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             Con  gression l Research Service
             Informing I hej e Itive liebatL  sce 1914




Recent Developments in Everglades Restoration


Uvervi w
What  Is the Everglades? The Everglades is a unique
network of subtropical wetlands in South Florida. By the
end of the 20th century, the ecosystem had degraded and
was approximately half its historical size, due in part to
U.S. Army  Corps of Engineers (USACE) water-supply and
flood-control projects (as well as agricultural and urban
runoff). The ecosystem is home to Everglades National
Park and unique species, including 67 species listed under
the Endangered Species Act (16 U.S.C. §§1531 et seq.).

What  Is CERP?  Congress  approved the Comprehensive
Everglades Restoration Plan (CERP) in the Water
Resources Development  Act of 2000 (WRDA   2000; P.L.
106-541). CERP  is a framework under which the federal
government  and the State of Florida are attempting to
restore the Everglades and improve the timing, distribution,
and quality of the water flowing south from Lake
Okeechobee  to the Everglades. Under CERP, the federal
government, through USACE   and the Department of the
Interior (DOI), is to fund half the costs of restoration; the
State of Florida is to contribute the other half. Tribes and
local agencies also are involved in the restoration effort.
Originally, CERP was to include 60 projects to be
completed over 30 years at a cost of $8.2 billion in FY2000
dollars (equivalent to $12.0 billion in FY2020 dollars).
Subsequent reports to Congress projected CERP would take
approximately 50 years from its authorization to implement
at a total cost of $23.2 billion (in FY2020 dollars) due to
inflation, changes in project scope and schedule, and new
project authorizations. Through FY2023, the federal
government  and the State of Florida have each spent $2.6
billion (nominal dollars) on CERP construction projects,
according to cost-share transparency reporting.

Separate from CERP, USACE   has performed actions
complementary  to restoring the Everglades (most of which
predate CERP). For example, after 22 years of constructing
the lower Kissimmee River Restoration Project, USACE
completed the project in July 2021. The federal government
has spent around $1.0 billion (nominal dollars) on these
non-CERP   construction projects.

CERP Projects Face Authorization by
Congress
WRDA 2000 approved CERP and its implementation
process and authorized several pilot projects. The process
requires that USACE produce a project implementation
report and obtain congressional project authorization before
a project can receive federal appropriations for
construction, including credit or reimbursement for
nonfederal work undertaken in advance. Subsequent laws
authorized projects planned under CERP. Some projects


Updated December  27, 2023


received appropriations and are under construction. Other
CERP  project studies are in progress (see Table 1).

Table  I. Status of CERP USACE Projects   in FY2023

    Project Name       Construction         Status
                        Auth. Year


Site I Impoundment

Picayune Strand
Restoration Project

Indian River Lagoon

C-43 West Storage
Basin Reservoir

C-I l l Spreader Canal
Western Project


Broward County
Water Preserve Areas

Biscayne Bay Coastal
Wetlands Project

Central Everglades
Planning Project

Everglades Agricultural
Area Reservoir

Loxahatchee River
Watershed Restoration
Project

Lake Okeechobee
Watershed Restoration
Project

Western Everglades
Restoration Project

Biscayne Bay and
Southern Everglades
Ecosystem Restoration

Southern Everglades

Lake Okeechobee
Component  A Storage
Reservoir


2007

2007


2007 and 2022

2014 and 2020


2014


2014


2014


2016 and 2020


2018 and 2020


2020



Not Applicable



Not Applicable


Not Applicable



Not Applicable

Not Applicable


Phase I completed

Under construction


Under construction

Under construction


Completed and
part of Biscayne
Bay Project study

Under construction


Under construction


Under construction


Under construction


Awaiting
construction


Study in progress
for two phases


Study in progress


Study in progress



Study in progress

Nonfederal-led
study in progress


Sources: South Florida Ecosystem Restoration Task Force, 2022
Biennial Report; USACE factsheets, work plans, and spend plans; and
enacted legislation.
Note: Auth. = Authorization; CERP = Comprehensive Everglades
Restoration Plan; USACE = U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

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