USA TODAY International Edition

A race against time in Fla. waste disaster

Millions of gallons of water pumped out of reservoir to stem breaches

- Zac Anderson

SARASOTA, Fla. – A drone equipped with thermal imaging equipment identified a possible “second breach” in the containmen­t pond wall that is leaking polluted water at a fertilizer processing plant property in Florida, officials said Monday.

The drone imaging may be a sign of further structural problems within the old Piney Point fertilizer processing plant in Manatee County or, it could be nothing. A Manatee County official said it’s not clear if the drone had identified something that already was known.

The Florida Department of Environmen­tal Protection later said that news reports – which were based on comments by two Manatee County officials – of a possible second breach were “unsubstant­iated.”

“There have been news reports of a second area of seepage from the east wall of the NGS- South compartmen­t at Piney Point. These reports are unsubstant­iated,” the DEP news release states. “A technical working group ... was on- site today evaluating conditions and determined the site was safe to continue work.”

The release adds officials are continuing to monitor the one area “where there is concentrat­ed seepage.”

The potential discovery comes as hundreds were ordered to evacuate as workers pumped millions of gallons of wastewater from the Piney Point reservoir into the Tampa Bay ecosystem, a move that could avoid disaster at the reservoir but could have harmful effects like red tide and fish kills in the Tampa Bay waters.

A team from the U. S. Army Corps of Engineers was assessing the structural integrity of the phosphogyp­sum stack’s containmen­t pond wall Monday, Manatee County officials said.

As of Monday afternoon, the worstcase scenario – a total collapse of the earthen berm that would cause floodwater to inundate nearby properties – had been avoided, but the possible identification of additional weakness in the wall could be a concern.

Officials are in a race against time to pump enough of the toxic water out of the pond to alleviate pressure on breaches in the wall and avoid its collapse. Manatee County acting Administra­tor Scott Hopes said about 35 mil

lion gallons are being pumped out of the pond daily, but when additional pumps were operating later Monday that would increase to between 75 million and 100 million gallons daily.

“A leak in the containmen­t wall continues at the Piney Point facility. ... The seepage rates remained steady overnight,” County Public Safety Director Jacob Saur said during a news conference Monday. “At approximat­ely 2 a. m. an infrared drone identified a signature that could indicate a second breach.”

Engineers were “reassessin­g” the possible second breach, Saur said.

Saur said in a follow- up interview that officials can’t say for sure if the wall’s structural integrity has further deteriorat­ed. “The engineers are not sure if they already knew about that second breach or not,” Saur said, adding, “It might be nothing.”

‘ We’re in a critical stage’

The containmen­t pond held less than 300 million gallons Monday afternoon. Hopes said that within 48 hours “we will be at a situation where we will no longer have that risk of a full breach.” About 150 million to 200 million gallons need to be pumped to reach that point, Saur said.

But for now, county officials are urging people within the flood zone if the containmen­t wall collapses to take the evacuation notice seriously.

“You need to take that evacuation message to heed,” Saur said. “We’re not out of the woods yet. We’re in a critical stage.”

More than 300 homes and multiple businesses in the area around Piney Point have been evacuated. The Manatee County Sheriff ’ s Office said 345 lowrisk jail inmates were moved to an undisclose­d location because of concerns about floodwaters reaching the jail.

The review of the site Monday by the Army Corps is the first time an engineerin­g team independen­t of the property owner, HRK Holdings, has analyzed the situation. Officials had been relying on a third- party engineerin­g contractor hired by HRK.

U. S. Rep. Vern Buchanan, R- Fla., who toured the site via helicopter Monday, urged the Army Corps and the U. S. Department of Environmen­tal Protection to get involved.

“I want the best and the brightest on the ground,” Buchanan said.

Buchanan said the problems at Piney Point were years in the making, and probably should have been dealt with earlier. “This is something that, unfortunat­ely, could have been dealt with probably over the years, but I’m not looking to assess blame or anything else,” Buchanan said. “I’m here to do everything I can to help the county and I don’t think it’s just Manatee County, this impacts the region.”

Roughly 480 million gallons were being held in the containmen­t pond before the leak started and officials began pumping water out on March 30.

The water being discharged has high levels of nutrients, such as nitrogen and phosphorou­s, and environmen­tal advocates are concerned that it will fuel algae blooms that cause fish kills and other environmen­tal damage.

The situation already is an environmen­tal catastroph­e, but it could still get worse if the containmen­t wall collapses. “I want to be hopeful, optimistic,” Buchanan said. “But just the fact that we’re running water into Tampa Bay is not a great thing, it’s not a great place to be at.”

Gov. Ron DeSantis said during a press conference that emergency managers had deployed about 20 additional pumps in an effort to double the flow of water out of the pond.

“We are hoping that we can just continue to get the water out in an S way and prevent a catastroph­ic event, but we have to prepare that this could be something where you see further degradatio­n,” DeSantis said.

 ?? PHOTOS BY MIKE LANG/ USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Wastewater from a containmen­t pond at an old fertilizer processing property is being pumped out to avoid the pond’s collapse, but the pollution could cause problems in the Tampa Bay ecosystem.
PHOTOS BY MIKE LANG/ USA TODAY NETWORK Wastewater from a containmen­t pond at an old fertilizer processing property is being pumped out to avoid the pond’s collapse, but the pollution could cause problems in the Tampa Bay ecosystem.
 ?? PHOTOS BY MIKE LANG/ USA TODAY NETWORK ?? The shoreline along Tampa Bay, just north of Port Manatee and Piney Point. The water being discharged in the bay has high levels of nutrients such as nitrogen and phosphorou­s that could lead to fish kills.
PHOTOS BY MIKE LANG/ USA TODAY NETWORK The shoreline along Tampa Bay, just north of Port Manatee and Piney Point. The water being discharged in the bay has high levels of nutrients such as nitrogen and phosphorou­s that could lead to fish kills.
 ??  ?? “I want to be hopeful,” said Rep. Vern Buchanan, R- Fla., who toured the site Monday. He said the problems at Piney Point were years in the making.
“I want to be hopeful,” said Rep. Vern Buchanan, R- Fla., who toured the site Monday. He said the problems at Piney Point were years in the making.

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