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clarionreef

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Reef's continued downfall dismays divers, scientists
They blame a sewage pipe that pumps treated waste into the Gulf Stream
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By Antigone Barton

Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

Tuesday, January 03, 2006

The question of what was killing the Gulf Stream coral reef was no deep mystery, even if it was happening far below the ocean surface.

Still, more than three years after a group of divers notified state environmental officials that a growth of pollution-fed algae was suffocating the reef, help has yet to arrive. More than two years after the group supplied evidence that a pipe spewing a brown cloud of partly treated sewage into the ocean off Delray Beach was fertilizing the growth, officials say they have no answers to what is killing the reef.


That is because the state agency charged with enforcing the federal Clean Water Act locally did not begin until late last year to discuss the matter with the municipal plant that discharges its waste through the pipe. Now, as officials mull proposals to monitor the pipe's outflow, the plant continues to operate on an extension of an expired permit that sets no limit on the amount of polluting nutrients it discharges into the ocean.

Yet the same officials say that the plant that uses the pipe, which began belching waste into the ocean 30 years ago, would be rejected if it applied for a permit now.

As volunteer divers begin a fourth year of testing the waters around the reef, some say the real mystery goes beyond the reef they call Palm Beach County's hidden gem, and the pipe they call the area's dirty little secret.

"The real question is, why isn't the Clean Water Act being enforced?" said Ed Tichenor, director of Palm Beach County Reef Rescue, a nonprofit group the divers organized.

Tichenor, a retired environmental scientist whose work focused on contamination investigations, is familiar with the Clean Water Act, enacted in 1972. It requires plants to demonstrate they would not harm the waters where they discharged waste.

A recreational diver, Tichenor also is familiar with the reef.

After he and other divers noticed red clumps of Lyngbya algae flourishing on the section of the Gulf Stream reef known as Lynn's reef, Tichenor compiled data on the bloom in a 27-page report he sent to the state Department of Environmental Protection in September 2003.

The report noted that the reef, which supports a chain of endangered sea life, had been severely damaged in the preceding six months. The report suggested officials examine the algae, its surrounding waters and any active waste discharge permits in the area that the department oversees to identify what was feeding the deadly bloom.

Instead, DEP officials did nothing.

'Canary in the mine shaft'

"After reviewing it, we found that it really didn't have conclusive evidence," DEP Water Resource Administrator Linda Horne said recently. "We reviewed the data. Other than that, we didn't respond to it."

As Kalk had been saying it would seem!
Steve
 

naesco

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When Bush and Company is booted out of office we can count on the human poisoning of US waters being dealt with along with the cyanide poisoning of the Islands of the Philippines tout de suite.
 

Kalkbreath

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Dumping sewage into waterways instead of filtering it down through millions of back yard septic tanks Is the reason the oceans are dying. Human waste belongs on the land where terrestrial bacteria can decompose it.
Shifting the denitrification burden out into the sea starting back in the 1970s is why the reefs have gone down ever since.
Its democrat enviro wackos who banned back yard septic systems.
This was all about saving the well water and land fills
Now the wells are still tainted and now the rivers and the Ocean too.
Nice work.
For 200 years Americans dumped the family poop in the back yard.
River were clean oceans pure.
New ideas are most often poor choices.
Which ever Doc Spock like minded hippy who came up with"the better way" the plan to ban back yard septic tanks in the 60s and pump the whole thing into the waterways was a back a** as Doc Spock was at raising kids.
Even todays Scientists are not much brighter..........Continuing to focus on soil run off as the main contributor to Caribbean reefs dying is silly. When Flagler plowed up the Keys building the roads and Rail way in the early 1900s the reefs remained pristine. When in the 1950s and 60s development of hundreds of the motels and marinas caused the soil to run into the reefs like never before, the reefs actually tried and grew to their hight in 1975.
Then came the Sewage..........
 
A

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naesco":3cvs9a8y said:
When Bush and Company is booted out of office we can count on the human poisoning of US waters being dealt with along with the cyanide poisoning of the Islands of the Philippines tout de suite.

me thinks your politcal views don't belong in this forum, the sump yes, but not the IBTH ;)
 

naesco

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GreshamH":3cyr3d92 said:
naesco":3cyr3d92 said:
When Bush and Company is booted out of office we can count on the human poisoning of US waters being dealt with along with the cyanide poisoning of the Islands of the Philippines tout de suite.

me thinks your politcal views don't belong in this forum, the sump yes, but not the IBTH ;)

It is not a polical statement. It is a positive forward thinking statement that show all of us concerned about the worlds reefs, that change is near.
We all need to rejoice.
 

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