Pleadings from United States v. SFWMD, et al.,
Case No. 88-1886-CIV-HOEVELER
 

 

Memorandum in Support of the Motion of the United States For Partial Summary Judgement on Liability

Part 2


  • Memorandum Part I 
    In Support of the Motion of the United States for Partial Summary Judgment of Liability  
     
  • Motion of the U.S. for Partial Summary Judgement on Liability 

 

 

Style    

I.         Introductory Statement  
II.        Summary of Argument
 
III.       Facts 
III A.   Everglades National Park 
III B.    Loxahatchee 
III C.    Development and Agricultural Water Use Have Significantly Damaged the historic Everglades 
IV.       Argument  
IV. A   Count I  
IV. B    Count II 
IV. C    Counts I and II  
IV. D    Defendants Are in Violation of the License Agreement with the United States   
V.        Conclusion  
          Certificate of Service

Attachments

A.  Declaration of Dr. Jones
B.  Declaration of Dr. Maffei 
C.  Decl of Dr. Walker

Footnotes  

1   2    3   4    5    6   7   8    9  10  11  12  13  14  15 16 17  18  19 20  21  22  23  24  25 26 27 28  29 30  31  32  33  34  35 36 37  38  39 40  41  42  43  44  45 46 47  48  49 50  51 52  53 54  55  56  57  58 59 60  61  62  63  64  65 66 67  68  69 70  71  72  73  74  75 76 77  78  79 80  81  82  83  84  85


 

 

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF FLORIDA
MIAMI DIVISION

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

Plaintiff,

vs .

SOUTH FLORIDA WATER MANAGEMENT
DISTRICT; JOHN R. WODRASKA,
Executive Director, South Florida
Water Management District;
FLORIDA DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL
REGULATION; and DALE TWACHTMANN,
Secretary, Florida Department Of
Environmental Regulation,

Defendants.

__________________________________________/

Case No
88-1886-CIV-WMH

FILED by SEC D.C.

Docket #: 

 

Memorandum in Support of
the Motion of the United States
For Partial Summary Judgement on Liability

Part 2

                                                     


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I.     INTRODUCTORY STATEMENT

Everglades National Park ("the Park") and the Arthur R.

Marshall Loxahatchee National Wildlife Refuge ("the Refuge" or

"Loxahatchee") are unique natural wonders. As the major remnants

of the greatly diminished original Everglades, the Park and the

Refuge contain unmatched, world-renowned examples of biologically

rich and diverse ecosystems. Both the Congress of the United

States and the legislature of the State of Florida have

determined that the Park and the Refuge deserve the strongest

protection the law provides so they will be preserved for all

future generations. Yet tragically, the ecological integrity and

ultimately the survival of the Park and Refuge are today

threatened by the inflow of nutrient-polluted water.

In this action the United States alleges that the

failure of the South Florida Water Management District and John

R. Wodraska ("the District" or "SFWMD") and the Florida

Department of Environmental Regulation and Dale Twachtmann ("the

DER") to enforce state water quality standards and to meet

contractual obligations has irreversibly damaged, and is

continuing to damage, the Refuge and the Park.1  The United

 


2


States now moves for partial summary judgment on the defendants'

liability under the Second Amended Complaint. Although some

aspects of this litigation may be complex, determination of the

issue of liability under the relevant statutes and contracts is

not. As the court itself noted at an early proceeding in this

case, the question of liability is relatively simple and

straightforward. By moving for summary judgment, the United

States hopes to accelerate the Court's and the parties'

consideration of the critical issue of relief so that effective

remedial measures halting the damage to the Park and the Refuge

can be implemented as expeditiously as possible.

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II.     SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT

Florida law charges the District and DER with affording

the highest levels of protection possible to the fragile and

vulnerable ecosystems of the Park and the Refuge. In addition,

the defendant District owes contractual duties to the United

States pursuant to the Cooperative and License Agreement between

the Central and Southern Florida Flood Control District and the

United States of America ("License Agreement") (Exhibit 1)

establishing the Refuge, and the Memorandum of Agreement Among

the Army Corps of Engineers, the South Florida Water Management

District and the National Park Service for the Purpose of

 


3


Protecting the Quality of Water Entering Everglades National Park

("MOA") (Exhibit 2), which incorporates state water quality

standards. The District and DER have breached Florida's strong

water quality laws, which were designed to safeguard these

ecological treasures by prohibiting imbalances of their native

plant and animal life and further degradation of their water

quality. The District has also breached its contractual

responsibilities by failing to protect the water quality in the

Park and Refuge.

The hallmark characteristic of the unspoiled Everglades

that still exist in remote portions of the Park and Refuge is the

nutrient-lean (oligatrophic) 2  condition of their aquatic

ecosystems. These ecosystems, as yet untainted by polluted

agricultural drainage, respond adversely and irreversibly 3  to

 


4


even minute increases in nutrient concentrations, the most

important of which for purposes of this motion is phosphorus.

Excess phosphorus accumulates quickly and permanently in the peat

underlying the water; alters the activity of microorganisms in

the water; disturbs the natural species composition of the algal

mat (periphyton) and other plant communities in the marsh;

depletes the marsh of oxygen; and, ultimately, causes native

sawgrass and wet prairie communities to give way to dense,

noxious cattail stands. The ability of the ecosystem to serve as

habitat and forage for the native wildlife is thereby greatly

diminished or utterly destroyed. These changes constitute

imbalances in the native flora and fauna populations which the

Park and Refuge were expressly established to permanently

preserve.

Since at least 1979, the phosphorus concentrations in

water entering the Park and Refuge have been increasing. To

date, the Refuge, which receives agricultural discharges directly

from the intensively farmed Everglades Agricultural Area ("EAA"),

exhibits more extensive damage than does the Park. Already, over

6,000 acres of the Refuge have converted from native sawgrass and

wet prairie communities to cattail-dominated communities as a

 


5

result of nutrient-polluted inflows. 4   In addition, countless

additional acres of the Refuge suffer the changes which portend

cattail domination of the marsh, including irreversible excess

phosphorus loading in the peat soils, periphyton impacts, and

DER-documented depletion of dissolved oxygen. Indeed, a total of

at least 24,000 acres, or 17 percent, of the Refuge has been

affected adversely by nutrient pollution. These changes have

adversely affected the native wildlife in the Refuge, including

its spectacular population of birds.

Cattails and other nuisance species have also begun to

dominate portions of the marsh at the north of the Park, and

elevated phosphorus levels in the peat and abnormal activity of

microorganisms in the water exist in a six-kilometer deep fringe

along t he Park's northern border. 5  The detrimental alteration of

the aquatic ecosystem, including invasion of nuisance species,

which has already begun in the Park, will continue inevitably if

 


6

the current increasing trend in Park inflow phosphorus

concentrations is not abated.

Nutrient-polluted agricultural drainage that the

District and DER allow to flow into the fragile Everglades

ecosystems in the Park and Refuge causes this elevation of

nutrient concentrations and consequent ecosystem damage. This

degradation violates state water quality standards which Florida

law requires the defendants to enforce. Under the State's

statutory water pollution control scheme, the Park and Refuge are

classified as Class III waters, to be protected for recreation

and the propagation of a healthy, well-balanced population of

fish and wildlife. They are also listed as Outstanding Florida

Waters ("OFW's"), granted the highest level of antidegradation

water quality protection available in Florida. F.A.C. § 17-

3.041(l) (1990). The water entering these waters from the EAA to

their north contains nutrient concentrations far greater than-

indeed, up to twenty times greater than - levels of nutrients

naturally and historically present in the nutrient-lean

Everglades.

This drastic increase in nutrients causes violations of

four Class III water quality standards applicable to the Park and

Refuge: 1) it causes depletion of dissolved oxygen in the water

below the numerical dissolved oxygen standard; 2) it allows the

dominance of nuisance species in vast portions of the marsh; 3)

it diminishes the biological integrity of the water below the

legally binding numerical standard; and 4) it causes an imbalance

 


7

in natural populations of aquatic flora and fauna. In addition,

the District's own data demonstrate that the nutrient

concentrations in Refuge and Park inflows have steadily increased

since 1979, in violation of the OFW standard prohibiting any

degradation of the water quality in the Park and Refuge after

1979. These perturbations of the aquatic ecosystems in the Park

and Refuge also constitute a nuisance under Florida law. By not

requiring permits or incorporating and enforcing water quality

conditions in the various permits they issue, the defendants have

failed and continue to fail to exercise their ample authority

under Florida law to control these violations. The District's

failure to abate nutrient pollution and resultant habitat

destruction in the Refuge and Park also constitutes a breach of

the License Agreement, which obligates the District to protect

wildlife uses in the Refuge, and the MOA, which incorporates

state water quality standards applicable to the Park.

Throughout this litigation, the defendants have claimed

that the urgent problems alleged in the Second Amended Complaint

will be addressed and solved pursuant to the Surface Water

Improvement and Management ("SWIM") Plan for the Everglades that

the District is preparing. 6   See Fla. Stat. Ann. § 373.451 et

 


8

seq. (1988). The District now has approved and made public a

final draft SWIM Plan (Exhibits 11c, 11d, 80), which was preceded

by three drafts (Exhibits 5-11b). 7

The SWIM Plan remains deficient in numerous significant

ways. It betrays a lack of commitment on the part of the

defendant District to confront and remedy the critical problems

facing the Park and the Refuge. The Plan seems to recognize that

the Park and Refuge are facing a critical water quality problem,

that damage to Everglades resources has occurred and continues to

occur, and that the EAA is the source of the problem. It notes

some superficially worthwhile remedial proposals. Nonetheless,

the SWIM Plan rings hollow. Specifically, it fails to require

 


9

strict compliance with enforceable performance-based standards,

fails to commit to a reasonable and definite timetable, fails to

include a concrete funding scheme with contingency plans if

funding cannot be obtained, fails to require responsible parties

to clean up the pollution they cause, and fails to provide a

scientific or technological explanation of the remedial strategy

it proposes. (See Draft and Final SWIM Plans and U.S. comments,

Exhibits 5-13). In short, it will not protect the Everglades

from destruction. Given the inadequacy and delay in the SWIM

administrative process and the continuing degradation of these

unique Everglades ecosystems, prompt judicial resolution of the

United States' claims for legal protection of the Park and Refuge

is essential. This is why the United States moves for partial

summary judgment at this time.

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III.     FACTS

The following sections set out the undisputed factual

context in which this dispute is being litigated. 8   The first

section describes the establishment of the Park and the Refuge

and the unique features which have earned them national and

international recognition. The next section describes the nature

of unimpacted aquatic ecosystems in the Park and Refuge and the

 


10

extreme vulnerability of those ecosystems to nutrients,

particularly phosphorus. The following section recounts the

manner in which the defendant District sends nutrient-laden water

to the Park and the Refuge; the damage that nutrient-polluted

water inflicts on nutrient-lean ecosystems in the Everglades; the

irreversible harm that has already occurred in the Park and

Refuge; and the inevitable dire consequences that will result if

degradation of these invaluable resources continues. The final

section recounts the history of the defendants' inaction, in the face

of long-standing and ever-mounting evidence of nutrient

degradation of the Everglades and the defendants' ample authority

to take corrective action, which prompted the United States to

file this lawsuit and now this motion.

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A.    Everglades National Park

Everglades National Park contains approximately 1.4

million acres of diverse subtropical habitat, most notably an

expansive "river of grass" 9  roughly 50 miles wide, at Florida's

southern tip. Authorized by Congress in 1934 and dedicated by

President Truman in 1947, the Park preserves numerous unique

features of global significance. See 16 U.S.C. § 410c (1988).

The Park supports ten endangered species and three threatened

 


11

species and plays a major role as a habitat of plants and of

aquatic and other animals of tremendous scientific, ecological

and economic importance. Nomination of Everglades National Park

as a Wetland of International Importance, at 4 (Exhibit 14). In

addition, the Park has special value for maintaining genetic and

ecological diversity because of the quality and uniqueness of its

flora and fauna. Id. at 4. The Park is well situated and well

equipped for scientific research and education, offering special

opportunities for promoting global understanding and appreciation

of wetlands. Id. at 4.

Everglades National Park has no equal in the world.

The Park is a World Biosphere Reserve (1976); 10  a World Heritage

Site (1979); 11  and a Wetland of International Importance under

 


12

the terms of the Ramsar Convention. 12   There are only two other

sites in the world, and none other in the western hemisphere,

which appear on all three lists - Lake Ichkeul, in Tunisia, and

Strebarna Lake, in Bulgaria. No other international recognition

of its uniqueness and biological importance.

Congress has long recognized the Park's national and

international importance. As Congressional debate leading to the

Park's authorization reflected, "[Everglades National Park] is a

country distinctly different from anything else in all our great

country, if not the entire world." 78 Cong. Rec. H9501 (daily

ed. May 24, 1934) (statement of Rep. Treadway) (Exhibit 18).

Specifically, Congress has found that "[t]he Everglades National

Park is the largest and most important subtropical wilderness in

North America. Although it is one of the largest national parks

in the country, it contains perhaps the most fragile and unique

plant and animal communities in the national park system." H.R.

Rep. No. 1455, 91st Cong., 2d Sess. 2-3 (1970) (Exhibit 19). In

addition, Congress recognized the Park's distinctive dependence

on water, noting that "[a]nything that affects the water affects

 


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the plant communities associated with it and the animal

communities related to them.m Id. at 3.

In light of the fragility and uniqueness of the

Everglades, Congress provided in the Everglades National Park

Enabling Act of 1934 that the Park "shall be permanently reserved

as a wilderness, and no development of the project or plan for

the entertainment of visitors shall be undertaken which will

interfere with the preservation intact of the unique flora and

fauna and the essential primitive natural conditions now

prevailing in this area." 16 U.S.C. § 410c (1988). 13   More

recently, Congress designated 1.3 million of the 1.4 million

acres in the Park as a federal Wilderness Area worthy of strict

preservation. 16 U.S.C. §§ 1131-1136 (1988).

The State of Florida recognizes the vital importance of

Everglades National Park and charges its own agencies with the

responsibility for protecting it. The Park, classified in 1979

as an Outstanding Florida Water (OFW), has consistently received

the highest possible water quality designations under state

law.14 Additionally, the Florida legislature decreed that "[t]he

 


14

South Florida Water Management District shall not divert waters

to the ... Everglades National Park in such a way that the state

water quality standards are violated [or] that the nutrients in

such diverted waters adversely affect indigenous vegetation

communities or wildlife ...." Florida Surface Water Improvement

and Management Act, Fla. Stat. Ann. § 373.4595(2)(a)l (1988).

These nondegradation designations, coupled with Class III state

water quality standards, provide additional mandates for

providing paramount protection to the Park.

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B.     The Arthur R. Marshall Loxahatchee National Wildlife
         Refuge

The Arthur R. Marshall Loxahatchee National Wildlife

Refuge contains 145,635 acres (589 sq. km.) of Everglades wetland

habitat, forming the northeastern extreme of the remaining

Everglades. SFWMD First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. III, at B-77

(1989) (Exhibit 8); H.R. Rep. No. 99-535, 99th Cong., 2d Sess. 2

(1986) (Exhibit 20). State-owned wetlands, called Water

Conservation Areas ("WCAs"), separate the Park and Refuge by

about 50 miles. See Map of the South Florida Water Management

District [hereinafter Map] (Exhibit 21). The Refuge was

originally created in 1951 when the District's predecessor, the

Central and Southern Florida Flood Control District, entered into

a "Cooperative and License Agreement" with the U.S. Department of

the Interior through the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Exhibit 1).

 


15

The agreement contemplated multiple purposes for land use in

the Refuge, providing that the Refuge would be operated to

promote wildlife preservation to the greatest extent possible

while still meeting the primary purpose of flood control.

License Agreement, at ¶ 2(a) (Exhibit 1).

Like the Park, the Refuge is characterized by its

unique freshwater marsh ecosystem. The Refuge marsh provides

habitat for numerous species, including several threatened and

endangered species and one of the largest populations of wading

birds in the Everglades ecosystem. Declaration of Dr. Mark

Maffei, at ¶ 8 (Sept. 4, 1990) [hereinafter Maffei Decl.]

(Attachment B). High species diversity and the complexity of the

interspersion of habitat types are the outstanding features of

the Refuge. First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. III, at B-86 (Exhibit

8). The Refuge consists of a spatially complex mosaic of wet

prairies, tree islands, aquatic sloughs and sawgrass stands that

represent the last remaining examples of native, northern

Everglades habitat. H.R. Rep. No. 99-535, 99th Cong., 2d Sess.,

at 2 (1986) (Exhibit 20). Because of its unique features, the

Refuge, like the Park, is classified under state law as an OFW.

F.A.C. § 17-3.041 (1990).

Loxahatchee is designated under the Endangered Species

Act as Critical Habitat for the endangered snail kite. 50 C.F.R.

Ch. 1, § 17.95(b), at 196-197 (1989). It also provides habitat

for the endangered Florida panther and the endangered bald eagle.

Maffei Decl., at ¶ 9. The Refuge provides feeding, roosting, and

 


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nesting habitat to thousands of migratory birds, including blue-

and green-winged teal, ring-necked ducks, American widgeon,

mottled ducks, great blue herons, wood storks, great egrets,

snowy egrets, and little blue herons. 15  Id. at ¶ 8. The

abundance and diversity of flora and fauna in the Refuge are

critically dependent on the quality of water and the extent and

diversity of aquatic habitat available in the Refuge. Id. at ¶ ¶

14-15.

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C.     Development and Agricultural Water Use Has
         Significantly Damaged the Historic Everglades

The Park and the Refuge constitute the southernmost and

northernmost remnants of the historic Everglades. Together with

small pockets in the WCAs, they contain the last examples of the

pristine Everglades marsh ecosystems which were prevalent in

South Florida prior to the growth of agriculture and urban areas

during the past seventy-five years. The water quality statutes

at issue in this litigation were enacted to preserve the

immeasurable value of these ecosystems. Despite this protection,

development in south Florida, particularly agricultural

development in the EAA since 1950, has significantly reduced the

size of the remaining Everglades, and nutrient-polluted drainage

from these agricultural lands, in former Everglades, threatens

their future.


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1.     The Everglades Ecosystem

  a.     The Native Everglades Ecosystem is Very
          Sensitive to Excess Nutrients

The native Everglades marsh ecosystem contains diverse

wetland communities, including periphyton, sawgrass marsh, wet

prairie, aquatic slough, tree island, willow stand and cypress

swamp. SFWMD Second Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. I, at 19 (1990)

(Exhibit 9) . At one time, these vegetative communities were

distributed throughout the Everglades in a mosaic of distinct and

valuable habitat types. Id. This integration of diverse habitat

types - sloughs, wet prairies, sawgrass marshes and tree islands

-still characterizes Loxahatchee, and indeed is its prevailing

feature. Maffei Decl., at ¶ 7 (Attachment B). The southern part

of the ecosystem, today contained in the Park, was and still is

characterized by a diverse mosaic of freshwater wetland

communities, grass prairies, upland pineland, tropical hardwood

forests and hammocks, tidally-influenced mangrove forests, and

the seagrass beds of Florida Bay. Second Draft SWIM Plan, Vol.

