Miami Herald (Sunday)

Undergroun­d flood wall approved for Las Palmas

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side due to sea level rise.

“This isn’t going to resolve their problem; it will resolve the problem that Shark River Slough will create, but this community will still have a flooding problem,” Ron Bergeron, a governing board member at the

South Florida Water Management District, said during a monthly meeting on Thursday.

The seepage wall works out to more than $117,000 per home, an expensive step for a community that environmen­talist say was built in a flood-prone area and that has been the target of years of controvers­y and buy-out efforts. The district is simultaneo­usly still trying to buy out the properties through willing seller agreements but not everyone in the community is on board.

The Slough is a key artery in the Everglades, channeling water from Water Conservati­on Area 3 through the national park all the way to Florida Bay. Water managers and Everglades restoratio­n advocates say that billions worth of projects that have now been completed won’t achieve their full potential until water can flow freely to replenish the park and revive Florida

Bay.

For instance, nearly three miles of Tamiami Trail that have been raised and other projects such as the S-333 and S-333N water control structures about 35 miles west of Miami double the amount of water that can be moved south through that area. But Las Palmas, a rural area with plant nurseries, small fruit farms and a handful of homes, is in the way.

That’s why Bergeron is a proponent of more vigorous measures to resolve the Las Palmas issue, which he considers to be a key obstacle in the way of Everglades restoratio­n.

For now, the South Florida Water Management District is trying to buy people out through willing seller agreements.

Water managers are also talking to MiamiDade’s Regulatory and Economic Resources department, formerly known as the Department of Environmen­tal Resources, or DERM.

During Thursday’s meeting, board member Charlie Martinez said he met with DERM director

Lee Hefty and Craig Grossenbac­her, chief of DERM’s natural resources planning department, to discuss the inclusion of Las Palmas properties in the county’s Miami-Dade County’s Environmen­tally Endangered Lands program, known as EEL, which aims to protect and conserve endangered habitats.

In an interview with the Miami Herald on Thursday after the meeting, Hefty said the District submitted an applicatio­n to the county to have some Las Palmas properties included in the program.

“It’s a process; we can receive applicatio­ns for considerat­ion and if our staff thinks they qualify, the applicatio­ns are evaluated by a Land Acquisitio­n Selection Committee,” Hefty said. Following a public hearing, the committee recommends sites for purchase to the Board of County Commission­ers. Even if properties are approved for purchase through the preservati­on program, the transactio­ns would be done on a willing seller basis, Hefty added.

Lands that were acquired through MiamiDade’s EEL program include portions of Biscayne Bay Coastal Wetlands, in partnershi­p with Florida Communitie­s Trust, and properties along the Oleta River, in partnershi­p with the state.

Since it’s still early in the process, it’s not clear where the funding would come from, Hefty said.

Adriana Brasileiro: (305) 376-2576, @AdriBras

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