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Posts Tagged ‘lake okeechobee’

Lake Okeechobee water level returns and so do the Trophy Bass!

Thursday, August 28th, 2008

Trophy Bass on Okeechobee

Lake Okeechobee is back up and looking better then it has in many years. With over 14ft of water the fishing is getting better then it has in years. The growth of vegetation is endless, and the sightseeing is better then I have ever seen it.

This 10lb-4oz bass was caught yesterday, an example of what is the foreseeable future for Lake Okeechobee fishing. We are so excited for this season to come, if these type of fish are being caught in the middle of the summer there’s no telling how good it could get come the winter during the spawn.

Got to go now, lots of new water to research!

If you are visiting South or Central Florida for work or vacation and want to experience the best fishing that there is to offer then please give me a call. We can be reached @ (888) 629-BASS or email us fishing@bassonline.com

Good fishing,

Capt Mark Shepard
marks@bassonline.com
(863) 673-4966 cell
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Okeechobee almost back - Water Level up!

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

Lake Okeechobee’s water level is at 12.52 feet above sea level on Friday. That is over one foot higher than it was before Tropical Storm Fay crossed the lake.

The South Florida Water Management District said at least 6 inches fell on the lake. And it will continue to rise as stormwater run-off from the Kissimmee River flows into the lake.

The SFWMD Web site, www.sfwmd.gov, indicated Okeechobee could rise to 12.80 feet in the next two weeks. That would be a total of about 1.76 feet as a result of Fay.

The lake was 2 1/2 feet below normal even after the 6 inches of rain fell, but a really good level for the lake.

Enjoying a last day off before school starts, kids used dip nets to scoop up catfish that swam into roadside drainage ditches during the storm, said Phillip Black of the Pioneer Estates neighborhood, off County Road 15A. Not far off, Bobby Hays, 11, Dakota Bond, 11, and Danny Hays, 7, rode skim boards in puddles left by Fay. Lake Okeechobee’s water level has risen half a foot, to 11.8 feet above sea level, and is expected to rise as water flows into the lake from the north.“We all are pretty excited,” about the lake level and the forecast for this winters fishing on Lake Okeechobee, said Lake Okeechobee fishing guide Mark Shepard of Clewiston, Florida. “We’ve had not seen the lake look this good in a couple of seasons. We need this, it is exciting.”

Around Lake Okeechobee, residents cleaned up some fallen tree limbs, fired up generators and patched roofs, after Fay walloped the north and west sides of the big lake as it crossed Florida. Among the highest damage estimates around the lake was on the east side, in Pahokee, where roof damage to city hall and sewer system damage clocked in at $1.5 million.

Flooding forced the closing of State Road 29 between Palmdale and LaBelle. A detour routed motorists around flooded lanes Wednesday along a short section of U.S. 27 south of Palmdale.

Even though water has been flowing hard through the Kissimmee River, weirs and other water-control structures in the river were not damaged by Fay, said Randy Smith, spokesman for the South Florida Water Management District.

No problems with the Herbert Hoover Dike, with flood-control structures around the lake or with lake navigation were found following inspections Wednesday, said Steve Dunham, chief of the South Florida office for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in Clewiston.

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Lake Okeechobee Tackle Shop owner dies in boating accident

Tuesday, August 12th, 2008

Lake Okeechobee bait & tackle shop owner

BY ED KILLER edward.killer@scripps.com
Tuesday, August 12, 2008

— This small lakeside community and its even tighter-knit fishing community was shaken Sunday by news that one of its well-known anglers and business owners was suddenly gone.

Paul “Bubba” Helton, 57, of Okeechobee fell from his bass boat Saturday afternoon while returning to Okeechobee from across the lake. Helton’s boat was one of six that had spent the morning fishing and having lunch in Clewiston.

At about 3:30 p.m., Helton reportedly slipped from the deck of his 21-foot bass boat about 10 miles south of Indian Prairie Canal after stopping for a short break from the 30-mile boat ride.

“There was a little bit of a swell on the lake, and he stood up and slipped overboard,” reported Capt. Larry Wright who spoke to the three passengers on Helton’s boat. “They said he popped right back up, but showed no signs of struggling or distress.”

Helton was not wearing a life jacket. The depth of the water was about seven feet.

