2 minute read
Letters to the Editor
Chiquita Lock serves no purpose, has a heavy downside
To the editor:
I, like hundreds of other Cape Coral residents, would like to see the Chiquita Lock removed/permanently opened
With the current problematic environmental condition of the Caloosahatchee River, the lock serves no purpose
My wife and I live full-time on an interior gulf canal whose brine water goes through the Chiquita lock, and we can attest that our water is environmentally cleaner than that of the river.
We have none of the algae growths or red tide blooms that have affected the canals along the Caloosahatchee River, and our canal has multiple manatees that apparently prefer to live and feed in our cleaner inland canal waters versus that of the river
In addition to the water being cleaner within the canals, manatees are being killed/crushed due to the lock Sixtyive manatees have died in Florida locks, since 2012, and four were killed in Chiquita lock in the last two years
We are also wasting a large amount of dollars on the lock itself, as follows:
Daily Operation - operator wages and benefits, electrical costs & inspections
Increasing monthly maintenance of the old, outdated lock
Damage costs due to the collision of boats when entering and while in the lock
That money has many better uses versus keeping up a locking system that has become outdated and no longer serves its original purpose
These wasted dollars could further support: basins
Contributions to further study endangered small tooth sawfish
Planting over 3,000 mangrove seedlings along the waterway and installation of oyster reef balls along the seawalls
Funding more educational programs concerning endangered species and water quality protection
Since the Chiquita lock opened in 1984, the City of Cape Coral has continued to make positive impacts on the environment, including the following:
Installed public sewers, potable water and re-use irrigation water within areas draining to the South Spreader Waterway and adjacent fresh water canals
Installed a deep injection well at the SW Reverse Osmosis potable water treatment plant to eliminate RO filtrate from normal plant operations to Lake Finnister which is connected to the spreader waterway
Implemented a dual water system for irrigation with improvements at waste water treatment plants to eliminate t r e a t e d w a s t e w a t e r e f f l u e n t d i s c h a r g e s t o t h e Caloosahatchee River
Began an interlock agreement for the City to purchase and dispose of reclaimed water generated by Fort Myers, resulting in a substantial reduction of nutrients to the Caloosahatchee River
Do we continue down an outdated path to further waste dollars and the environment or do we stand up and do what is right for the environment?
Thank you for your consideration and commitment to resolve this issue
Gary Lane Cape Coral
Par ty of fiscal responsibility?
To the editor:
The national debt increased by almost $8 trillion under Trump and the Republican Congress Now the Republicans threaten to default on our country’s obligations that they incurred
Please explain to me, again, how anyone can believe that the Republicans are the party of fiscal responsibility And how America remains a functioning democracy
Lynn A. Hagedorn Cape Coral