Indian South

Comprehensive Restoration Plan Outreach Martin County Supports the Lagoon

Total Captured

120,000

42% 42% 41% 100,000

35% 80,000

Natural Area Restoration Irrigation 60,000 Land Conversion

kg/yr STAs Reservoirs

40,000 16% 20,000 11%

0 Alt 1 Alt 2 Alt 3 Alt 4 Alt 5 SP Alternatives

BMP Manual

Introduction – why important? Chapters for 5 areas Appendices Reference List Emergency Phone Nos. Non-emergency Nos. Spill Reporting Req. 177 pages –tables, photos, diagrams 350+ distributed to growers, production managers, chemical company reps. “The Legislature has declared …

Stormwater Treatment Areas (STAs) … to be the best available technology for achieving the interim goals of the Everglades restoration program …”

Sec. 373.4592(1)(g) Florida Statutes

Indian River Lagoon Feasibility Study and EIS Components

C-23/24 Basin Components 5. C-23/24 North Reservoir 6. C-23/24 South Reservoir 7. C-23/24 Stormwater Treatment Area 8. C-23/24 Stormwater Treatment Area and Canal 9. Allapattah Complex Natural Storage and Water Quality Area 10. Cypress Creek/Trail Ridge Complex - Natural Storage and Water Quality Area

C-25 & Northfork & Southfork Basin Components 11. C-25 Reservoir 12. C-25 Stormwater Treatment Area 13. Southfork Natural Storage and Water Quality Area 14. Northfork Natural Restoration

C-44 Basin Components 1. C-44 West Reservoir 2. C-44 West Stormwater Treatment Area 3. C-44 East Stormwater Treatment Area In Components 4. Palmar Complex - Natural Storage and 15. Muck Remediation (phase to coincide Water Quality Area with reservoir construction) 16. Artificial Habitat

The Local Challenge

LEADERSHIP

CITIZENSHIP

GROUPS

STATESMANSHIP CELEBRATIONS CERP / IRL Action Plan Yearlong Planning Process Upper East Coast Symposium, Jan/04 State of the St. Lucie River and Estuary/IRL Science Session on Martin County’s restoration efforts and poster display Washington Group hired February 10, 2004 March 24, 2004 Commissioners to attend PIR ACOE Division signing in D.C. March 31, 2004 Commissioners attend PIR ACOE District approval, signing and transmittal to DC in WPB March - April 2004 IRL update to the St. Lucie River Initiative and Coalition An IRL Slide Show CD is developed

April 13, 2004 Project Plan of Action authorized and funded by Commission April 13, 2004

Everglades / Indian River Lagoon Champion Award established; Gov. Bush to be first recipient

Friend of the Everglades Award program approved by the MC Commission April 14, 2004 Rep. Foley visits MC to discuss Congressional procedures related to CERP/IRL Plan adoption Media - Video Weekly updates at BOCC meetings on MCTV “Week in Review” - June 2003 to present IRL “Call to Action” Video airing - Feb 1-present Community Foundation-sponsored video began airing April 1, 2004.

Media - Print – County Page CERP/IRL stories

Healthy Rivers Monthly Updates

Continuing PIR updates to the “Stuart News” and “Palm Beach Post”

Develop an “information packet” to be provided as requested

Letters for Commission to request support from FDEP, Governor/President Bush for the IRL

Media – Website – MC staff updated MC homepage to include IRL information and related links – Posted draft letter of support for the IRL to be used as a guide public participation

– Web page includes phone #s, addresses and e-mail addresses of appropriate legislative contacts

Ecosystem Restoration Task Force Meeting •Crystal Elementary student letters May 2004

Addressed Editorial Boards

Newspaper coverage of County Commission DC trip

Contact and coordinate with local City and County officials

June 2004 - Enlist Local Players

Facilitate Stakeholder Meeting Establish the Community Executive Committee (CEC) Institute “Call to Action” coordination plan

Prepare and maintain lists of influential individuals and groups for support of IRL “Short-notice” Grassroots strategy

June 2004 – Call to Action Event Colleen Castille, Secretary FDEP Henry Dean, Executive Director, SFWMD Dennis Duke, Project Manager, USCOE

– Public pep rally for IRL project – Solicited public support to contact legislators – Grassroots strategy

July 2004 - USCOE Moves Forward

• The Chief’s Report was signed and transmitted to • CongressCongress will recess for the Month of August

September 2004

• Alert news media of “Call to Action” efforts

• Initiate local grass roots email campaign

• CEC respond to requests by the legislative delegation and The Washington Group Points of Interest

• The Kissimmee Federal Congressional Authorization occurred in October of 1992

• The WRDA 2000 Congressional Authorization occurred October 31st 2000

Rainfall – August thru September 2004 (Avg. Rainfall 53”/Year)

• At Least one named storm in the Atlantic Basin continuously from August 25 – October 2.

