Legislation - Policy

As bouts with killer algae rose, Florida gutted its water quality monitoring

When Florida Sea Grant director Karl Havens, who is a well-regarded expert on water and has studied pollution all over the world, began hearing about a deepening algae bloom in his own backyard in Lake Okeechobee this summer, he struggled to find information that could tell him what was going on.

State scientists sample water in the lake, but too infrequently to track rapidly evolving algae blooms. Instead, Havens had to rely on satellite images that were taken on sunny days when clouds don’t get in the way.

“No one is out on the lake collecting water samples of the bloom,” he said last month. “We’re flying blind.” And not for the first time.

Over the last decade, as the state fought federal efforts to protect water, shrunk its own environmental and water-management agencies, and cut funding to an algae task force, monitoring for water quality has plummeted.

While one crisis after another hit Florida, state and federal funding that paid for a massive coastal network with nearly three decades of information dwindled from […]

More about algal blooms in Florida:

Environmental activist Erin Brockovich on water releases from Lake Okeechobee

Florida: FWC to suspend aquatic spraying

NOAA: 40% of Lake Okeechobee covered in harmful algae

Toxic Lake: The Untold Story of Lake Okeechobee

Gil Smart: What’s behind push for deep injection wells near Lake Okeechobee?

Summary
Article Name
As bouts with killer algae rose, Florida gutted its water quality monitoring network
Description
The state fought federal efforts to protect water, shrunk its water-management agencies and cut algae task force funds. Monitoring water quality plummeted.
Author
Publisher Name
Miami Herald
Publisher Logo

Recent Posts

Invisible Threats: Understanding Water Contaminants in the U.S.

Clean water is essential for life, yet millions of Americans unknowingly consume contaminants through their…

4 weeks ago

High levels of microplastics in human brains appear to be increasing

Human brains contain higher concentrations of microplastics than other organs, according to a new study, and the…

2 months ago

California: executive order to help capture and store more water from severe storms

From the Office of the Governor: In anticipation of a multi-day, significant atmospheric river in Northern California,…

2 months ago

Experts give the real facts on California water

From Governor Newsom: Scientists, water managers, state leaders, and experts throughout the state are calling…

2 months ago

Water Quality and Protection

Photo: A harmful algal bloom in Milford Lake, Kansas, made the water appear bright green.…

2 months ago

World’s Fifth-Largest Economy Is About to Ban Most Polystyrene Foam

An expanded plastic foam coffee cup is at a donut shop in Monterey Park, California.…

3 months ago