I, at 19 (Exhibit 9).

The natural ecosystem of the Everglades is one that

evolved under and continues to depend on maintenance of extremely

low levels of phosphorus. Nutrient levels in the water column of

the original Everglades were very low, as they are today in

unimpacted remnants of the native marsh. Jones Decl., at ¶ 3

(Attachment A). Because phosphorus was available in such low

supply that it limited biological growth and productivity, it is

the nutrient that shaped historical Everglades flora and fauna.

 


18

Id. at ¶ 3. Therefore, changes in the amount of phosphorus in

the Everglades ecosystem are especially significant. The

presence of low vegetative growth rates; low concentrations of

phosphorus within the periphyton and in interior marsh surface

waters; and the low phosphorus content of unaltered Everglades

soils all indicate that phosphorus was scarce. SFWMD Draft

Everglades Nutrient Removal Management Plan, at 26 (undated)

[hereinafter Everglades Nutrient Removal Plan] (Exhibit 22).

Remote sites in the interior of the Everglades marsh,

far removed from the influence of artificial nutrient sources,

provide the best estimates and remaining examples of pristine

Everglades water quality. First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. III, at A-

10 (Exhibit 7). At these interior sites, phosphorus

concentrations in surface waters are extremely low due to limited

loading of nutrients into the peat and the rapid uptake and

recycling of phosphorus by microorganisms and physical processes.

Id. Phosphorus loads are low because the surface flow entering

remote sites undergoes natural phosphorus removal through

biological uptake in upstream marshes, and because rainfall at

those sites contains relatively low levels of contaminants, such

as nutrients, from human activities. Concentrations of

biologically-available phosphorus - i.e., phosphorus that

organisms in the marsh can consume readily - in the surface

waters of these remote locations typically are less than 0.004

milligrams per liter (mg/1), at the limit of chemical detection.

 


19

Id. Total phosphorus concentrations average less than 0.010

mg/1- Id.

As noted above, the nutrients in remote interior

marshes derive mainly from rainfall, which contains extremely low

nutrient levels, and thus those marshes approximate the original,

nutrient-limited Everglades ecosystem. Id. at A-11. Not only

are background marsh nutrient concentrations very low, but any

nutrients that enter the system from rainfall, bird droppings or

other natural sources are rapidly assimilated by the ecosystem,

with no net accumulation of phosphorus. Id. at A-10, A-11.

Under these natural conditions, native Everglades wet prairies,

sloughs and sawgrass wetlands are relatively effective nutrient

traps. Id. at A-11. At very low, naturally occurring nutrient

concentrations, the sawgrass marsh and its associated microflora

efficiently utilize the very limited supplies of nitrogen and

phosphorus that are naturally available in surface waters as they

pass through the marsh. Id. However, the ability of sawgrass

and other native Everglades flora to remove phosphor us from the

water is overwhelmed at elevated nutrient concentrations. S.

Davis, et al., Statement Paper: An Assessment of the Potential

Benefits to the Vegetation and Water Resources of Everglades

National Park and the Southern Everglades Ecosystem Associated

with the General Design Memorandum to Improve Water Deliveries to

Everglades National Park, at 4 (1987) [hereinafter Statement

Paper: An Assessment] (Exhibit 23). Even minute increases in the

nutrient supply to the Everglades have been observed to have

 


20

major ecosystem impacts. Id. at 4; Jones Decl., at ¶ 4

(Attachment A).

As discussed in later sections, the Everglades have

been and continue to be subjected to nutrient-polluted water

originating in the EAA. The addition of enhanced levels of

nutrients to a nutrient-limited system such as the Everglades

causes degradation by elevating the phosphorus content of the

peat soil; disturbing biological and chemical processes in the

marsh; and altering the vegetative communities. Jones Decl., at

¶ 4 (Attachment A). The peat, marsh processes, and marsh biota,

adapted to a low-nutrient environment, cannot keep pace with the

phosphorus load, and phosphorus consequently accumulates

unnaturally in the ecosystem. Id. at ¶ ¶ 2-4. These imbalances

occur throughout the ecosystem, favoring survival of pollutant-

tolerant species, such as cattail, and decline of others, such as

sawgrass. Statement Paper: An Assessment, at 4 (Exhibit 23);

Second Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. I, at 21 (Exhibit 9). These

changes, which are systemic impacts affecting every aspect of the

marsh ecology, result in destruction or reduction of habitat for

numerous wildlife species, including some that are endangered or

threatened. Id. at 22.

Because the entire Everglades ecosystem developed under

phosphorus-limited conditions, the integrity of the Everglades

ecosystem is dependent on maintaining those low-phosphorus

conditions. Everglades Nutrient Removal Plan, at 26 (Exhibit

22). Otherwise, nutrient enrichment will continue to result in

 


21

an overall decline in the total number or diversity of species,

and an increase in nuisance species. The ultimate and tragic

result will be a pollution-drenched ecosystem at the southern tip

of Florida with none of the unique and irreplaceable features of

the pristine Everglades -- a permanent loss of one of the world's

unequaled natural wonders.

b.     Drainage in South Florida Has Greatly
        Diminished the Historical Everglades

The Everglades have undergone many changes in this

century, particularly, and most dramatically, since the rapid

growth in agriculture which began in the 1950s. Present

conditions in the Everglades are strikingly different than those

which existed in the mid-19th century. First Draft SWIM Plan,

Vol. III, at A-11 (Exhibit 7). Prior to recent wide-scale

development in South Florida, water moved freely across the

shallow Everglades, which originally covered approximately 4,000

square miles. Id . at A-10; Second Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. I, at 19

(Exhibit 9). Water flowed through more than 90 miles of

sawgrass, wet prairies and open water sloughs, from Lake

Okeechobee to coastal estuaries and Florida Bay. First Draft

SWIM Plan, Vol. III, at A-10 (Exhibit 7). See Map (Exhibit 21).

In the native Everglades, water moved as sheet flow southward at

an almost imperceptible pace over this flat wetland terrain.

First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. III, at A-10 (Exhibit 7). Today,

more than half the original Everglades have been drained,

primarily for agricultural development, and the water flows

 


22

through a highly managed system of canals and levees in greatly

altered flow patterns. Id. at A-11.

Everglades National Park is the last recipient of water

in the highly-managed Kissimmee-Okeechobee-Everglades hydrologic

regime, which begins at the source of the Kissimmee River. See

Map (Exhibit 21). The waters of the Kissimmee River watershed

drain into Lake Okeechobee, which in turn provides water to the

EAA. The EAA comprises 822 square miles of drained and

cultivated Everglades wetlands used to grow crops such as sugar,

sod and vegetables. First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. III, at B-55

(Exhibit 8); Second Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. II, at 31 (Exhibit 10).

Drainage from the EAA directly enters state-owned wetlands, the

WCAs, which lie south and east of the EAA. There are five WCAs

labelled from north to south: WCA-1 (contained in the Loxahatchee

National Wildlife Refuge), WCA-2A, WCA-2B, WCA-3A, and WCA-3B. 16

See Map (Exhibit 21). The Park lies at the southern terminus of

the Kissimmee River watershed, directly south of the Refuge and

the WCAs. The modern remnants of the original Everglades are

contained mostly within the approximately 1.4 million acres of

the Park and the 860,000 acres of the WCAs. S. Davis, Sawgrass

 


23

and Cattail Nutrient Flux: Leaf Turnover, Decomposition, and

Nutrient Flux of Sawgrass and Cattail in the Everglades, at 4

(Undated) (Exhibit 25).

2.     District Water Management is Irreversibly Damaging
        the Everglades

a.     District Water Management Pollutes the Park
        and the Refuge

 i.     Water Management in the EAA Causes
        Increased Nutrient Concentrations in
        Drainage Waters Which District Pumps
        Discharge to the Refuge, the WCAs and
        the Park

The Everglades Agricultural Area, bordering Lake

Okeechobee, is the first segment of the canal and levee system

stretching from the lake to the Park. First Draft SWIM Plan,

Vol. III, at B-55 (Exhibit 8). Almost all the land in the EAA is

in agricultural production. Id. Agriculture within the EAA

requires extensive drainage and irrigation of the rich organic

soil. Id. During the wet season, growers commonly pump large

volumes of nutrient enriched water off their land to protect

crops against flooding. Id. In the dry season, irrigation water

is released from the lake and utilized by agricultural concerns

as needed. Id. at B-60. The primary drainage and irrigation

system for the EAA consists of a network of canals, levees, pumps

 


24

and water control structures operated by the District. 17  Id. at

B-55

The replacement of natural habitats in the EAA with

intensive agricultural uses that depend on the Everglades as a

receiver of runoff has adversely affected water quality in the

Everglades system. Formerly, this vast area was part of the

untamed, low-nutrient Everglades. Now, drainage and aeration of

EAA soils which results from on-farm water management practices

in the EAA cause shrinkage, consolidation and biological

oxidation of the soils to a point where soil losses result in

measurable ground level subsidence over time. 18   First Draft SWIM

Plan, Vol. III, at B-65 (Exhibit 8). This soil subsidence in the

EAA has reduced the thickness of the EAA soil profile by about

 


25

one half and is a major contributor of nitrogen and phosphorus,

which are released through mineralization when the soil is

oxidized, into EAA drainage canals. 19   First Draft SWIM Plan,

Vol. III, at B-65-B-66 (Exhibit 8). Exhibits 31 and 32

illustrate soil losses in the EAA from 1973 to 1988.

Adverse impacts of EAA drainage on downstream water

quality result because of the large volume of water that is

pumped off EAA farmland and the release of nitrogen and

phosphorus, derived from leaching and subsidence of EAA organic

soils, into surface drainage waters. 20   First Draft SWIM Plan,

Vol. II, at 29-30 (Exhibit 6). EAA discharges represent a more

than 100-percent increase over the nutrient load in rainfall that

under natural conditions would be the principal nutrient source

for the marsh. , Vol. III, at B-122. In addition, EAA

drainage contains average phosphorus concentrations ten times

higher than background concentrations of phosphorus observed at

interior marsh sites. 21   Id.

 


26

The adverse impacts on downstream resources are

exacerbated by the ability of farmers in the EAA, unconstrained

by the defendants, to avoid the impacts of droughts and heavy

rainfall by excessive pumping of water onto or off their fields

at whim. First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. III, at B-67 (Exhibit 8).

Moreover, in spite of the already huge phosphorus load which

derives from agriculture uses in the EAA, the SFWMD projects an

increase in demand for agricultural irrigation water from

1,275,000 million gallons per year (MGY) in 1988 to 1,427,000 MGY

in 2000. Memorandum from D. Gilpin-Hudson to B. Adams (Aug. 22,

1989) (Exhibit 33). 22

 


27

The WCAs, including the Refuge, are the first

recipients of the nutrient-polluted waters that flow south from

the EAA. 23   Because of the relatively large volumes of water they

discharge, the District's S-5A, S-6, S-7 and S-8 pump stations

are the four largest surface water sources of nutrients to the

WCAs. 24   Second Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. II, at II-50 (Exhibit 10).

Water quality data from the United States Geological Survey and

the SFWMD indicate that the S-5A, S-6, S-7 and S-8 pump

stations contribute 76 percent of the surface water phosphorus load

(excluding rainfall) and 46 percent of the total phosphorus load

(including rainfall, which contributes 39 percent) entering the

WCAs. 25   Id. at II-49, Table 2-11. Pump station S-5 A, which

 


28

discharges directly into the Refuge, contributes approximately 74

metric tons of phosphorus, or 17 percent of the total WCA

phosphorus load, and is the second largest surface water source

of phosphorus loading to the WCA system. Id. at II-49, Table 2-

11.

The District's operation of the regional water

management system affects aquatic communities in several ways.

For example, WCA-2A wetlands receive a particularly large supply

of nutrients through the S-10 inflow structures, which transport

drainage from the Refuge, because of the large canal system which

converges on these structures and because of their proximity to

the EAA. SFWMD Technical Publication 83-4, at 1 (Exhibit 34).

See Map (Exhibit 21). The absence of interior canals in WCA-2A

forces this water to flow across the marsh, where nutrients

accumulate in the marsh through incorporation by marsh soils and

vegetation, eventually saturating the system and moving farther

and farther downstream. SFWMD Technical Publication 83-4, at 1

(Exhibit 34); Jones Decl., at ¶ 14 (Attachment A). By contrast,

some of the nutrient-enriched water entering the WCAs never flows

 


29

through the marsh. Instead, the District can and does operate

the system so as to rapidly shunt poor quality, nutrient-enriched

waters from the EAA through canals to remote sites, including the

Park, 26   without the phosphorus removal that would occur if the

water flowed through the WCA marshes. First Draft SWIM Plan,

Vol. III, at B-259 (Exhibit 8); Statement Paper: An Assessment,

at 2 (Exhibit 23).

ii.     The District's interim Action Plan Has
        Increased Environmental Damage By
        Exacerbating Nutrient Loading to the
        WCAs

The District originally utilized Lake Okeechobee to the

north of the EAA as a flood storage area to handle excess water

pumped off EAA farm lands. First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. III, at

B-63 (Exhibit 8). Thus, during the 1960's and 1970's,

considerable amounts of nutrient-enriched EAA water were pumped

north into Lake Okeechobee rather than south and east to

Loxahatchee, the WCAs, and the Park. Id.

The District in 1979 implemented a plan to reduce the

pumping of EAA runoff to Lake Okeechobee. Under the Interim

Action Plan ("IAP"), which the District ultimately approved in

1980, the District reversed its former practice of backpumping to

Lake Okeechobee and now pumps 95 percent of the EAA runoff into

the WCAs. Option, Interim Action Plan, at 1 (Nov. 16, 1987)

(Exhibit 36). Although concerns over the ecological health of

 


30

the lake were legitimate, the District unilaterally decided under

the IAP to divert nutrient-polluted water to the WCAs, the Refuge

and the Park without ensuring that the rerouted water would have

no adverse impact on the water quality in those downstream areas.

The WCAs receive an additional loading of approximately 50 tons

(45.4 metric tons) of phosphorus per year under the IAP. First

Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. II, at 31 (Exhibit 6); Nutrient Removal

Management Plan, at 22 (Exhibit 22). The District's action has

increased the level of impacts that EAA drainage has on native

Everglades water quality, plant communities and wildlife habitat,

contributing to the rapid and noxious spread of cattail and other

pollutant-tolerant species and loss of native Everglades habitat

in the WCAs. 27

 


31

Despite this increase in nutrient loading in the WCAs,

the District, in the 1989 Lake Okeechobee SWIM plan, elected to

continue the IAP without addressing the acceleration of

degradation of the Everglades. First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. II,

at 7 (Exhibit 6); Second Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. II, at 7 (Exhibit

10). Thus, the IAP continues to exacerbate nutrient-related

water quality problems in the Everglades. 28 Id.

iii.     The Refuge Receives Excessive Nutrient
         Loads from the District's Pump Stations

The Refuge comprises the northernmost WCA in the

modified Everglades wetlands system, and is one of the first

receivers of nutrient-polluted water that the District pumps out

of the EAA. The Refuge is made up of a relatively shallow marsh

encircled by a 56-mile levee and canal system. 29   First Draft

SWIM Plan, Vol. III, at B-78 (Exhibit 8); SFWMD Technical

Memorandum, at 4 (Exhibit 24). Two of the District's primary

pump stations draining the EAA, pump stations S-5A and S-6,

 


32

contribute the majority of the surface water to the Refuge. 30

SFWMD Technical Memorandum, at 5 (Exhibit 24).

Because pump stations S-5A and S-6 move water directly

from the feeder canals in the EAA into the Refuge, the nutrients

absorbed by the water in the EAA are pumped directly onto the

Refuge. First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. III, at B-78 (Exhibit 8).

These nutrient-rich agricultural waters result in both high

average total phosphorus concentrations in Refuge inflows and

intermittent peaks of phosphorus far above the average. 31   SFWMD

Technical Memorandum, at 60 (Exhibit 24). The average flow-

weighted total phosphorus concentrations of the discharges from

pump stations S-5A and S-6 from 1979 to 1988 were 0.190 mg/l and

0.119 mg/l respectively - 10 to 20 times higher than the total

phosphorus concentration in pristine Everglades marsh. Id. at B-

133.

 


33

During periods of low stage levels in the Refuge, water

pumped into the Refuge will, in general, flow south along the

perimeter canal and avoid the higher ground at the center of the

Refuge. SFWMD Technical Memorandum, at 4-5 (Exhibit 24). Under

these conditions the water quality at the center of the area is

relatively unpolluted by EAA drainage waters. First Draft SWIM

Plan, Vol. II, at 62 (Exhibit 6). However, as the stage levels

increase, the amount of penetration of EAA drainage waters into

the Refuge interior also increases, resulting in an increased

adverse effect on the entire Refuge. SFWMD Technical Memorandum,

at 4-5 (Exhibit 24).

Under the District's IAP, the quantity of nitrogen and

phosphorous entering the Refuge from the EAA has increased

dramatically. Thus, the Refuge has the highest average nitrogen,

phosphorus, color, and turbidity concentrations of the three

WCAs. SFWMD Study, at 17 (Exhibit 35). The Refuge also receives

the highest inflow total nitrogen and total phosphorous

concentrations and has the highest average interior

concentrations of total phosphorus and total nitrogen. Id.

iv.     Nutrient-Polluted Water Moves Southward
        Through the WCAs to the Park

The District also delivers nutrient-polluted water to

the Park. On average, approximately 11 metric tons of phosphorus

(2.6 percent of the phosphorus load introduced into the WCAs)

were discharged annually into the Park from 1978 to 1988. First

Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. III, at B-134 (Exhibit 8). A portion of

the Park inflows at the S-12 structures is high-nutrient canal

 


34

water from the Miami Canal and L-67A, which carries water from

the EAA to the Park without the benefit of overland sheet flow in

the WCA marshes. Statement Paper: An Assessment, at 2 (Exhibit

23). Since 1979, the phosphorus concentration of Park inflows

has increased 4 percent annually at S-12 structures, which

discharge to Shark River Slough, and 21 percent annually at the

S-332 structure, which discharges to Taylor Slough. Declaration

of Dr. William W. Walker, at ¶ 15 (Sept. 17, 1990) [hereinafter

Walker Decl.] (Attachment C).

b.     District Nutrient Pollution Has Damaged the
        Everglades, Including the Park and Refuge

The elevated nutrient loadings in agricultural drainage

which the District sends southward to the Everglades have created

imbalances in the plant and animal life in the Everglades and

threaten ongoing degradation of the biological integrity of the

Refuge, the Park, and the WCAs. First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. III,

at A-16 (Exhibit 7). The District admits that at total

phosphorus concentrations above 0.030 mg/l, significant changes

have occurred that impact the structure and function of the

Everglades ecosystem. Id. Additional evidence demonstrates that

significant ecological changes are triggered at total phosphorus

concentrations well below 0.030 mg/1. 32   Memorandum from D.

