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News / Nation & World

44 miles of Florida river now restored

Kissimmee had been turned into straight channel

By Associated Press
Published: August 2, 2021, 6:03am

SEBRING, Fla. — The 22-year project to restore Florida’s Kissimmee River from a straight manmade channel to its natural meandering state has marked a major milestone.

Officials involved in the nearly $1 billion Kissimmee River Restoration Project said at an event Thursday that 44 miles of the waterway have been returned to its curving path in central Florida.

The project began in 1999 amid evidence that converting the river to a straight flood control canal in the 1970s damaged the environment, dumping more polluted water into Lake Okeechobee, sharply reducing waterfowl and bald eagle populations and harming fish and invertebrates.

TC Palm newspapers reported that the Kissimmee River’s restored floodplains and oxbows will help clean water laden with nitrogen and phosphorus from agricultural runoff, which has fed harmful algal blooms, plaguing the lake for decades.

“Not only are we keeping water in the watershed and delivering it in the right volumes and frequencies, we’re also connecting with the floodplains where it cleans the water before it heads down into the lake,” said South Florida Water Management District Executive Director Drew Bartlett.

“From a (water) quantity standpoint, it’s a home-run,” he added. “From a quality standpoint it is, too.”

The project’s total cost was estimated at $980 million, split 50-50 between the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the water management district.

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