Wright said that he appeared to dive back beneath the waves, perhaps to retrieve his glasses from the lake bottom, thought the other boaters. But after a few minutes, Helton failed to return to the surface and the passengers took action.

One called authorities while the other two threw out anchors to stop the boat’s drift and then jumped into the water to physically try to help Helton. After hours of searching, they were unable to find him.

Law enforcement officials arrived about an hour later. Officials searched for Helton until darkness Saturday. His body was found Sunday afternoon at about 5 p.m. by an aerial search by the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission. He was found about a half mile from where the incident occurred.

The cause of death is unknown. An autopsy will be performed in Fort Myers.

Helton will be missed.

“He was like a brother to me,” said Red Altman of Okeechobee, a former fishing guide and bass tournament angler who worked on the lake for years along with Helton. Altman was best man at Helton’s wedding to Margaret over 15 years ago. “He moved to Florida from Tennessee 22 years ago and was a big Volunteers fan. I’m a Gator fan. It was about the only thing we didn’t see eye to eye on.”

Wright will miss Helton’s straightforward approach.

“We had our moments where we would bump heads, but it was over as soon as it began,” said Wright who guided out of and often helped man Garrard’s Bait and Tackle owned by the Heltons. “He was the kind of friend that if you called him at 3 a.m., he wouldn’t ask questions, he would just be there.”

Helton was often an outspoken critic of water management policies when it came to Lake Okeechobee’s water level and quality. He told Scripps Treasure Coast Newspapers in June 2007 that in his opinion, the mismanagement of Lake Okeechobee that spring sent small businesses into an economic tailspin.

Altman said there will be a remembrance for Helton from 5-7 p.m. Thursday at Buxton Funeral Home, 110 Northeast 5th Street, Okeechobee. For directions visit www.buxtonfuneralhome.com or call (863) 763-1994.

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New Islands Could Be Alternative for Fla. Everglades’ Economy

Tuesday, August 5th, 2008

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. _ New islands, rising from Lake Okeechobee like a bass fisherman’s version of Atlantis, could become a tourist-attracting, economic alternative for the Florida city of Pahokee’s life after U.S. Sugar. The state’s proposed $1.75 billion buyout of U.S. Sugar to further Everglades restoration threatens to leave Pahokee and other Glades cities without a major employer. This comes at a time when lingering low lake levels have hurt marinas and other water-dependent businesses.

That has the city teaming with Palm Beach County in a renewed push to dredge channels, clearing the way for boat traffic in low water.

The material dredged from the lake bottom would be used to create proposed “eco-islands” _ fishing, camping and bird-watching destinations that also provide a safety buffer for the lake’s aging dike.

The major hurdle is the steep price tag, as much as $55 million according to a study released in July.

The city and county are counting on the federal government to help pick up the tab. But right now, the spending priority is the decades-long, billion-dollar repair of the Herbert Hoover Dike _ named one of the six in the country most at risk of failing.

Supporters say the islands could help shield the dike, while at the same time creating an economic lifeline for communities in need of a boost.

Boat slips at Pahokee’s refurbished marina and campground often sit empty because low water levels have stopped vessels from using the lake to travel between Florida’s east and west coasts. Back-to-back years of drought, coupled with decisions to keep the lake lower due to concerns about the dike’s strength, resulted in the low water levels.

Factoring in the economic ripple effects of possibly losing U.S. Sugar’s 1,700 jobs, the situation is going to get worse for restaurants, hotels and shops, said Jim Sheehan, whose company manages Pahokee’s marina and campground.

“There is no business,” Sheehan said. “We’ve got a marina that you can’t get boats to.”

Palm Beach County paid for the $50,000 study that explores the possibility of dredging lake channels and creating the islands.

Now the county is considering spending another $150,000, during a tight budget year, for engineering and design plans needed to keep the project going. The county finalizes its budget in September.

“Create a destination for boaters, create good fishing habitat … it is just very promising,” county Parks Director Dennis Eshleman said.

The plan proposes three types of islands: one creating an extended shoreline, reachable by those without boats; several shallow water islands that cater to canoes; and a larger deep water island near the Pahokee marina with more boat moorings and campgrounds.

Aside from cost concerns, island backers have to overcome regulatory and permitting obstacles from a slew of state and federal agencies, most notably the Army Corps of Engineers.