 


35

Swift, Research Environmentalist, to W. Dineen, Director

Environmental Sciences (Dec. 28, 1987) (Exhibit 38). Park and

Refuge inflows have exceeded 0.030 mg/l total phosphorus on

numerous occasions. Elevated nutrient concentrations in vast

portions of the Refuge and other areas in the northern Everglades

WCAs have visibly altered and degraded native plant communities

and marsh ecosystem structure and function. 33   The precursors of

 


36

these changes are already apparent in the Park, and will

inevitably give way to further, more visible and far-reaching

damage if existing nutrient concentration trends in Park inflows

are allowed to continue. 34   These adverse changes constitute

water quality violations for which the District and DER are

responsible.

i.     Nutrient Pollution Causes Imbalances at
       Every Level of the Everglades Ecosystem

The vegetative changes which occur in areas of

increased nutrient loading are most noticeable in the replacement

of native sawgrass and wet prairie communities by cattail-

dominated communities. 35   P. Gleason et al., The Impact of

Agricultural Runoff on the Everglades Marsh Located in the

Conservation Areas of the Central and Southern Florida Flood

Control District, at 1 (1975) [hereinafter The Impact of

Agricultural Runoff] (Exhibit 42). However, while cattail

expansion into sawgrass communities is the most often cited and

obvious physical result of. nutrient enrichment in the Everglades,

cattail expansion in fact represents only the final stage of a

series of ecological impacts that result from degraded water

 


37

quality within the marsh. 36   Draft Memorandum from P. B. Rhoads,

Director Resource Planning (Aug. 23, 1989) (Exhibit 43). Before

healthy sawgrass or wet prairie communities are displaced by

cattail, a number of dramatic and adverse changes have taken

place affecting the soil, the microbiology and lower forms of

vegetation of the ecosystem. First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. III, at

A-12 (Exhibit 7); Draft Memorandum from P. Rhoads to J. Garner,

Chairman, Governing Board at 2 (July 24, 1989) (Exhibit 4); Jones

Decl., at ¶ 4 (Attachment A). Once extensive cattail stands have

overtaken the marsh, the value of the marsh to native wildlife is

 


38

virtually destroyed. In other words, the adverse impacts of

nutrient pollution on the Everglades are ecologically systemic,

affecting most if not all components of the Everglades community.

First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. II, at 61 (Exhibit 6). The impacts

described below are the inevitable consequences of nutrient-

enriched inflows throughout the Everglades, including the Park

and the Refuge.

a)     Phosphorous Loading of the Soil
        Column is One of the First
        Nutrient-Related Impacts on the
        Everglades Ecosystem

One of the earliest observed impacts of nutrient-

enriched water on the Everglades ecosystem is phosphorus loading

of the peat soil in the marsh. 37   Measurements of total

phosphorus levels in Everglades peat, coupled with field

observations, show that elevated concentrations of total

phosphorus in Everglades peat soils are a precursor to cattail

invasion and other ecosystem impacts. Jones Decl., at ¶ ¶ 2, 17

(Attachment A). Once Everglades soils are loaded with excess

phosphorus, nuisance species such as cattails which thrive on

excess phosphorus are able to invade the marsh. Id.

 


39

Additionally, because of the slowness with which Everglades soil

rids itself of phosphorus, soil loaded with excess phosphorus can

take hundreds of years to return to background levels. Id. at ¶

15. Thus, in practical terms, elevated levels of phosphorus in

Everglades soils represent an irreversible adverse impact on the

ecosystem. 38   As documented below, both the Park and the Refuge

suffer from substantial excess phosphorus loading in their peat

soils.

b)     Adverse Impacts of Nutrients on
        Microbial Populations Are Another
        Early Indicator of Ecosystem
        Disruption

Within the water column, increased nutrient loading

first affects microbial populations of bacteria and fungi that

are responsible for nutrient cycling and the decomposition of

organic matter, such as leaf litter. In comparison to normal

background sites in the marsh, oxygen-depleted conditions in the

water at nutrient-enriched sites in the Everglades have resulted

in a shift in the composition of these microbial communities.

First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. III, at B-114 (Exhibit 8).

Microorganisms that grow in the presence of oxygen are suppressed

at nutrient-enriched sites. Id. at B-114. In addition, the

density of bacteria and fungi suspended in the water column

increases at the elevated nutrient concentrations that exist in

vast areas in the Everglades. Second Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. III,

at A-4 (Exhibit 11). Adverse ramifications of this shift on

 


40

Everglades food chains are significant since food chains relating

to the decomposition of plant material play a major role in

wetland ecosystems. First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. III, at B-114

(Exhibit 8).

Because of their important role in the cycling of

phosphorus in the marsh ecosystem, bacteria are the first group

of organisms to exhibit measurable effects of perturbations in

phosphorus concentrations in the water. Jones Decl., at ¶ 5

(Attachment A) . The effect of these perturbations on bacteria

can be monitored by measuring the activity in the water of the

enzyme alkaline phosphatase (AP). 39   Id. at ¶ 6. Specifically,

these microorganisms excrete less AP as the total phosphorus

concentration in the water increases. Id. Thus, AP is extremely

valuable as a sensitive and early indicator of ecosystem changes

caused by excess phosphorus in the Everglades ecosystem. Id. at

¶ 7. A decrease in AP activity indicates that excess phosphorus

is adversely affecting the natural cycling of phosphorus in the

ecosystem. Id.

c)     Nutrients Also Adversely Impact the
        Periphyton Community

Submerged and floating mats of predominantly blue-

green algae, commonly referred to as periphyton, are a

 


41

conspicuous feature of the Everglades ecosystem. SFWMD Technical

Publication 81-5, Preliminary Investigation of Periphyton and

Water Quality Relationships in the Everglades Water Conservation

Areas, at ix (December 1981) [hereinafter SFWMD Technical

Publication 81-5] (Exhibit 44). Periphyton is the community of

microorganisms (primarily algae) that live attached to the

surfaces of stems and leaves of aquatic plants and other

submerged surfaces. Id. The periphyton community converts

carbon dioxide, water and other nutrients into organic plant

material which is foraged upon by a wide variety of Everglades

invertebrates and juvenile fishes. Id. Thus, periphyton

represents an important primary food source in the Everglades

food chain. Id. In addition, periphyton photosynthesis and

metabolism greatly influence dissolved oxygen concentrations in

the marsh. Id. In some portions of the Everglades, periphyton

biomass exceeds the biomass of nearby macrophyte communities.

Id.

Nutrients, particularly phosphorus, 40   have had and

continue to have a significant adverse impact on the structure

and function of the periphyton community in the Everglades.

First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. III, at A-13 (Exhibit 7). The

general response of these microorganisms to phosphorus enrichment

is an immediate increase in the population density of a few

pollution-tolerant forms, a reduction or elimination of

 


42

pollution-sensitive species, a reduction in the numbers and types

of species present, and an overall increase in the algal standing

crop. 41   Id. In the Everglades, native periphyton communities

are extremely sensitive to even low levels of phosphorus added to

the environment. Id. Shifts from native periphyton species to

pollution-tolerant forms have been observed in Everglades marshes

at total phosphorus concentrations of 0.030 mg/l. Id.

Reduction of periphyton species diversity as a result

of nutrient enrichment ultimately has reduced Everglades

ecosystem stability by reducing the number of food item choices

available to grazing invertebrates. SFWMD Technical Publication

87-2, Periphyton and Water Quality Relationships in the

Everglades Water Conservation Areas 1978-1982, at 39 (1987)

(Exhibit 45). Aquatic ecosystems containing high species

diversity contain more complex food webs or food chains and are

more stable ecosystems in comparison to simpler, less diverse

communities. Id. In fact, the District has acknowledged that

there are fewer types and numbers of fish and larger aquatic

animals in nutrient-enriched cattail-dominated areas in which

periphyton also is adversely affected. SFWMD Board Meeting Staff

Briefing Overheads, at 33 (May 6, 1989) (hereinafter SFWMD Board

Meeting Overheads) (Exhibit 46). The reduction in algal species

 


43

and the other nutrient-related impacts on periphyton consequently

represent a significant imbalance in the native ecosystem.

d)     Nutrients Cause a Detrimental
        Lowering of Dissolved oxygen

The dissolved oxygen budget is one of the most

important factors in determining the environmental quality of an

aquatic system, since both animal and plant life are dependent

upon aerobic metabolism in one way or another. DER Report,

Water Quality Data Assessment of South Florida Water Conservation

Areas, at 10 (1987) (hereinafter DER Water Quality Assessment]

(Exhibit 47). Nutrient enrichment reduces oxygen-producing

periphyton and increases oxygen-consuming flora, thereby reducing

the level of dissolved oxygen (D.O.) in the water column of marsh

surface waters. First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. III, at A-14

(Exhibit 7). Loss of D.O. in the water undermines the entire

ecosystem by suffocating the aquatic organisms at the bottom of

the food web. 42   Id. at A-14. Few native species of Everglades

fauna are adapted to survive and breed in long-term oxygen-

deprived conditions. Id. at A-14. Depletion of D.O. in the

Refuge and other Everglades marshes is well-documented


44

e)     Nutrient Pollution Causes
        Imbalances in Everglades Macrophyte
        Communities

Sawgrass is an important and abundant larger plant in

the Everglades ecosystem. It represents by far the most

widespread plant community in the Everglades, covering 65 to 70

percent of the Everglades marsh. Sawgrass and Cattail Nutrient

Flux, at 4 (Exhibit 25). Sawgrass has low nutrient requirements,

as evidenced by low phosphorus and nitrogen concentrations in

sawgrass tissue as compared to those in other Everglades

macrophytes. Id. at 4-5. Low nutrient requirements partially

explain the dominance of sawgrass in a rainfall-fed system with

little available phosphorus and nitrogen. Id. at ii.

Cattails are another naturally occurring Everglades

macrophyte, but they appear naturally in small isolated pockets

rather than large nearly monotypic expanses. 43   As nutrient

 


45

concentrations in the marsh increase, shoot production and

decomposition proceeds much more rapidly in cattail than in

sawgrass. SFWMD Board Meeting Overheads, at 42 (Exhibit 46).

Thus, at elevated nutrient concentrations, cattails have a

competitive advantage over sawgrass. Id. Expansion of the

nutrient enriched area of WCA-2A from 6,000 to 20,0000 acres from

1978 to 1986 corresponds with the observed area of expansion of

cattail into sawgrass. Id. at 41. Thus, the District staff

itself is convinced that nutrient discharges are the primary

cause of cattail expansion in the Everglades. Draft Memorandum

from P. Rhoads, Director, Resource Planning Department, to J.

Garner, Chairman, Governing Board, at 1-2 (July 24, 1989)

(Exhibit 4). The displacement of sawgrass by cattail represents

 


46

a severe, long-term imbalance in the native ecosystem. 44   There

is no evidence that this imbalance is reversible.

f)     The Altered Ecosystem Does Not
        Support indigenous Wildlife
        Communities

The Everglades ecosystem changes induced by nutrient-

enriched surface water inflows cause imbalances in native

wildlife.45 South Florida Water Management District Action Plan

to Protect Lake Okeechobee and the Everglades, at 1 (Aug. 30,

1988) (Exhibit 49). Characteristic native Everglades fish, birds

and other wildlife are unable to use large cattail stands. For

example, cattail stands are inadequate nesting and feeding

grounds for numerous species. First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. III,

at B-92 (Exhibit 8). Because wading birds such as the egret and

wood stork (an endangered species) require shallow open water to

 


47

feed, they cannot and do not utilize areas dominated by cattail.

Maffei Decl., at ¶ 21 (Attachment B). Moreover, landing, and

movement in general, is extremely difficult in cattails for these

species. Id. For birds that feed by sight, poor visibility in

dense cattail stands makes it difficult or impossible to find

prey. Id. at ¶ 22. In addition, water under the dense cattail

mats which are formed by decomposing cattails is lacking in

dissolved oxygen and unable to support native aquatic organisms.

Id. ¶ 23; SFWMD Board Meeting Overheads, at 38 (Exhibit 46).

Thus, areas which have converted to cattail offer poor food

resources.

Obviously, large cattail stands also reduce the areal

extent of the many different intermixed habitats and the natural

structural diversity of the natural Everglades which are

essential to the native fauna. Maffei Decl., at ¶ 20 (Attachment B). 

Many species require several of the varied Everglades

habitat types in order to engage in normal breeding, feeding and

sheltering habits. Id. at 11. Some species will utilize

relatively dry areas such as tree islands for nesting but require

access to open wet prairies for feeding. Id. at ¶ ¶ 12-13. Thus,

preservation of habitat diversity is essential to preserving the

natural balance of the total marsh ecosystem. Research by

District staff scientists shows that in comparison to pristine

Everglades wet prairie and aquatic slough habitats, nutrient-

enriched areas of the marsh experienced reduced species diversity

and diminished richness of aquatic macrofauna. D. Swift,

 


48

Abstract: Effects of Nutrients on the Structure and Function of

Everglades Periphyton Communities, at 9 (1987) (Exhibit 50).

ii.     Nutrient-Polluted Agricultural Drainage
        Has caused Damage in the Park and Refuge

The nutrient-polluted water which the District sends

south from the EAA already has caused extensive biological

alterations in the WCAs. First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. II, at 30

(Exhibit 6). These impacts were exacerbated after implementation

of the IAP. F. Davis, Draft Evaluation, Option: IAP, at 2 (June

30, 1986) (Exhibit 51). 46   In addition to widespread damage in

the Refuge, District scientists have documented extensive change

from sawgrass to cattails in WCA-2A. First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol.

II, a t 30 (Exhibit 6). Since 1979, the nutrient-enriched area of

WCA-2A increased from 6,000 to 20,000 acres. 47  at 30; Action

Plan to Protect Lake Okeechobee and the Everglades, at 1 (Aug.

 


  49

30, 1988) (Exhibit 49). WCA-3A also has been adversely affected

by agricultural runoff. Vegetation impacts similar to those that

have been described for the Refuge and WCA-2A have occurred in

portions of WCA-3A near the S-11 structures, along the Miami

canal, and in proximity to other water delivery structures.

First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. II, at 30 (Exhibit 6). See Map

(Exhibit 21). The Park has already experienced the early stages

of nutrient-related deterioration, and is threatened with ongoing

destruction if existing trends continue. First Draft SWIM Plan,

Vol. II, at 30 (Exhibit 6). The serious damage to the Refuge and

Park resulting from nutrient pollution is described in the

following sections.

a)     Nutrient-Enriched Discharges From
        the District's Pumps Have Caused
        Harm to the Native Flora and Fauna
        of the Refuge

The degraded quality of surface water that the District

pumps into the Refuge from the EAA has decimated the historic and

essential vegetative diversity of vast portions of the Refuge. 48

First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. III, at B-88 (Exhibit 8). In 1960,

the Refuge was free from cattail stands resulting from nutrient-

enriched inflows. Id. By contrast, current satellite and other

data indicate that by 1987, cattail had replaced the delicate

 


50

native plant communities in 6,000 acres in the Refuge, creating a

thirteen-mile long swath which in some places in the Refuge is as

wide as a mile. Id.; First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. II, at 30

(Exhibit 6); Maffei Decl., at ¶ 20 (Attachment B). Indeed,

increased nutrient loading is placing the south end of the refuge

in jeopardy of being entirely converted to cattail. First Draft

SWIM Plan, Vol. III, at B-88; Maffei Decl., at ¶ 20 (Attachment B).

As much as 24,000 acres, or 17 percent of the total

area of the Refuge, are estimated already to have suffered damage

from nutrient pollution. 49  Maffei Decl., at ¶ 24 (Attachment B);

see also First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. III, at B-88 thru 91

(Exhibit 8). For example, the phosphorus level in the peat soils

in the Refuge is almost four times higher in areas near the

perimeter canal, which contain relatively high phosphorus

concentrations, than it is in the interior of the Refuge. Jones

Decl., at ¶ 11 (Attachment A). From peat loading to cattail

expansion, these changes are destroying the natural biological

diversity of the marsh and severely reducing the value of the

Refuge as habitat for its spectacular bird and wildlife

 


51

populations. 50   See Maffei Decl., at ¶ ¶ 19, 21, 22, and 23

(Attachment B).

The defendants are well aware of these adverse impacts.

A 1987 DER Interoffice Memorandum states:

S-5 and S-6 discharge into Water Conservation
Area 1, which is also the Loxahatchee
National Wildlife Refuge. The water is high
in nitrogen, phosphorus and specific
conductance. SFWMD and U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service studies has [sic] documented
major invasions of cattails in the areas
adjacent to the perimeter canal of the Refuge
due to excessive nutrients and shifts in
periphyton communities because of the higher
specific conductance of the EAA water. SFWMD
estimates that 57,000 acres of the 141,000
acres in the Refuge have been adversely
affected by these discharges.

Interoffice Memorandum from B. Hinkley to P. McVety, at 4 (Feb.

17, 1987) (Exhibit 40).

In addition, the DER has determined explicitly that

water quality violations have occurred as a result of

agricultural discharges into the WCAs, including the Refuge. 51

First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol.. III, at B-123-125 (Exhibit 8).

According to the defendants, violations of state water quality

standards occur particularly in the perimeter canals of the

 


52

Refuge, and are especially bad during dry periods when water is

confined to the canals. First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. II, at 34

(Exhibit 6). Specifically, the DER, using SFWMD data, determined

that two water quality standards were not met at nutrient-

enriched sites in the Refuge: 1) Imbalance in Natural

Populations of Flora or Fauna, and 2) Biological Integrity. Fla.

Admin. Code §§ 17-3.121(7), and (19) (1990). 52   First Draft SWIM

Plan, Vol. III, at B-97 (Exhibit 8). In addition, in 1987, DER

documented violations of the state water quality standard for

dissolved oxygen in the perimeter canals and interior marsh in

the Refuge. Id. at B-125. Nutrient concentrations cause water

quality in the Refuge to continue to decline. Trend analysis of

the Refuge rim canal data revealed worsening water quality

conditions during the 1970-1987 time period. DER Water Quality

Report, at 2 (Exhibit 47). Indeed, DER has proclaimed that a

long-term annual trend of degrading water quality in the Refuge

is obvious for D.O., total nitrogen and total phosphorus. Id. at

10.

b)     Nutrient-Enriched Inflows Have
        Already Caused Harm to the Park

As shown above, water containing elevated concentrations

of phosphorus, nitrogen and other pollutants presently enters the

Park through the S-12, S-332 and S-18C structures. Statement

 


53

Paper: An Assessment, at 2 (Exhibit 23); Walker Decl., at ¶ ¶ 8,

15, 16, 17, 21 (Attachment C). See Map (Exhibit 21). The supply

of nutrients to the Park has increased significantly since the

Park was authorized in 1934, primarily as a result of drainage of

EAA runoff. Walker Decl., at ¶ ¶ 8, 15, 16, 17, 21 (Attachment C). 

