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Sun-Sentinel.com: Broward wants to keep dumping treated sewage in ocean

http://www.sun-sentinel.com/health/fl-waste-outfall-broward-20101025,0,2211108.story

Reef Relief’s Paul Johnson worked hard to get this bill passed using rigorous science that demonstrated the negative impacts of sewage on coral reefs; the benefits of meeting fresh water demands alone, beyond the obvious issue of providing clean water for the area’s coral reefs, make it a win-win for any responsible community. What are they thinking?  DV

County says state law would double residents’ sewage bills

By David Fleshler and Brittany Wallman, Sun SentinelPompano Beach outfall pipe video:http://www.sun-sentinel.com/videobeta/0396149c-9a3d-4677-94a2-7dd4591db657/News/Pompano-Beach-outfall-pipe

6:08 p.m. EDT, November 1. 2010

Broward County wants to escape a state mandate to shut down a pipe that discharges treated sewage into the ocean off Pompano Beach, saying the cost would be huge and the environmental payoff negligible.

The pipe is one of six in Broward, Miami-Dade and Palm Beach counties ordered closed by a 2008 state law, after a campaign by environmentalists who argued the pipes were polluting coral reefs and wasting fresh water.

The law, which set a deadline of 2025, requires wastewater authorities to improve treatment systems so the water can be used for purposes such as irrigating golf courses, watering lawns and recharging underground water supplies.

The Broward County Commission learned last month that it would cost about $800 million to construct such systems. Sewage bills for the pipe’s northern Broward users would more than double, with the average customer’s bill rising from $33.09 to $69.48.

Now the county is aiming for a way around the requirement — by a change in the law, a waiver or some other exemption.

Thomas Hutka, Broward’s public works director, said spending hundreds of millions to pump the water into the Floridan aquifer or to lay pipes to spray it on lawns “is not a cost-effective use of taxpayer funds.”

“The county will continue to work with the state as we have since the year 2007 so that we can continue using the ocean outfall, which we believe to be both cost-effective and environmentally sound,” Hutka said.

Alan Garcia, the county’s water and wastewater director, said the water already is 90 percent clean.

“If you take a jar out of our treatment plant it’s as clear as can be,” he said. “There are no solids in it. It’s not yellow or green.”

Ed Tichenor, director of Palm Beach County Reef Rescue, an environmental group that led the campaign to close the pipes, said environmental advocates would put up “quite a fight” to prevent Broward from keeping the pipe in service.

“Solids aren’t the problem,” Tichenor said. “It’s the nutrients, it’s the pharmaceuticals, it’s the pathogens and viruses that survive the initial treatment. And one reason they passed this legislation was a water shortage in southeast Florida, and southeast Florida doesn’t recycle water like the rest of the state.”

The pipe off Delray Beach shut down last year. Boca Raton expects to be reusing 100 percent of its water by 2015, using the pipeline only for seasonal overflows, said Chris Helfrich, the city’s utilities director. Hollywood and Miami-Dade County are exploring options, both saying the change would require a massive investment in new treatment systems.

The Broward-operated pipe, installed in the mid-1970s, discharges 32 million to 34 million gallons of treated sewage daily from Parkland, Pompano Beach, Deerfield Beach, Coral Springs, Tamarac, Oakland Park, Lauderhill, North Lauderdale, Coconut Creek, Lauderdale Lakes, part of unincorporated Broward and a small part of Fort Lauderdale.

Environmentalists have blamed this and other pipes for discharging nutrients such as ammonia that fertilize the growth of algae that smothers coral reefs. State legislators said the region can’t afford to dump that much fresh water at sea when the region is facing permanent water-use restrictions.

Broward Vice Mayor Sue Gunzburger said, “If there’s anything we can do to avoid meeting that standard by 2025,” Broward wants to do it.

“It’s a very expensive, unfunded mandate that I don’t think would make much difference when it comes to the ocean,” Gunzburger said. “The most telling fact is that most of the nutrients that go into the sea are not from the wastewater effluent but from storm water discharge.”

Although there have been several swimming advisories in Broward for high bacteria levels over the past year, environmental officials inspected the pipes and plants and found no malfunctions. Health officials say the more likely source of contamination was animal waste washed into the water from birds and other wildlife.

Broward Commissioner Kristin Jacobs, who is known as an environmentalist, said the state mandate was not based on sound science and the alternatives have their own environmental issues.

“It is not the intent of Broward County to slip one past the people,” said Jacobs. “What we’re looking for is a science-based solution.”

But she said she doubts the county will be allowed to keep using the outfall.

“There are politicians who used this in their brochure for their next election: ‘I shut off the ocean outfall.’ They’re going to come back and give us some grace to deal with this issue? I’m skeptical.”

David Fleshler can be reached at dfleshler@sunsentinel.com or 954-356-4535.

