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allow agriculture to remain productive. Storage facilities associated with Lake
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Okeechobee such as those north of the lake, and Lake Okeechobee aquifer storage
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and recovery will enable the lake to remain an important source of water supply
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while keeping lake stages at more ecologically desirable levels. Additional storage
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facilities built throughout the system will diversify sources of water for many users
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and enable recycling of water within a basin to meet dry season demands,
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significantly improving the reliability of agricultural water supply in the future.
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The recommended Comprehensive Plan also assures that the quality of south
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Florida’s water bodies will be restored to achieve overall ecosystem restoration. The
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recommended Comprehensive Plan includes many features to assure that water
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quality standards will be met and water quality conditions are improved or not
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degraded. The Comprehensive Plan includes the development of a comprehensive
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integrated water quality plan, which will lead to recommendations for water quality
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remediation programs and the integration of water quality restoration targets into
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future design, construction, and operation activities as features of the recommended
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Comprehensive Plan are implemented.
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How the Comprehensive Plan Will Be Implemented
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No plan can anticipate fully the uncertainties that are inherent in predicting
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how a complex ecosystem will respond during restoration efforts. For example, the
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remaining Everglades are only one-half as large as the original and current
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Summary
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Final Feasibility Report and PEIS April 1999
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xiv
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boundaries do not logically follow natural ground elevations or habitat patterns. For
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these and many other reasons, the ways in which this ecosystem will respond to the
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recovery of more natural water patterns almost certainly will include some
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surprises. The recommended Comprehensive Plan anticipates such surprises and is
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designed to facilitate project modifications that take advantage of what is learned
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from system responses, both expected and unexpected, and from future restoration
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targets as those become more refined. For example, future water quality
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restoration targets will be integrated into the detailed design, construction, and
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future operation of all recommended Comprehensive Plan features.
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A new type of reporting document will be prepared as the implementation
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process begins. Project Implementation Reports will bridge the gap between the
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Comprehensive Plan and the detailed design necessary to proceed to construction.
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In addition to supplemental National Environmental Policy Act documentation, the
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Project Implementation Report process will allow for continuing public participation
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on each feature. In this more detailed phase of analysis, Comprehensive Plan
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components will be further investigated and appropriate actions recommended.
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The Comprehensive Plan includes an aggressive adaptive assessment
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strategy. This strategy ensures that new information about the natural system,
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learned from continuing research and from measuring responses to implementation
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of plan components, can be used to increase the ultimate level of success of the
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overall restoration program. Specifically, adaptive assessment uses a well focused,
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regional monitoring program to measure how well each component of the plan
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accomplishes its objectives. This, in turn, sets up opportunities for refinement of
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succeeding components. Such adaptive assessment and regional monitoring are
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essential features of the recommended Comprehensive Plan and ensure its overall
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success. Independent scientific peer review is an integral part of this process.
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Pilot projects to demonstrate the effectiveness of technologies such as aquifer
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storage and recovery, seepage management, and wastewater reuse are a part of the
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implementation strategy. Three new feasibility studies, Florida Bay and the Florida
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Keys, Southwest Florida, and a comprehensive integrated water quality plan, will
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also be undertaken to assure that full implementation of the Comprehensive Plan
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leads to overall ecosystem restoration in south Florida. The use of the best available
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science and extensive outreach and public involvement, both of which have been an
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essential part of the Restudy, will continue during the implementation process.
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The recommended Comprehensive Plan described in this report will serve as
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a framework and guide for modifications to the Central and Southern Florida
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Project. The pilot projects and a set of specific key components are recommended for
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initial authorization. The estimated total cost of these initial features are
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$1,198,000,000 (October 1999 price levels) and an annual cost of $20,000,000 for
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operation and maintenance. The estimated Federal cost is $599,000,000 with
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Summary
|
Final Feasibility Report and PEIS April 1999
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xv
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estimated annual operation and maintenance costs of $10,000,000; and the
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estimated non-Federal cost is $599,000,000 with estimated annual operation and
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maintenance costs of $10,000,000.
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Further, the Water Resources Development Act of 1996 provided
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authorization for Critical Restoration Projects in order to expedite implementation
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of the restoration effort. A similar programmatic authority is recommended to help
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expedite implementation of some components in the recommended Comprehensive
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Plan. This programmatic authority would be limited to those components of the
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Comprehensive Plan that have a total project cost of $70,000,000 with a maximum
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Federal cost of $35,000,000.
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Authorization for the remaining components of the Comprehensive Plan will
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be sought after completion of more detailed planning and submission of Project
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Implementation Reports to Congress. Each Project Implementation Report will also
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contain an analysis of the Comprehensive Plan and any recommendations
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concerning modifications to the plan.
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AREAS OF CONTROVERSY AND UNRESOLVED ISSUES
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During the course of the Restudy, a number of important issues have
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emerged. Many have been resolved, but some remain. For example:
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Scientific Models. Many scientific and engineering models were used in
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developing the recommended Comprehensive Plan. The models employed in the
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Restudy are state-of–the-art, and represent the best understanding of the hydrology
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of both the pre-drainage and current C&SF system (Natural System Model and
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South Florida Water Management Model) as well as species responses to hydrology
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(Across Trophic Landscape System Simulation). But by their very nature, models
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are uncertain because they are simplifications of reality. The South Florida Water
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Management Model and the Natural System Model have undergone technical peer
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review. The conclusions that can be drawn from them are only as good as the basic
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understandings and information that are the foundations of the models. Most
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importantly, such conclusions must be understood in the context of model
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uncertainty and appropriateness of scale, and are best utilized to compare
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performance among alternative plans. The Natural System Model, for example,
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depicts the hydrologic response of the pre-drained system to rainfall and other
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hydrologic conditions of the period from 1965 through 1995. It does not depict the
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conditions of the pre-drained Everglades system, although there is a misconception
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