Indeed, a steady annual increase of from 4 percent to 21

percent has been observed in Park inflow phosphorus

concentrations since 1979. Id. In addition, the frequency

with which total phosphorus concentrations of inflows at the S-12

structures exceeded 0.030 mg/l increased from 6 percent of the

time from 1977 to 1982 to 15 percent of the time from 1984 to

1989. Id. at ¶ 17.

The steady increase in phosphorus concentrations in

Park inflows is only one measure of the degradation that the Park

is currently suffering. Spikes of water with phosphorus

concentrations as high as 0.20 mg/l have caused irreversible

loading of phosphorus in the peat soils and harmed aquatic

organisms in the Park. Walker Decl., Attachment 1, Fig. 4, at 15

(Attachment C); Jones Decl., at ¶ 15 (Attachment A). Near the

S-12 Park inflow structures, the peat contains phosphorus levels

five to ten times higher than the peat phosphorus levels in

pristine areas in the Park, and phosphatase (AP) activity 53  is

depressed to about one fifth of AP activity measured at

background sites. Id. at ¶ ¶ 9, 18. These disturbed peat soils

correspond to an area in which abnormal vegetative growth

 


54

abounds, a correlation that also exists in the north of WCA-2A

where one of the largest cattail-dominated marshes in the

Everglades presently exists. Id. at  ¶ ¶ 2, 13, 16, 17. Moreover,

excess phosphorus levels in the peat and depressed AP activity in

the water column have already penetrated at least 6 kilometers

into the Park in Shark River Slough. Id. at  ¶ ¶ 9, 18.

As experience in the Refuge and WCA-2A demonstrates,

elevated phosphorus levels in the peat in the Park set the stage

for proliferation and dominance of nuisance species, including

cattails, in the Park. Id. at  ¶ 17. Currently, areas of

vegetation in the Park that have been affected by increased

nutrients exist in the northern portion of the Park, south of the

S-12 structures and along the L-67 extension canal, where stands

of cattail occur. Statement Paper: An Assessment, at 4 (Exhibit 23); 

Jones Decl., at  ¶ 16 (Attachment A). Because the spread of

cattails is one of the last ecosystem impacts caused by excess

nutrients, it follows that the full range of ecosystem impacts

described in the preceding sections also exist in the northern

end of the Park. Further degradation in the quality of water

delivered to the Park will only exacerbate harm to its fragile

ecosystem. 54

 


55

c)     Further Environmental Damage to the
        Park Is Inevitable if Present
        Trends Continue

The preceding sections demonstrate that the District is

sending nutrient-polluted water to the Park and Refuge. The

Refuge and the WCAs have suffered tremendous damage, the

precursors of which already exist in the Park. Degradation of

water quality within the WCAs has the potential to continue to

affect, with increasing magnitude, the quality of water delivered

to the Park.

If nutrients continue to be added to the water in

sufficient quantities to cause cattail and other nutrient-

tolerant species to replace sawgrass marsh and wet prairies

upstream of the Park, these adverse changes inevitably will

increase in the Park. Jones Decl., at ¶ 14 (Attachment A). As

the steady supply of nutrients from the EAA is maintained,

cattails will continue to expand and replace native sawgrass and

wet prairie communities. This is because areas where cattails

have replaced sawgrass and we t prairie communities become

saturated with nutrients. 55   Id. After the nutrients cause the

 


56

conversion to cattails in upstream areas such as WCA-2A, WCA-3A

and WCA-3B, they pass through that area into formerly pristine

habitat and impact additional acreage in the marsh, eventually

converting more native marsh communities to cattails. Thus,

nutrient-induced impacts, such as the conversion of Everglades

marsh to cattails, are leap-frogging from the source of the

nutrients south toward the Park. 56   Id.

The only known way to limit the further spread of

cattails and the deleterious ecosystem changes that precede

cattail invasion is to reduce significantly the amount of

nutrients that are discharged into the WCAs from EAA surface

water drainage. Nonetheless, the defendants have allowed

excessive nutrient loads to strain the Everglades for decades,

and despite clear and growing substantiation of this water

quality crisis, in large measure by their own staff, they

continue to do so.

 


57

D.     The Defendants Have Failed to Halt Environmental Damage
         to the Everglades

1.     SFWMD Has substantial Discretion to Manage Water in South Florida and to Comply With State Water Quality Laws

Until devastating hurricanes of 1926 and 1928 resulted

in large losses of life and property, there was no federal

involvement in ongoing state, local and private drainage projects

in south Florida. These state and private projects involved

construction of canals, dikes and levees to drain large portions

of the approximately 20 million acres of wetlands that existed in

lower Florida. The Central and Southern Florida Project for

Flood Control and Other Purposes (OC&SFPO) originated with state

requests for federal assistance. Congress directed the Corps of

Engineers to respond to the 1926 and 1928 hurricanes, which

proved the existing state and private projects inadequate. In

March 1930, the Corps submitted to Congress an initial plan for

remedying the flooding problems and for navigational improvements

by building additional levees and navigational canals in the

affected area. The authorized works were essentially completed

by the early 1940s.

By 1947, droughts, hurricanes, fires and the threat of

salt water intrusion made it apparent that simply draining areas

and building levees was not an adequate solution to the water

problems of central and south Florida. The Corps, pursuant to

Congressional and local agency requests, concluded in a May 6,

1948, report to Congress that one comprehensive plan was needed

to cover all phases of water management in the entire central and

 


58

south Florida area. Comprehensive Report on Central and Southern

Florida for Flood Control and Other Purposes, House Document No.

643, 80th Cong., 2d Sess. (May 6, 1948) [hereinafter House

Document No. 643] (Exhibit 26). Congress defined the purposes of

what became known as the C&SFP (encompassing previous private,

local and State projects) as flood protection, water

conservation, prevention of salt water intrusion, major drainage,

navigation and preservation of fish and wildlife resources. 57

See id. at 2. In addition, the plan for the project recognized

that preservation of Everglades National Park was consistent with

the project. 58

 


59

The first phase of the comprehensive plan was

authorized as part of the Flood Control Act of June 30, 1948. It

consisted of the canals, locks, reservoirs, spillways and other

improvements necessary to afford flood protection to the

agricultural areas south of Lake Okeechobee and the highly

developed urban area along the lower east coast of Florida. The

cost of the project was shared with the State of Florida.

The rest of the comprehensive plan was authorized by

the Flood Control Act of September 3, 1954, and the project was

modified in 1958, 1962, 1965, 1968 and 1970. The 1968 Flood

Control Act provided inter alia for the raising of Lake

Okeechobee levees; the recovery of excess water from the lower

east coast for later use by backpumping into Lake Okeechobee and

the Water Conservation areas; and the improvement of water

distribution. The House document recommending the modifications

explicitly noted that preservation of Everglades National Park is

a project purpose, stating:

The need for water and related land-resource
development in the study area are dependent
upon the economic activity in which the
population is engaged and the restoration and
preservation of Everglades National Park
.

 


60

Water Resources for Central and Southern Florida, House Document

No. 369, 90th Cong., 2d Sess. at 31 (July 30, 1968) (emphasis

added) [hereinafter House Document No. 369] (Exhibit 27). 59

Subsequent legislation required a guarantee that not less than

315,000 acre-feet of water be delivered annually from the C&SFP

to Everglades National Park. River Basin Monetary Authorization

and Miscellaneous Civil Works Amendments Act of 1970, Pub. L. No.

91-282, § 2, 84 Stat. 310.

The regulation schedules, which generally set the outer

parameters of water management in the C&SFP, are established by

the Corps after consultation with the District. Final approval

of the regulation schedules rests with the Corps. However,

management of water levels in the project within the ranges set

by the regulation schedules is subject to the discretion of the

SFWMD:

Corps of Engineers has not prescribed
regulations which restrict the District's
ability to make discharges or convey water
for purposes other than flood protection,
when water levels are beneath the regulation

 


61

schedule discharge criteria. Thus, no direct
conflict with federal law would be created by
a state law which prescribes conditions on
"non regulatory" discharges which might be
made by the District.

Memorandum from S. Niego, Litigation Attorney, to S. Walker,

District Counsel, at 7 (Aug. 5, 1987) (Exhibit 29). See also

Memorandum from J. Rader to S. Walker, District Counsel, and I.

Quincy (July 29, 1986) (Exhibit 30).

Congress has never altered the project purposes from

the first congressional authorization in 1948, although it has

since made more explicit the need to heed water quality concerns

and to protect and preserve native Everglades ecology. At no

point in this litigation have the defendants demonstrated that

adherence to regulation schedules or other federal laws or

regulations concerning the C&SFP prevents them from complying

with and enforcing Florida state water quality standards and

other state water quality laws.

2.     The District and DER Have Known About Impacts of
        Nutrient-Polluted Drainage on Everglades
        Ecosystems for at Least Fifteen Years Without
        Taking Corrective Action

The defendants' history of inaction on nutrient

pollution of the Everglades, despite at least fifteen years of

ecosystem studies and consideration of regulatory and

technological strategies directed at the problem, is

distressing. 60   District staff had observed sure signs of

 


62

nutrient-related degradation of the Everglades marsh by 1971, and

had recommended remedial measures, still not implemented today,

as early as 1975. Nonetheless, nutrient pollution in the

Everglades has worsened since the mid 1970s. The United States

therefore views skeptically the defendants' representations that

they are now ready to tackle this urgent problem.

In a 1971 memorandum, the Chief of Environmental

Services at the District's predecessor observed:

[D]ata . . . indicates [sic] that vegetation
can remove considerable amounts of "waste"
nutrients. I do fear, though, that
Everglades marshes can quickly become over-
enriched. We cannot depend upon the marshes
of the Glades to handle our excess nutrient
problems because at this time we are unaware
of "how much is too much." My observations
in the marsh of [WCA-2] indicates [sic] that
excessive nutrients may be manifested in
dense growths of periphyton seen in recent
years. . . . Lush growths of bladderwort
(Utricularia) appear throughout the slough
systems in [WCA-2] and immediately are coated
with periphyton, adding to the organic debris
when it sinks. . . . Detritus deposits of up
to 14 inches in depth are causing the
rootstocks of the white water lily to
actually "let go" of the bottom and float to
the surface. These are indications of
degradation of the marsh environment
.

Memorandum from J.W. Dineen to D. Morgan (June 16, 1971)

(emphasis added) (Exhibit 57). 61   By 1972, the District staff was

 


63

aware of "pretty good evidence that the north end of [WCA-2] is

receiving a high loading of nutrients" and that an "apparent

front of high nutrient containing vegetation" was moving south in

WCA-2. Letter from K. Steward to W. Dineen (Nov. 14, 1972)

(Exhibit 58). The District noted as early as 1975 that "changes

in water chemistry due to the influence of agricultural runoff

probably cause significant changes in algal flora [in the

Refuge]." P. Gleason et al., Preliminary Report on the Effect of

Agricultural Runoff on the Periphytic Algae of Conservation Area,

at 2 (1975) (Exhibit 60).

District staff by 1973 was formulating policy options

for dealing with pollution of the WCAs:

Conservation Area 2 is currently in
environmental difficulty. . . . [N]ew data
are continually arising which indicate that
CA-2A is actually becoming polluted. The
high phosphorus in the sawgrass, the high
chloride levels in the water, the species
composition of periphyton in CA-2A, are all
good indications of pollution in the
Conservation Areas by backpumped water. . . .
Much more thought and discussion needs to be
put into permitting private drainage
districts to backpump to the Conservation
Areas. . .
. If we are to develop water
quality standards for waters discharged into
[District] waterways then we had better get
at it. If someone else is to do it, then
they had better get at it
.

 


64

Memorandum from W. Dineen to B. Storch (April 10, 1973) (emphasis

added) (Exhibit 61). Following through on the recommendation to

permit drainage districts, District staff recommended

unsuccessfully that a 1975 surface water management permit for a

sugar grower be conditioned on both implementation of a water

quality monitoring program and a construction of a retention or

impoundment area to clean nutrient-laden drainage.

These recommendations pertaining to the
retention area are based upon the staff's
opinions . . . that the work proposed under
the subject application will result in a
higher concentration of nitrogen and
phosphorus in the discharge water and an
increase in nitrogen to C-51. This is
because higher concentrations of nitrogen (N)
are found in water drained from sugar cane
producing muckland. It was found by the
staff that discharge resulting from the
proposal would degrade water quality in C-51
and will , if this basin is ever backpumped to
the conservation areas, increase the loading
of nutrients to the Everglades region.

In re Application No. 23660 by Sucrose Growers & Roger Hatton for

Water Use, Surface Water Management and Right of Way Occupancy,

Case No. 75-1636, at 2-3 (Fla. Div. Admin. Hearings, Oct. 20,

1975) [hereinafter In re Application No. 23 660] (Exhibit 62). 62

Water retention areas and detention areas have

continued to be considered as an option for cleaning agricultural

drainage in the EAA. In 1978, the Florida State Planning

 


65

Director recommended to the Executive Director of the District

that the District undertake:

systematic evaluation of all potential
retention areas to achieve optimum storage
and recycle of water now backpumped.
Consideration of storage of a percentage of
water now pumped from the southern half of
the Everglades Agricultural Area to
Conservation Area 3 in the retention areas
should be a part of the planning process as
should water which present plans intend to
route from the Everglades Agricultural Area
and adjacent areas into Conservation Area 3.

Letter from R.G. Whittle, Jr., State Planning Director, to J.

Maloy, Executive Director SFWMD, at 4 (Aug. 30, 1978) (Exhibit 63). 

Similarly, the Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission

stated in a letter to the Secretary of DER:

The Holey Land reservoir may provide some
degree of water quality and quantity relief
to Lake Okeechobee, but the long-range
solution to many of these problems is closely
entwined with the types of land uses
established in the EAA and their water needs .
We recommend that considerable emphasis be
placed on the demonstration and research
values of currently developed State lands for
developing and implementing water quality and
quantity management techniques such as
agricultural Best Management Practices
,
alternate agricultural crops more tolerant of
water conditions, integrated pest management
,
or on-site storage.

SFWMD, Executive Summary Addendum, Water Quality Management

Strategy for Lake Okeechobee (November 1982) (Attachment 1),

Letter from Col. R. Brantly to V. Tschinkel, at 4 (May 18, 1982))

(emphasis added) (Exhibit 64). In 1985, the Director of the

Environmental Sciences Division at the District offered a

specific proposal for a half-mile wide flow-way in the EAA to

 


66

clean agricultural drainage, noting that "[t]his concept is not

new . . ." Memorandum from J.W. Dineen, Director Environmental

sciences, to P.B. Rhoads, Director Resource Planning, at 1

(Nov.18, 1985) (Exhibit 65).

The defendants have also considered and rejected for

many years an aggressive regulatory program for the EAA. When

the District in 1982 considered the use of the Holey Land, a

state-owned wetland within the EAA, to purify agricultural

drainage, District counsel stated:

Pursuant to the recent stormwater delegation
from DER, all agricultural operations can
be required to obtain "stormwater discharge
permits" from this District
. Under this
option, the District would define those
agricultural operations which would be served
by the Holeyland project, and require the
same to obtain stormwater discharge permits
from the District. As a condition for
obtaining such a permit, the applicant would
be given the option of providing adequate
mechanisms on-site for retaining or detaining
stormwater run-off from the operation, or
signing up with the District for the use of
the Holeyland project
.

Memorandum from S. Niego, Office of Counsel, to S. Reel, Director

Special Projects, at 1 (Sept. 8, 1982) (emphasis added) (Exhibit 66).

Nonetheless, District staff in 1985 reported that "the

[District's] regulatory program has approached the [water

quality] issue cautiously, requiring general or passive kinds of

systems that are primarily justified for their hydrologic value

rather than their pollution abatement value." SFWMD, Draft

Resource and Process Issues, at 3 (November 1985) (Exhibit 67).

District counsel in 1985 identified the various permitting

 


67

options available to regulate the EAA, but conceded that "[i]n

the long run, it is not our intent to use the permitting process

to specifically regulate individual agricultural interests."

Memorandum from S. Walker, District Counsel, to P. Rhoads et al.,

at 1 (Dec. 5, 1985) (Exhibit 68). More recently, the District

again conceded that "[t]here is absolutely no question in our

minds that we can regulate the Everglades Agricultural Area." 63

Nonetheless, the District admits that it "did not under take an

enforcement program to require all the existing development to

seek permits." 64

Despite the defendants' awareness of the ecological

devastation that nutrient-polluted agricultural drainage from the

EAA for many years has caused and continues to cause in the

Everglades, they remain tentative and seemingly uncommitted to

solving the problem. The Final Everglades SWIM Plan does not

guarantee such a solution. Instead an aggressive remedial

strategy is urgently needed. The first step in forging such

relief is to establish the defendants' liability. The following

sections demonstrate that the defendants are liable under Florida

law for the ongoing pollution they allow in the Everglades.


Return to top of page                                                                                                                                  68

IV.     ARGUMENT

The defendants have caused or allowed serious water

quality problems in the Everglades to persist and continue

despite stringent Florida water quality statutes and contractual

agreements between the District and agencies of the United States

which place responsibility on the defendants to prevent

degradation of Everglades water. Specifically, the Florida

legislature has enacted two statutes that govern water quality:

the Florida Water Resources Act of 1972, Fla. Stat. Ch. 373, and

the Florida Air an d Water Pollution Control Act of 1975, Fla.

Stat. Ch. 403. 65   In 1987, Chapter 373 was amended to add the

Surface Waters Improvement and Management Act ("SWIM Act"), Fla.

Stat. Ann. §§ 373.451-373.503 (1988). These statutes, which are

to be construed liberally, Fla. Stat. § 373.6161 (1988), require

the defendants to protect the water quality in the Park and

Refuge by establishing and enforcing water quality standards and

by placing and enforcing appropriate restrictions in various

 


69

permits governing the use of waters in the State. 66   The License

Agreement between the District and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife

Service and the MOA between the District, the Corps of Engineers

and the National Park Service place additional duties on the

District to safeguard water quality in the Park and Refuge. By

allowing nutrient-polluted water to flow into the Everglades, the

defendants breach these statutory and contractual obligations.

Accordingly, the United States is entitle d to partial summary

judgment on liability. 67


Return to top of page                                                                                                                                 70

A.    Count I - Defendants Have Breached Their Duty To
        Enforce Florida's Water Quality Statutes, Damaging the
        Park and Refuge

The Park and Refuge receive the highest level of water

quality protection under Florida law. This stringent level of

protection is implemented through water quality standards 68  which

DER promulgated under Chapters 403 and 373. See Fla. Stat. Ann.

§ 403.061(11) (1986 & Supp. 1988). The State Water Policy

provides that "[w]ater quality standards shall be enforced

pursuant to Chapter 403 . . . to protect waters of the State from

point and non-point sources of pollution." F.A.C. § 17-40.060(l)

(1990). Florida law obligates the defendants to enforce these

standards through permitting schemes that they administer. In

violation of this enforcement mandate, the District and DER for

years knowingly have allowed and continue to allow widespread

breach of water quality standards designed to safeguard the

unique ecological features of the Park and Refuge. Accordingly,

the United States is entitled to judgment on count I of the

Second Amended Complaint alleging the defendants' failure to

control water pollution.

