West Palm shuts down canal to protect drinking water but Lox River may be left hanging

West Palm shuts down canal to protect drinking water but Lox River may be left hanging

The City of West Palm Beach shut down taps flowing into its main supply of drinking water after finding algae in canals coming from Lake Okeechobee.

Poonam Kalkat, the city’s director of public utilities, said the Grassy Waters Preserve, which also provides water for the Town of Palm Beach, needed to be protected from potential harmful algae blooms, even though the supplemental lake water was buoying the preserve until the wet season arrives.

With water levels dropping in the preserve, there is also a risk the long-suffering Loxahatchee River won’t get the freshwater it needs to fight back invasions of saltwater lethal to native cypress trees that have died in slow motion since human development so altered the watershed.

The Loxahatchee River is South Florida’s only nationally recognized wild and scenic river.

“We are working hard to make sure that while we meet all the needs of the City of West Palm Beach residents, we are also trying to supply water to the Loxahatchee,” Kalkat said in a Water Resources Task Force meeting last week.

A similar situation happened in 2020 when water levels in Grassy Waters dropped too low to supply the Loxahatchee River. At the same time, Lake Okeechobee was also low – 11.03 feet above sea level on May 15 – but a special agreement was made with the South Florida Water Management District to funnel water to the river until the rains came.

Grassy Waters Preserve is the source of most of West Palm Beach's drinking water.

TONY DORIS/palmbeachpost.com

 

This year, Lake Okeechobee is flush with water at nearly 14 feet on Thursday, but algae is the concern.

“We certainly have more water to deliver this year than we did last year if we need to, but now we have water quality issues,” said South Florida Water Management District governing board member Jay Steinle during the April 29 task force meeting. “Prior to that, we should have, and could have, been delivering supplemental flows to the river, because every year the degradation of the river is getting worse.”

The algae found by city officials in the L-8 canal from Lake Okeechobee is growing in patches throughout Palm Beach County waterways and in the lake. Kalkat said she didn’t know if the L-8 algae contained toxins, and no tests in the area are showing on the state’s algal bloom monitoring website.

Water levels continue to drop at the Grassy Waters Preserve on Wednesday, May 13, 2020 in West Palm Beach. The rainy season officially starts Friday.

GREG LOVETT/palmbeachpost.com

 

In late March, the Florida Department of Environmental Protection notified the state health department in Palm Beach County that water samples taken in the C-51 canal upstream of where the releases reach the Lake Worth Lagoon were tainted with blue-green algae and low levels of the toxin microcystin.

Last month, an algae bloom at the Pahokee Marina tested 100 times more toxic than what is considered safe for humans and triggered an emergency cleanup effort spearheaded by the water management district.

Lake Worth Waterkeeper Reynaldo Diaz said cyanobacteria blooms – also known as blue-green algae – have also been spotted in three spillways that lead to the C-51 and in the M canal, which channels water from the L-8 to Grassy Waters.

“There’s been so much political theater over the Pahokee Marina and they completely ignore the true extent (of the algae). They’re going to need a bigger vacuum,” he posted on the waterkeeper Instagram account referring to one of the tools used to clean up the marina.

May 23rd 2021 LW Lagoon Volunteer Days: Bryant Park

May 23rd 2021 LW Lagoon Volunteer Days: Bryant Park

EVENT DETAILS:

WHEN:
Sunday, MAY 23rd

WHERE:
Bryant Park
(Click for directions)

TIME:
1:00PM – 3:00PM

WHAT:
Cleanup/Restoration

As “adopters” of the Bryant Park living shoreline projects we regularly maintain the project. This can entail a number of tasks, including cleaning, removing invasive plants, rebuilding the rip rap rock, or planting.
 
Living shorelines are critically important to the Lake Worth Lagoon because they provide habitat for wildlife, protect the seawall, and even clean lagoon water by pulling out nutrient pollution.
 
Join us on our volunteer days to come out and help us keep these shorelines going, and come learn about the project and our environment.
May 9th 2021 LW Lagoon Volunteer Days: Jewell-Steinhardt Cove

May 9th 2021 LW Lagoon Volunteer Days: Jewell-Steinhardt Cove

EVENT DETAILS:

WHEN:
Sunday, MAY 9th

WHERE:
Jewell Cove
(Click for directions)

TIME:
2:00PM – 4:00PM

WHAT:
Cleanup/Restoration

As “adopters” of the Jewell-Steinhardt Cove living shoreline project we regularly maintain the project. This can entail a number of tasks, including cleaning, removing invasive plants, rebuilding the rip rap rock, or planting.
Living shorelines are critically important to the Lake Worth Lagoon because they provide habitat for wildlife, protect the shoreline, and even clean lagoon water by pulling out nutrient pollution.
Join us on our volunteer days to come out and help us keep these shorelines going, and come learn about the project and our environment.
Jewell-Steinhardt Cove is across the street from the Lake Worth Municipal Beach. Limited park is available on the side of the road in the grass, otherwise there is metered parking in the beach lot across the street.

May 8th Member Adventure: Loxahatchee River Hike

May 8th Member Adventure: Loxahatchee River Hike

EVENT DETAILS:

WHEN:
Saturday, MAY 8th

WHERE:
Riverbend Park
(Click for directions)

TIME:
10:00 AM

WHAT:
Member hike

Join us for our inaugural member outdoor adventure hike to the Loxahatchee River!

Your Lake Worth Waterkeeper will guide our members and prospective members on regular outdoor adventures. You can learn about the local habitat, the wildlife, environmental issues.

We’re starting with the Loxahatchee River because it is a National Wild and Scenic River, a designation that was made possible by members of an organization, much like what we’re trying to build. So please join us if you’re a member, and if not you’ll have a chance to become a member at the event!

Come learn about what your role as a member will be and how much good we’ll be able to do together.

We’ll be meeting at Riverbend Park in Jupiter in front of the boardwalk at 10am. Bring a backpack, water bottles, and wear some comfortable shoes that may get muddy. You might also want to wear clothes to go for a swim in.

Your contribution ($20-30pp is recommended) or membership purchase will be payable on-site before we start. The first 10 new members will receive a thank you basket.

Please RSVP by sending an email to info@lakeworthwaterkeeper.org if you plan to attend.

Raise Your Voice: Tell your commissioners defend our communities!

Raise Your Voice: Tell your commissioners defend our communities!

RAISE YOUR VOICE

Call YOUR town's commissioner. Tell them that cyanobacteria blooms will effect all of us in PBC, and all commissioners should come together to defend their citizens.
Find Your City Government Contact Info

“A blue-green algae bloom was identified in water discharging to the Lake Worth Lagoon last month with toxin levels high enough to trigger the posting of multiple warning signs at Spillway Park, a popular fishing spot”

-The Palm Beach Post

Towns all over the Lake Worth Lagoon watershed are being subjected to a toxic cyanobacteria bloom that fills the air with a poisonous stench. Humans breathing cyanotoxins have an increased risk of neurodegenerative diseases like amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), multiple sclerosis, Parkinson’s disease, Alzheimer’s disease, Huntington’s disease, and prion diseases –and all are incurable. Pets can be mortally sickened. From the Glades to Palm Beach, we should all RAISE OUR VOICE.

If enough of us take action quickly, our Commissioners should attend the Army Corp of Engineers’ LOSOM meeting on Friday from 9am to 3pm and fight effectively for us.

You can email your comment or testify during public comment period by clicking the button below.

Lake Worth Waterkeeper Cyanpbacteria Pahokee Marina 1
Lake Worth Waterkeeper Cyanpbacteria Pahokee Marina 2