Specifications
Section 1 Introduction
EAA Storage Reservoirs Revised Draft PIR and EIS February 2006
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Details on projects, studies, and program documents can be found on the
Internet at
www.evergladesplan.org/pm/landing_pp.cfm. Projects of particular
relevance to the EAA Storage Reservoirs Project are:
• C-43 Basin Aquifer Storage and Recovery - Part 2,
• C-43 Basin Storage Reservoir - Part 1,
• Caloosahatchee Backpumping with Stormwater Treatment,
• Caloosahatchee River (C-43) Basin Aquifer Storage & Recovery Pilot,
• Everglades Agricultural Area Storage Reservoirs - Phase 2,
• Flow to Northwest & Central Water Conservation Area 3A,
• Henderson Creek / Belle Meade Restoration,
• Indian River Lagoon – South,
• Lake Okeechobee Aquifer Storage & Recovery,
• Lake Okeechobee Aquifer Storage & Recovery Pilot,
• Lake Okeechobee Watershed,
• Modify Holey Land Wildlife Management Area Operation Plan,
• Modify Rotenberger Wildlife Management Area Operation Plan,
• Water Conservation Area - 2B Flows To Everglades National Park,
• Water Conservation Area - 3A / 3B Flows To Central Lake Belt (CLB),
• Water Conservation Area 3 Decompartmentalization & Sheet Flow
Enhancement - Part 1,
• Water Conservation Area 3 Decompartmentalization & Sheet Flow
Enhancement - Part 2.
SFWMD has undertaken the development of regional and sub-regional level
water supply plans to provide for better management of South Florida’s water
resources. The Lower West Coast Water Supply Plan was completed in
February 1994 (SFWMD, 1994b). The Interim Plan for Lower East Coast
Regional Water Supply (SFWMD, 1998d), which addresses water related needs
and concerns of southeastern Florida through the year 2010, and the Upper East
Coast Water Supply Plan (SFWMD, 1998b), which evaluates future 2020 water
demands and supplies for the Upper East Coast of Florida, were completed in
1998. A Lower East Coast Plan with a 2010 horizon was developed in 2000
(SFWMD, 2000).
Table 1-1 lists other projects or features that may affect the EAA Storage
Reservoir Project.










