly, after about 30 days, they start to run out of groceries on the islands and we start to see impacts,’’ Anderson said.

The Corps’ initial effort to lower the massive lake has already dumped more than 11 billion gallons of freshwater laced with high levels of farm chemicals and nutrients into the St. Lucie River on the east coast and the Caloosahatchee River on the west coast. Similar but much larger dumps after hurricanes in 2004 and 2005 destroyed oyster beds and sea grass, and triggered massive foul fish-killing algae blooms.

But with two months still left in hurricane season and plenty of rain remaining in the forecast, the Corps’ lake managers said they had little choice but to accelerate the damaging releases.

“We just haven’t seen the results we wanted since we started,” said Lt. Col. Thomas Greco, the Corps’ deputy commander for South Florida.

Under the Corps’ management plan, the water level in Lake Okeechobee is supposed to stay between 12.5 feet and 15.5 feet above sea level, rising and falling with seasonal rain. It stood at 15.69 feet on Wednesday.

That’s still well short of the 17-foot level where engineers begin to worry about the integrity of its aging dike, which has sprung leaks during past hurricanes and is undergoing repairs that will take years. But a tropical storm like Isaac can quickly drive up lake levels by two or three feet, which would raise the risk of a potentially catastrophic failure.

The lake has to come down and the Everglades are already too full to send water there, Greco said.

State and federal water managers say they are doing the best they can do with an outmoded and overwhelmed flood-control system that operates under sometimes conflicting regulations to protect suburbs, farms and the Everglades from excessive flooding. A string of Everglades restoration projects, starting with a bridge along Tamiami Trail expected to be completed next year, promises to resolve many of the issues and eventually allow more water to flow south into Everglades National Park. But it could take a decade or more for enough of the projects to come on line to make a significant difference.

For now, water managers are diverting as much water as they can out of the biggest troubles spots in the Everglades — the marshy water conservation areas bordering Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach counties — and sending it down canals into southern Everglades National Park and Florida Bay. State wildlife managers also have temporarily restricted public access to flooded portions of the Everglades and the Francis S. Taylor Wildlife Management Area to ease stress on stranded wildlife.

Flooding decimated the Glades’ population of white-tailed deer in 1982 and 1995, knocking the herd from thousands to hundreds, and killed countless smaller animals that rely on high, dry tree islands for food and shelter.

The FWC’s Anderson said he doesn’t expect that level of loss this time around, barring another major storm, which could keep water levels high even longer.

According to the South Florida Water Management District, which runs the flood control system from Orlando to Key West, seasonal rainfall is running about 114 percent above normal with an average of 37.53 inches across 16 counties.

But some areas have been hit harder than others, with the district showing eastern Broward County experiencing the wettest April through September since 1955, with more than 44 inches of rain — more than nine inches above average. Eastern Miami-Dade has been even wetter, with nearly 50 inches of rain — 13.22 inches above average.

At the official rainfall gauges maintained by the National Weather Service, Miami is on pace to record its wettest year ever, with 79.51 inches measured at Miami International Airport through September. The annual record for that site is 89.33 inches in 1959. The Redland, with 72.69 inches, and Homestead, with 67.58 inches, also are on pace for the wettest years on record. Fort Lauderdale’s Dixie water plant, with 69.24 inches, is the second wettest mark through September on record.

-By CURTIS MORGAN

"Eve Samples: St. Lucie River gets dumped on again" @TCPalm

Enough fresh water to fill more than 900 Olympic-size swimming pools every day started gushing into the St. Lucie River last week.

The water — arriving from Lake Okeechobee via the St. Lucie Canal — is laden with pollutants. It is brown and foamy as it cascades through the St. Lucie Lock & Dam.

We can expect it to kill oysters and sea grasses. Depending on how long the Army Corps of Engineers continues the releases, it might trigger algae blooms and fish kills.

