Polluted Lake Okeechobee Water Dump Sparks Coastal Protests

Polluted Lake Okeechobee Water Dump Sparks Coastal Protests

The Indian River Lagoon is turning black and green and tempers are flaring red.

Photo

Source: TC Palm

Thousands of people have demonstrated in Martin County for two consecutive weeks as our government dumps a daily chemical stew of phosphorus and nitrogen from Lake Okeechobee into the Indian River Lagoon.

The Corps of Engineers says it has to dump the lake's polluted water because of high levels caused by a rainier than usual summer and a weak levee, but coastal residents are outraged.
 
This problem is not going away unless we set protective numeric limits on pollution and approve plans to restore water flow through the Everglades.
 
Our state and federal governments need to: 

  • Approve the Central Everglades restoration plan and raise Tamiami Trail. The South Florida Water Management District Governing Board can vote this week to endorse the Central Everglades Restoration plan to help restore flow to the Everglades.
  • Set protective numeric standards for all canals, intermittent streams, tidal creeks, all flowing waters and waters of the estuary.
Take action: Contact the South Florida Water Management District Governing Board and tell them to vote for the Central Everglades restoration plan at their Thursday, Aug. 15 meeting.
 
CEPP It Up!
 
Some are calling the US Army Corps of Engineers’ Central Everglades Planning Project (CEPP) the last, best hope for restoring the Everglades. It's no hyperbole.
 
After a century of ditching, diking and damming the Everglades, the Federal Government and the State of Florida have in front of them a plan that could restore fresh water flow to millions of acres.
 
Photo
 
Dredging an Everglades Canal, State Archives of Florida, Florida Memory, http://floridamemory.com/items/show/32148
 
The Central Everglades plan rips out more than 25 miles of canals and levees. It eliminates much of the Miami Canal and creates a path of sheet flow across the L-67 canals toward a 2.6 mile bridge over Tamiami Trail. It removes a massive clog in the River of Grass. As the Everglades nears ecological collapse accelerated by climate change, we have no other option.
 

But this summer, the state and the federal government have been fighting over who pays for water quality improvements in the plan, and it has already caused the Corps to miss a key deadline. If this deadly game of chicken continues any longer, restoration may be stalled for another decade or more.

Take action: Contact the South Florida Water Management District Governing Board now and tell them to CEPP it up!

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