The corps in a June 25 letter raised concerns about covering the lake bottom with man-made islands as well as using the dredged material to create those islands.

The corps also wants to finish building a reinforcing wall through the dike before allowing dredging. Rehabilitation of the southeastern side of the dike is supposed to last until 2013.

Using dredged material to build the islands could become a cost-effective way to move and contain the polluting sediment that covers much of the lake’s bottom, said Paul Gray, a scientist for Audubon of Florida.

“The mud center of the lake is just a crippling problem,” Gray said. “Part of dealing with the mud is where do we put it?”

The cost of the islands and environmental concerns raised by the corps are important issues, but so too is the need to create attractions that compensate for the loss of sugar industry jobs, Pahokee Mayor Wayne Whitaker said.

“That is a big opportunity for tourism,” Whitaker said. “We have got to provide for ourselves and provide jobs for people.”

(c) 2008, South Florida Sun-Sentinel.

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Lake Okeechobee Fishing in July

Saturday, July 26th, 2008

Little 8yr old on Okeechobee

Today I had the opportunity to fish with Steve Raimo and his 8 year old son out of Clewiston, Florida. I have fished with a lot of kids, this kid was a ace to say the least. Today’s weather was clear and calm, not want we really wanted on a hot summer day. In these condition’s you have to be almost sneaky and very patient when fishing your areas.

We had short day, but we were still able to catch some fish and see a lot of wildlife. The lake level is coming up nicely and we should be back fishing in the grass beds by next week. It has been two years sense we have fished the grass-beds and swamps of Lake Okeechobee. This is quite exciting going into the spawn for this winter. As history repeats it’s self, the fish will love all the brand new habitat already full of life. Looking ahead, this is going to be one of the most exciting times to fish the lake.

With all the new places to explore, each fishing trip is going to be a new adventure for every customer.

If you are visiting South or Central Florida for work or vacation and want to experience the best fishing that there is to offer then please give us a call. We can be reached @ (888) 629-BASS or email us @ fishing@bassonline.com

Good fishing,

Capt Mark Shepard
marks@bassonline.com
(863) 673-4966 cell
(888) 629-BASS
www.bassonline.com
www.flpeacockbass.com
www.hawghunter.net
www.basson-line.com
www.bassauthority.com

Lake Okeechobee Fishing Report 7-9-08

Friday, July 11th, 2008

Today I fished with David Williams and Daniel Bradley from Plano, TX .

The lake level has come up and the fish have seem to follow. We had about 30 largemouth bass on Okeechobee today and lost quite a few also. With the sun up, high bright and clear skies it was important to be sneaky. The lake clarity is very clear and in most places the grass is growing few well again.

Lake Okeechobee is as pretty as I have seen in a along time. A lot of great fishing to come don’t miss out on the great new adventures.

To go fishin with Capt Mark Shepard

Capt Mark Shepard
marks@bassonline.com
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New Lake Okeechobee Bass & Crappie Rules

Wednesday, July 2nd, 2008

Freshwater anglers fishing in Lake Okeechobee are reminded that new size rules are now in effect for bass and crappie. Black or largemouth bass must now be a minimum size of 18 inches total length to be kept. There is still a 5-bass bag limit and only one larger than 22 inches may be kept.

Crappie, also called black crappie, speckled perch or specks, must now be a minimum of 10 inches in order to be kept. The 25-crappie bag limit has not changed.

For complete fishing regulations pick up a copy of Florida Fishing Regulations or tackle shops that sell fishing licenses. Information is also available online at MyFWC.com.

From Staff and Wire Reports
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Political pluck, power dovetailed in state-U.S. Sugar deal

Saturday, June 28th, 2008

Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

Saturday, June 28, 2008

Standing on his skiff, hedge fund billionaire Paul Tudor Jones II grew more confident with each cast into the salty shallows of Florida Bay - snook or no snook.His goal was more ambitious than catching a few fish. He hoped to persuade Florida’s newly elected governor, Charlie Crist, to loosen Big Sugar’s grip on the agency charged with restoring Florida’s Everglades, the South Florida Water Management District.

Success would be like catching a 16-pound bonefish, something huge, and maddeningly elusive under Gov. Jeb Bush. It would mean real progress toward Everglades restoration. Progress toward a clean and healthy Florida Bay.

