Health alerts warning of dangerous blue-green algae toxins in Palm Beach County waterways have come rapid fire this month with eight issued in the first three weeks from areas as far west as Lake Okeechobee to the C-51 spillway into the Lake Worth Lagoon. 

But locations that tested positive for even higher levels of microcystin poison in May received no formal alerts from the Department of Health as internal policies tried to catch up with the algae spread. 

Temporary 12-by-18-inch signs were posted in many locations, including at public parks, boat ramps and canal banks, but boaters said signs along the C-51 Canal were too small to be seen from the water, and because they were two-sided — one warning that toxins were present, the other saying toxins may be present — the message was unclear.

Pamela McAfee, whose 8-year-old dog Bella died May 25 after coming into contact with toxic blue-green algae, told West Palm Beach commissioners this week that two water samples taken May 6 and May 20 near her home on the C-51 Canal tested positive for microcystin toxins.

Bella, an 8-year-old dog belonging to Pamela McAfee, died after being exposed to toxic blue-green algae on the C-51 Canal in West Palm Beach.

Contributed by Pamela McAfee

 

“The public was not aware of this, I was not aware of this,” McAfee said at the June 14 council meeting. “My dog weighed 78 pounds, and what concerns me is there are children that weigh much less than her on these canals, skiing, wakeboarding, and the waterways aren’t safe, our waterways are toxic.”

The May 20 sample taken upstream from McAfee’s house was nearly three times higher than the 8 parts-per-billion (ppb) considered harmful to humans during recreational activities. A May 18 test at the boat ramp in Lake Clarke Shores had a microcystin reading of 6 ppb, according to the Florida Department of Environmental Protection’s Algae Bloom Dashboard.

A two-sided sign warning of algae has a caution message on one side and a health alert on the other.

Florida Department of Health

 

Florida Department of Health Communications Director Weesam Khoury said the state’s public notification process changed on May 26 and was initiated May 27 — a move that triggered the more public process of issuing health alerts this month. 

“We are also working through updating our public website and will add all notification locations, as well as any local press releases,” she said.