The Southwest Florida Water Management District and the City of Crystal River recently signed an agreement for another project that will improve water quality within Kings Bay.
The project will construct a stormwater treatment system for runoff from Crystal Center, a large commercial center located just west of the intersection of U.S. 19 and S.E. 5th Terrace. Untreated stormwater runoff from the center currently enters a canal that discharges directly into Kings Bay, which is a priority water body of the District’s Surface Water Improvement and Management Program.
The stormwater treatment system includes the installation of a baffle box or Continuous Deflective Separation (CDS) unit to capture sediments and other pollutants before the water flows into the canal.
This project is similar to another project the District and the City of Crystal River are working on for the Kings Bay Plaza. That project is expected to be complete in March 2009.
The Crystal Center project is located just south of the Kings Bay Plaza, and is expected to be complete by March 2010.
The cost to complete this project is expected to be $200,000, which will be divided equally between the District and the city. District funding comes from the District’s Coastal Rivers Basin Board and the Water Management Lands Trust Fund.
The city will act as the lead agency on this project, hiring all consultants and contractors.
This project is part of the city’s watershed management plan, which was previously funded by the District and the city. The plan identifies multiple projects that will reduce flooding and improve water quality.
A watershed management plan is a process that identifies, prioritizes and addresses water resources issues within a watershed. The plan has five stages:
•The collection of detailed information such as land elevation, drainage ditches, culverts, and other features that affect how water moves within the watershed;
•The evaluation of the collected data to identify flooding or water quality problems;
•The identification of potential projects, or best management practices, that will resolve the water resource problems;
•The implementation of best management practices to resolve problems;
•The regular updating of data to ensure that decisions are being made based on the best available information.
Stormwater is water that flows over land during and immediately after a rainstorm. The Environmental Protection Agency has identified stormwater runoff as Florida’s most serious water quality problem today. Pollutants associated with stormwater runoff include sediment, nutrients, heavy metals, oils, greases, pesticides and bacteria. Without proper treatment in developed areas, these pollutants adversely impact the quality of the receiving water.