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Altogether, these problems seriously threaten the natural and human
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environment of the south Florida ecosystem.
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What Is Expected to Happen Without the Recommended Comprehensive Plan
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Although some level of ecological improvement will occur in the south Florida
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ecosystem as a result of implementation of projects currently planned outside of the
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Restudy, the cumulative, regional benefits from these projects would not result in a
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sustainable south Florida ecosystem. Specifically, based on an evaluation of
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conditions in the year 2050 without the recommended Comprehensive Plan, it was
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determined that the overall health of the ecosystem will have substantially
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deteriorated. This type of assessment was carried out for all planning alternatives
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evaluated during the course of the Restudy. The analyses show that making
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modifications to only some portions of the C&SF Project in order to achieve
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sustainable natural systems will not succeed. Conditions predicted in 2050 fail to
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meet the basic needs of the south Florida ecosystem.
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Demands placed on Lake Okeechobee result in damaging water levels and
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extreme harm to the littoral zone. Damaging fresh water discharges into the
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Caloosahatchee and St. Lucie estuaries result in major harm to fisheries. Damaging
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high flows alter salinity balances in Lake Worth Lagoon. Hydropatterns predicted
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for the Water Conservation Areas are harmful to tree islands. Everglades National
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Park does not receive enough freshwater flow to maintain important aquatic
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habitat in Shark River Slough. Low flows to Florida and Biscayne bays also result
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in harm to the resources in these areas. These ecological problems would not be
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corrected solely by implementation of currently planned or ongoing projects.
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Relatively greater levels of improvement were identified for water quality
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conditions in the future compared to existing conditions in south Florida. It is
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expected that state, tribal, regional, and local programs to improve water quality
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Summary
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Final Feasibility Report and PEIS April 1999
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v
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will be implemented to varying degrees throughout the study area during the next
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50 years. Ongoing restoration projects in the Kissimmee River watershed are
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expected to beneficially affect water quality. Current efforts to reduce inputs of
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excessive nutrients into the Everglades through the Everglades Construction
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Project should substantially slow the spread of cattails and other plants with high
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nutrient tolerances and result in a slow recovery of natural vegetation patterns in
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some nutrient-stressed parts of the system. Proposed modifications to the Lake
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Okeechobee regulation schedule and water quality improvement projects suggested
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by the South Florida Ecosystem Restoration Working Group’s Lake Okeechobee, St.
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Lucie, and Caloosahatchee Issue Teams should improve water quality conditions in
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those water bodies. Nonetheless, the future without plan condition, while resulting
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in water quality improvements over existing conditions in certain subregions of the
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Restudy area, was still determined by the Restudy’s water quality team to be
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unacceptable for sustainable ecosystems.
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The future demand for suitable water is expected to exceed the limits of
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readily available sources. Predictions of water restrictions in the future indicate
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serious – and probably unacceptable – levels of water supply cutbacks. Modeling of
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the future “without plan” condition shows that for the Lake Okeechobee Service
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Area, 24 percent of water supply demands could not be met over a 30-year period.
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This translates into water supply restrictions every other year. In the Lower East
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Coast, water restrictions would be expected to occur every other year in Palm
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Beach, Miami-Dade, and the Florida Keys portion of Monroe County. In Broward
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County water restrictions would occur on nearly an annual basis. The ability to
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sustain the region’s natural resources, economy, and quality of life depends, to a
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great extent, on the success of the efforts to enhance, protect, and better manage the
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region’s water resources.
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A major advantage of the Comprehensive Review Study is that it has used
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tools and methods to evaluate the entire C&SF Project area together as an
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integrated system. Thus, the effects of making modifications in one area on another
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area were able to be seen and then used to develop a plan that maximized positive
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system-wide benefits. The South Florida Water Management Model is the tool that
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demonstrates the hydrologic effects of changes in one region on other regions. The
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Restudy Team developed measures to evaluate an alternative plan’s effect on the
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entire C&SF Project area. The use of system-wide tools and a science-based
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analytical approach supports the conclusion, as shown in the following table, that
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the future without plan condition is not favorable - nor is it sustainable - for the
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south Florida ecosystem.
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Summary
|
Final Feasibility Report and PEIS April 1999
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vi
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PERFORMANCE OF THE COMPREHENSIVE PLAN
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COMPARED TO THE NO-ACTION ALTERNATIVE
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Area
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Future
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Without
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Plan
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Future
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With
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Plan
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Lake Okeechobee Y G
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Caloosahatchee Estuary R G
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St Lucie Estuary R G
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Lake Worth Lagoon Y Y
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Holey Land & Rotenberger WMA Y G
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Loxahatchee National Wildlife Refuge Y G
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Water Conservation Area 2A G/Y
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Water Conservation Area 2B R
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Northwestern Water Conservation Area 3A G
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Northeastern Water Conservation Area 3A Y
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Eastern Water Conservation Area 3A Y
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Central & Southern Water Conservation Area 3A G/Y
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Water Conservation Area 3B
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R
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Y
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Everglades National Park – Shark River Slough R G
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Everglades National Park – Rockland Marl Marsh R Y
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Florida Bay R G
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Biscayne Bay Y G
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Model Lands R G
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Big Cypress National Preserve Y G
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Lake Okeechobee Service Area R G
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