The Palm Beach Post

It’s long past time to stop the fouling of Lake Okeechobee

- PRESTON T. ROBERTSON, TALLAHASSE­E Editor’s note: Robertson is vice presidentg­eneral counsel of the Florida Wildlife Federation.

Recent state and national headlines are full of the algae bloom disaster now unfolding in South Florida, especially along our east coast and in Martin County. A wave of green, smelly, toxic goop has invaded coastal areas, fouling water and suffocatin­g aquatic species and manatees. This situation is not only upsetting, it is, unfortunat­ely, completely predictabl­e.

Since the Hoover Dike was completed in the 1960s, essentiall­y making Lake Okeechobee into a giant bathtub, pollutant-laden water from agricultur­al and other sources have been deposited into the Kissimmee River and surroundin­g watersheds, which has traveled south to the lake. Nitrogen and phosphorou­s now degrade this once-pristine water body, which had once been a fishery of great renown. Following completion of the dike, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, fearing a breach or overflow of the dike, has pulsed polluted water east and west, to the coasts. Prior to the dike, clean water had flowed slowly south, thereby creating the “River of Grass” and the Everglades. Today, millions of gallons polluted water are shunted to the St. Lucie Canal eastward or to the Caloosahat­chee River westward.

The Florida Wildlife Federation has been involved in efforts to rectify this horrendous situation for at least 20 years, pushing for action on the Comprehens­ive Everglades Restoratio­n Plan and taking private polluters, state agencies and the federal government to court when we believed our laws were being violated, especially the Clean Water Act. We have sued the South Florida Water Management District, which was backed by the sugar industry, over back-pumping of dirty water into Lake Okeechobee from agricultur­al land south of the lake. We have litigated against the Corps of Engineers when it shifted essential water resources from the Caloosahat­chee River to irrigation projects. These cases take time, and even if we prevail at the trial level, lengthy appeals follow. Years of inaction go by as the problems get worse.

What is the solution? We need to stop the pollution at its source — especially runoff upstream from the lake. We need to halt back-pumping of dirty water into the lake. We need to move clean Lake Okeechobee water south. We need to put property owners on central sewer and eliminate septic tanks from sensitive areas (this goes for our coasts and our freshwater springs). We need to strongly support incoming Senate President Joe Negron’s efforts to purchase land south of the lake, and the Now or Neverglade­s petition.

It is well past time to stop kicking this can down the road if we are to save what makes Florida special, economical­ly viable and ecological­ly sustainabl­e.

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