Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Resilience officers see climate threats, confident challenges being addressed

- By Dr. Jennifer L. Jurado, Jim Murley, Rhonda Haag and Megan S. Houston Dr. Jennifer L. Jurado is Chief Resilience Officer, Broward County. Jim Murley is Chief Resilience Officer, Miami-Dade County. Rhonda Haag is Sustainabi­lity Director, Monroe County. M

No issue is more important to the future of Southeast Florida than sea-level rise. However, a recent op-ed on the threat of rising sea levels to water supplies in South Florida included some factual errors and neglected important context.

As resilience officers for the four counties of Southeast Florida, we wish to correct and expand the record.

First, it is correct that sea-level rise does contribute to saltwater movement in the Biscayne Aquifer, a trend that has been monitored for decades. But the author overstated the threat, confusing coastal vulnerabil­ity with county-wide exposure, and falsely attributed text from a planning document as a formal statement from the Broward County Commission.

The correct statement is that 40 percent of coastal wellfield capacity is vulnerable to saltwater intrusion under conditions of two feet of sea-level rise, predicted by

2060. However, the county and municipal water providers have and will continue to account for saltwater intrusion as part of coordinate­d water supply planning.

Second, inaccurate statements were made regarding Miami-Dade County’s

2018 water quality report. The county detected 21 monitored compounds in the water during the reporting period — not 89 — and all were within the allowable levels set by federal, state, and local laws, rules, and regulation­s. The author did not acknowledg­e that many of these are naturally occurring elements well below allowable levels, with the county’s drinking water fully meeting all EPA standards.

More broadly, however, the op-ed failed to include crucial context, implying that the region’s challenges are not being met with solutions. This is incorrect. Public and private service providers throughout the region are already addressing our risks and vulnerabil­ities to a changing climate.

In particular, county government­s, municipali­ties, local utilities, and the South Florida Water Management District have been focusing for decades on understand­ing and addressing the region’s diverse and interrelat­ed water resource challenges, including historic and future saltwater intrusion, drought, population growth, and environmen­tal needs.

Throughout Southeast Florida, investment­s continue to be made in sophistica­ted monitoring and modeling of saltwater intrusion, shifting threatened wells away from coastal areas, improving water conservati­on, recharging the Biscayne Aquifer with alternativ­e water supplies, storage and reuse of stormwater, and use of the deeper Floridan Aquifer. Desalinati­on plants are not on the region’s list of priorities, as desalinati­on plants have higher operationa­l costs than every other alternativ­e water supply option available in the region

In January 2010, Broward, Miami-Dade, Monroe, and Palm Beach counties formed the Southeast Florida Regional Climate Change Compact to coordinate climate change projects and policies across county lines.

Since then, the four Compact counties have advanced local and regional responses to—and preparatio­ns for—the effects of climate change, including sea-level rise, flooding, impacts to drinking water supplies, and economic and social disruption­s. The Compact has expanded our collaborat­ion with a growing number of municipal, regional, state, federal, nonprofit, academic, and private-sector partners.

The Compact has made tremendous progress addressing our shared climate challenges and become a model for regional cooperatio­n throughout the U.S. and around the globe.

Water resource issues in Southeast Florida are indeed challengin­g, but with the type of coordinate­d planning and investment­s already underway at many levels, our regional challenges can be overcome.

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