Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Officials say drone finds possible second breach at Piney Point wastewater reservoir

- By Curt Anderson

A drone discovered a possible second breach in a large Florida wastewater reservoir as more pumps were headed to the site to prevent a catastroph­ic flood, officials said Monday.

U.S. Rep. Vern Buchanan, a Republican, toured the area by helicopter Monday and said federal resources were committed to assisting the effort to control the 77-acre Piney Point reservoir in Manatee County, just south of the Tampa Bay area.

Among those are the Environmen­tal Protection Agency and the Army Corps of Engineers, Buchanan said at a news conference.

“I think we are making some progress,” Buchanan said. “This is something that has been going on too long. Now, I think everybody is focused on this.”

Fears of a complete breach at an old phosphate plant led authoritie­s to evacuate more than 300 homes, close portions of a major highway and move several hundred jail inmates nearby to a second floor of the facility.

Melissa Fitzsimmon­s lives with her husband and 19-monthold daughter in Palmetto, on the edge of the evacuation zone. Fitzsimmon­s said that for the past four days she has been terrified since she found out about the leak. While her house is on a hill and may not be directly affected by the water if the leak continues to grow, Fitzsimmon­s said her family is preparing for the worst.

“Within 24 hours it escalated to like a catastroph­ic evacuation, and we really didn’t know anything until we saw that there was an evacuation and then suddenly an evacuation within the block of our house,” Fitzsimmon­s said. “We’re not in the full on evacuation zone so we didn’t make the decision to leave, but we are certainly ready to go, I would say within like a 10-second notice, we can be out the door.”

Scott Hopes, the Manatee County administra­tor, said the additional pumps should increase the capacity for a controlled release of the water from about 35 million gallons a

day to between 75 million and 100 million gallons a day.

“This has become a very focused local, state and national issue,” Hopes said.

The Florida Department of Environmen­tal Protection says the water in the pond is primarily salt water mixed with wastewater and storm water. It has elevated levels of phosphorou­s and nitrogen and is acidic, but not expected to be toxic, the agency says.

The ponds sit in stacks of phosphogyp­sum, a solid radioactiv­e byproduct from manufactur­ing fertilizer. State authoritie­s say the water in the breached pond is not radioactiv­e.

Still, the EPA says too much nitrogen in the wastewater causes algae to grow faster, leading to fish kills. Some such blooms also can harm humans who come into contact with polluted waters, or eat tainted fish.

The Piney Point reservoir, and others like it storing the phosphogyp­sum byproduct, have been left unaddresse­d for far too long, environmen­tal groups say.

“This environmen­tal disaster is made worse by the fact it was entirely foreseeabl­e and preventabl­e,” said Jaclyn Lopez, Florida director at the Center for Biological Diversity. “With 24 more phosphogyp­sum stacks storing more than 1 billion tons of this dangerous, radioactiv­e waste in Florida, the EPA needs to step in right now.”

Dale Rucker, a hydrologis­t and former editor of the Journal of Environmen­tal and Engineerin­g Geophysics, says the leak is a reminder that government­s need to pay attention to aging infrastruc­ture that could endanger the environmen­t

and put communitie­s at serious risk.

“Continued neglect can have serious environmen­tal consequenc­es like we are seeing,” Rucker said. “These environmen­tal catastroph­es are going to happen with higher probabilit­y.”

 ?? TIFFANY TOMPKINS/THE BRADENTON HERALD ?? This photo taken by a drone shows the old Piney Point phosphate mine Saturday in Bradenton. Gov. Ron DeSantis declared a state of emergency after a significan­t leak at a large pond of wastewater threatened to flood roads and burst a system that stores polluted waters. The pond where the leak was discovered is at the old Piney Point phosphate mine, sitting in a stack of phosphogyp­sum, a waste product from manufactur­ing fertilizer that is radioactiv­e.
TIFFANY TOMPKINS/THE BRADENTON HERALD This photo taken by a drone shows the old Piney Point phosphate mine Saturday in Bradenton. Gov. Ron DeSantis declared a state of emergency after a significan­t leak at a large pond of wastewater threatened to flood roads and burst a system that stores polluted waters. The pond where the leak was discovered is at the old Piney Point phosphate mine, sitting in a stack of phosphogyp­sum, a waste product from manufactur­ing fertilizer that is radioactiv­e.
 ??  ?? Ron DeSantis addresses the situation at Piney Point at a press conference in Manatee County on Sunday.
Ron DeSantis addresses the situation at Piney Point at a press conference in Manatee County on Sunday.
 ??  ?? Map locates the Piney Point facility pond that is leaking contaminat­ed water.
Map locates the Piney Point facility pond that is leaking contaminat­ed water.

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