 


71

The Park and Refuge are classified as Class III waters,

which are to be maintained for recreation and the "propagation

and maintenance of a healthy, well-balanced population of fish

and wildlife." F.A.C. § 17-3.121 (1990). 69   By allowing

nutrient-polluted drainage to invade the Park and Refuge, the

defendants violate at least four water quality standards which

must be met in Class III waters: 1) the numerical dissolved

oxygen standard; 2) the standard prohibiting substances in

concentrations which result in the dominance of nuisance species;

3) the numerical standard of biological integrity; and 4) the

standard prohibiting nutrients in concentrations that cause an

imbalance in natural populations of aquatic flora or fauna.

F.A.C. § 17-3.061(3)(g)(q); F .A.C. § 17-3.121(7),(11),(13), and

(19) (1990). In addition, nutrient-polluted inflows to the Park

and Refuge contravene DER's policy "to limit the introduction of

man-induced nutrients into the waters of the State" and the

 


72

directive to give "particular consideration . . . to the

protection from nutrient enrichment of those waters presently

containing very low nutrient concentrations: less than 0.3

milligrams per liter total nitrogen or less than 0.04 milligrams

per liter total phosphorus." F.A.C. § 17-3.011(11) (1990).

Aside from these Class III water quality standards,

both the Refuge and the Park are Outstanding Florida Waters

("OFWs"), for which State policy affords "the highest

protection.m F.A.C. § 17-3.041(l) (1990). OFW standards thus

are designed to provide even more stringent protection than Class

III water quality standards. DeCarion v. Department of Environ.

Regulation, 445 So.2d 619, 621 (Fla. App. 1 Dist. 1984). The OFW

standard prohibits the lowering of the ambient water quality

below the quality that existed on either property during the year

prior to March 1, 1979. F.A.C. §§ 17-3.041(5), 17-4.242(2). 70

Analysis of Park and Refuge inflow concentration data collected

since 1979 evinces clear violations of the OFW standard in both

the Park and the Refuge.

Finally, the District violates the specific provision

in the Surface Water Improvement and Management ("SWIM") Act,

Fla. Stat. Ann. §§ 373.451-373.4595 (1988), directing the

defendant District to prevent nutrient-polluted inflows from

degrading the water quality in the Park. Specifically, the SWIM

 


73

Act, passed in 1987, requires each water management district to

devise and implement plans and programs for surface water

improvement and management. In light of the legislative finding

"that efforts to reduce nutrient levels in Lake Okeechobee have

resulted in diversions of nutrient-laden waters to other

environmentally sensitive areas, which diversions have resulted

in adverse environmental effects," Fla. Stat. Ann. §

373.4595(2)(a)(1) (1988), the SWIM Act provides that "[t]he

[SFWMD] shall not divert waters to . . . the Everglades National

Park [] in such a way that the state water quality standards are

violated [or] that the nutrients in such diverted waters

adversely affect indigenous vegetation communities or wildlife

. . ."

1.     Defendants Have Failed to Enforce Water Quality
        Standards Applicable to the Refuge

The water quality impacts of nutrient-polluted water

are to date even greater in the Refuge than in the Park. As a

result, numerous violations of Class III water quality standards

and the OFW anti-degradation standard occur in the Refuge. The

defendants are liable for failing to enforce these water quality

standards.

a     Water Quality in Loxahatchee Violates Class
        III Water Quality Standards

Following DER's 1987 water quality investigation in the

Refuge, DER documented numerous Class III water quality standard

violations in the Refuge. Specifically, DER found that water in

the Refuge suffered from 1) the dominance of nuisance species, 2)

 


74

an imbalance in the aquatic community, 3) a 25 percent decrease

in the biological integrity (diversity) of the ecosystem, and 4)

decreased levels of D.O. DER Interoffice memorandum from R.

Frydenburg & L. Ross to P. McVety, at 1 (Nov. 24, 1987)

[hereinafter DER WCAs Memorandum] (Exhibit 72). DER's research

showed that "[s]ubstantial evidence exists that nutrient inputs

are creating conditions harmful to the biota in the Water

Conservation Areas and are resulting in violations of state water

quality standards." Id. at 4. Each of these violations is

discussed in more detail below.

i.     Water Entering the Refuge Violates the
        Numerical Dissolved Oxygen Standard.

In assessing the water quality in the WCAs, DER

documented violations of the D.O. standard. A DER technical

report on water quality violations in the WCAs admits that "there

are violations of Chapter 17-3 standards for dissolved oxygen,

pH, specific conductance and bacteria in both the rim canal and

interior marsh in the Refuge. DER Water Quality, Assessment, at

10-11 (Exhibit 47). Moreover, the DER Report found that "[a]

long-term annual trend of degrading water quality [in the Refuge]

is obvious for dissolved oxygen, total nitrogen and total

phosphorus." Id. at 10. The documented loading of peat in the

Refuge with phosphorus has set the stage for ongoing dominance of

nuisance species in the Refuge. Jones Decl., at ¶ ¶ 11

(Attachment A).

 


75

ii.     Concentrations of Nutrients which Result
        in the Dominance of Nuisance species are
        Present in Water Entering the Refuge.

Both cattails on the macrophytic scale and oxygen-

depleting algae on the microscopic scale are nuisance species in

nutrient-enriched areas of the Everglades. The conversion of at

least 6,000 acres of Refuge habitat from sawgrass and wet prairie

marshes to cattails is an obvious violation of the Class III

water quality standard prohibiting water entering the Refuge from

causing the dominance of nuisance species. SFWMD Board Meeting

Overheads, at 37 (Exhibit 46). In addition, DER's review and

assessment of water quality violations in the WCAs, including the

Refuge, concluded that this standard is violated in nutrient-

enriched areas of the WCAs, such as exist in vast portions of the

Refuge. Specifically, the DER memorandum states:

Nutrient inputs were shown to produce
conditions which resulted in the dominance of
pollution indicator algal species and
anaerobic decomposer microbes.

DER WCAs Memorandum, at 1 (Exhibit 72).

iii.    The Biological Integrity of the Refuge
        is Being Impaired by Saturation With
        Nutrients.

Both District and DER staff scientists have found that

the biological integrity of the Refuge is impaired by the

introduction of nutrients which cause species diversity to

decline. DER notes in the 1987 water quality assessment that

nutrient enriched areas of the Refuge violate F.A.C. § 17-

3.121(7). DER WCAs Memorandum, at 4 (Exhibit 72). Specifically,

DER verified that

 


76

[m]oderate to severe water quality problems
were found in the Conservation Areas as
evidenced by high nutrient and oxygen demand
concentrations, and low dissolved oxygen
concentrations and macroinvertebrate
biological diversity
....

DER Water Quality Data Assessment, at 2 (emphasis added) (Exhibit 47).

In addition to DER's research, District scientists have

found that "[p]eriphyton species diversity in the interior of

WCA-1 [the Refuge] were [sic] significantly higher than those

recorded in WCA-2A, WCA-3A, and the peripheral marsh of WCA-1.

Lowest diversity indices occurred in nutrient rich waters...."

SFWMD Technical Publication 87-2, at vi (Exhibit 45). This

reduction in periphyton species diversity constitutes a violation

of the biological diversity standard applicable to the Refuge.

iv.     Nutrient Concentrations In Water
        Entering Loxahatchee are Causing an
        Imbalance in the Natural Populations of
        Aquatic Flora and Fauna.

An imbalance in the natural populations of aquatic

flora and fauna can be determined from a test which measures

significant changes in organism abundance, species richness,

diversity, or community compositions DER WCAs Memorandum, at 2

(Exhibit 72). When DER conducted such tests in nutrient-

enriched areas in the WCAs, such as exist in the Refuge, they

found both "imbalances in the aquatic community" and a "25%

decrease in biological integrity (diversity)." Id. at 1. DER

cited numerous significant nutrient-related imbalances in the

algal community, the benthic community, freshwater shrimp

 


77

populations and other aquatic faunal communities. Id. at 2. The

conversion of 6,000 acres native marsh in the Refuge to cattails,

as well as the extensive excess phosphorus loading in Refuge

soils and other nutrient-related impacts affecting up to 24,000

total acres in the Refuge must also be considered imbalances

within the meaning of this water quality standard.

b.     Defendants Have Failed to Enforce the OFW
        Standard in the Refuge

The OFW regulation is designed to prevent degradation

of surface waters by prohibiting the lowering of water quality

below the ambient water quality that existed in the OFW during

the year preceding the effective date of the OFW designation.

F.A.C. § 17-4.242(l) (1990). The Refuge was designated an OFW as

of 1979. Thus, under Florida law, direct discharges into the

Refuge from inflow stations such as pumps S-5A and S-6 must not

lower ambient water quality below that which existed in the

Refuge from March 1978 to March 1979.

Despite DER's acknowledgement that the Refuge's status

as an OFW "subjects its waters to more stringent criteria" than

Class III water quality standards alone, the defendants allow

violation of this paramount standard. DER Water Quality Data

Assessment, at 8 (Exhibit 47). DER admits that in the Refuge,

"[a] long term annual trend of degrading water quality is obvious

for dissolved oxygen, total nitrogen and total phosphorous." Id.

at 9. DER's technical report substantiated that "[t]rend

analysis of Conservation Area 1 [Refuge] rim canal data revealed

worsening water quality conditions during the 1970-1987 time

 


78

period." Id. at 2. These documents demonstrate that the ambient

water quality levels in the Refuge have been lowered in direct

contravention of DER's OFW standard.

2.     Defendants Have Failed to Enforce water Quality
        Standards Applicable to the Park

The enhanced growth of cattails and other nutrient-

tolerant species in the northern reaches of the Park and the

extensive loading of the peat soils six kilometers into the Park

constitute violations of the Class III water quality standards

applicable to the Park. In addition, the Park's OFW standard is

violated by the steady increase in nutrient concentrations in

Park inflows since 1979. The District and DER are liable for

failing to enforce these standards.

a.     The Defendants Allow Violations of Class III
        Water Quality Standards in the Park

DER's water quality regulations mandate that

"[s]ubstances in concentrations that result in the dominance of

nuisance species . . . shall [not] be present" in Class III

waters. F.A.C. § 17-3.061(3)(q) (1990). "Dominance" in this

context means:

the presence of species or communities in
greater numbers, biomass, or areal extent
than competing species or communities, or a
scientifically accepted tendency of species
or communities to achieve such a status under
existing or reasonably anticipated
conditions
.

F.A.C. § i7-3.021(10) (1990) (emphasis added). 71   By displacing

 


79

vast sawgrass marshes and wet prairies and interfering with the

"propagation and maintenance of a healthy, well-balanced

population of fish and wildlife," F.A.C. § 17-3,121 (1990), 72

cattail becomes a nuisance species. Nutrient pollution already

has invaded the Park, loading the peat soils to the point where

cattails can dominate other species. Jones Decl., at ¶ 17

(Attachment A). Thus, under "existing or reasonably anticipated

conditions" nuisance species such as cattails and lower-level

nuisance species, such as oxygen-depleting algae, will interfere

with the designated use of the Park under Florida's water quality

regulations. The damage caused by nutrient loading in Park soil

and the continuing threat posed by the expansion of the nutrient

front toward the Park constitute a violation of DER's water

quality standards.

b.     The Steady Trend of increasing Nutrient
        Concentrations in Park Inflows Violates the
        Park's OFW Anti-Degradation Standard

Because of its exceptional ecological significance, the

Park, like the Refuge, was designated an OFW as of March 1, 1979.

F.A.C. § 17-3.041(5) (1990). Thus, the baseline year for

assessing the ambient water quality in the Park is March 1, 1978

to March 1, 1979. Despite the Park's anti-degradation

designation, the defendants since 1979 have allowed the average

 


80

phosphorus concentration in Park inflows to increase an average

of 4 to 21 percent annually. By allowing this degradation trend,

defendants violate the OFW standard applicable to the Park.

Return to top of page

B.     Count II - Defendants' Intentional Diversion of
        Polluted Water Constitutes a Nuisance Under State Law

Count II alleges in part that the District's delivery

of nutrient-laden water to the Park and the Refuge constitutes a

nuisance. Under Florida law, a nuisance is activity which

"annoys or disturbs one in free use, possession or enjoyment of

his property or which renders its ordinary use or occupation

physically uncomfortable." Town of Surfside v. County Line Land

Co., 340 So.2d 1287, 1289 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App.), cert. denied,

352 So.2d 175 (Fla. 1977). Since 1889 the Florida Supreme Court

has recognized that water pollution is a nuisance . Pensacola Gas

Co. v. Peblev, 25 Fla. 381, 5 So. 593 (1889) [percolation from

refuse which pollutes and makes the water in the wells of an

adjoining landowner unfit for household and stock uses is a

nuisance.] More recent examples abound. In St. Regis Paper Co.

v. Pollution Control Board, 298 So.2d 217 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App.

1974), the court enjoined operation of a mill that colored affected

waters. In Wetzel v. Duda & Sons, 306 So.2d 533 (Fla.

Dist. Ct. App.), cert. denied, 316 So.2d 289 (Fla. 1975),

riparian property owners on Lake Apopka successfully sued

farmers for abrogating their duty to operate their farming operations

without injuring neighboring property by discharging noxious

substances into the lake. And in Bunvak v. Clyde Yancey and Sons

Dairy, Inc., 438 So.2d 891 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1983), cattle

 


81

farmers were awarded compensatory and punitive damages for

injuries caused by liquefied cow manure flowing onto their

property.

Florida's water quality statutes also proscribe as

nuisances activities that pollute state waters. Specifically,

under Florida law:

Any stormwater management system, dam,
impoundment, reservoir, appurtenant work, or
works which violates the laws of this state
or which violates the standards of the
governing board or the department shall be
declared a public nuisance.

Fla. Stat. Ann. § 373.433 (1988).

Under this Florida case and statutory law, the

defendants' intentional introduction of nutrient pollution that

causes the wholesale conversion from sawgrass marshes and wet

prairies to cattail-dominated marshes and other ecosystem changes

that precede cattail invasion is clearly a nuisance. Knowing

that the nutrient-laden water causes ecological damage,

defendants deliberately decided in the 1979 Interim Action Plan

to stop backpumping nutrient polluted water into Lake

Okeechobee. 73   Instead of cleaning the water, defendants annually

divert over fifty additional tons of phosphorus into the Refuge,

the other WCAs and ultimately the Park. 74   First Draft SWIM Plan,

 


82

Vol. 1, at 4 (Exhibit 5). The District reaffirmed this decision

in the 1988 Lake Okeechobee SWIM Plan. The SFWMD's intentional

diversion of nutrient-polluted water onto federal. property, which

to date has caused conversion of at least 26,000 acres of native

Everglades to cattail-dominated marsh and countless additional

acres of ecological damage that precedes cattail conversion,

constitutes a nuisance which must be abated.

Return to top of page

C.    Counts I and II - Defendants Fail to Fulfill Their
        State Law Duty to Require and obtain Permits

Counts I and II allege in part that the defendants

violate Florida law by failing to require of others, or

themselves apply for and obtain, permits adequately protecting

water quality in the Park and Refuge. The state law permitting

provisions plainly require the protection of water quality. The

defendants breach these permitting provisions by failing to

require permits for activities in the EAA that pollute the Park

and Refuge with nutrients and by failing to incorporate adequate

water quality-based restrictions in the permits they do issue.

The District also violates state law by not having obtained

necessary permits for its pumps and structures that discharge

into the Refuge and south toward the Park. Accordingly, the

United States is entitled to judgment on those parts of counts I

and II alleging the defendants' failure to exercise their

permitting authority adequately.

 


83

1.     Defendants Fail Adequately to Consider Everglades
        Environmental Impacts Before Issuing Permits For
        Use and Management of Waters

Chapter 373 establishes a consumptive use permitting

system to govern the allocation, use and management of water

resources. The statute required the governing board of each

water management district, by October 31, 1983, to implement a

consumptive us e permitting program, including appropriate

monitoring efforts. Fla. Stat. Ann. § 373.216 (1988). Under the

consumptive use provisions, SFWMD or DER "may require such

permits for consumptive use of water and may impose such

reasonable conditions as are necessary to assure that such use is

consistent with the overall objectives of the district or

department and is not harmful to the water resources of the

area." Fla. Stat. Ann. § 373.219(l) (1988) (emphasis added).

An applicant for a consumptive use of water must

establish that the proposed use of water "[w]ill not interfere

with any presently existing legal use of water . . . and is

consistent with the public interest." Fla. Stat. Ann. §

373.223(l) (1988). 75   Thus, consumptive use permits may impose

restrictions based on water quality impacts. See Zellwood

[upholding St. Johns Water Management District's denial of

 


84

consumptive use permit based on impact on water quality in

receiving waters] (Exhibit 71).

The State of Florida has long recognized the obligation

of its agencies, including the water management districts, to

protect water quality under authority of Chapter 373. In 1975,

the Florida Attorney General told the Central and Southern

Florida Flood Control District (SFWMD's predecessor):

As a general rule, your agency is required by
law to prevent harm to water resources within
the district. While no specific reference is
made in Ch. 373, F.S., to the district's
authority to control water quality, it is
implicit in the act that the district should
not, by permit, authorize unlawful
degradation of water quality.

Op. Atty. Gen. 075-16 (Jan. 29, 1975).

The Attorney General correctly reasoned that the

District has authority to issue consumptive use and surface water

management and storage permits only for activities that will not

be harmful to the water resources of the area, and that "it is

axiomatic that lowering water quality would be harmful to the

water resources of the district." Id. at 24. Thus, he

concluded, Nit is clear that the district's permitting procedures

must take into consideration water quality. . . . especially

. . . when considering the general policy of creation of the

water management district under the Florida water Resources Act

 


85

of 1972, and the fact that the statute is to be liberally

construed for effectuating the Act's purposes." Id. at 24. 76

Although Chapter 373 authorizes both DER and the water

management districts to issue consumptive use permits, DER

delegated to SFWMD its consumptive use permitting authority,

including the authority to regulate nonpoint source pollution,

such as agricultural wastewater, through consumptive use permits.

F.A.C. § 17-101.040(12)(1) (1990). The SFWMD Board "may impose

on any [consumptive use] permit . . . such reasonable conditions

as are necessary to assure that the permitted use or withdrawal

will be consistent with the overall objectives of the District

and will not be harmful to the water resources of the District

. . ." F.A.C. § 40E-2.381(l) (1990). SFWMD rules also require a

consumptive use permittee to mitigate to the satisfaction of the

District any adverse impact on existing legal uses caused by

withdrawals. When adverse impacts occur, or are imminent, [the

SFWMD] reserves the right to curtail withdrawal rates. Adverse

impacts include . . . change in water quality that causes

impairment or loss of use of a well or water body." F.A.C. §

40E-2.381(2)(d)(4) (1990).

Defendant SFWMD has issued numerous consumptive use

permits in the EAA. As evidenced by the continued nutrient-

 


86

induced loss of native Everglades habitat, the spread of cattails

in both Loxahatchee and WCA-2A, and the ecologically systemic

adverse nutrient-induced changes affecting countless thousands of

acres in the Everglades, adequate water quality considerations

are not incorporated in the decision whether and under what

conditions to issue a consumptive use permit. Moreover, these

facts demonstrate that the upstream EAA uses interfere with the

Park and the Refuge's legal uses of the water, also in

contravention of the consumptive use permitting requirements.

