Ask Florida statehouse and Water Districts to explain JAX treated wastewater into the Suwannee Basin or to stop it, 2026-01-02

Do you think a billion dollars to pipe treated wastewater from Jacksonville into the Suwannee Basin is a bad idea?

If so, please ask your statehouse delegation and Water Management District Board to explain why limiting water withdrawals would not be a better idea, or to stop this project.

Everybody is downstream from somebody else. But we don’t need the Suwannee River Basin to be downstream from Jacksonville. Sure, we’re poorer than Jacksonville, but we’re not their sacrifice zone.

[Why is piping treated JAX wastewater into the Suwannee River Basin, better than limiting water withdrawals? Ask FL statehouse and WMD boards]
Why is piping treated JAX wastewater into the Suwannee River Basin, better than limiting water withdrawals? Ask FL statehouse and WMD boards

Here’s how to find your legislators:

https://pluralpolicy.com/find-your-legislator/

Also ask SRWMD to hold a Public Hearing explaining why this project instead of limiting water withdrawals.

Let’s see the Environmental Impact Statement (EIS). Including evidence about how much JEA’s Buckman Wastewater Treatment Facility actually removes PFAS forever chemicals, drugs, and artificial sweeteners. Plus single points of failure such as sole-source contractors.

Suwannee River Management District
9225 CR 49
Live Oak, FL 32060
Phone: 386.362.1001
Toll Free: 1.800.226.1066
Hugh Thomas, Executive Director
Hugh.Thomas@SRWMD.org

Also ask your SRWMD Board members:
https://mysuwanneeriver.com/134/Current-Board-Members

The Suwannee River Water Management District (SRWMD) seems to know surprisingly little about this joint project with the St Johns River Water Management District (SJRWMD).

They don’t know where the water would go into wetlands to “clean” it up some more, and they don’t know where it would go to infiltrate into the Floridan Aquifer. They don’t have a pilot study nor wetland site assessments.

We have found much more information in the SJRWMD Board meeting minutes, such as SJRWMD hired a consultant in November. The consultant is supposed to work up the pilot study and preliminary wetland assessments by 2028.

But those documents raise even more questions.

  • Why is the St Johns River Water Management District (SJRWMD) making billion-dollar decisions on water levels and flows in the Suwannee River Basin?
  • Why is the Suwannee River Water Management District (SRWMD) merely a junior non-voting partner along with Clay County Utility Authority, Gainesville Regional Utilities (GRU), JEA, and St. Johns County Utility Department?

    [North Florida Regional Recharge Project - Conceptualization, 2025-07-08 --SRWMD]
    North Florida Regional Recharge Project – Conceptualization, 2025-07-08 –SRWMD
    PDF

  • Where is the evidence that the source wastewater plant would remove PFAS, drugs, and artificial sweeteners?
  • Why is piping treated wastewater from Jacksonville into the Suwannee River Basin even an option, instead of limiting water withdrawals?
  • Why not have Jacksonville get a grip on its water usage? A report to SJRWMD says agricultural water withdrawals account for almost half of all withdrawals in the study area, while “Public Supply” accounts for almost half in the SJRWMD part of the area.

People from Jacksonville come to Suwannee River Basin springs and rivers all the time. So Duval County people, please ask SJRWMD these questions.

[Water First North Florida, Next Steps: Pilot Study, Siting Study RFQ, Wetland Site Assessment, 2025-07-08 --SRWMD]
Water First North Florida, Next Steps: Pilot Study, Siting Study RFQ, Wetland Site Assessment, 2025-07-08 –SRWMD
PDF

If Jacksonville’s wastewater is treated so well it can be piped to recharge springs in the Suwannee River Basin, how about instead pipe that water into Jacksonville’s drinking water?

If people don’t want to drink it, how about use it for golf courses, datacenters, and other industrial uses?

Let’s see some explanations.

Or stop this project.

 -jsq, John S. Quarterman, Suwannee RIVERKEEPER®

You can help with clean, swimmable, fishable, drinkable, water in the 10,000-square-mile Suwannee River Basin in Florida and Georgia by becoming a WWALS member today!
https://wwals.net/donations/

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