Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Trump wants work to move faster on lake dike

- By Jim Turner The News Service Of Florida

TALLAHASSE­E — With the White House pointing to ties between President Donald Trump and Gov. Rick Scott, repairs to the Herbert Hoover Dike around Lake Okeechobee might be done more quickly than anticipate­d.

Trump on Thursday directed Mick Mulvaney, the chief of the White House Office of Management and Budget, to accelerate the work.

“The administra­tion, working closely with Florida Gov. Rick Scott, will now plan to expedite work at the project,” the White House said in a news release late Thursday.

Scott quickly thanked the president in a tweet. The news release didn’t outline costs or timelines for the work, which is intended to allow the lake to retain more water without causing a threat to surroundin­g communitie­s.

Trump previously set aside $82 million for the work in his proposed 2018 budget.

The remaining work has been projected to cost up to $930 million.

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers since 2001 has spent more than $870 million on projects designed to reduce the risk of “catastroph­ic failure” to the aging 143-mile earthen dam that also features levees, hurricane gates and other water-control structures, according to the Army Corps.

The Legislatur­e included $50 million in this year’s Florida budget to help speed the Army Corps repairs.

State lawmakers also approved an $800 million plan spearheade­d by Senate President Joe Negron, R-Stuart, to start work on a reservoir south of the lake.

The Senate plan, which depends on federal matching funds, allows Florida to bond the money as a way to speed the reservoir’s con- struction. The intent is to move water south from the lake, rather than to the east and west when the lake’s water level gets too high.

Treasure Coast residents blame polluted water releases from Lake Okeechobee for algae outbreaks in surroundin­g waterways.

The White House announceme­nt said the dike work “is still more than a decade away from completion.”

Scott has pushed to move up the completion by 2022.

“This April, Gov. Rick Scott spoke with President Donald Trump regarding the importance of fixing the federally operated Herbert Hoover Dike,” the governor’s office said late Thursday. “Following their conversati­on, President Trump committed to fixing the dike.”

The ongoing repair work started in 2007, according to the White House release.

“This project is important to the state of Florida and we are honored to play a role in the funding, and now accelerati­on, of this essential infrastruc­ture initiative,” Mulvaney said in the White House release.

 ?? JOE RAEDLE/GETTY IMAGES FILE ?? Earth movers transport large rocks along part of the 140-mile-long Herbert Hoover Dike that encircles Lake Okeechobee near Pahokee.
JOE RAEDLE/GETTY IMAGES FILE Earth movers transport large rocks along part of the 140-mile-long Herbert Hoover Dike that encircles Lake Okeechobee near Pahokee.

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