Thus, defendant SFWMD violates its statutory mandate by

continually issuing consumptive use permits without adequately

considering water quality impacts on the receiving waters.

2.     Defendants Fail to Consider Everglades
        Environmental Impacts Before Issuing EAA
        Stormwater and Surface Water Management and
        Storage Permits

Defendant SFWMD has authority to issue permits under

Fla. Stat. Ann. § 373.416 (1990) for stormwater and surface water

management and storage. This state program recognizes that the

operation, maintenance, alteration or construction of stormwater

management systems, dams, impoundments, and other surface water

management systems may be permitted by the state. The permits

may impose conditions designed to ensure that the facilities

"will not be harmful to the water resources of the district."

Fla. S tat. §§ 373.413(l) and 373.416(l). The state's regulations

recognize that the permits should require, among other things,

that the systems "will not cause adverse water quality and

quantity impacts upon receiving waters and adjacent lands" and

 


87

"will not cause adverse environmental impacts . . ."  40

F.A.C. § 40E-4.301(l). 77

As shown by the continued spread of cattails in both

the Refuge and WCA-2A, as well as the numerous other adverse

ecosystem changes which occur in the Refuge and the Park, water

quality considerations are not being adequately incorporated in

the decision whether and under what conditions to issue

stormwater and surface water management and storage permits in

the EAA. Indeed, the SFWMD admits that it imposes water quality

limitations - which to date have been unsuccessful in meeting

water quality standards in the Everglades - only on surface water

permits for new construction, leaving the massive number of

existing facilities unregulated with respect to water quality:

The District has applied its surface water
permitting process primarily to new
construction. Permits are generally required
for existing, unpermitted systems only when
changing land uses or specifically identified
water management problems dictate alterations
of the existing system. This approach of
applying the permit program primarily to new
development was taken to prevent the growth
of water resource management problems. It
takes advantage of the construction process
to implement the required design features.
Finally, it recognizes that, in many cases,
correcting existing problems will be a large
undertaking involving a scope of activities
much broader than the regulatory process.

 


88

SFWMD Report, Review of the Rules and Enforcement Programs of the

South Florida Water Management District Pertaining to the

Pollution of Surface Waters, at 3-4 (Feb. 12, 1988) [hereinafter

SFWMD Report, Review of the Rules and Enforcement Programs]

(Exhibit 77). That insistence on water quality conditions will

be complicated, far-reaching or controversial in no way excuses

the District from exercising its duty to impose them on EAA water

users.

Despite the District's longstanding authority to

require water quality conditions in surface water and stormwater

management and storage permits, this policy only recently

replaced a policy of incorporating no meaningful water quality

conditions on such permits. 78   Moreover, even the new policy

 


89

exposes the District's unwillingness to take the heat for an

aggressive regulatory approach that would force existing

facilities to internalize the costs of their pollution. Instead,

the District appears willing to let unique Everglades resources

pay the ecologically devastating price of the District's

inaction. 79

SFWMD's conscious failure properly to consider water

quality in its permitting decisions for stormwater and surface

water management and storage, and to enforce any such conditions

which have been incorporated into permits, contravenes the

explicit language and underlying intent of the regulations

governing such permits. The result of this regulatory failure

has been the continued degradation of water quality to the

detriment of federal property.

3.     The Defendants Fail To Require Adequately
        Protective Discharge Permits for EAA Discharges

Chapter 403, "Florida Air and Water Pollution Control

Act," passed in 1975, requires DER to "[e]stablish a permit

system whereby a permit may be required for the operation,

construction, or expansion of any installation that may be a

source of air or w ater pollution and provide for the issuance and

revocation of such permits ...." Fla. Stat. Ann. § 403.061(14)

 


90

(1986). Also under Chapter 403, DER may "[i]ssue such orders as

are necessary to effectuate the control of air and water

pollution and enforce the same by all appropriate administrative

and judicial proceedings." Fla. Stat. Ann . § 403.061(8) (1986).

The law further provides:

No stationary installation which will
reasonably be expected to be a source of air
or water pollution shall be operated,
maintained, constructed, expanded, or
modified without an appropriate and currently
valid permit issued by the department . . . .

Fla. Stat. § 403.987(l). The term "source" is defined in § 403-

031(9) as "any and all points of origin" of "contaminants." The

statute similarly prohibits persons from discharging without a

permit:

No person, without written authorization of
the department, shall discharge into waters
within the state any waste which, by itself
or in combination with the wastes of other
sources, reduces the quality of the receiving
waters below the classification established
for them.

Fla. Stat. § 403.088(1).

The private pumps in the fields of the EAA which

discharge into the SFWMD canals are installations that require

DER discharge permits. Indeed, in an administrative enforcement

case by DER against Deseret Ranches of Florida, Inc., DER

maintained that agricultural pumps require permits for operation.

State of Florida Department of Environmental Recrulations v.

Deseret Ranches of Florida, Case No. 78-2040, (Fla. D.E.R. Sept.

13, 1989) (Exhibit 73). The District itself concedes that

"[t]h ere is absolutely no question in our minds that we can

 


91

regulate the Everglades Agricultural Area." 80   Nonetheless, the

District admits that it "did not undertake an enforcement program

to require all the existing development [in the EAA] to seek

permits." 81   The defendants are liable for their consistent

failure to require discharge permits and to incorporate mandatory

water quality considerations in the permitting process. See

Florida Wildlife Federation v. Department of Environmental

Regulation, 390 So.2d 64 (Fla. 1980) [statute creates cause of

action to compel permitting].

4.     Defendants Fail to Require Permits for Current EAA
        Discharges So To Satisfy the State Antidegradation
        Water Quality Standard

DER and SFWMD are also required, by the state

antidegradation water quality standard, to evaluate existing EAA

sources that threaten the Everglades. They must refuse to issue

permits to current dischargers where substantive water quality

concerns cannot be satisfied or impose strict discharge limits

that will satisfy these water quality concerns, as well as take

enforcement action against currently unpermitted discharges which

violate the state water quality standards. These provisions, in

short, man date that DER and SFWMD may not simply continue the

 


92

status quo and implement only prospective regulation through

permits.

Florida's regulations explicitly require that permits

that are issued be consistent with the state's antidegradation

policy. F.A.C. § 17-242(l)(a). In particular, the

antidegradation policy is made applicable to "existing

discharges." F.A.C. § 17-3. 042(6). Thus, "[p]ollution which

causes or contributes to . . . continuation of existing

violations [of water quality standards] is harmful to the waters

of this State and shall not be allowed." F.A.C. § 17-3.042(5).

Furthermore, the DER is required to "refuse to permit the

discharge" for existing discharges which "reduce the quality of

receiving waters below the classification established for them or

violate any Department rule or standard . . . ." F.A.C. § 17-

3.042(6). Thus, the defendants' failure to regulate existing

discharges breaches their obligation to assure compliance with

the state's antidegradation standard.

5.     Defendants Fail to Require or Obtain Stormwater
        and Surface Water Management and Storage Permits
        for the Pumps that Discharge into the Refuge and
        South Toward the Park

Contrary to its statutory mandate, the District has not

procured adequate stormwater and surface water management and

storage permits from the DER for the District's large pumps which

transport water either directly onto or toward federal property.

As discussed above, the state regulatory program for stormwater

and surface water management and storage recognizes that the

operation, maintenance, alteration or construction of stormwater

 


93

management systems, dams, impoundments, and other surface water

management systems may be permitted by the state with conditions

designed to ensure that the facilities "will not be harmful to

the water resources of the districts." Fla. Stat. §§ 373.413( l)

and 373.416(l).

The pumps that discharge into the Refuge must have

stormwater and surface water management and storage permits which

will ensure that water quality is not degraded below the Class

III and OFW standards. 82   At present, DER does not require

permits that w ill necessarily ensure that discharges out of the

EAA will meet all applicable water quality standards in the

Refuge and the Park. Indeed, DER acknowledges that the

District's pumps discharge water in violation of water quality

standards:

All [five SFWMD structures which discharge
water from the EAA to the WCAs] appear to
have existing parameters which are not in
continuous compliance with all state water

 


94

quality standards, and two of these
structures (S-5A and S-6) discharge into
outstanding Florida Waters (Water
Conservation Area 1 - Loxahatchee National
Wildlife Refuge).

Attached Notes to Letter from R. L. Armstrong, DER, to T. K.

MacVicar, SFWMD (May 18, 1990) (Exhibit 55).

The state, in letters from the DER to the District and

the Corps in January 1990, has also conceded that pursuant to the

Stormwater Act, Chapter 89-279, Laws of Florida, a stormwater

management permit is required for the District's S-5A, S-6, S-7,

S-8 and S-150 structures which drain the EAA. Letter to J.

Wodraska from D. Twachtmann (Jan. 9, 1990) (Exhibit 76). DER

told the District that the permit application "should be designed

to comply with the provisions of both Chapters 373 and 403 [and]

to provide reasonable assurance that state water quality

standards will be met." Id. at 2. Moreover, DER has required

permits for the District's S-2, S-3, S-4 and other pumps that

discharge to Lake Okeechobee. See DER Permit No. RT 50-15769

(Dec. 10, 1979) (Exhibit 74). The District's S-5A and S-6 pumps

are indistinguishable from those pumps for permitting purposes.

DER's letter, and the District's response that it will

apply for a permit in conjunction with the SWIM plan, do not

ensure that the serious water quality violations in the Refuge

and Park will be remedied. An exchange of letters alone should

not convince the court that the defendants are now ready and

willing to take actions that they have delayed for decades.

 


94

Florida water quality standards are being violated in

the Refuge by nutrient-laden water that is pumped in from the

EAA. 83   DER's failure adequately to require permits for the vast

majority of the pumps in the EAA, as well as some of the largest,

most polluting pumps operated by SFWMD, allows nutrient pollution

to continue unabated in derogation of state law and to the

detriment of federal property.

Return to top of page

D.     Defendants Are in Violation of the License Agreement
        With the United States

In 1951, SFMWD's predecessor, the Central and Southern

Florida Flood Control District (CSF), entered into a "Cooperative

and License Agreement" with the United States, through the U.S.

Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS). License Agreement (Exhibit 1).

The genesis of the Agreement was the requirement of the Fish and

Wildlife Coordination Act of 1934, as amended, 16 U.S.C. §§ 661-

668ss (1985), that fish and wildlife preservation be coordinated

with the construction of flood control projects, 84  and the 1950

General Plan for the Use of Lands for Wildlife Conservation and

Management of Water Conservation Area No. 1, Central and Southern

Florida Flood Control District, between the Director of the

 


96

Florida Fish and Game Commission and the Secretary of the

Interior (Exhibit 79). The General Plan recognized that the CSF

had acquired certain lands for flood control and was agreeable to

having some of those lands used for wildlife conservation

purposes. Id. The General Plan further recognized that the

Secretary of the Interior had found that WCA 1 (the Refuge) had

particular value in carrying out the migratory bird management

program. Id. The parties to the Plan therefore agreed that FWS

would have use of WCA 1 as embodied in the License Agreement.

1.     The License Agreement Provides for Both Wildlife
        and Flood Control Uses

The License Agreement granted a 50-year license,

automatically renewable for three fifteen year terms, for the use

of lands owned by CSF in Water Conservation Area 1, to the FWS.

The Agreement contemplates that flood control objectives would be

achieved while allowing for maximum possible wildlife utilization

of the Refuge lands.

Section Two of the License Agreement describes the

purposes for which FWS was to utilize the Refuge:

The Service shall use said property as a
Wildlife Management Area, to promote the
conservation of wildlife, fish, and game, and
for other purposes embodying the principles
and objectives of planned multiple land use.

License Agreement, at 2 (Exhibit 1). While the Agreement states

that "flood control and other allied purposes" are the primary

purposes of the proposed multiple use, Section 18 mandates that

these purposes be carried out in a manner consistent with the

purposes described in section Two, such as wildlife use and

 


97

protection, development of breeding and feeding grounds for fish

and wildlife, recreational opportunities for the public and

associated endeavors:

It is understood and agreed that in the
operation and management of the Conservation
area lands for the primary purpose of flood
control and other allied purposes, the lands
and waters will be managed and operated in
the manner most consistent with Section 2
hereof, so far as it is not inconsistent with
the said primary purpose.

License Agreement, at 6 (Exhibit 1).

Thus, under the License Agreement, flood control in the

Refuge is to be conducted so as to interfere as little as

possible with wildlife preservation. Flood control and wildlife

preservation can be highly complementary in this context. Native

Everglades species have historically experienced periods of high

and low water and have adapted to seasonal changes in hydroperiod

which are not dissimilar to those that are caused by utilizing

the Refuge for flood control. See Maffei Decl., at ¶ 6

(Attachment B). The License Agreement clearly contemplates that

flood control can be achieved and wildlife preservation

benefitted at the same time. Although wildlife objectives may

have to bow to flood control needs in certain instances, the

License Agreement provides that where flood control management

needs may be achieved by any of several methods, those "most

consistent with wildlife preservation must be pursued. Under

the License Agreement, then, wildlife preservation is clearly

intended to be more than an incidental benefit of utilizing

the area for flood control.

 


98

2.     SFWMD Violates Section Two of the Agreement by
        Polluting Wildlife Habitat

The water regulation schedule set by the Corps of

Engineers for the Refuge implemented the flood control and water

storage purposes of the CSF Project. That schedule is roughly

patterned after the normal seasonal wet and dry cycle of the

Everglades, based on rainfall patterns. Nevertheless, under the

1979 IAP, SFWMD began diverting additional waters polluted with

nutrients into Loxahatchee. 85   The delivery of this pollution

serves neither a flood control nor any "allied purpose" -- the

existence of this nutrient loading in the water provides no flood

protection in times of rain and does nothing to assist in water

storage in times of drought. Accordingly, the pollution of EAA

discharges may not receive any priority under the multi-use

arrangement specified by the License Agreement. Furthermore, it

is completely inconsistent with the wildlife purposes of Section

Two of that Agreement.

It has been shown that nutrient enrichment of these

areas causes imbalances in the natural flora of the Refuge,

ultimately culminating in the development of dense cattail

stands. SFWMD Board Meeting Overheads, at 37 (Exhibit 46);

Maffei Decl., at ¶ 19 (Attachment B). Over 6,000 acres of the

land and waters of Loxahatchee have already converted to

cattails, totally losing their utility for wildlife preservation

 


99

and protection. Characteristic Everglades wildlife avoid these

cattail areas and do not use them for any purpose. SFWMD Board

Meeting Overheads, at 37 (Exhibit 46); See Maffei Decl., at ¶ ¶

21-23 (Attachment B). An additional 24,000 acres -- roughly one-

sixth of the entire Refuge -- have suffered nutrient pollution.

SFWMD Board Meeting Overheads, at 37 (Exhibit 46); Maffei Decl.,

at  ¶ ¶ 18, 20, 24 (Attachment B). It is inevitable that, absent

remedial action, more and more acreage will suffer the adverse

ecological ramifications of nutrient pollution and ultimately

become infested with cattail. SFWMD Board Meeting Overheads, at

38 (Exhibit 46).

The central purpose for the creation of wildlife

refuges such as Loxahatchee is the protection and provision of

habitat suitable for wildlife. without such habitat, numerous

endangered and other species cannot survive. At a time when all

effort should be made to protect the rapidly diminishing

available wading bird habitat in South Florida, cattail

encroachment and other adverse ecosystem impacts continue.

This loss of significant portions of Refuge wildlife

habitat has unnecessarily and without sufficient connection to

any legitimate flood control purpose abrogated and will continue

to abrogate the wildlife purpose of the Refuge. See Maffei

Decl ., at  ¶ ¶ 24 (Attachment B). Under the License Agreement

(Exhibit 1), SFWMD agreed that it would operate its flood control

program within Water Conservation Area No. 1 (now Loxahatchee)

for all the wildlife purposes set forth in Section Two, "in the

 


100

manner most consistent with Section 2." The License Agreement

does not contemplate use of the Refuge as a nutrient dumping

ground, and that use has no priority at all which would permit

SFWMD lawfully to harm or degrade the wildlife use. SFWMD may

not subject the wildlife use, even though it is secondary, to

this significant abrogation if it has alternatives to achieving

flood control. The SFWMD has never demonstrated that it can

achieve flood control objectives only by delivering polluted

waters to Loxahatchee. Accordingly, SFWMD is in breach of the

License Agreement.

E.     The District Has violated the memorandum of Agreement

In 1979, and subsequently in 1984, the District entered

into a MOA (Exhibit 2) with the United States, through the Corps

and NPS, to protect the purity of water entering the Park. Under

the MOA, water quality criteria for 27 parameters as set forth in

Appendix A to the MOA applied to all surface waters delivered to

the Park. In addition the MOA states:

Federal, State, and local water quality criteria which
are more stringent than those appended criteria shall
continue to apply.

SFWMD's deliveries of nutrient-laden water to the Park are in

violation of the state water quality standards incorporated into

the MOA.

The defendants' violation of state water quality

standards applicable to the Park and Refuge is demonstrated

above. The MOA incorporates and relies on those standards when

applicable. Nutrient pollution has invaded the Park and Refuge,

 


101

causing systemic vegetative changes and wholesale destruction of

vast areas of marsh. SFWMD's continued delivery of water in

violation of state water quality standards is, by inclusion, also

a violation of the MOA.

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V.     CONCLUSION

For the foregoing reasons, the United States is

entitled to partial summary judgment declaring the defendants

liable under all counts of the Second Amended Complaint. By

granting the United States' motion, the court will significantly

accelerate the forging of a remedy that will provide the Park and

the Refuge with the protection they urgently require and to which

the law entitles them.