"It's easily the most frustrating aspect of the current system that the Army Corps operates, just because the estuary bears the brunt of it," said Kevin Powers, vice-chair of the South Florida Water Management District Governing Board.

There is no debating that the releases — which started Wednesday as the Army Corps tried to lower a rising Lake O — will hurt the already ailing St. Lucie River estuary.

What is still being debated, after decades of abuse, is where to focus efforts for a solution.

Allies of the Rivers Coalition, a diverse collection of advocates for the St. Lucie River, have been clear about what must happen.

"The true long-term fix for the next generation is for them to be able to move and store the water south," said Leon Abood, chairman of the group.

If he had a nickel for every time he made a statement like that, he'd be able to buy all the land needed to restore the natural flow of water from Lake Okeechobee to the Everglades.

But the unwavering message has not forced the hands of those in power.

The Rivers Coalition has tried taking its battle to federal court. It has tried diplomacy with government agencies.

Neither approach has stopped the discharges into the St. Lucie River. On Thursday, 925 cubic feet of polluted water per second flowed through the St. Lucie Lock & Dam — less than what the Army Corps is allowed to send our way, but enough to cause damage.

Still hoping for a solution, the Rivers Coalition now intends to try its message on a new potential ally: the sugar farmers who control much of the land south of Lake Okeechobee.

"We don't have the political will to force it. We don't have the money to outspend them. We don't have the political influence to out-lobby them," Abood said. "So we've got to get them to the table."

Two representatives of the sugar industry — consultant Thomas MacVicar and David Goodlett of the Sugar Cane Growers Cooperative of Florida — will join the Rivers Coalition at 11 a.m. Thursday for a public meeting at Stuart City Hall.

They're bound to get an earful from fed-up residents who are tired of the federal government propping up the sugar industry with subsidies while the St. Lucie River suffers.

"What we're looking to accomplish is to have them be frank and candid in their answers to specific questions involving the flow way south, involving cleaning up their own water, involving their support for a flow way concept," Abood said.

Abood and other members of the Rivers Coalition were hopeful about a flow way in 2008 when former Gov. Charlie Crist announced a deal to buy more than 180,000 acres south of Lake Okeechobee from U.S. Sugar. That deal was dramatically scaled back after Gov. Rick Scott took office, though the South Florida Water Management District still has an option to buy the remaining 153,000 acres.

Powers, who is in the unique position of living on the St. Lucie River and sitting on the South Florida Water Management District Governing Board, is more focused on near-term projects than embracing the idea of a flow way.

He pointed to four things that, in combination, he believes could help the St. Lucie avoid at least some water from Lake Okeechobee:

Construction of the C-44 reservoir, which will capture local runoff in the St. Lucie Canal; rehabilitation of the Herbert Hoover Dike around Lake Okeechobee's 140-mile perimeter, which might allow the lake to hold more water; restoration of the Kissimmee River north of the lake; and water-quality projects to the south.

"I would rather focus on things that we have an actual chance of doing," Powers said.

Abood said he agrees with Powers to a point. He supports those four projects — yet he and many others in the Rivers Coalition want the larger fix, too. They raised their voices together Wednesday night, when about 50 protesters from the River Kidz group gathered at the St. Lucie Lock & Dam to oppose the releases.

As Powers pointed out, Martin County's voices often get drowned out amid the competing interests jockeying for Florida's water supply.

"Martin County's at a huge disadvantage. It's got 140,000 residents. It's got 100,000 voters," Powers said. "There's 5 million people in the counties south of us. Who do you think has a louder voice?"

-By Eve Samples

"Corps to begin draining storm-swollen Lake Okeechobee" @MiamiHerald

Federal engineers will start slowly lowering levels of Lake Okeechobee in an effort to minimize algae blooms that have tainted rivers during past releases.

With Lake Okeechobee now topping 15 feet and still rising from Tropical Storm Isaac, federal engineers decided Tuesday to begin slowly draining the lake, opening gates that will send polluted waters down rivers on both coasts but ease pressure on its aging dike.

