Chattanooga Times Free Press

Leak at Florida wastewater pond prompts evacuation­s of 300 homes

- BY ADRIANA GOMEZ LICON

MIAMI — Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis declared a state of emergency Saturday after a significan­t leak at a large pond of wastewater threatened to flood roads and burst a system that stores polluted waters.

Officials in Florida ordered more than 300 homes to be evacuated and closed off a highway Saturday near the large reservoir in the Tampa Bay area north of Bradenton.

Residents who live around the Piney Point reservoir received an alert via text saying to leave the area immediatel­y because the collapse was “imminent.” Authoritie­s expanded the evacuation area later Saturday to include more homes, but said they were not planning to open shelters.

The Florida Department of Environmen­tal Protection says a break was detected Friday in one of the walls of a 77-acre pond that has a depth of 25 feet and holds millions of gallons of water containing phosphorus and nitrogen from an old phosphate plant.

Officials brought in rocks and materials to plug the hole in the pond late Friday into Saturday, but the attempt was unsuccessf­ul.

Manatee County Administra­tor Scott Hopes said at a press conference Saturday that the most pressing concern is that the water could flood the area, which he said was agricultur­al and low in population density.

“We are talking about the potential of about 600 million gallons within a matter of seconds and minutes leaving that retention pool and going around the surroundin­g area,” Hopes said.

Workers have been pumping out thousands of gallons per minute at the site to bring the volume down in the event the pond bursts. Pumping the entire pond would take 10 to 12 days. Others have been working to chart the path to control how the water flows from the pond into the Tampa Bay.

DeSantis’ declaratio­n of a state of emergency allocates more pumps and cranes to the area. The owner, HRK Holdings, did not respond to a request for comment on Saturday.

The pond where the leak was discovered is at the old Piney Point phosphate mine, sitting in a stack of phosphogyp­sum, a waste product from manufactur­ing fertilizer that is radioactiv­e. It contains small amounts of naturally occurring radium and uranium, and the stacks can also release large concentrat­ions of radon gas.

Hopes says that if the pond collapses, there is a risk it could destabiliz­e the walls of other areas in the plant.

“The pond is basically salt water. We saw ducks yesterday, there are snooks swimming in there. It’s sustaining wildlife. That’s not the case for the other two pools,” he said, adding the wastewater in the other ponds would need to be treated to reduce ammonium content and other materials.

The executive order declaring the state of emergency said the breached structure has 480 million gallons of seawater mixed with process water and the embankment materials from the old fertilizer manufactur­ing plant.

Agricultur­e Commission­er Nikki Fried urged the governor in a letter to convene an emergency session of the state cabinet to discuss a plan, adding that this property has seen similar leaks in the past.

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