 

Respectfully submitted,

 

___________________
RICHARD B. STEWART
Assistant Attorney General
Environment and Natural Resources
Division

 

____________________
DEXTER W. LEHTINEN
United States Attorney
Southern District of Florida

 

____________________
SUZAN HILL PONZOLI
(Fla. Bar No. 0272450)
RICHARD W. HARRISON
B.J. THRONE-CONTE
MAUREEN DONLAN
Assistant United States Attorneys
Southern District of Florida
155 South Miami Avenue

 


102

 

Miami, Florida 33130
(305) 536-5477

 

___________________
GEOFFREY A. GARVER
BEVERLY SHERMAN NASH
U.S. Department of Justice
Environment and Natural Resources
Division
General Litigation Section
P.O. Box 663
Washington, D.C. 20044-0663
(202) 272-4692

Attorneys for Plaintiff

 

JEREMY D. NEWMAN
MARY LOU FOLWER
Paralegals
Environment and Natural Resources
Division
General Litigation section

 


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CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE

I hereby certify that a true and correct copy of the

foregoing Memorandum in Support of the Motion of the United

States For Partial Summary Judgement on Liability was mailed,

postage prepaid, this 19    day of November 1990, to the following

counsel of record:

 

James A. Rogers
Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher
   & Flom
1440 New York Avenue, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20005

 

Stanley J. Niego
South Florida Water Management District
Box 24680
3301 Gun Club Road
West Palm Beach, Florida 33416

 

Daniel H. Thompson
General Counsel
David Crowley
Assistant General Counsel
State of Florida Department of  Envirormental Regulation
2600 Blair Stone Road
Tallahassee, Florida 32399


Terry S. Nelson
66 West Flagler Street
Second Floor
Miami, Florida 33130

Terrell K. Arline
1380 Prosperity Farms Road
Suite 204
Palm Beach Gardens, Florida 33410

 

Deborah H. Wagner
Assistant General Counsel
Executive Office of the Governor
The Capitol
Tallahassee, Florida 32399

 

James T.B. Tripp
Environmental Defense Fund
257 Park Avenue South
New York, New York 10010


Robert Dreher
Sierra Club Legal Defense Fund
1531 P Street, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20005

 

 

Martin Suuberg
Office of the Solicitor
U.S. Department of the Interior
l8th & C Streets, N.W.
Room 6560
Washington, D.C. 20240

 

William E. Guy, Jr.
Box 3386
55 East Ocean Blvd.
Stuart, Florida 34995

 

David J. White
Proenza, White & Huck
2900 S.W. 28th Terrace
Miami, Florida 33133

 

William L. Earl, Esquire
Peeples, Earl & Blank, P.A.
One Biscayne Tower, Suite 3636
Two South Biscayne Blvd.
Miami, Florida 33131

 

David White
National Wildlife Federation
1718 Peachtree Street, N.W.
Suite 592
Atlanta, Georgia 30304

 

Thomas W. Reese
123 Eighth Street, North
St. Petersburg, Florida 33701

 

 

____________________________
GEOFFREY A. GARVER


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FOOTNOTES:

1     The Second Amended Complaint filed on February 8, 1990, raises five counts: (1) defendants have failed and continue to fail to enforce their statutory obligations under Florida water quality statutes, (2) defendants have failed and continue to fail t o enforce their statutory obligations to require water quality permits, (3) the intentional diversion of polluted water onto federal property constitutes a nuisance under state law, (4) defendants violate a lease agreement between the United States and the predecessor to the District by impairing the use of Loxahatchee as a wildlife refuge, and (5) defendants have violated and continue to violate water quality standards incorporated into a Memorandum of Agreement between the National Park Service, the U.S. Corps of Engineers and the SFWMD.
        The original Complaint was filed on October 11, 1988, and an Amended Complaint was filed on December 23, 1988

2     A glossary of technical terms is attached hereto.

3     Dr. Ronald Jones states in his declaration:

The only ways in which [total phosphorus] TP effects can be eliminated from the peat are by 1) the extremely slow accumulation of new peat containing lower levels of phosphorus, which buries the phosphorus-enriched peat; 2) destruction of the peat by fire, which removes the phosphorus from the peat, but in such a way that the phosphorus is transported downstream; or 3) slow release and transport downstream of phosphorus that would occur if the soils were exposed continuously and for extremely long periods of time to pristine water flow. Based on my knowledge and understanding of phosphorus cycling in Everglades peat soils, it is my opinion that the effects of elevated TP in Everglades soils have the potential to remain for hundreds of years because of the limited ability of the system to rid itself of phosphorus.

        Declaration of Dr. Ronald Jones, at ¶ 15 (Sept. 18, 1990) [hereinafter Jones Decl.] (Attachment A). Thus, for all practical purposes, the loading of peat with phosphorus is a permanent, irreversible alteration of the ecosystem.

4     Florida law unambiguously provides that nutrients can be pollutants:

Man-induced nutrient enrichment (total nitrogen or total phosphorus) shall be considered degradation in relation to the provisions of Rules 17-3.041 and 17-4.242, F.A.C.

F.A.C § 17-3.061(3)(j) (1990).

5     Cattails are dominating an increasing area within the WCAs as well. The District has studied for years the expansion of cattails in WCA-2A, and has recently documented an alarmingly large new area of cattail expansion farther south in WCA-3A and WCA -3B, much closer to the northern border of the Park. See Map of the Water Conservation Areas [hereinafter WCAs Map] (Exhibit 2a ) (Shaded areas on map indicate cattail dominated marsh).

6     The State recognizes the urgency of the problems facing the Everglades, as evidenced in a 1987 letter from the State Attorney General to the Governor:

The Everglades and Lake Okeechobee are state and national treasures deserving the highest protection. The magnitude and urgency of the threat to these resources are such that the State needs to examine what else can be done to forestall any further degradation of these invaluable resources. . . . We can not afford to wait. Any immediate action the state can take to correct past mistakes should be vigorously pursued.

Letter from R. Butterworth, Attorney General, to B. Martinez, Governor of Florida (Aug. 24, 1988) (Exhibit 3). Similarly, acknowledging that N[t]he Everglades are unique" and that nutrient-related problems in the Everglades "are continuing and the impacted areas are expanding," the District "Staff considers [water quality and ecological problems of the Everglades] to be urgent and requiring prompt decisions regarding a solution course." Draft Memorandum from P. Rhoads, Director Resource Planning, to J. Garner, Chairman, Governing Board, at 4 (July 24, 1989) (Exhibit 4).

7     The District issued the first draft in August and November of 1989. Subsequent drafts were distributed to the public on April 11, 1990, August 9, 1990, September 12, 1990, and September 28, 1990. The Final Draft SWIM Plan consists of various volumes distributed on August 9, 1990, September 12, 1990, and September 28, 1990. The United States submitted comments to the District on the first two drafts. The comments of the United States are attached as Exhibits 12 and 13.

8     For the most part, the United States relies on factual admissions that the defendants have made in numerous documents and public presentations. Even accepting the facts as the defendants admit them, the defendants' liability is clear. Although the United States does not dispute these facts for purposes of this motion, the United States reserves the right to adduce additional evidence with respect to the defendants' factual admissions in any proceedings subsequent to this motion.

9     "Saw grass reaches up both sides of [Lake Okeechobee] in great enclosing arms, so that it is correct to say that the Everglades are there also. But south, southeast and southwest, where the lake water slopped and seeped and ran over and under the rock and soil, the greatest mass of the saw grass begins. It stretches as it always has stretched, in one thick enormous curving river of grass, to the very end. This is the Everglades." M. Douglas, The Everglades: River of Grass, at 5 (1974).

10     "Biosphere reserves are protected areas of representative terrestrial and coastal environments which have been internationally recognized under the United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization [UNESCO] Man and Biosphere [MAB] Programme for their value in conservation and in providing the scientific knowledge, skills and human values to support sustainable development." UNESCO, A Practical Guide to Man and the Biosphere, Appendix A at 1 (1987) (Exhibit 15). The Task Force on Criteria and Guidelines for Choice and Establishment recognized that successful stewardship of biosphere reserves depends on adequate control of the use of land and water in surrounding areas.

11     In nominating Everglades National Park to the World Heritage List, the United States noted that "Everglades National Park is a superlative example of viable biological processes and whose examples of rare and endangered species are of universal interest and significance." United States of America Nomination of the Everglades National Park for the UNESCO World Heritage List, at 16 (1979) (Exhibit 16).

12      Placement on the Ramsar list is recognition of the global importance of the wetland site, including recognition that "wetlands constitute a resource of great economic, cultural, scientific and recreational value, the loss of which would be irreparable." Convention of Wetlands of International Importance Especially as Waterfowl Habitat, at 1 (1971) (Exhibit 17). Signatory nations, including the United States, agree to "formulate and implement their planning so as to promote the conservation of the wetlands included in the List, and as far as possible the wise use of wetlands on their territory." Id. at Art. 3, ¶ 1.

13      The purpose of the National Parks "is to conserve the scenery and the natural and historic objects and the wild life therein and to provide for the enjoyment of the same in such manner and by such means as will leave them unimpaired for the enjoyment of future generations." 16 U.S.C. § 1 (1988).

14     The Park is currently proposed for designation as one of the first two Outstanding National Resource Waters (ONRW) in Florida. Both the OFW and potential ONRW designations are intended to provide stringent protection against degradation of the Park 's water quality below the pristine water quality of the ambient marsh in the Park. See F.A.C. §§ 17-3.041, 17-4.242 (1990). The biological health of the ecosystems in the Park and Refuge is critically dependent on maintenance of this pristine water quality.

15      244 of the 253 bird species listed on the 1984 Refuge bird list are defined as Migratory in 50 C.F.R. ch. 1 § 10.13 (1986). In 1988, between 35,000 and 40,000 wading birds were fledged in Refuge nests. Maffei Decl., at ¶ 8 (Attachment B).

16      The series of diked, shallow-water impoundments which comprise the WCAs were constructed in the 1950's, and have been managed since for multiple purposes of stormwater storage (flood control), water supply, recreation, and wetland preservation. Because water flowing into the Park comes from the EAA, the WCAs also serve as important filters and suppliers of water to the Park. Therefore, the maintenance of water quality within the WCAs is crucial to the ecology of one of the nation's most unique national parks. SFWMD Technical Memorandum: Water Quality Analysis in the Water Conservation Areas 1978 and 1979, at 4 (May 1981) [hereinafter SFWMD Technical Memorandum] (Exhibit 24).

17      Drainage and irrigation of the EAA is achieved through six primary canals (Hillsboro, North New River, Miami, West Palm Beach, Cross and Bolles Canals) and an extensive network of secondary canals. See Map (Exhibit 21). In addition, seven major pump stations operated by the SFWMD (S-2, S-3, S-4, S-5A, S-6, S-7 and S-8) serve the irrigation and drainage systems in the EAA. First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. III, B-55 (Exhibit 8). The EAA is drained by pump stations S-5A, S-6, S-7 and S-8, which discharge into the WCAs. Id. at B-60. Two of those pump stations, S-5A and S-6, discharge directly into the Refuge. SFWMD Technical Memorandum (Exhibit 24).

18      Soil subsidence occurs as a result of the high biological activity of soil microorganisms, such as fungi and aerobic bacteria, which oxidize the soil and mineralize the organically-bound nutrients contained in them when the soil is exposed to air. First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. III, at B-65 (Exhibit 8). Before the EAA was drained for agricultural use, the long hydroperiod and the natural accretion of new peat in the marsh prevented soil subsidence. Id. at B-63. The need to maintain water tables below the ground surface during crop cultivation in the EAA today eliminates peat accretion and, combined with routine tilling, greatly increases the opportunity for the soil to dry and oxidize.

19      The District's SWIM Plan notes that it is estimated that only 13 percent of the EAA will have soils thicker than 36 inches by the year 2000. First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. III, at B-65 (Exhibit 8).

20     Elevated nitrogen concentrations are derived primarily from the biological oxidation and mineralization of organic (peat) EAA suck soils, while relatively high phosphorus concentrations result from a combination of soil subsidence and fertilizer use within the EAA. First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. III, at B-122 (Exhibit 8); SFWMD Technical Memorandum, at 18-19 (Exhibit 24).

21      Surface water drainage from the EAA represents 47 percent (182 metric tons, annual average) of all phosphorus inflows to the Everglades system, while direct rainfall accounts for 38 percent (143 metric tons per year). First Draft SWIM Plan Vol. II, at 63 (Exhibit 6). Whereas background total phosphorus concentrations at interior Everglades marsh sites average 0.012 mg/l or less, the average total phosphorus concentration of EAA drainage waters is 0.126 mg/l. First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. III, at B-122 (Exhibit 8). The L-8, West Palm Beach, Hillsboro, North New River and Miami Canals which run through the EAA contain generally poor water quality, with extremely high nutrient and low dissolved oxygen concentrations as they pass through the EAA. Second Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. II, at 39 (Exhibit 6). South of the EAA, the water quality improves in some of the canals, but remains poor in the Miami Canal because of agricultural drainage.

22     The memorandum states:

While urbanization has and will remove some agricultural lands from production, the total water required for agricultural irrigation within the District will in fact increase.
This is because crops that are irrigated intensively are replacing pasture which is
rarely irrigated. Citrus, sugarcane, rice, nursery crops, and turf are all crops which
require intensive irrigation and are all showing growth within the District.

Memorandum from D. Gilpin-Hudson to B. Adams (Exhibit 33).

23      Water is managed in the WCAs so as to allow the orderly release of excess water to the coast and Everglades National Park during wet conditions and impoundment of water for use during the dry season. SFWMD Technical Memorandum, at 2 (Exhibit 24). while their water retention abilities are used to provide a fresh water supply to meet the agricultural, industrial, and municipal demands of south Florida, the WCAs are also managed for flood protection, groundwater recharge, recreation, and wildlife preservation. SFWMD Technical Publication 83-4, Decomposition, Nutrient Uptake and Microbial Colonization of Sawgrass and Cattail Leaves in Water Conservation Area 2A, at 1 (1983) 
(Exhibit 34).

24      According to the District, rainfall contributes 66% of the total volume of water entering the WCAs, but only 39% of the total phosphorus load. First Draft SWIM plan, Vol. III, at B-133 (Exhibit 8). Most of the total phosphorus load (about 60%), but only 33% of the total water volume, derives from the combined total of all the surface water sources. Id. This means that discharges from the District's pump stations contain much higher concentrations of phosphorus, than does rainfall. Id.

25      According to a SFWMD study, the Refuge had the highest average nitrogen, phosphorus, color, and turbidity concentrations of the WCAs. SFWMD Study, Water Quality and Nutrient Loading Analysis of the Water Conservation Areas 1978-1983, at 17 (1984) (Exhibit 35) [hereinafter SFWMD Study]. A positive relationship existed between the interior WCA nutrient water quality and the inflow concentration. Id. The Refuge received the highest inflow total nitrogen and total phosphorus concentrations and had the highest average total nitrogen and total phosphorus interior concentrations. Id. WCA-2A which receives water from the Refuge, received the second highest inflow concentrations and subsequently had the second highest average interior concentrations. Id. Finally, WCA-3A received the lowest inflow concentration and had the lowest interior total nitrogen and total phosphorus concentrations.

26      The Refuge receives water directly from the EAA, whereas the Park generally receives a mixture of canal and overland flow. As direct discharges, Refuge inflows contain much higher nutrient levels than do Park inflows.

27     In the 1989 SWIM Plan for Lake Okeechobee, the District stated:

The IAP unfortunately has several major drawbacks. As a natural biological filter,
the 1,500 sq. mi. Everglades Water Conservation Areas presently assimilates
[sic] nutrients more efficiently than the lake, but it [sic] too, has shown recent
signs of degradation . . . . Excessive nutrient loading in combination with
increased water depths or retention times has altered native plant vegetation changed the species composition of marsh algae, lowered dissolved oxygen levels, and reduced the natural nutrient retention capacity of the ecosystem. . . . The IAP has in effect,
shifted the EAA's S-2 and S-3 basin water quality problems from Lake Okeechobee south to the Water Conservation Areas.

SFWMD, Interim SWIM Plan for Lake Okeechobee, at 88 (Feb. 9, 1989) (emphasis added) (Exhibit 37).

28     Because the IAP has caused a substantial increase in phosphorus loadings to the WCAs, the District staff recommended to the Governing Board that these impacts be mitigated as soon as possible. Second Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. II, at 7 (Exhibit 10). The way to mitigate the impacts of the IAP is to clean the water before it enters the WCAs or the lake. Both Lake Okeechobee and the WCAs are entitled to water that meets the water quality standards applicable to them.

29      The Refuge is the only WCA completely encircled by canals. First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. III, at B-78 (Exhibit 8).

30      According to the District, rainfall represents 54% of the Refuge water budget, while 46% of the water budget is agricultural drainage. Of this agricultural drainage, S-5A accounts for 65% (30% of the total), S-6 accounts for 33% (15% of the total) and small additional pumps account for 2% (1% of the total). First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. III, at B-78 (Exhibit 8).

31      The total average annual phosphorus load to the Refuge is 138 metric tons, of which 101 metric tons (73%) is EAA drainage derived from the S-6 and S-5A pump stations. First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. II at B-63 (Exhibit 6). This total phosphorus load is comprised of 73 metric tons from S-5A and 28 metric tons from S-6. Id. By contrast, rainfall contributes only about 25% of the total phosphorus load. First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. III at B-133. (Exhibit 8). Maximum phosphorus loading to the Refuge occurred during 1982-1984 following the 1981 drought. First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. II, at 64 (Exhibit 6). These higher phosphorus loading rates were also affected by the IAP. Id. Phosphorus loading to the Refuge more than doubled during this period with a maximum annual phosphorus loading value of 213 metric tons.

32      Indeed, one District scientist stated in a December 1987 internal memorandum that "average annual nutrient concentrations greater than 0.02 mg/1 as total phosphorus (or greater than 0.01 mg/1 for ortho-phosphorus) are reasonable critical threshold concentrations which alter periphyton growth rates and algal species composition within the Everglades marsh." Memorandum from D. Swift, Research Environmentalist, to W. Dineen, Director Environmental Sciences, (Dec. 28, 1987) (Exhibit 38).

33     In August 1986, the Director of the Environmental Sciences Division of the District explained to the Executive Office of the District that

the present method of introducing agriculturally enriched water to the Water
Conservation Areas (including the interim action plan) is altering the macrophytic
vegetation from a stable, nutrient retaining sawgrass community to an unstable nutrient-
recycling community; changing a diverse algae and periphyton food web to a simplistic
oxygen consuming blue-green complex of low nutritive value (resulting in anaerobic
conditions which have reduced invertebrate and small fish diversity from 54 to 13
species in some localities) over an increasing area of the Everglades Water
Conservation Areas.

Memorandum from J. W. Dineen, Director Environmental Sciences Division, to P. Bidol, Executive Program Director (August 28, 1986) [hereinafter the Impact of Agricultural Runoff] (Exhibit 39). DER staff have also acknowledged that "[T]he Everglades habitat of the water conservation areas and Everglades National Park are being significantly degraded by discharges from agricultural operations in the EAA." Interoffice Memorandum from B. Hinkley to P. McVety, at 4 (Feb. 17, 1987) (Exhibit 40). The Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission, a sister agency to defendants DER and the District, similarly has observed that "[n]utrient laden water has already modified the vegetation in CA1, CA2, and CA3; tens of thousands of acres of cattails now occur where native Everglades vegetation previously existed." Letter from J. Ault, Biological Scientist Supervisor, and J. Fury, Biological Scientist, to J. Branscome (Nov. 18, 1988) (Exhibit 41).

34      Indeed the District has stated that the high levels of phosphorus in the EAA discharges which the District and DER allow to flow south into the Park and Refuge constitute the most immediate water quality concern facing the Everglades system. First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. II, at 29 (Exhibit 6).

35      Research performed fifteen years ago by SFWMD staff scientists establishes that "ag-runoff may disturb the natural equilibrium between inorganic nutrition and plant success inherent in the Everglades ecosystem, and by so doing, favor the development of plant species unrepresentative of the Everglades." The Impact of Agricultural Runoff, at 1 (Exhibit 42).

