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TexasTowelie

(116,904 posts)
Wed May 5, 2021, 02:57 AM May 2021

Florida will spend $100 million to clean up, close Piney Point

PALMETTO, Fla. — State lawmakers have secured $100 million to permanently clean up and close the former Piney Point phosphate plant.

Manatee County Administrator Scott Hopes made the announcement Tuesday during a meeting with both county government and the mayors of manatee’s towns and cities.

Hopes confirmed there haven’t been any major changes to the former plant’s status since April 8. He says the steel patch that was fixed to secure the leak is holding, and the plans to move forward with an injection well are still in the works.

Scientists from Manatee, Pinellas, and Hillsborough counties, as well as local colleges and Florida’s Department of Environmental Protection are continuing to monitor the water quality around Port Manatee and the bay. Maya Burke with the Tampa Bay Estuary Program says based on the data that she is seeing right now, she is cautiously optimistic.

Read more: https://www.baynews9.com/fl/tampa/news/2021/05/04/florida-lawmakers-secure--100-million-to-clean-up--close-piney-point

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Florida will spend $100 million to clean up, close Piney Point (Original Post) TexasTowelie May 2021 OP
I have often wondered what they plan on doing with the grasslands. Dreampuff May 2021 #1
knowing my home state, 20 mil to clean it up and 80 mil for kickbacks and "over run costs".nt mitch96 May 2021 #2

Dreampuff

(778 posts)
1. I have often wondered what they plan on doing with the grasslands.
Wed May 5, 2021, 12:49 PM
May 2021

A few years ago there were several news stories about the failure of properly closing up a phosphate mine in a local Housing Development. We know a retired engineer who swears up and down everything was done correctly the entire time that he worked at his job.

Not sure of the status of it, but I don't think anything was redone at the grasslands or across the road and people who owned houses there wanted everything kept quiet and swept under the rug out of fear of their property values plummeting.

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