Great Lakes Regional
Collaboration Strategy Now Available http://www.glrc.us;
EPA Outlines Next Federal Actions
(Note: Basin, ecosystem, watershed, region, etc. -- all are major Language Deception terms to disguise The Wildlands Project.)
Contact: Anne Rowan, EPA Region 5, [email protected] or 312-353-9391
The administrator also committed to specific actions among federal agencies to accelerate cleanup of contaminated sediment, return another 200,000 acres of wetlands to ecological health in equal partnership with the states, reduce the spread of invasive species and make beaches cleaner. "One year ago, we accepted President Bush's unprecedented charge to devise a strategy for prioritizing future actions to protect the Great Lakes," Administrator Johnson said. "Today's blueprint is the next step in ensuring these majestic lakes remain an international treasure." The Great Lakes Legacy Act of 2002 authorizes $270 million in funding over five years for cleanups of contaminated hot spots at 31 areas of concern in the United States. In 2004, the first year funds were available, Congress appropriated $9.9 million. In 2005, Congress appropriated $22.3 million, and $30 million will be available in 2006. President Bush requested $50 million in 2006. Last week, EPA announced the approval of a $50 million Legacy Act cleanup of the Ashtabula River in Ohio, a tributary to Lake Erie. Cleanups of Black Lagoon, an inlet of the Detroit River in Trenton, Michigan, and Newton Creek/Hog Island Inlet in Superior, Wisconsin, were completed last month. Another project is under way at Ruddiman Creek in Muskegon, Michigan. More projects will be announced in the coming months. Johnson also announced that EPA will work with Congress to ensure
that the interim barrier halting the advance of Asian Carp to the
Great Lakes system is made permanent. This effort includes streamlining the wetlands permit process specifically for restoration and water quality projects in the Great Lakes basin. EPA and the states will also take action to restore another 200,000 acres in the basin so they can perform their indispensable, natural functions. Healthy wetlands support biological diversity, help maintain valuable economic resources like fisheries, provide flood control and filter pollution. The agency will also supplement and bolster beach monitoring and notification programs in lakeside communities. EPA proposes a three-year, three-step effort to perform watershed-based sanitary surveys in Great Lakes recreational waters to help identify sources of pollution. Surveys will be done in 2006 and the first pilot projects should begin in the Great Lakes basin in 2007. President George W. Bush's Executive Order 12240 (May 18, 2004) recognized the national significance of the Great Lakes, established a federal task force and supported the creation of a Great Lakes Regional Collaboration. Over the past year, more than 1,500 people from throughout the Great Lakes basin participated on eight strategy teams to develop the recommendations that form the basis of the strategy. Summit I was held in December 2004 in Chicago, with conveners representing the federal government and Great Lakes states, cities, tribes and public interest groups as well as the region's congressional delegation. Today at Summit II, representatives from the collaboration signed a resolution formally adopting the strategy and committing to continue to work together. The strategy is available at: http://www.glrc.us
c63852570d50069141d!OpenDocument View all news releases related to water: http://yosemite.epa.gov/opa/admpress.nsf/Press%20Releases%20-%20Water!OpenView
"Great Lakes Regional Collaboration:"
12/9/2005
Press Conference in Chicago Monday to Release the Great
Lakes Regional Collaboration Strategy 2006c4077!OpenDocument 065d4c6!OpenDocument 14cd!OpenDocument 2395!OpenDocument 41d!OpenDocument
4/25/2006
Great Lakes Cleanup Projects Get New Direction 11!OpenDocument !OpenDocument |