Crews race to drain Florida wastewater reservoir on brink of collapse
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[April 06, 2021]
By Gabriella Borter and Steve Gorman
(Reuters) -Emergency crews labored around
the clock on Monday to prevent the collapse of a wastewater reservoir's
leaky containment wall near Tampa Bay, Florida, making steady progress
after officials warned of an imminent threat of flooding over the
weekend.
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers worked with local public safety teams
to drain the Piney Point reservoir, which holds about 480 million
gallons, in a bid to prevent a major breach that could unleash a cascade
of wastewater into the surrounding area, officials said.
While the pumping operation appeared to diminish the immediate threat to
hundreds of homes near Piney Point, a former phosphate plant, the
wastewater drainage was being discharged to a nearby Gulf Coast seaport,
posing environmental concerns there.
The crisis began over the weekend when a worsening week-old leak in the
containment wall prompted authorities to order the evacuation of more
than 300 dwellings, with Florida Governor Ron DeSantis declaring a local
state of emergency on Saturday.
Authorities said they were particularly concerned that tall stacks of
phosphogypsum waste, an industrial byproduct from fertilizer
manufacturing, might suddenly collapse and be swept into adjacent
communities.
Crews from the state Environmental Protection Department and Army Corps
of Engineers teamed up on Monday to "reassess the stability of that wall
and a second breach that we might have found," Jacob Saur, direct of
public safety for Manatee County, said in a video statement.
Nevertheless, he and acting county administrator Scott Hopes said the
imminent flood threat had eased on Monday as expanded pumping operations
lowered the volume of the reservoir, reducing stress on the containment
structure holding back the wastewater.
"By the end of the day today when the additional pumps come online, we
will more than double the volume of water that we're pulling out of that
retention pool," Hopes said at a news conference. Just under 300 million
gallons remained as of midday Monday, he said, adding that crews were
looking to drain an additional "75 to 100 million gallons a day."
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A reservoir of a defunct phosphate plant south of Tampa,
where a leak at a waste water reservoir forced the
evacuation of hundreds of homes and threatened to flood the
area and Tampa Bay with polluted water, is seen in an aerial
photograph taken in Piney Point, Florida, U.S. April 4,
2021. REUTERS/Drone Base
Wastewater from the property, owned a company called HRK Holdings,
was being pumped into Port Manatee at the mouth of Tampa Bay,
raising concerns that the nutrient-dense discharge could spawn algal
blooms toxic to marine life in the estuary.
"The biggest concern from our standpoint right now is the amount of
nutrients being loaded into the lower Tampa Bay," Ed Sherwood,
executive director of the Tampa Bay Estuary Program, told radio
station WMNF on Sunday. "This event, in probably five to 10 days, is
introducing the amount of nutrients into the bay that we would want
to see over an entire year."
U.S. Representative Vern Buchanan, a Republican who represents
Florida's 16th district, told reporters on Monday that reducing
possible ecological harm from the draining was a top priority and
that the Environmental Protection Agency was working with local
agencies to monitor and mitigate the situation.
"Just the fact that we're running water into the Tampa Bay is not a
great thing," Buchanan said. "But the reality of it is, it seems
like it's the right thing to do right now."
Representatives for HRK Holdings could not immediately be reached
for comment.
(Reporting by Gabriella Borter in New York and Steve Gorman in Los
Angeles; Editing by Steve Orlofsky and Aurora Ellis)
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