The move, which in the past has triggered foul fish-killing algae blooms in the sensitive estuaries of the Caloosahatchee River on the West Coast and the St. Lucie River on the East Coast, will begin on both sides of the lake at 7 a.m. Wednesday.

Lt. Col. Thomas Greco of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers said the agency would try to minimize environmental impacts by starting with small volumes rather than the torrents of runoff laced with agricultural chemicals and nutrients that devastated both rivers after the hectic 2004 and 2005 hurricane seasons. The dumping also can raise salinity levels in estuaries, which can harm sea grass, oysters and other marine life.

“We’re actually releasing much less than what is authorized under the Lake Okeechobee regulation schedule,’’ said Greco, the Corps’ deputy commander for South Florida.

Under the Corps plan, the lake level is supposed to stay between 12.5 feet and 15.5 feet above sea level, rising and falling with rainfall. The goal is to balance the big lake’s often conflicting uses as a flood control basin, regional water reservoir and world-renowned fishing destination.

In the dry winter, it serves as a major source of water for surrounding sugar, citrus, sod and vegetable growers. In the wet summer, it handles runoff from hurricanes and storms like Isaac, which quickly filled a lake that had previously been running below normal. The lake has risen nearly three feet in the last month.

Greco said the lake’s massive dike, which is being beefed up with construction projects, is in good shape. Though the aging earthen levee has leaked during past storms, Greco said Isaac caused no problems and Corps studies suggest it would be safe with water levels up to 18 feet.

But because the lake is so near the 15.5-foot ceiling, there is little room left if another tropical system hits. The lake can rise much faster than the Corps can lower it. A foot of rain over the Kissimmee River basin to the north can boost lake levels as much as four feet in weeks, Greco said. It can take the Corps 75 days to drop it to that level again, barring other storms.

“Really what we’re looking at is preparing ourselves and make sure the conditions are right through the hurricane season,” he said.

"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.

What took five years to approve this??? "U.S. set to approve python ban" in @MiamiHerald #eco #verglades #water

After five years of debate and hearings in Washington, U.S. Interior Secretary Ken Salazar is expected to announce the Burmese python will soon be illegal to import.

   With a 17-foot skin from a python killed in the Everglades, Florida Sen. Bill Nelson urges a Senate panel to help ban the import of Burmese python into the U.S.
With a 17-foot skin from a python killed in the Everglades, Florida Sen. Bill Nelson urges a Senate panel to help ban the import of Burmese python into the U.S.
U.S. Senate Staff

Cmorgan@MiamiHerald.com

The United States is poised to formally and finally ban that slithering scourge of the Everglades, the Burmese python.

U.S. Interior Secretary Ken Salazar, who has championed the ban, is expected to make the announcement Tuesday morning during a press conference at a flood control pumping station off Tamiami Trail in the Everglades — a spot that is pretty much ground zero for a giant exotic constrictor that has become one of the nation’s most notorious invasive species.

 

"Judge offers qualified praise for state Glades efforts" - @MiamiHerald #eco #everglades #water

Judge offers qualified praise for state Glades efforts

Though encouraged by a new pollution clean-up plan touted by Gov. Rick Scott, a Miami federal judge presses state and federal agencies to commit to paying for work that could cost $1 billion or more.

 

Cmorgan@Miamiherald.com

 

A Miami federal judge on Thursday commended Gov. Rick Scott for stepping in with a proposal to bust open a legal logjam that for two decades has hampered efforts to stem the flow of pollution into the Everglades.

 

But the praise from U.S. District Judge Alan Gold was delivered in a cautious tone and included a message that might be summed up by that familiar line from Jerry Maguire: Show me the money.

