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    USACE helps celebrate the completion of Caloosahatchee C-43 Reservoir Pump Station

    CALOOSAHATCHEE, FL, UNITED STATES

    12.21.2023

    Story by Jazika Levario 

    U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Jacksonville District

    Today, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) Jacksonville District participated in a ribbon-cutting event hosted by South Florida Water Management District (SFWMD) to celebrate the completion of construction on the Caloosahatchee C-43 Reservoir pump station. The C-43 Reservoir, once completed, willhold approximately 170,000 acre-feet of water (55 billion gallons) and is part of the state-federal Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan (CERP) to restore the environment and make our water resources more resilient.

    “The goal of South Florida Ecosystem Restoration is to improve the health of 2.4 million acres of the South Florida Ecosystem including Lake Okeechobee,” said Maj. Cory Bell, the Deputy District Commander for South Florida for USACE Jacksonville District.

    The Caloosahatchee (C-43) Reservoir will be an 18 square mile, above-ground water storage reservoir designed to hold excess water during the wet season and then provide beneficial flows of freshwater to the Caloosahatchee Estuary during the dry season. The Caloosahatchee River needs beneficial freshwater inflows for the health of the Estuary, especially during the dry season, to keep salinities in the optimum range for species such as oysters.

    “In fiscal year 2023 Jacksonville District obligated $362 Million – the highest annual in South Florida Ecosystem Restoration program history. We are seeing unprecedented levels of active construction contracts. Currently, there are seven Everglades restoration projects under construction, representing $13.2B in federal and non-federal investment,” said Bell.

    The Everglades restoration effort covers over 18,000 square miles and involves hundreds of restoration projects that provide critical benefits to improve the health of the ecosystem such as improving water quality, managing flood risks, protecting endangered species habitat and improving resilience to climate change.

    “Everglades restoration is an enormous undertaking that cannot be accomplished alone,” Bell said. “Much of our recent progress is due to a firm and ongoing commitment to Everglades restoration at both the state and federal levels, and thanks to our strong partnership with the South Florida Water Management District, which I believe is unique in the nation,”

    “What really stands out about these projects is the partnerships that bring them across the finish line,” said Kathleen Passidomo, Florida Senator.


    “I have so appreciated the relationship we have had and the communication that we’ve been able to have over the past few years. It’s been an Army Corps that has been really striving for communication across the board and across the state to all our stakeholders and that has is evident in everything that you have been doing,” said Holly Smith, Sanibel Council Woman. “Today is restoring another step in our everglades restoration process and we have many more ahead of us,” she continued.

    The partnership between South Florida Water Management District, local, state and federal partners, city and county governments and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has been pivotal in the completion of this project.


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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 12.21.2023
    Date Posted: 01.31.2024 06:43
    Story ID: 462221
    Location: CALOOSAHATCHEE, FL, US

    Web Views: 37
    Downloads: 0

    PUBLIC DOMAIN