36      The District admits that cattails are only a symptom of the problem. In a 1989 memorandum, the Director of Resource Planning at the District stated:

The water discharged from the EAA has adversely impacted other components of the
ecosystem such as periphyton, benthic invertebrates, dissolved oxygen, etc. . . .
The replacement of native marsh species by a dense, near-monoculture of cattails is only one of the effects occurring in the Everglades marsh adjacent to points of
discharge from the EAA. LOTAC 2 categorized the ecological changes as follows: 1)
Native marsh species are replaced by a dense monoculture of cattails; 2) Dissolved oxygen is lowered and the qualities of the bottom sediments are changed; 3) The natural periphyton that are the base of the marsh food web are replaced with less desirable species that do not serve the same purpose; 4) Macroinvertebrate species diversity is reduced;[and] 5) The altered marsh provides diminished value for most native species of fish, birds and wildlife.

Draft Memorandum from P. B. Rhoads, Director Resource Planning, (Aug. 23, 1989) (Exhibit 43). See also Draft Memorandum from P. Rhoads to J. Garner, Chairman, Governing Board at 2 (July 24, 1989) (Exhibit 4).

37      According to a District study, the soil incorporates phosphorus more readily than living plants and leaf litter. In the study, radioactively labelled phosphorus was introduced into enclosures within nutrient-enriched and background stands of cattail and sawgrass. After ten days, over half (54-66%) of the labelled phosphorus was incorporated into marsh sediments; 30% was assimilated by leaf litter at the enriched site, while only 12-15% was taken up by leaf litter at the background site. Living plant tissue incorporated only 2-4% of the introduced phosphorus. First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. III, at B-113, B-114 (Exhibit 8).

38     See note 3 above.

39      All living organisms possess AP, which enables organisms to utilize organic phosphorus by promoting the remineralization of organic forms of phosphorus to a biologically usable form of inorganic phosphate. Unlike other organisms, bacteria and fungi excrete AP outside of their cells. Thus, the reliance of bacteria and fungi on AP can be monitored by measuring AP that they have excreted. Jones Decl., at ¶ 6 (Attachment A).

40      Phosphorus concentrations in the marsh are a major factor affecting periphyton growth rates. SFWMD Technical Publication 81-5, at x (Exhibit 44).

41      Due to their sensitivity as water quality indicators, biologists have used these organisms as a monitoring tool for the assessment of water quality and environmental change in aquatic environments. SFWMD Technical Publication 81-5, at ix-x (Exhibit 44).

42      Mid-day surface water dissolved oxygen is frequently not detectable in nutrient-enriched areas of the WCAs, while it is high at background locations. SFWMD Board Meeting Overheads, at 32 (Exhibit 46). Increased nutrient supply and near zero oxygen conditions change the microscopic communities that decompose sawgrass and cattail. Id. at 33. These decomposers represent an important Everglades food chain base in Everglades aquatic systems.  Id.

43      According to a SFWMD scientist:

All Everglades marsh areas which have experienced anthropogenic [man-induced]
phosphorus penetration have become nearly monospecific cattail stands or are currently being invaded by cattail. Major zones of cattail expansion as of January 1989 include approximately [5,000 acres] in Water Conservation Area I and approximately [20,000 acres] in Water Conservation Area 2A. Widely scattered cattail at interior Everglades sites appear to be related to its success as an early colonizer of disturbed sites.  Cattail's role appears to change from an early colonizer to a long-term dominant in nutrient-enriched marshes, as evidenced by the unidirectional spread and eventual
formation of dense monotypic stands near phosphorus inflows.

S. Davis, Abstracts From Everglades Symposium: Phosphorus Inputs and Vegetation Sensitivity in an Oligotrophic Everglades Ecosystem, at 1 (Oct. 1989) [hereinafter Everglades Symposium] (Exhibit 48).

44      One SFWMD scientist has stated:

Accompanying the shift from sawgrass to cattail at phosphorus-enriched sites are
depressed dissolved oxygen concentrations, a reduction in facultative populations of
detritus microflora, a reduction in macroinvertebrate species numbers, near elimination of gastropods, elimination of isopods, more than doubling in numbers of annelid worms, and a change in texture of organic sediments toward a flocculent, relatively fine texture.

S. Davis, Everglades Symposium, at 2 (Exhibit 48).

45      The District admits: "Nutrient-enriched runoff encourages the growth of cattails which can rob the water of oxygen when they die and block sunlight to small organisms. This disrupts the food chain, leaving cattail-infested areas undesirable habitat for wildlife." South Florida Water Management District Action Plan to Protect Lake Okeechobee and the Everglades, at 1 (Aug. 30, 1988) (Exhibit 49).

46     In discussing the environmental impacts of the IAP, F. Davis of the SFWMD states:

[T]he increased discharges of poor quality water to the Water Conservation Areas 
increases the environmental stress on these systems. Both the quality and quantity of
water act to stimulate a reduction in species diversity and a shift toward hard water,
pollution tolerant periphyton. The specific impacts of these changes are not fully
understood, but it is generally concided [sic] that they are detrimental.

F. Davis, Draft Evaluation, Option: IAP, at 2 (Exhibit 51).

47      Water quality and periphyton biomonitoring studies conducted by the District staff in the northeast section of WCA-2A during 1980-82 showed nutrients penetrating the marsh deeper than reported in a similar 1978-79 survey. SFWMD Technical Publication 87-2, at vi (Exhibit 45).

48     A DER Interoffice Memorandum, dated September 12, 1989, notes in commenting on the District's draft Everglades SWIM Plan: "While recognizing that the interior of the marsh in WCA-1 contains excellent water quality and should be protected, other areas have undergone environmental degradation." Interoffice Memorandum from H. Zebuth to P. Mathews, at 1 (Sept. 12, 1989) (Exhibit 52).

49     In a December 1985 memorandum, the director of the Major Programs Division of the District acknowledged that "[t]he S-5A and S-6 discharges . . . have high concentrations of phosphorus and nitrogen, which are having impacts in both the Refuge and Conservation Area 2-A." Memorandum from J. Hall, Director, Major Programs Division, to A. Hall, F. Davis, T. Federico, W. Dineen, at 4 (Dec. 31, 1985) (Exhibit 53). The memorandum notes that the District had already documented the impacts of agricultural runoff on periphyton in the Refuge. Id. at 3-4.

50      For example, the proliferation of cattails downstream from EAA inflow structures in the Refuge provides relatively poor fish habitat for Everglades sport fish, as dense vegetation and leaf litter accumulation reduces oxygen in the water column which is detrimental to the survival of most native sport fish species. First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. III, at B-102 (Exhibit 8).

51     In 1987, defendant DER examined biological data and determined that water quality standards were being violated in the WCAs. First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. III, at B-123 thru B-125 (Exhibit 8).

52      Hester-Dendy sampler data also indicated imbalances in the benthic fauna from nutrient enrichment as follows: (1) an 83% decrease in gastropods in the Refuge and WCA-2 and (2) a 65% decrease and total elimination of ephemaropterans at nutrient-enriched sites in the Refuge and WCA-2. First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. III, at B-98 (Exhibit 8).

53     See Section III.D.l.b. above.

54      The State of Florida admits that the Park continues to be imperiled by alterations to natural waterflow, encroachment by development, and pollution and that "these multiple threats have resulted in diminished biological diversity, transformation of wetlands into upland ecosystems, drastic declines in wading bird populations, and destruction of important fisheries." State of Florida, Resolution of Governor and Cabinet (Feb. 23, 1988) (Exhibit 56).

55     In its review of the SFWMD's recent application for stormwater permits for the S-5A, S-6, S-7, S-8 and S-150 pump stations which discharge water from the EAA to the WCAs, DER noted: 

SFWMD data indicate that [marsh nutrient] uptake efficiency appears to decrease with
time. . . . Since the area of impact to Everglades macrovegetation has reportedly increased and the WCAs with the highest loading have decreased retention efficiencies , it appears that areal uptake efficiency decreases with time and that
uptake for a given area may not be sustainable on a long-term basis.

Attached Notes to Letter from R. L. Armstrong, DER, to T. K. MacVicar, SFWMD (May 18, 1990) (Exhibit 55).

56     A senior scientist at the District recently confirmed that analysis of water quality data in WCA-2A from 1976 to 1988 shows that total phosphorus concentrations increased over time and in area over that time period, and that "[t]he perception that the 'nutrient front' has progressed further south from 1977 to 1988 in WCA-2A is certainly supported by these data." Memorandum from M. Maceina, Sr. Environmentalist, at 1-2 (March 20, 1990) (Exhibit 56). A recent District map of cattail expansion in the WCAs corroborates this alarming progression. See WCAs Map (Exhibit 2a).

57      The report stated:

The plan of improvement presented in this report has been developed with full
consideration given to (preservation of fish and wildlife]. In brief, it appears that
large parts of the Everglades should be held and protected as conservation areas which would be ideal for preservation of wildlife.

House Document No. 643, at 36 (Exhibit 26). See also id. at 2, 10.

58      The Comprehensive Report stated:

The comprehensive plan proposed on this report has been prepared in full recognition
of the Everglades National Park . . . . Since the park was opened formally on December 6, 1947 only a few days before completion of this report it has not yet been possible to examine all aspects of the relationship of the national park area to the plan proposed in this report. The proposed plan of improvement, however, would not damage or interfere with this great national park as the purposes of the comprehensive plan are aimed at restoring and preserving natural conditions over areas which appear unsuited to agriculture. . . . In brief, it is believed that this comprehensive water-control plan and the national park are complementary features of Federal activity necessary to restore and preserve the unique Everglades region.

House Document No. 643, at 57 (Exhibit 26).

59     A 1970 Senate Report noted:

The most recent modification of the central and southern Florida project was authorized
by the Flood Control Act of 1968. . . . The 1968 authorization specifically recognized
provision of adequate water supplies to the Everglades National Park as a project
purpose, in order to preserve and restore its natural state and to maintain and protect its unique ecology.

River Basin Monetary Authorizations and Miscellaneous Civil works Amendments, S. Rep. No. 91-895, 91st Cong., 2d Sess. at 16 (May 26, 1970) (Exhibit 28).

60      The District admits that "[s]ince the early 1970's, the SFWMD has conducted research, primarily within WCA-2, to determine the effects of water quality on vegetation communities. Those studies have primarily focused on periphyton, cattail and sawgrass communities." First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. III, at B-150 (Exhibit 8).

61      Also in 1971, "the Governor's Conference on Water Management in South Florida, a special task force composed of scientific, agricultural, conservation, and governmental experts, concluded that: 'There is a water crisis in South Florida today. . . . Every major water area in the South Florida basin, Everglades National Park, the conservation areas, Lake Okeechobee, and the Kissimmee Valley is steadily deteriorating in quality from a variety of polluting sources.' " Fla. Dept. of Admin., Draft Summary, Findings and Recommendations from the Special Project to Prevent the Eutrophication of Lake Okeechobee, at 1 (May 1976) (Exhibit 59).

62     In fact, the staff's recommendation was for a detention area, in which water would be stored for four days prior to discharge, rather than a retention area, in which water is held permanently. In re Application No. 23660, at 3 (Exhibit 62).

63      Letter, to Dr. P. Parks, Defenders of the Environment, from R. Rogers, SFWMD Director Resource Control (January 21, 1988) (Exhibit 69).

64      Letter, to Mr. E. Whitfield, Office of the Governor, from J. Wodraska, SFWMD Executive Director (October 4, 1988) (Exhibit 70).

65    The language of Chapters 373 and 403, F.S. evinces an intent that the agencies, DER and
        water management districts work hand in hand.  DER is given responsibility for the 
       administration of Chapter 373, F.S. at the state level, and general supervision of the water
        management districts in section 373.026       F.S. DER is required to review the rules of the
        water management districts to insure consistency with the state water policy and may order a
        district whose rule is found inconsistent to amend or repeal the rule.

Zellwood Drainacie and Water Control District, v. St. John's River Water Management District, No. 88-5486 R, at 16 (Fl. Div. of Admin. Hearings, Feb. 27, 1989) (Exhibit 71).

66      The policy underlying Fla. Stat. Ch. 373 is, inter alia, "[t]o prevent damage from . . . soil erosion and excessive drainage; [t]o preserve natural resources, fish, and wildlife; [t]o promote the public policy set forth in [the Florida Air and Water Pollution Control Act, Chapter 403]; [and] [t]o . . . protect public lands." Fla. Stat. Ann. § 373.016(2) (1988). To implement these policy objectives, Chapter 373 provides for a two-tiered state administrative structure, headed by the DER. Fla. Stat. Ann. § 373.019(l) (1988). Under the DER, five regional water management districts, including SFWMD, were created to provide the diverse types of regulation necessary in the different areas of the state. Fla. Stat. Ann. § 373.069 (1988). The DER has supervisory authority over the water management districts, Fla. Stat. Ann. § 373.026(7) (1988), but can and does delegate administrative and enforcement power to the operative districts. Fla. Stat. Ann. §§ 373.016(3), 373.103(l) (1988); F.A.C. § 17-101.040(11) (1990).

67      Summary judgment is appropriate here because there is no genuine issue as to any material fact in dispute and the United States is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c). See Matsushita Electric Industrial Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp., 475 U.S. 574 (1986); Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317 (1986); Barnes v. Southwest Forest Industries Inc., 814 F.2d 607 (11th Cir. 1987). Rule 56 provides for the rendering of summary judgment on the issue o f liability alone. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c). In this case, the facts upon which plaintiff relies are drawn largely from defendants' own documents and admissions. Based on these facts, and defendants' admissions that water quality standards are being violated, the United States has demonstrated that defendants fail to meet their statutory, regulatory and contractual obligations.

68      Under the State Water Policy, water quality standards are defined as:

standards comprised of designated most beneficial uses (classification of waters),
the numerical and narrative criteria applied to the specific water use or classification,
the Florida anti-degradation policy, and the moderating conditions contained in Rules 17-3 and 17-4, F.A.C.

F.A.C. § 17-40.020(10) (1990).

69      F.A.C. § 17-3.061(3) (1990) sets forth certain minimum water quality criteria for surface waters:

A violation of any one of the following surface water quality criteria constitutes
pollution....

Subparagraph (j) of said code provision states:

Nutrients - The discharge of nutrients shall continue to be limited as needed to prevent
violations of other standards contained in this Chapter. Man-induced nutrient
enrichment (total nitrogen or total phosphorus) shall be considered degradation
in relation to the provisions of Rules 17-3.041 and 17-4.242, F.A.C.

70      F.A.C. § 17-4.242(2) establishes procedures for implementing equitable abatement of discharges that violate water quality standards in an OFW. Defendants have not adequately implemented these procedures in order to protect the Park and Refuge.

71     In addition, F.A.C. § 17-3.021(17) (1990) defines "nuisance species" as "[s]pecies of flora or fauna whose noxious characteristics or presence in sufficient number, biomass, or areal extent may reasonably be expected to prevent, or unreasonably interfere with, a designated use of those waters." [Emphasis added].

72      SFWMD Board Meeting Overheads, at 4 (Exhibit 46).

73      First Draft SWIM Plan, Vol. 1, at 4 (Exhibit 5).

74     In the federal comments on the District's SWIM Plan drafts, the United States delineates steps which could be taken to provide cleaner water to the WCAs, the Refuge and the Park. See Comments of the United States on the April 11, 1990 and November 1989 Draft SWIM Plans (Exhibits 13, 14).

75     The District's consumptive permitting rules are more explicit. Under SFWMD rules a consumptive use permit applicant "must give reasonable assurances that the proposed water use will not adversely impact offsite land uses existing at the time of application; . . . will not cause significant environmental impacts; [and] will not interfere with presently existing legal uses." F.A.C. § 40E-2.301(l)(1990).

76      The Act provides that "[chapter 373] shall be construed liberally for effectuating the purposes described [t]herein, and the procedure [t]herein prescribed shall be followed and applied with such latitude consistent with the intent thereof as shall best meet the requirements or necessities thereof." Fla. Stat. 373.6161 (1988).

77      Standard limiting conditions include: "The permittee shall prosecute the work authorized in a manner so as to minimize any adverse impact of the works on fish, wildlife, natural environmental values, and water quality. . . ." F.A.C. § 40E-4.381(2)(a ) (1990).

78     A 1981 memorandum written by the Director of the Resource Control Department at the District makes clear that the present policy was still only a suggestion at that time:

My opinion is that the EAA has used State resources long enough to expect reasonable
continuation. The public on the other hand does not need to be saddled forever with poor water quality discharged into the public system. I therefore propose that we
generally treat the EAA as we do new urban construction. The reason why the EAA is
being singled out is because the water quality problems are documented
.

Memorandum from R. Rogers to A. Hall, at 2 (Oct. 5, 1981) (emphasis added) (Exhibit 78).

        Incidentally, although the general recommendation in the memorandum to impose water quality conditions on surface water management permits was eventually accepted by the District, another specific recommendation in the memorandum, to require detention areas to clean farm drainage, never has been implemented. Id.

79      The District acknowledges that technological infeasability is not the justification for its passive approach to regulation of existing polluting entities, but that rather its reticence has been motivated by economic considerations: "A major cost issue for retrofitting existing agricultural systems is the probability of having to take land out of production in order to implement most of the currently available BMPs." SFWMD Report, Review of the Rules and Enforcement Programs, at 7 (Exhibit 72).

80     Letter, to Dr. P. Parks, from R. Rogers (January 21, 1988) (Exhibit 69).

        While state law provides an exception from the discharge permit requirement for "agricultural activities and agricultural water management systems," this exception is not applicable to "the ultimate point of discharge" from such a system. Fla. Stat. 403.927(2).

81      Letter, from Mr. E. Whitfield to J. Wodraska (October 4, 1988) 
(Exhibit 70).

82     The SFWMD's pumps are also required to have surface and stormwater management permits through application of the following provision:

Notwithstanding the provisions of Chapter 120, the temporary construction, operation, or maintenance of water supply backpumping facilities to be used for storage of surplus
water shall not require a permit under this chapter, chapter 253, or chapter 403 from the Department of Environmental Regulation if the governing board issues an order declaring a water emergency which order is approved by the Secretary of Environmental Regulation. ... If the district intends to operate any such facilities permanently under nonemergency conditions, it shall apply for the appropriate required
permits from the Department of Environmental Regulation within 30 days of rescinding the emergency order.

Fl. Stat. Ann. § 373.086(3)(a) (1988).

83      DER WCAs Memorandum, at 1 (Exhibit 72).

84     Flood control projects in Central and Southern Florida at this time were based on the Comprehensive Report on Central and Southern Florida for Flood Control and Other Purposes, H.D. 643, May 6, 1948, P.L. 80-858, wherein the FWS, in consultation with the Corps, pursuant to the FWCA, recommended the establishment of a wildlife refuge in the Loxahatchee area. See House Document No. 643, at Appendix F (Exhibit 26). In accordance with its obligations under the FWCA, the Corps' project plan for the area included fish and wildlife preservation among its several purposes. See id. at 2.

85     See discussion at pp. 32-33; Option: Interim Action Plan, to Luis Ajamil, LOTAC II, from Tom MacVicar, SFWMD, (Nov. 16, 1987) (Exhibit 36).

 

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