Thursday, October 05, 2017

Sewage Plant near our Well-field and Road Blocks to Incorporation, Commissioners Come On! By Geniusofdespair

Only Commissioner Moss voted against this Ordinance, I think  he would like to be Mayor of a new City because he is term limited.

Didn't we have a referendum on Incorporation? I seem to remember a referendum that passed to make it easier to incorporate and then Barbara Jordan immediately put a roadblock on it. Then they had a study, and bla bla...wasted time...and now another roadblock. Anyone remember what is going on? Daniella Levine Cava, constituents from Commissioner Moss's district are disappointed you voted for this.

Here is what passed on the ballot in 2012, it was meant to make forming cities easier not harder:


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In other startling Miami Dade County News: They want to put a $2 Billion sewage treatment plant on this piece of property, West of NW 137th Avenue and North of NW 6th Street (Near 836 and our well field and West of The Urban Develop Boundary). The property owners are fighting eminent domain by the County for the facility on the grounds it would be incompatible with planned subdivisions.

The County wants to inject the wastewater...remember the infamous article in Miami New Times about the pink water that showed our aquifer flowed like a swift river underground in this area? They put red dye underground near the well field and it reached homes in 4 hours. Scientists were convinced it would take 2 to 3 days.

 
MDXQ Corp. Owns the property. UED. LCC is related.- Nicholas Kelly is the Key.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

This is great, if not global warming and sea level rise gets us out of here, Miami Dade Water and Sewer will, pronto!

Anonymous said...

GOD,
You are misinformed regarding the hydrogeology of south Florida. The wastewater will be injected into a section of the Floridan Aquifer known as the boulder zone which lies at ~ 3200 ft below the surface. The red dye that you refer to was in the Biscayne Aquifer which is where we get our drinking water from. It extends from about 100' depth to the surface.

Wastewater has to go somewhere. The Feds won't allow us to dump treated effluent in the the oce3an anymore and deep well injection is the only viable alternative.

Learn about the facts a little more before you make statements like this. https://sofia.usgs.gov/publications/papers/pp1403g/flaqsys.html

Geniusofdespair said...

Yeah yeah know about all the zones Floridian, Boulder, Biscayne, etc. the problem is they can't keep in the zone they want to... never could. It seeps upward. Problems around Black Point in the past. We don't have a confining layer like clay... fractured layers. I am never misinformed I just try to make it easy for some of my nitwit readers who can't handle more than 2 paragraphs before they start to drool and pass out from boredom. The D E P swore to us water couldn't seep upward... but it did and it will. That much water, I would expect sinkholes and other problems as well.