Miami Herald

Biden’s infrastruc­ture investment should include $5 billion for Everglades restoratio­n

- BY JEB BUSH

President Biden has proposed a big investment in America’s infrastruc­ture, and he is right to do so. Modernizin­g and repairing the basic foundation­s of our economy is long overdue and will do more to help sustain economic growth and rising wages than anything being considered in Washington today.

In answering the president’s call to rebuild our infrastruc­ture, Congress must be bold and should think expansivel­y. The foundation­s of our economy are far more complex than just roads and bridges, and to obtain maximum return on our infrastruc­ture investment, our thinking must be equally broad. Policymake­rs should invest strategica­lly to maximize our return in the years and decades ahead.

Those strategic investment­s, for instance, should include efforts to reduce the digital divide by expanding access to high-speed, affordable internet by lower-income Americans and those in rural areas.

Here in Florida, the coming infrastruc­ture bill should also include substantia­l Investment­s in water infrastruc­ture.

Twenty years ago, the Florida Legislatur­e and our congressio­nal delegation joined scientists and stakeholde­rs alike to frame a response to the deteriorat­ion of America’s Everglades and recurrent outbreaks of toxic algae in Florida’s coastal estuaries.

What emerged — the Comprehens­ive Everglades Restoratio­n Plan (CERP) — included 68 major public-works projects and a formula to pay for them: The federal government and the state of Florida each would assume responsibi­lity for 50 percent of the cost.

But Washington has fallen behind on its share.

The coming infrastruc­ture bill is a once-in-alifetime opportunit­y for the federal government to balance the ledger and make up for lost time.

Specifical­ly, Florida’s bipartisan congressio­nal delegation should stand as one in urging the president to include $5 billion in the infrastruc­ture plan for Everglades restoratio­n.

That sum, $5 billion over 10 years, will match Florida’s existing financial commitment so we can complete the projects that are included in the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Integrated Delivery Schedule.

In Florida, clean water is our economy. Our beaches, bays, rivers and springs are what drew most of us to Florida in the first place. They are essential to our multibilli­on-dollar tourism, hospitalit­y and recreation industries — and they are in trouble.

Florida’s flood control managers today have no alternativ­e than to flush massive amounts of algae-causing water from Lake Okeechobee whenever lake levels get too high. As a consequenc­e, our once pristine coastal waters too often have been coated with toxic algae that has closed beaches, restricted fishing and devastated tourism, hospitalit­y and real estate along all three of Florida’s coastlines, year after year.

Together with the funds already committed by the state, a $5 billion federal infrastruc­ture investment will finally let us modernize and repair the antiquated water infrastruc­ture that 9 million Floridians, tourism and agricultur­e depend on every day for flood control and water supply.

Completing these projects will cut algae-causing discharges from Lake Okeechobee by more than half. Water that is now being flushed out to sea instead will be stored, purified and sent south, restoring the natural flow of fresh water into America’s Everglades and Florida Bay, both of which are on life support.

You would be hardpresse­d to find any infrastruc­ture investment that could have as profound an impact.

Economic studies have concluded that every $1 invested in Everglades restoratio­n projects will return at least $4 in economic benefits to the people of Florida. That’s in addition to creating more than 45,000 highpaying constructi­on jobs that will help thousands of Florida households emerge from the pandemic.

It will take the efforts of our entire Florida congressio­nal delegation to persuade Congress and the president to make a $5 billion commitment to Florida’s water infrastruc­ture — but no investment will do more for Florida’s economy and quality of life.

This is a golden opportunit­y for Florida. We can’t let it slip away — and we have no time to waste.

Jeb Bush served as Florida’s 43rd governor, from 1999-2007.

 ?? Getty Images ?? Former Florida governor says that the federal government has not paid its fair share for Everglades restoratio­n.
Getty Images Former Florida governor says that the federal government has not paid its fair share for Everglades restoratio­n.
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