Miami Herald

Army Corps launches Everglades and Biscayne Bay restoratio­n plan

- BY ADRIANA BRASILEIRO abrasileir­o@miamiheral­d.com

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers started taking public comment this week for a project to remove unnatural barriers to the flow of water through the Everglades to Florida Bay and to restore coastal wetlands in an effort to improve the health of Biscayne Bay.

The Biscayne Bay and Southeaste­rn Everglades Ecosystem Restoratio­n Feasibilit­y Study, which is part of the Comprehens­ive Everglades Restoratio­n

Plan, aims to restore parts of the South Florida ecosystem in freshwater wetlands of the southern Glades and rehydrate coastal wetlands, including mangrove and seagrass areas, of Biscayne Bay, Biscayne National

Park, Manatee Bay, Card Sound and Barnes Sound.

All these areas have been affected by decades of overdraina­ge and by damaging freshwater releases from canals, such as the C-111 Canal, also known as the Aerojet Canal. The Corps plans to start a second phase in a project to restore the natural hydrology destroyed by the wide and deep canal built in the 1960s to transport rocket engines from a nearby factory to Cape Canaveral.

A key challenge is to prevent flooding in the wrong areas, especially considerin­g water naturally flows southeast through the area’s porous limestone, threatenin­g farms and highdensit­y areas closer to the coast.

The Corps will build flood control structures but it will also have to limit the amount of water allowed to flow into Taylor Slough. That’s a key conduit of fresh water into Florida Bay. Environmen­talists hope more freshwater will revive seagrass beds that have been replaced by mangroves due to high salinity levels.

The Corps also wants to make the area more resilient to climate change, as sea level rise has already pushed some mangroves inland. That’s one of the goals of the coastal restoratio­n portion of the plan.

The current plan, known as BBSEER, is the merger of two projects in the widerangin­g, multi-billion Everglades Restoratio­n portfolio known as CERP: a delayed second phase of coastal wetlands restoratio­n in southern Biscayne Bay and the changes to the C-111 canal, which also include removing obstacles to connect areas that are currently blocked by roads and other structures.

The C-111 is so wide and deep that scientists estimated it collects three-quarters of the water that once flowed south through Taylor Slough into Florida Bay. That has caused severe salinity issues that worsened the environmen­t for fish, crabs and wading birds.

The Corps expects to take three years to develop the BBSEER plan and send it to Congress for approval.

The Everglades ecosystem is made up of a system of diverse wetland landscapes that are hydrologic­ally and ecological­ly connected across more than 200 miles from north to south, and across 18,000 square miles of southern Florida.

In 2000, Congress authorized the federal government, in partnershi­p with the state of Florida, to launch the multi-decade, multi-billion dollar CERP to further protect and restore the remaining Everglades ecosystem while also meeting other water-related needs of the region.

Earlier this month, a key CERP project to raise the Tamiami Trail and modify water delivery from the northern Everglades into southern areas including Everglades National Park went ahead after a contract was awarded to complete a massive bridge. Work on the final phase of the $200 million Tamiami Trail Next Steps Project is scheduled to begin in November. The Florida Department of Transporta­tion, in coordinati­on with Everglades National Park, will oversee the project.

“Raising the trail will be a tremendous victory for Everglades restoratio­n and the end result of 30 years of hard work by conservati­onists, local communitie­s, and state and federal leaders,” said Cara Capp, senior Everglades program manager at the National Parks Conservati­on Associatio­n.

The Corps is taking public comment on BBSEER through Oct. 2. Comments can be emailed to BBSEER comments@usace.army.mil

 ?? Miami Herald file ?? The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers started planning its next Everglades project aimed at fixing troubled Biscayne Bay and sending more water south to Florida Bay.
Miami Herald file The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers started planning its next Everglades project aimed at fixing troubled Biscayne Bay and sending more water south to Florida Bay.
 ?? Miami Herald file ?? Earlier this month, a key project to raise the Tamiami Trail and modify water delivery from the northern Everglades into southern areas, including Everglades National Park, went ahead after a contract was awarded to complete a massive bridge. Work on the final phase of the $200 million Tamiami Trail Next Steps Project is scheduled to begin in November.
Miami Herald file Earlier this month, a key project to raise the Tamiami Trail and modify water delivery from the northern Everglades into southern areas, including Everglades National Park, went ahead after a contract was awarded to complete a massive bridge. Work on the final phase of the $200 million Tamiami Trail Next Steps Project is scheduled to begin in November.

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