EPA's  BEACH  Report:
Florida  2008  Swimming  Season
              May 2009

Introduction
The BEACH Act of 2000 requires that coastal and
Great Lakes states and territories report to EPA on
beach monitoring and notification data for their
coastal recreation waters. The BEACH Act defines
coastal recreation waters as the Great Lakes and
coastal waters (including coastal estuaries) that states,
territories, and authorized tribes officially recognize or
designate for swimming, bathing, surfing, or similar
activities in the water.
This fact sheet summarizes beach monitoring and
notification data submitted to EPA by the State of
Florida for the 2008 swimming season.
During 2008 Florida monitored 305 beaches along
the coasts of the Atlantic Ocean and the Gulf of
Mexico. These beaches are located in 34 of Florida's
35 coastal counties. The only other coastal county has
no accessible beaches along the gulf. In total, there are
approximately 1,100 miles of recreational beaches in
Florida, and approximately 600 miles are monitored
at least once per week, year round. The geography
of these beaches varies from open coasts on barrier
islands to more enclosed bays, sounds, and intra-
coastal water ways.
Florida's beaches are heavily used most of the year;
late April to mid-September are the peak season in
most of the state. The state's population is estimated
at 18 million, and approximately 70 million tourists
visit per year. Estimates from the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) place the
number of swimmers at just over 14 million a year.
In addition, NOAA estimates that another 3.5 million
snorkelers, surfers, and divers  enter Florida water's
each year.
                                    Figure 1.  Florida coastal
                                            counties.
                                                          Monr
                               Table 1.  Breakdown of monitored and unmonitored
                                       coastal beaches by county for 2008.

County















BAY
BREVARD
BROWARD
CHARLOTTE
CITRUS
COLLIER
DIXIE
DUVAL
ESCAMBIA
FLAGLER
FRANKLIN
GULF
HERNANDO
HILLSBOROUGH
INDIAN RIVER
LEE



















LEW
MANATEE
MARTIN
MIAMI-DADE
MONROE
NASSAU
OKALOOSA
PALM BEACH
PASCO
PINELLAS
SANTA ROSA
SARASOTA
ST. JOHNS
ST. LUCIE
TAYLOR
VOLUSIA
WAKULLA
WALTON
TOTALS
Total
Beaches
16
27
19
9
1
56
1
10
18
9
6
7
1
9
16
19
2
11
21
16
39
29
26
24
7
42
10
33
8
25
5
16
2
12
552

Monitored
13
9
15
7
1
14
1
10
12
6
6
6
1
9
6
13
1
10
9
15
17
11
12
14
7
15
7
16
8
4
4
15
2
9
305
Not
Monitored
3
18
4
2
0
42
0
0
6
3
0
1
0
0
10
6
1
1
12
1
22
18
14
10
0
27
3
17
0
21
1
1
0
3
247


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2008 Summary Results
How many notification actions were reported
and how long were they?
When water quality standards are exceeded at
a particular beach, Florida's approach is to issue
a beach advisory that warns people to avoid
contact with the water. A total of 109 monitored
beaches had at least one advisory issued during the
2008 swimming season. Figure 2 presents a full
breakdown of notification action durations.
What percentage of days were beaches under a
notification action?
For Florida's 2008 swimming season, actions were
reported about 5 percent of the time (Figure 3).
How do 2008 results compare to previous years?
Table 2 compares 2008 notification action data with
monitored beach data from previous years.
What pollution sources possibly affect
investigated monitored beaches?
Figure 4 displays the percentage of Florida's
investigated monitored beaches possibly affected by
various pollution sources. In 2008, 58 percent of the
beaches had unidentfied sources.

For More Information
For general information about beaches:
www.epa.gov/beaches/
For information about beaches in Florida go to:
www.doh.state.fl.us (Select "Beach Water Quality"
from the subject  list.)
Figure 2:  Beach notification actions by duration.
                           110
                   2       3-7      8-30
                  Duration of Actions (days)
                                            >30
Figure 3: Beach days with
          and without
          notification
          actions.
           Beach days with
             an action:
               5,382
               (5%)
Table 2. Beach notification actions, 2006-2008.
 Beach days
with no action
   106,308
    (95%)

Number of monitored
beaches
Number of beaches
affected by notification
actions
Percentage of beaches
affected by notification
actions
Percentage of beach
days affected by
notification actions
2006
307
104
34%
4%
2007
308
99
32%
5%
2008
305
109
36%
5%
                                         Figure 4: Percent of investigated monitored beaches affected by
                                                                possible pollution sources (305 beaches).
                                                                        Percent of beaches
                                                       0    10    20   30   40   50  60   70   80    90   100
                              Investigated / no sources found
                                   Non-storm related runoff
                                       Storm-related runoff
                                        Agricultural runoff
                                           Boat discharge
                              Cone, animal feeding operation
                                   Combined sewer overflow
                                    Sanitary sewer overflow
                              Publicly-owned treatment works
                                    Sewer line leak or break
                                     Septic system leakage
                                                Wildlife
                                  Other (identified) source(s)
                                     Unidentified source(s)
                             Note: A single beach may
                              have multiple sources.

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