• There were 30 inches of rainfall in the Upper Kissimmee Basin.

• The wettest 2 month period in the Upper Kissimmee Basin since 1915.

• There were 21.5 inches District wide.

What We Can Expect

• It now appears more likely that nothing will happen on WRDA before Congress recesses on October 8 until after the election

• Now it appears that Congress will return around November 15 for a lame duck session

• Nobody knows for sure how long that session will last, but there is likely to be a big appropriations omnibus bill for FY 2005 What’s Next

• The Committee Staff of the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee continues to try to reach agreements on the controversial items such as beach renourishment and the Mississippi River.

• Senator Graham is exploring every opportunity that comes along and Rep. Foley will take action if anything happens in the Senate.

What We Were Doing

• Continue efforts to get communications to the leadership--Frist, McConnell, Daschle and Reid. Communications from people who know them are most apt to be effective.

• Continue contacting the Governor to press for Senate action on WRDA.

• Outreach to the Press for stories calling on the Governor, the President and Senate leadership to let WRDA move.

What We Are Doing

• Working toward another referendum

• Continue contacting the Governor to press for Federal action on legislation

• Supporting District efforts to move forward with the C-44 project

Everglades Restoration Step 1: Indian River Lagoon South Component

CERP IRLS Study Area Project Boundary

•Martin County •St. Lucie County •Okeechobee County The Everglades

Everglades 1900 Everglades 1973 Indian River Lagoon Estuary and St. Lucie River Are International and National Treasures

Official Designations Sites in Lagoon

International of National Significance ( 1993)

National Estuary of National Significance (EPA National Estuarine Program 1990)

America’s First National Wildlife Refuge (President Roosevelt 1903)

Archie National Wildlife Refuge (Congress 1989)

Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge (Congress 1963)

St. Lucie Nearshore Reefs (nominated NOAA -Marine Sanctuary Program)

Uniqueness of Indian River Lagoon Estuary

•Location at the Temperate/Tropical Transition Zone in North America

Cool water

America’s Zone of Highest Biodiveristy •2100 species plants •2200 species animal •800 fish species •310 bird species

Warm water The Problem Large-Scale Changes to the Regional

Moderate Freshwater Flow to Estuary Too Much Freshwater Flow to Estuary Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan RESTORE NATURAL FLOWS

Reduce Damaging Flows to Damaging Flows to IRL The Indian River Lagoon South Indian River Lagoon

St. Lucie River

St. LucieInlet Coastal Reefs St. Lucie Canal Constructed 1916 to 1928

Lake Okeechobee Major Freshwater Flow From To Indian River Lagoon Estuary & Reefs

Muck Sediment Discharged to Estuary

St. Lucie Estuary

Indian River Lagoon

Discharge Plume Leaving Inlet Offshore Reefs

Atlantic Ocean Low Quality Water Discharge The Consequences Loss Fisheries Habitat

(2) (3) Coastal Reefs (1) Beds Direct Effects on Fisheries Economically Important Spotted Seatrout Reproduction Inhibited at Low in Estuary •Ulcers and Lesions on Striped Mullet •Prevalent with Low Salinities & Discharges •Potential Human Health Problems Effects on Economics Economic Water-Related Benefits Martin and St. Lucie Counties TOTAL: $840 million Annually

1. Sales-$519 million/yr • Marinas • Boat sales/repairs • Fishing tackle/bait/charters 2. Personal income- $206 million/yr • 6,600 jobs supported • Guide fishing • Commercial fishing 3. Tourism-$115 million/yr • Visitation to beaches/hotels • Recreational fishing/boating The Support the First Component of CERP Indian River Lagoon South Plan

Reduce Damaging Flows to Estuaries