Water-Related News

Work stopped at two Fort Myers projects after runoff pollutes Caloosahatchee

Water pollution from two downtown Fort Myers construction sites has halted work for the third time in as many months.

A heavy rainstorm Monday sent sheets of silty water into the river, past the floating yellow curtains installed to contain it. Both developments are near West First Street, bounded by Altamont and Virginia avenues, and both have been subsidized with city tax incentives: $12.96 million for Silver Hills and $ $5.5 million for City Walk.

“The City Walk and Silver Hills projects were issued stop-work orders (Tuesday) morning by the City of Fort Myers,” city spokeswoman Stephanie Schaffer wrote in an email. “The stop-work orders will continue until BMPs (best management practices) are improved at the construction sites.”

In case you missed it:Right past the barriers: Dirty water again surged into the Caloosahatchee from two downtown Fort Myers construction sites

The Florida Department of Environmental Protection also was on-site Tuesday, “investigating new reports of turbid runoff into the Caloosahatchee River from the City Walk and Silver Hills properties,” said spokeswoman Alexandra Kuchta.