No other governor, not even Big-Tobacco-slaying Democrat Lawton Chiles, had been willing to tackle sugar in hand-to-hand combat. Fighting sugar head-on was political suicide. Yet surrounded by sparkling water and mangrove flats in February 2007, Crist was receptive.

For more than 30 years, the environmental aristocrats who bankrolled state advocacy groups have sounded the same theme: Return farmland to wetlands, so that water can flow like a sheet from Lake Okeechobee to the Everglades, and finally into Florida Bay, the way nature intended.

Yet farm interests stood in the way, and in Florida government, they have remained as fixed as the horizon. In nearly 10 years, the plan to restore the Everglades had never broached a Big-Sugar buyout. All the more reason that jaws dropped when Crist last week stood side-by-side with the U.S. Sugar CEO Robert Buker, announcing the largest conservation land deal in the history of Florida, a $1.75 billion plan to buy the 80-year-old company’s assets.

How that moment came to be has been a mystery to many, from sugar industry watchers to political insiders. Crist has long had an interest in the Everglades and has assembled a staff with similar interests. But the large and complex deal also bears the imprint of Jones, a top Wall Street expert in commodities markets and a passionate conservationist who owns a vacation home in Islamorada.

Jones, traveling in Africa, did not respond to e-mailed questions about his role. But his colleagues and advisers to Crist acknowledge a relationship has developed between the two, one so close that Jones reportedly knew of Sugar’s openness to sell its assets in November, several months before the executive director of the South Florida Water Management District or even Florida Secretary of Environmental Protection Mike Sole.

Crist’s chief of staff, Eric Eikenberg, acknowledged the fishing trips and phone calls Crist and Jones have shared.

“There is a relationship there that has been formed out of respect,” said Eikenberg. “They’ve had multiple conversations since the governor took office.”

Crist is a Republican, and Jones is a top fund-raiser for Barack Obama, a Democrat. Still, the longtime politician and the liberal billionaire have much in common. Both found their environmental epiphany at the end of a fishing pole. Fish don’t like dirty water.

And both had crossed Big Sugar before. Jones had seen Crist willing to vote against the sugar lobby 12 years earlier, back when both men supported a penny-a-pound sugar tax to pay for pollution clean-up. Jones had bankrolled the sugar-tax campaign with an $11 million investment. His devotion to that cause provoked U.S. Sugar’s Buker to tell The Miami Herald in 1996 that Jones was “a cockroach.”

“You shine a light on him and he runs away,” Buker said then.

The sugar tax try failed.

Tide turns for industry

In the intervening years, both Crist and Jones grew more powerful. Jones ascended from commodities trader to Wall Street wizard, becoming one of the wealthiest men in the world according to Forbes, zipping in and out of about 30 commodities markets and assembling companies, one of which manages an estimated $20 billion in assets. Colleagues say he hasn’t traded in sugar in 15 years, and they insist he does not have any financial interest in the debt the state plans to issue for the purchase.

The 53-year-old father of four has been as devoted to his family, his recreation and his philanthropies as he is his hedge funds. Married to Australian model Sonja, Jones founded New York’s poverty-fighting Robin Hood Foundation, and he helped found Miami’s Everglades Foundation, devoted to restoring the environment.

Jones, who was born in Memphis, is an avid hunter and fisherman.

In Greenwich, Conn., he’s known for decorating his waterfront mansion at Christmastime in such an elaborate manner that he must hire off-duty police to manage the traffic.

In Islamorada, he’s known for his ownership of the Coral Bowl, a local bowling alley that he saved from closure for his children and their friends in 2000.

Jones got his start trading cotton and earned a reputation as a hedge fund genius at a young age after predicting the stock market crash of 1987. His environmental awakening came through his Islamorada neighbor, the late George Barley, who was his frequent fishing companion. Active in politics, he hedges his donations the same way he does his investments, becoming one of Obama’s top fund-raisers even as he gave the maximum to Rudolph Giuliani and Mitt Romney.

Crist, meanwhile, skipped like a stone from law-and-order legislator to attorney general to green governor, thanks in part, to the half-million worth of Jones’ checks to the state Republican Party.

