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Mission: To reduce the impacts of stormwater runoff to surface waters through a comprehensive program of improvement projects, resource protection, and public involvement" Under Florida law, e-mail addresses are public records. If you do not want your e-mail address released in response to a public records request, do not send electronic mail to this entity. Instead, contact this office by phone or in writing. |
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Our Watershed and the IssuesThe Indian River Lagoon stretches 156 miles from the Ponce De Leon Inlet in Volusia County to Jupiter Inlet in Palm Beach County. It is an estuary, a body of water where freshwater from rivers and streams mix with the ocean saltwater. Seventy-two miles of the lagoon lie in Brevard County and play a vital role in the community���s livelihood. Some of the lagoon���s major contributions to Brevard County include the following:
The St. Johns River is the longest river in Florida at 310 miles. It is one of the few rivers in the United States that flows north. Because it flows north, the upper basin area to the south that forms its marshy headwaters in Indian River and Brevard counties. This is approximately a 1,000-square-mile basin. The river stretches from Indian River County to Duval County in northeast Florida, where the river empties into the Atlantic Ocean.
The Indian River Lagoon and the St. Johns River are currently battling
pollution that could potentially prevent the citizens of Brevard County
from using it for those very activities that make it so valuable. Untreated
stormwater runoff is now considered the state's leading source of water
pollution. Stormwater runoff, a form of non-point source pollution,
is caused when rainfall runs over the land, picks up pollutants and
deposits them into our waterways.
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