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Lake Okeechobee recedes, but not enough. Discharges continue.

State lawmakers are considering bills to keep toxic algae out of the St. Lucie River, prioritize public health, and alert people to the hazards of discharges.
 
Release of water from nutrient-rich Lake Okeechobee promotes algae blooms like this one in 2018 along the St. Lucie River.
Release of water from nutrient-rich Lake Okeechobee promotes algae blooms like this one in 2018 along the St. Lucie River.
Published March 28, 2021|Updated March 28, 2021

WEST PALM BEACH — Lake Okeechobee discharges will be reduced to the Caloosahatchee River but will continue at the same rate to the St. Lucie River — indefinitely.

The Caloosahatchee will get 969 million gallons per day, down from an average 1.3 billion gallons a day since Feb. 13, Col. Andrew Kelly, Florida commander of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, announced in a news conference call Thursday.

The St. Lucie will continue to get a weekly average rate of 323 million gallons per day, the same amount since discharges started March 6, Kelly said.

The Corps released water “really early, and really hard to the Caloosahatchee estuary,” Kelly said. “We think we’re achieving a balance, and an equity between those releases.”

At 14 feet, 8 inches Thursday, Lake Okeechobee’s elevation above sea level has dropped over 6½ inches since March 6, but is still 2½ feet higher than this time last year.

The Army Corps projects the lake level will be about 13½ feet by June 1, but the agency typically wants it a foot lower by the start of the summer rainy season, so it can be stored in the lake, not released east and west to the coastal estuaries.

“We are working with Mother Nature currently to do the best we can,” Kelly said.

The too-high lake level is blamed on Tropical Storm Eta in November, which raised it to a peak of 16 feet, 5 inches, but it didn’t recede as fast as the Army Corps had hoped.

Drier weather recently has helped lower the lake level: Martin, Okeechobee and western St. Lucie counties were classified as “abnormally dry” on the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s drought monitor Thursday.

Over three weeks into this latest discharge event, there still appears to be no current threat of cyanobacteria, commonly called blue-green algae, being dumped into the St. Lucie River.

A true-color satellite image taken Wednesday showed little or no blue-green algae on Lake Okeechobee, with a clear sky showing the lake’s surface in its entirety.

Clumps of algae swooped throughout the lake’s northern half, according to the Cyanobacteria Index, operated by NOAA. High levels of blue-green algae would appear as red on the index, which depicts what the naked eye can’t see, as the algae’s density increased.

There is some algae gathered along the Port Mayaca Lock and Dam, where water flows are “minimal,” Kelly said.

“It is very, very challenging” to project what the algae threat will be once the warmer, wetter mid-summer months arrive, when algae begins to thrive, Kelly said. That’s why the Army Corps is discharging water now, in hopes of avoiding that in June or July.

U.S. Rep. Brian Mast, R-Palm City, announced Monday three water bills to mitigate public health risks from toxic Lake O discharges.

The bills aim to keep toxic algae out of the St. Lucie River, prioritize public health and alert people to the hazards of Lake Okeechobee discharges.

If passed, one of the three bills would require the Corps to notify at-risk coastal communities of potential incoming health hazards before releasing lake containing called blue-green algae.

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The bill, called the Toxic Health Threat Warning Act, would require tests to determine whether the lake water is contaminated. If it is, the Corps would have to notify the public about the human health risks, Mast said.

Kelly assured the Corps is doing all it can to notify the public about Lake Okeechobee releases, and committed Thursday to “utilize every piece of data” to inform the public about potential algae threats.

“We’re trying to be as communicative as possible about releases on Lake Okeechobee every day of the year, all the time,” Kelly said. “We’re telling everybody about releases every time we do it, before we do it, what we’re thinking about doing, and what we potentially might do.”

- Max Chesnes