Sugar’s star had not risen so high. By last summer, the sugar industry found itself facing unprecedented challenges. Free trade pressures in Washington threatened its long-protected federal subsidies. The black-gold muck that nourished its cane would not last forever, but there was a backup plan to build hundreds of thousands of homes in Palm Beach County’s Everglades Agricultural Area. The real estate downturn threatened that plan.

Meanwhile, the company was fighting a bitter and costly lawsuit from its employee-shareholders. They had learned that the company’s board, dominated by descendants of Charles Stewart Mott, had nixed an offer that would have given them nearly $100 a share more than U.S. Sugar told them their shares were worth.

Amid this, a drought and a newly environmentally sensitive water district board was, U.S. Sugar felt, threatening the dependability of its water supply.

Two months after his Florida Bay fishing trip with Jones, Crist had made two key appointments to the water district board: Miami attorney Eric Buermann was a former general counsel to the Bush-Cheney campaign, but he also carried pro-environment credentials such as a membership in the Theodore Roosevelt Society. Shannon Estenoz, a civil engineer, was a leading Everglades advocate.

Environmental leaders were thrilled with Estenoz and cautiously optimistic about Buermann. The sugar industry was less pleased, particularly with Estenoz.

Buermann became chairman of the governing board, with Estenoz as vice chair.

And things changed. There was a time when the water district could be counted on to allow farmers to recycle their polluted runoff into Lake Okeechobee when necessary. But when the historically low lake levels struck last summer, Crist’s appointees led the charge in voting against such backpumping. It made no sense to allow pollution of the waterways when they were spending billions to restore and clean them, they said.

“It was the first time they had lost in the 20 years I’ve been around,” said Tallahassee lawyer and environmental advocate Thom Rumberger. “They got slapped in the face.”

U.S. Sugar’s Robert Coker asked Crist for a meeting. In November, Coker sent two lobbyists, Brian Ballard and Mac Stipanovich, to “help him better understand our perspective,” Coker said, to see that he was “sensitive to our need for sustainability.”

They discussed backpumping, lake levels, court-ordered pollution controls. Crist ended the meeting by shocking the lobbyists.

“What the governor said was, ‘There are a lot of complex matters. Maybe what we ought to do is just buy U.S. Sugar out,’ ” Coker said.

Ballard and Stipanovich took the proposal back to Coker.

“I was very stunned. That was not the expectation we had for that meeting. What we hoped to get out of that meeting was a commitment to work on issues in a cooperative way,” he said.

And yet when the proposals went back to U.S. Sugar’s board, it was not rejected.

“When you own something and build something for 80 years, you develop an emotional attachment to the business and to the land. The descendants of Charles Stewart Mott, who make up the majority of our board, have had offers in the past for all or parts of our company and our land. They never felt it met their criteria,” he said.

But Crist’s offer had their attention.

“We believe that our company and our board and our shareholders have gotten two things. We’ve gotten reasonable fair value - not what we thought we could have gotten,” Coker said. “And at the same time, they know these lands are going to be used to ensure the future of the Florida Everglades. I think that’s a legacy they were comfortable with.”

At Crist’s announcement, a day on which God, Teddy Roosevelt and the Louisiana Purchase were invoked, Coker found himself shaking hands with George Barley’s widow, Mary, co-founder with Jones of the Everglades Foundation.

It was a strange moment. Coker and Barley had been bitter political opponents for decades.

Coker said Crist brought fresh faces to the issue. Diana Sawaya-Crane had worked for Crist when he was attorney general. He made her a cabinet aide and designated her an environmental adviser. Eikenberg, a former aide to former U.S. Rep. E. Clay Shaw, had worked on Everglades funding in Washington.

Looking for the big ‘wow’

Meanwhile, Michael Sole, Crist’s new environmental protection secretary, had regulated pollution and other matters in 17 years with the agency. Sole had experience organizing state deals to buy and preserve large tracts of land, including the Babcock Ranch Preserve.

In February, Crist asked all of them to work on assessing the feasibility and desirability of acquiring U.S. Sugar’s land.

“Every day, the concept became more and more, ‘Not only is this viable, but, wow, this is the right thing to do for Everglades restoration,’ ” Sole said.

A year earlier, Sole and Eikenberg had sat in a briefing on Everglades restoration, looking at a map with more than 200 small and complex projects needed to store dirty farm water and runoff, clean it, and enable it to flow when needed into the Everglades.

