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CONSERVATION
ARCHIVE 2000 Port
of Miami Violations Recently, a massive coastal dredge and fill violation in Dade County, attributed to the Port of Miami, was discovered by the Department of Environmental Resource Management (DERM). It is still under investigation by DERM and the DEP. It is possible that the EPA and the Army Corps of Engineers are also looking into it. The Port distributed a master plan in January of this year which said that Virginia Key and surrounding bay bottoms, are very sensitive and that they intend to be cautious in protecting the Bay in that area. However, in that area it is alleged that more than 5 acres of bay bottom was illegally dredged. The damage was done starting in 1995 and continuing until 1997. The DEP has a 1997 permit application submitted by the Port to do the Central Turning Basin Widener, but apparently Dutra, the dredge company hired by the port, went out and excavated the area a year or two before the DEP received this application! The field survey for the DEP application was obviously false since the damage was there when the survey was conducted. It appears that
for 10 or 15 days, Dutra was dredging past the boundaries
into water which was 2 to 5 feet deep, destroying more
than 5 acres of sea grass. A State staff member said an employee at
the port actually brought it up to his superiors. He pointed out that
there appeared to be too much dredge material. To compound the
problem, the Army Corps was doing some research on the ocean floor
and found numerous piles of dredge debris dumped illegally on
the way out to a permitted, legal, offshore ocean site.
DERM has gotten a submersible and is trying to trace the illegally
dumped debris to its source, thinking it might be part of the illegal
dredge. Besides the mitigation
plan, DERM wants the original area at least partially restored.
They want the port to put boulders down for fish habitat where the
damage was done.
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