From Captains for Clean Water:
Three industrial sugarcane corporations filed a lawsuit in 2021 against the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers over the design and intended use of a critical Everglades restoration project, the Everglades Agricultural Area (EAA) Reservoir.
The EAA Reservoir, considered the keystone project of Everglades restoration, is intended to provide full-scale relief to south Florida’s water quality crisis by restoring the natural Everglades flow south. Expected to be complete and operational in 2030, the reservoir will store excess Lake Okeechobee water, clean it to federal standards and move it south through the Everglades and into Florida Bay at the proper timing, volume and distribution needed.
Captains For Clean Water Co-Founder Capt. Daniel Andrews and other stakeholders at the EAA Reservoir groundbreaking, a milestone for Everglades restoration.
This lawsuit gets to the core of the fight which is—who’s in control of the water in Florida and how is water being prioritized? Are we prioritizing water for the benefit of our economy, our environment? Or are we continuing to prioritize the irrigation supply for the sugar industry which is exactly what got us into the situation we’re in now.”
Capt. Daniel Andrews, Executive Director at Captains For Clean Water
High-volume discharges from Lake Okeechobee to the coasts that wreak havoc on the estuaries, communities and economy. Photo credit to Captains For Clean Water.
We believe in the power of the people to make a difference; to come together and say enough is enough. Regardless of the political mountains, regardless of the amount of corruption and dollars that our opposition puts into this—our job is to come together as we the people, come together as a collective voice, and to stand up and fight against the corruption that’s allowed this tragedy to continue for so long.
Capt. Daniel Andrews, Executive Director at Captains For Clean Water