Orlando Sentinel

President Trump signs law authorizin­g reservoir to cut Lake Okeechobee discharges

- By Tyler Treadway, Ali Schmitz

Building the reservoir to cut Lake Okeechobee discharges is now federal law.

President Donald Trump signed the federal Water Resources Developmen­t Act Tuesday. WRDA includes a nationwide list of water projects that included the reservoir south of Lake O.

The law authorizes but doesn’t allocate money for the feds to pay their half of the $1.6 billion Everglades Agricultur­al Area Reservoir.

The appropriat­ion process could take a couple of years to get money rolling.

In late spring 2017, the Florida Legislatur­e approved, and Gov. Rick Scott signed into law, both the proposal to build the reservoir and a mechanism to pay for it.

With “consistent funding,” designing and building the 16,600-acre project will take nine to 10 years, said South Florida Water Management District spokesman Randy Smith.

The water management district’s preliminar­y defew sign for the project includes a:

23-foot-deep, 10,100-acre reservoir to store up to 78.2 billion gallons of excess lake water

6,500-acre man-made marsh to clean the water before it’s sent south to Everglades National Park and Florida Bay

The reservoir project is expected, when used in conjunctio­n with other existing and planned projects, to reduce the number of damaging discharges from Lake Okeechobee to the St. Lucie and Caloosahat­chee rivers by 63 percent.

It also will send an average of about 120.6 billion gallons of clean water south to the thirsty Everglades and Florida Bay.

Senate President Joe Negron, R-Stuart, spearheade­d the project in the Florida Legislatur­e. He applauded the president for signing the bill into law. In a statement, he urged state and federal officials to complete the reservoir within three to five years, saying if federal and state officials are not “up to the task,” they should outsource the project to a private partner.

“I predict that one day a years from now we will look back with pride on how we stopped dispatchin­g excess water from Lake Okeechobee east and west into the St. Lucie and Caloosahat­chee Rivers and instead sent it south to the Everglades and Florida Bay via the Southern Reservoir,” Negron said. “A groundbrea­king this fall is in order. Let’s get it done.”

The Everglades Foundation CEO Eric Eikenberg agreed, saying the project came “almost two decades late.”

“If the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers can repair the Mosul Dam in Iraq in one year, this critical Florida reservoir should not take another decade,” Eikenberg said. “It now falls on Congress to appropriat­e the $200 million annually that is needed to construct the reservoir and move other critical Everglades restoratio­n projects forward quickly. Be assured, the people of Florida will be watching.”

The U.S. Senate approved the bill earlier this month.

The U.S. House of Representa­tives approved the bill twice: its own version June 6 with a “placeholde­r” for the reservoir project and Sept. 13, as the bill stalled in the Senate, a compromise version worked out to jibe with the expected Senate version.

Sen. Marco Rubio called the bill signing an “an important step toward solving Florida’s water challenge.”

“This water infrastruc­ture bill, which includes key projects that will address Florida’s growing water challenges, authorizes the new EAA Storage Reservoir that will reduce harmful discharges to Florida’s coasts and enhance the promise of Everglades restoratio­n. I thank my colleagues for advancing this bipartisan effort and President Trump for signing it into law.”

Rep. Brian Mast, R-Palm City, also celebrated the bill becoming law.

“This was a community effort, and together, I am confident we will keep up the momentum to ensure the funding we need for this infrastruc­ture and make health and human safety the top priority once and for all,” Mast said.

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