Florida evacuations order lifted as danger from leaky wastewater
reservoir fades
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[April 07, 2021]
By Steve Gorman
(Reuters) - Evacuation orders were lifted
on Tuesday for hundreds of residents near Tampa Bay in Florida as crews
relieved pressure on the containment wall surrounding a leaky wastewater
reservoir, reducing the threat of a toxic flash flood.
Residents and local businesses were permitted to return after data from
the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers showed a diminished risk of a
catastrophic collapse at the site of the former Piney Point phosphate
plant.
The Army Corps and local public safety crews have worked around the
clock for days pumping hundreds of millions of gallons of water out of
the reservoir to ease pressure on its weakened containment wall.
The crisis began last Thursday when officials discovered leaks in the
structure, lined with tall stacks of phosphogypsum waste, an industrial
byproduct from fertilizer manufacturing known to emit radon, a
cancer-causing radioactive gas.
State environmental officials have said tests of water seeping from the
reservoir showed it was not radioactive.
But local authorities nevertheless said they feared that an all-out,
uncontrolled breach of the wall could unleash a 20-foot torrent of
untreated wastewater into the surrounding area, and they ordered a
mandatory evacuation of more than 300 nearby homes as a precaution over
the weekend.
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Effluent spews from a pipe into a ditch at Port Manatee, where a
breach in a nearby wastewater reservoir on the site of a defunct
phosphate plant forced an evacuation order for hundreds of homes and
threatened to flood the area and Tampa Bay with polluted water, in
Piney Point, Florida, U.S. April 6, 2021. REUTERS/Octavio Jones
Florida Governor Ron DeSantis declared a local state of emergency on
Saturday.
"We're now ending our fifth day since learning of a breach at the
site, and I am in awe over the state, federal and local cooperation
to ensure the safety of our residents," Manatee County Commission
Chairman Vanessa Baugh said in a statement announcing the lifting of
the evacuation.
While the pumping operation eased the threat to homes and businesses
adjacent to the reservoir, the wastewater drainage was being routed
into a nearby Gulf Coast seaport, posing environmental concerns
there.
Ed Sherwood, executive director of the Tampa Bay Estuary Program,
said pumping the nutrient-dense discharge into Port Manatee at the
mouth of Tampa Bay could spawn algal blooms toxic to marine life in
the estuary.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Kenneth
Maxwell)
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