South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Sugar company frees up land near Everglades reservoir

- By Jim Turner

TALLAHASSE­E – The sugar grower Florida Crystals has agreed to the early end of a controvers­ial lease on land south of Lake Okeechobee that is envisioned for a stormwater-treatment area linked to a new reservoir.

An extension of the lease last November by the South Florida Water Management District in the Everglades Agricultur­al Area resulted in Gov. Ron DeSantis — in one of his first actions after being inaugurate­d — calling for members of the district board to resign.

The governor ’s office announced the terminatio­n of the lease Thursday in a news release that didn’t mention his board turnover request, which was carried out by the end of January.

“Today’s news is an important step forward in expediting constructi­on of the EAA reservoir project and reducing the harmful discharges hurting our coastal estuaries,” DeSantis said in a prepared statement.

A letter from Florida Crystals Vice President and General Counsel Armando Tabernilla said the company intends to “continue to farm these fields on a field-byfield basis until its operations are incompatib­le” with the reservoir project.

Florida Crystals spokesman Gaston Cantens said the company “fulfilled our promise by releasing leased land early based on the district’s expedited constructi­on schedule.”

“This process has once again proven that farming is compatible with restoratio­n and is the best use of these lands to protect jobs and food supply until they are needed for the project,” Cantens said in a prepared statement.

The nearly $1 million-a-year lease, which was challenged by environmen­tal groups, allowed Florida Crystals to continue farming on about 16,000 acres planned for the project.

Critics of the lease, which the district said was in the works for months, noted the issue was posted on a meeting agenda the night before it was approved.

“Thanks to Governor Ron DeSantis’ determined leadership, what began as a post-Election Day double-cross by Florida Crystals and the former South Florida Water Management District board to complicate constructi­on of the Everglades Reservoir has instead now forged a path for its groundbrea­king,” Everglades Foundation CEO Eric Eikenberg said in a statement Thursday.

The move by Florida Crystals is expected to allow the district to advance the constructi­on schedule on a roughly $1.6 billion reservoir project that state lawmakers approved in 2017. The reservoir is aimed, at least in part, at helping reduce the amount of polluted water going from Lake Okeechobee into the St. Lucie and Caloosahat­chee rivers, which have faced major problems with toxic algae.

“We look forward to working closely with the [U.S. Army] Corps to expedite federal permits so we can immediatel­y begin site preparatio­n work,” district Executive Director Drew Bartlett said in the announceme­nt from the governor’s office.

The district governing board will review the terminatio­n letter next week.

The district applied for permits from the Army Corps in June and August for the stormwater-treatment area component of the reservoir project.

The Army Corps is expected to build the reservoir, while the district constructs the water-cleansing treatment area.

The 2017 law, spearheade­d by then-Senate President Joe Negron, R-Stuart, allows Florida to issue up to $800 million in bonds for the reservoir, with the rest of the funding coming from the federal government.

The bill capped annual state funding at $64 million and placed the reservoir on state-owned land rather than private farmland in the Everglades Agricultur­al Area.

 ?? SUN SENTINEL FILE PHOTOS ?? A nearly $450-million reservoir, proposed to boost Broward and Palm Beach County drinking water supplies, would be built beside an existing reservoir built from converted rock mines west of Wellington.
SUN SENTINEL FILE PHOTOS A nearly $450-million reservoir, proposed to boost Broward and Palm Beach County drinking water supplies, would be built beside an existing reservoir built from converted rock mines west of Wellington.
 ??  ?? A reservoir to boost Broward and Palm Beach County drinking water supplies is proposed beside the existing L-8 Reservoir, built at Palm Beach Aggregates rock mining company west of Royal Palm Beach.
A reservoir to boost Broward and Palm Beach County drinking water supplies is proposed beside the existing L-8 Reservoir, built at Palm Beach Aggregates rock mining company west of Royal Palm Beach.

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