 

Gold, who has issued a series of rulings blasting the “glacial delay’’ in the federally mandated clean-up, urged state and federal environmental managers negotiating a new Everglades clean-up strategy to come back with a firm plan for both protecting the marsh and — just as important — paying for projects that could easily approach $1 billion or more.

 

While he said he was encouraged by ongoing talks to resolve two long-running federal lawsuits over farm, ranch and yard pollution poisoning the River of Grass, he cautioned that without a firm financial commitment from water managers and the state, “what we’re doing is going around in circles, again.’’

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Poll indicates support for federal water quality standards in The Florida Current #everglades #eco

01/05/2012

 

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency ignited a controversy in 2009 when it agreed to adopt numeric nutrient criteria for Florida waterways. EPA said the specific limits were needed to replace Florida's narrative standards that environmental groups said have failed to prevent algal blooms they say are choking waterways. However, utilities along with industry and agriculture groups generated a firestorm of opposition, saying the rules will be difficult and expensive to meet.

In December, the state Environmental Regulation Commission OK'd its own water quality rules that are intended to replace federal standards. The next stop for the state rules is the Legislature, which in 2010 passed a bill requiring any state rules costing more than $1 million to receive legislative ratification. If it OKs the new water rules, they will be sent to the EPA to consider.

 

Glad to see the Herald Editorial Board has arrived at the obvious..."The #Everglades: It’s all business" - Editorials in Miami Herald

HeraldEd@MiamiHerald.com

As the Florida Legislature prepares to grapple with another tight budget year, and leaders vow to continue to build an appealing pro-business environment that reduces costs for businesses to generate more jobs, there’s one jobs creator being virtually ignored that stretches from Kissimmee near Walt Disney World to the Florida Keys: the Everglades.

Cleaning up Florida’s fabled River of Grass after decades of abuse from polluted rainwater runoff draining from area farms, homes and businesses into the ’Glades ecosystem is not only necessary but economically desirable. The 27th annual Everglades Coalition conference underway this week appropriately titled its meeting: “Everglades Restoration: Worth Every Penny.”

The numbers tell why.

Just in the past three years, in the midst of a recession, Everglades restoration projects — whether they redirect canals or elevate roadways or make other needed environmental fixes — have generated 10,500 jobs. Add to that the spin-off of tourism, recreational fishing and other ventures and as many as 442,000 jobs will materialize in the next decades, according to the coalition.

Building the bridge on the Tamiami Trail, which will help restore water flows to the river, is putting 1,212 people to work.

Even as Florida struggles to balance its budget for the coming year, Gov. Rick Scott and the Legislature have to see why the Everglades is not only a water source for agriculture and drinking water for one in three Floridians — the major water source, in fact, for South Florida residents — but also a boon for business.

This is, after all, an international treasure, a rare river that’s more grass than water to the eye, 100 miles long and 60 miles wide, where tourists near and far come to watch flocking birds and gator brawls.

The Everglades ecosystem isn’t some isolated sore spot. It runs from central Florida’s Kissimmee Chain of Lakes into Lake Okeechobee (our water supply) and through the River of Grass, out to Florida Bay and the Keys. Hundreds of thousands of jobs already depend on it.

Visitors to Everglades National Park spend about $165 million a year. And the jobs created by restoration projects pay well, too. Hydrologists, engineers, geologists, surveyors — those are the kinds of jobs Florida should want to keep.

 

The Governor understands the need to fix the #Everglades; the question is how, and how to pay for it..."Florida Gov. Rick Scott pledges support at Everglades Coalition meeting"

HUTCHINSON ISLAND — Gov. Rick Scott didn't exactly win environmentalists over in his first year in office, as he gutted growth management laws, waged a legal battle against federally imposed water quality standards and expressed general disdain for "job-killing" regulations.

But Thursday evening, the governor stood before an audience of some of his harshest critics at a meeting here of the Everglades Coalition and pledged — like every governor who has spoken before him — that he was committed to restoring the struggling River of Grass.