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Controversial Everglades rock mine scaled back under legal settlement

A permit authorizing on rock mine in sugarcane fields in Palm Beach County will scale the project back from 8,000 acres to about a quarter of the size.
Amy Beth Bennett
/
Sun Sentinel
A permit authorizing on rock mine in sugarcane fields in Palm Beach County will scale the project back from 8,000 acres to about a quarter of the size.

A rock mining project in sugarcane fields near a significant Everglades restoration project is being dramatically scaled back under a settlement announced Thursday.

Under the deal, the 8,000-acre mining operation expected to last 40 years will now only be permitted to a quarter of that size.

“The applicant sought to push this project through before analyzing how it would affect the Everglades ecosystem,” Tropical Audubon board president José Francisco Barros said in a statement. “That ‘build first, analyze later’ approach is not how projects intended to benefit the Everglades should be evaluated.”

Tropical Audubon challenged a Florida Department of Environmental Protection permit last year after the agency approved the rock mine in Palm Beach County on land is owned by U.S. Sugar and Okeelanta Corp. Tropical argued that allowing water from the mine and into the Everglades could harm habitat, wildlife and ongoing restoration work.

U.S. Sugar and infrastructure contractor Phillips & Jordan proposed mining 8,000 acres for about 40 years and eventually using pits as a water storage project on land just north of a 10,500-acre reservoir and 6,000-acre treatment marsh being constructed by the state and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers as part of Everglades restoration. The projects are expected to cost taxpayers more than $3 billion.

The settlement calls for the permit to limit mining to just over 2,200 acres on land that is already being mined.

This is a News In Brief report. Visit WLRN News for in-depth reporting from South Florida and Florida news.

Jenny Staletovich is WLRN's Environment Editor. She has been a journalist working in Florida for nearly 20 years. Contact Jenny at jstaletovich@wlrnnews.org
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