Coral-list: UNEP’s Cartagena Convention LBS Protocol enters into force at last

Montego Bay, Jamaica
7th October 2010

At  the  Fourteenth Intergovernmental Meeting on the Action Plan for the Caribbean Environment Programme and Eleventh Meeting of the Contracting Parties to the Convention for the Protection and Development of the Marine Environment of the Wider Caribbean Region  being held in  Montego Bay, Jamaica, today the Bahamas announced its accession to the Cartagena Convention as well as its Protocol Concerning Pollution from Land-Based Sources and Activities in the Wider Caribbean (LBS).  After Guyana’s recent accession to the Cartagena Convention and all three of its protocols (Oil Spills, SPAW and LBS) becoming the 8th Party to the LBS Protocol, the accession by the Bahamas as its 9th Party means that the LBS now officially enters into force as a legal instrument and that there will be stronger pollution control measures in place in Caribbean waters at a time when the effects of sea temperature rise and climate change are of major concern to coastal communities with regard to the  conservation of the region’s marine biodiversity.

The Cartagena Convention now has 25 member countries, out of a total of 28 countries in the Wider Caribbean, only Haiti, Suriname, and Honduras have not yet acceded. SPAW now has 14 contracting parties.

Special thanks to Paul Hoetjes

CRISP (Coral Reef InitiativeS for the Pacific) in New Caledonia has released a gorgeous new field guide: A guide to the decapod crustaceans of the South Pacific, by Joseph Poupin and Matthieu Juncker. 2010. 318 pp.

It is available online for free, and there is one edition in English, and another in French.

Go to:
www.crisponline.net/CRISPPRODUCTS/Biodiversityknowledgeandconservation/tabid/317/Default.aspx

You will find a number of other informative publications on a variety of reef topics as well at this web page, all free to download.

 There is also a printed version of the crustacean guide which has both languages, not sure how to get that, best to contact CRISP.

The photos are gorgeous, and the text informative, it covers 223 species.  There is a section of general information on crustaceans at the beginning of the book.  The book covers reef, shore, mangrove, stream, and terrestrial species.

Enjoy!
Doug Fenner, Australian Institute of Marine Sciences

Special thanks to Doug Fenner and the Coral-list.

Blue Frontier Campaign: Third Blue Vision Summit May 21-23, 2011 – Washington, D.C.

http://us1.campaign-archive.com/?u=fb7357aafe4ce51894c41682b&id=d65f181b07&e=1c101f3bc0

For the more than 400 of us who participated in the March 2009 Blue Vision Summit in Washington, D.C., it was both an inspiration and a practical chance to develop strategies and begin solving ocean problems early in the new administration. (See the Summit video narrated by Sylvia Earle and directed by David McGuire).

Summit participants take the message to the White House.Following this historic gathering, we’ve seen the launch of the first U.S. Ocean Policy based on ocean health, but we’ve also seen an oily catastrophe in the Gulf of Mexico and continued declines in the health of our public seas and waterways.  That’s why we hope you’ll SAVE THE DATES and be part of a much needed third Blue Vision Summit in Washington, D.C. May 21-23, 2011.

This will follow the fourth annual Blue Frontier/Peter Benchley Ocean Awards that will take place on Friday, May 20, 2011 also in Washington, D.C.  SAVE THE DATE!

Planning meetings for the next Summit are scheduled for Wednesday, November 10 at the Carnegie Institution in Washington, D.C. and Wednesday, November 17 at the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco.

For more information or if you’re group wants to be a sponsor and planner of the summit or the Benchley awards, please contact info@bluefront.org.

Special thanks to David Helvarg.

Conservation International announces release of three new publications on Marine Managed Areas

Colleagues:

I am pleased to announce the release of 3 new publications promoting
solutions to the global ocean crisis. Produced by the Science-to-Action
partnership, which includes more than 75 organizations led by Conservation
International’s Marine Management Area Science Program, the publications are
based on 5 years of natural and social science research in over 70 marine
managed areas in 23 tropical countries.

Drawing on the results of more than 50 studies, the Science-to-Action
partnership offers recommendations for successful implementation of marine
managed areas (MMAs) to maximize the benefits to people and nature. The
findings and recommendations are presented in 3 reader-friendly, richly
illustrated booklets:

• People and Oceans explores the role of people in marine managed areas,
including the human well-being benefits and challenges of MMAs, and how
socioeconomic conditions affect success.
http://www.science2action.org/peopleandoceans

• Living with the Sea examines the role of MMAs in restoring and sustaining
healthy oceans, particularly the importance of local management efforts.
http://www.science2action.org/livingwiththesea

• Marine Managed Areas: What, Why, and Where defines MMAs and discusses the
challenges of implementation.
http://www.science2action.org/mmas-whatwhyandwhere

I encourage you to use these booklets to advance discussions with government
agencies, non-government organizations, user groups, and other stakeholders
to influence better decisions for coastal and ocean resources and about how
and why to implement integrated management systems for the ocean.

These and other publications may be downloaded in pdf format at our new
website http://www.science2action.org. Please contact Septiana Rustandi at
s.rustandi@conservation.org if you would like printed copies of the
booklets. Figures and illustrations from the booklets are provided on the
website in jpeg format for use in presentations and documents. Additional
information on marine managed areas and the Science-to-Action global
learning network is also available at http://www.science2action.org.

The MMAS Program welcomes feedback on the utility of these documents.

With kind regards,
John J.Tschirky
Conservation International
Marine Managed Areas Science Program
2011 Crystal Drive, Suite 500
Arlington, VA 22202  USA
office: 703 341 2628
email: j.tschirky@conservation.org
_______________________________________________
Special thanks to Coral-List mailing list
Coral-List@coral.aoml.noaa.gov
http://coral.aoml.noaa.gov/mailman/listinfo/coral-list