FPL, salt water intrusion, and the latest, great battle for Biscayne Bay … Miami,Florida
By Gimleteye at 21 May, 2009, 6:22 am
Florida Power and Light, the multi-billion dollar energy corporation, is nearing completion of plans to build two new nuclear reactors at Turkey Point in South Dade. Its existing nuclear facility cools process water through a miles of cooling canals. For many years, regulators have been concerned about salt water intrusion in the area. With the recent drought and monitoring of chloride levels, the concern has elevated to alarm. Salt water, moving in under the thin layer of groundwater, could wreck South Dade farmland and the drinking water wells in Homestead, serving the Florida Keys. Those wells are about ten miles from the edge of Biscayne Bay. Carl Schumacher was a young boy when he moved to Homestead in 1912. Today, his brief remembrances are bound in xeroxed pages. They make curious reading, of an earlier time when the presence of radioactive isotopes like tritium in ground water were not a fact. I’ll share with you what he wrote about the movement of surface water in exactly the place that regulators are concerned about salt water intrusion: “Before man came to South Dade County, the land between Biscayne Bay and the pine and rock land from Cutler to Florida City would be under water all summer,” Schumacher writes of a landscape covered now with roads, strip malls, farmland and tract housing. Farmers wanted to drain the land to quicken the arrival of growing season. The Miami Land and Development Co. dug a large canal from Biscayne Bay to Florida City. The canal started about a quarter mile south of Palm Drive, near Krome, and ran a distance of about 9 miles straight to the bay. In exactly the area where, today, agencies are fretting about the movement of salt water westward, in Carl Schumacher’s day, water flowed eastward through the canal, seventy five feet wide and twelve to eighteen feet deep. It didn’t just flow eastward. It raced “at about five miles per hour” the entire length of the canal. In other words, the pressure of water rushing out of the Everglades was so great that a river of water flooded eastward. That’s the opposite direction from which salt water is moving, today, under a thin stagnant layer of groundwater. The water, all nine miles of it, was “clear, cool and pure”. When he was a boy, Schumacher and his friends used to keep a look

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FPL, salt water intrusion, and the latest, great battle for Biscayne Bay … Miami,Florida
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