Looking at the map, Eikenberg said he could only shake his head at the complexity and expense. Water district Executive Director Carol Wehle recalls how Eikenberg ended that initial meeting.

“He said, ‘This is messy and it’s complicated, and it’s a lot of little projects. Isn’t there some big wow that would move a lot of this forward?’ ” Wehle recalled.

Buying U.S. Sugar didn’t even enter her mind. It was never on the table. Eikenberg and Sole said they didn’t raise the possibility, either.

“It never would have occurred to me to say, ‘Hey, what if we bought out U.S. Sugar,’ ” Wehle said.

That the day had come was as amazing to Wehle as it was to Eikenberg, Sole and even U.S. Sugar’s Buker, who had fought the environmentalists so hard, for so long.

Asked what had transpired in 10 years of Everglades restoration to make U.S. Sugar suddenly receptive to selling its assets, Buker, put it simply: “What changed in 10 years ago from now is the people have changed.”

From Staff and Wire Reports
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Seven Days on Lake Okeechobee

Friday, June 27th, 2008

Lake Okeechobee fishing picture What a week of fishing we had. This week, I fished with Alan Heidenrich a long time client that has fished with me for over five years and fishes with me several times a year. Alan has become part of my family and I always can’t wait for the adventures to begin each and every time.

Alan is very serious about his bass fishing, with a lot of big water (offshore) experience he has given it up. He has become one of the most dedicated bass fishermen I know today. Alan also takes great pride in his own equipment with G Loomis and Shimano of all styles and also has a very good bait selection for all styles of bass fishing.

Our first day on Lake Okeechobee was short with bad Bluegill fishing on Lake Okeechobeeweather, but we still were able to catch 17 fish on crankbaits and swim baits. Day two we spent searching the flats, we found a little spot with some schooling bass and caught over 60 on swim baits and top water baits. Day three we decided to explored around the lake, we found lots of blue gill beds and some shell crackers. So, we decided to catch some food for dinner, we caught hundreds of them on beetle spins and worms. We kept a few of the shell crackers and had a fish fry that night.

As the rest of the week goes we caught lots of nice bass and battled the brim on lite tackle. As this week has it, we had lots of afternoon storms which made for some fast action at times. Okeechobee has been very low, so go fishing with some one who knows how to get around. The lake water is very clear and grass beds are bigger than I have seen since I was a kid. With all this rain I hope we can get to start fishing in the grass soon. Until, then the lake still has a great adventure for everyone.

To go fishin with Capt Mark Shepard

Capt Mark Shepard
marks@bassonline.com
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Rivers Coalition signals backing for U.S. Sugar buyout

Thursday, June 26th, 2008

 The Rivers Coalition, a Treasure Coast environmental group that has sued the federal government to stop discharges from Lake Okeechobee into the St. Lucie Estuary, unanimously approved a resolution Thursday supporting a deal between the state and U.S. Sugar Corp. designed to move the water south instead.

On Tuesday, the South Florida Water Management District and the sugar company signed a “statement of principles” calling for the state to buy about 187,000 acres in the Everglades Agricultural Area for $1.8 billion. The land could be used to restore the traditional flow of water from Lake Okeechobee to the Everglades.

Establishing the flow way also is designed to significantly reduce the amount of water released into the St. Lucie Estuary.

“The Rivers Coalition is in full support of this acquisition,” said Leon Abood, chairman of the group, “providing the last is used for the southern conveyance of water from Lake Okeechobee.

But Abood said it’s too early for the group to consider dropping its lawsuit.

The Stuart-based Rivers Coalition, a consortium of local environmental groups, outdoors enthusiasts and fishing clubs, filed a federal lawsuit in November 2006 against the Army Corps of Engineers, which operates the control structures at Lake Okeechobee in an effort to end discharges that in most years send hundreds of billions of gallons of muddy, polluted fresh water into the St. Lucie Estuary.

“Over the last couple of days I’ve been asked lots of times if we’re going to drop the lawsuit,” Abood said. “The answer is unequivocally no. We’re going to keep moving forward.”

At the same time, Abood said the coalition plans to work closely with government agencies to make sure the southern flow way becomes a reality and to make sure the end result benefits Treasure Coast waterways.

“We don’t want to take our eyes off local drainage issues,” he said.

From Staff and Wire Reports
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