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KEYS RESIDENTS ASKED TO CONSERVE WATER AMID THIRD WATER MAIN BREAK IN LESS THAN A WEEK
“We need to put out a 50 or 100year plan,” Veliz said, adding that FKAA can’t drop pipes into the ground and worry about it later down the road.
The first break in the Keys occurred during the early morning hours of March 8 near Postcard Inn Beach Resort & Marina. Repair crews battled the sun and heat as they spent 12 hours repairing the break and the road. Sheriff’s deputies and flagmen directed northbound traffic to the Old Highway and southbound traffic onto the northbound lane of U.S. 1.
Just as Florida Keys Aqueduct Authority crews were finishing repairs of a water main break at MM 84 near Postcard Inn Beach Resort & Marina on the evening of March 8, a second major leak was reported roughly eight miles north at MM 92 in Tavernier. As a result, crews were sent to the Tavernier water leak that Veliz said was much worse than the break in Islamorada.
Veliz said repair crews were working more than 29 hours between the first two breaks.
JIM McCARTHY jim@keysweekly.com
Homes and businesses from the Upper Keys to Key West turned their faucet handles to find little to no water flowing following a third pipe break during the evening hours of March 11.
Florida Keys Aqueduct Authority repair crews worked throughout the night and into the morning at MM 84.5 — an area that witnessed two breaks in less than week — to restore the flow.
With water now running out of the faucets, FKAA is asking residents, the many tourists staying at hotels and campgrounds during spring break and businesses throughout the island chain to conserve water to allow the system to return to normal operations. In a statement, Greg Veliz, Florida Keys Aqueduct Authority executive director, said the agency reduced output from its Florida City plan to relieve pressure on the system.
“We are asking for assistance from the public, in an effort to conserve water and rebuild our services,” Veliz said. “FKAA is generating enough water to service our customers. However, we are limited in our ability to build our reserves, which have been depleted as a result of the leaks that occurred last week.” from page 4
Veliz added that people should reduce irrigation systems, boat washing and running water through the faucet or shower for too long.
“Irrigation systems are a big killer for us,” Veliz said during a March 14 appearance on Keys Talk 96.9 radio with Michael Stapleford.
The many motorists traveling south on a heavily congested U.S. 1 on Plantation Key on March 13 passed by a Monroe County Sheriff’s Office message board urging them to conserve water.

FKAA had issued a precautionary boil water notice to residents from Windley Key to Key West, all of whom were affected by the latest water main break over the weekend. The precautionary measure ended on March 14. All water passed testing in all areas, FKAA said.
Pipe breaks in the Upper Keys happened as FKAA prepares to begin a 4-mile, $42-million water main replacement project from Tea Table Relief at MM 79 to Whale Harbor at MM 84. Excavation work is slated for April to place new 36-inch water main transmission alongside U.S. 1. Veliz said the breaks at MM 84.5 are outside the scope of the project. Veliz told Stapleford during an interview with Keys Talk that FKAA will eventually replace 130 miles of water main. Veliz also emphasized the importance of planning once the new pipes are in the ground.
“And this isn’t sitting under the tree, this is 29 (hours) in the hole,” Veliz told the Keys Weekly.
Stanley Switlik and Plantation Key schools closed on March 9 due to the low water pressure. Coral Shores and Marathon high schools also closed, as well as the village of Islamorada administrative building and the county tax collector’s offices in the Upper and Middle Keys. All schools and government buildings are currently open.
A number of restaurants throughout the Keys were forced to close on March 8 and March 12 due to the lack of water.
U.S. 1 heading north closes to allow FKAA crews to repair a major pipe burst at MM 92 on March 9. Traffic was diverted to a southbound lane.
Weekly what the lawsuits allege.
The Keys Weekly emailed Curran copies of the legal complaints and invited her to submit comments — from herself or her attorney — to be included in this article.

Less than an hour after speaking with Keys Weekly, Curran’s office sent a notice to all patients that said, “Our company system crashed. We are putting records back together. If you paid by Venmo, please respond so we don’t bill you twice.”
Lawsuits request jury trials
Fort Lauderdale attorney Brian Militzok filed the federal whistleblower lawsuit on behalf of the former office manager. That suit requests a jury trial, the employee’s unpaid overtime, plus attorneys’ fees and additional compensatory and punitive damages.
Brian Militzok and Matthew Militzok are both listed as attorneys in the class-action lawsuit, filed in Monroe County. Sharon Davidson, a former patient and one-time business consultant for Curran, is the lead plaintiff in the class-action suit.
The class-action suit also requests a jury trial and is enrolling additional affected plaintiffs who are eligible to join the lawsuit.
“There are hundreds, if not thousands, of members of the class described,” states the class-action lawsuit that applies to “all patients who, between March 9, 2019 and Sept. 15, 2022, were a paying patient of defendants and who paid defendants, at least in part, to receive a cosmetic injectable treatment of one or more of Botox, Juvederm Ultra, Juvederm Voluma, Restylane with lidocaine, and/or Sculptra injection treatment from defendants, and who did in fact receive a non-FDA-approved substitute cosmetic injectable.”
No hearings had been scheduled for the cases, as of March 15, according to court records.