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Second annual event raises boater awareness of aquatic invasive species and prevention across the Great Lakes Basin

Great Lakes Basin This summer hundreds of organizations will reach out virtually and in person to remind boaters and the public about the risks of spreading aquatic invasive species (AIS). The Great Lakes Commission is working with states and provinces to coordinate the second annual Great Lakes AIS Landing Blitz from June 28 to July 10 across the region.

U.S. and Canadian groups will show boaters across the Great Lakes Basin how to properly inspect and clean boats, trailers and other equipment to prevent the spread of AIS, which are recognized as one of the most significant threats to the ecological and economic health of the Great Lakes Basin. Volunteers, along with paid inspectors, are partnering with state and provincial agencies at boat launches to educate boaters on how to prevent the spread of AIS, ways to identify AIS and report an AIS discovery, and local AIS regulations.

“Partnering directly with anglers, boaters, and other community members across the Basin is critical to preventing the spread of aquatic invasive species in the Great Lakes,” said Sharon M. Jackson, chair of the Great Lakes Commission and deputy general counsel for Indiana Governor Eric Holcomb. “The more people we reach, the more people become part of the solution to protecting our lakes and rivers.”

Last year’s inaugural Great Lakes AIS Landing Blitz reached 115,000 people at 1,400 public and private boat landings across the region. This year, agencies leading the effort are expanding their online presence due to measures to limit the spread of COVID-19.

“The unusual circumstances created by COVID-19 have driven us to be more creative in how we reach people and expand our impact beyond just the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence River region,” said Martine Hébert, Québec government Delegate in Chicago and Great Lakes Commissioner. “We are committed to working with our partners and colleagues around the basin in a continued effort to keep invasive species out of the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence. We are always happy to participate in delivering a coordinated message – virtually and in person – about the importance of AIS prevention during what remains one of the busiest boating weekends of the year.”

More than 180 non-native aquatic species are established in the lakes, many of which are invasive and cause harm. Progress is being made to prevent new invasions and reduce the damage from those species already here. Despite this, the region remains vulnerable to the introduction and spread of AIS and these threats are likely to increase with changing weather patterns, including this spring’s severe storms and flooding. As boaters return to the water this summer, it is imperative that they clean, drain and dry their boat and gear, and for anglers to properly dispose of any unused bait.

For more information on the Great Lakes AIS Landing Blitz, including educational materials, location, and volunteer opportunities, visit www.glc.org/blitz.


The Great Lakes Commission, led by chair Sharon M. Jackson, Deputy General Counsel for Governor Eric J. Holcomb of Indiana, is an interstate compact agency established under the Great Lakes Basin Compact of 1955. The Commission is authorized by state and U.S. federal law and dedicated to promoting a strong economy, healthy environment and high quality of life for the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence Basin and its residents. The Commission consists of governors’ appointees, state legislators, industry and nonprofit leaders and agency officials from eight states and two provinces. Associate membership for Ontario and Québec was established through the signing of a “Declaration of Partnership.” The Commission maintains a formal Observer program involving U.S. and Canadian federal agencies, tribal authorities, binational agencies and other regional interests. The Commission office is in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Learn more at www.glc.org.

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For media inquiries, please contact Beth Wanamaker, beth@glc.org.

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Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/news/blitz-070220

Beth Wanamaker

Independent experts are questioning the adequacy of plans to examine how much fluorochemical pollution is entering Michigan’s Rogue River from Wolverine World Wide contamination sites and subsequently washing downstream toward Lake Michigan. Read the full story by MLive.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20200623-PFAS-rogue

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Blue Accounting partners with U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to track investments, impacts in Great Lakes coastal wetlands

Great Lakes Basin – In a historic agreement, Blue Accounting has partnered with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to better track investments in restoring and protecting Great Lakes coastal wetlands. The Service has agreed to share its Habitat Information Tracking System (HabITS) database for publication in a public platform, substantially increasing the number of coastal wetland projects tracked on www.blueaccounting.org.

With this agreement, Blue Accounting will incorporate the two largest sources of coastal wetland project data in the Great Lakes Basin: the HaBITS database and Great Lakes Restoration Database, which tracks projects funded under the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative. Blue Accounting will soon be able to connect information on the vast majority of U.S. coastal wetland investments in the Great Lakes Basin initiated since 2010.

“The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is committed to collaborative approaches for fish and wildlife conservation across the Great Lakes Basin,” said Charlie Wooley, Regional Director for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s Great Lakes Region. “The principles of being collaborative, outcome-driven, data and science-informed, and adaptive are shared between the Service and the Blue Accounting Initiative. We are proud to have supported and participated with Blue Accounting since its inception as a means to join with other agencies to develop shared objectives and track progress toward goals. This agreement will allow for better tracking of the region’s progress toward restoring and protecting critical Great Lakes coastal wetlands.”

“Coastal wetlands protect our communities from floods, provide habitat for fish and wildlife, filter our water, and serve as economic drivers for the Great Lakes states and provinces,” said Sharon M. Jackson, chair of the Great Lakes Commission and deputy general counsel to Indiana Governor Eric Holcomb. “We are excited to partner with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to expand the investments in wetlands that Blue Accounting is tracking, in order to make sure we are best protecting, restoring and utilizing this invaluable resource.”

The Blue Accounting coastal wetland team, led by The Nature Conservancy, works with a regional partnership of state, federal, tribal, nongovernmental and academic organizations to report on investments in Great Lakes Coastal Wetlands.  This regional partnership, called the Great Lakes Coastal Assembly, is co-chaired by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources and has identified a collective vision and goals for coastal wetlands. This vision and goals act like a roadmap ensuring our collective actions create healthy coastal wetlands supporting fish, wildlife, plants, and people. The USFWS data provided through this agreement will help track investment and progress toward meeting these shared coastal wetland goals.

Through Blue Accounting, key experts and stakeholders track progress toward shared goals for the Great Lakes, helping decision-makers improve how they are protected and restored. The Great Lakes Commission leads Blue Accounting in partnership with dozens of federal, state, provincial, local and private sector organizations. Blue Accounting receives funding support from the Charles Stewart Mott Foundation, the Fred A. and Barbara M. Erb Family Foundation, the Joyce Foundation, and the Herbert H. and Grace A. Dow Foundation.


The Great Lakes Commission, led by chair Sharon M. Jackson, Deputy General Counsel for Governor Eric J. Holcomb of Indiana, is an interstate compact agency established under the Great Lakes Basin Compact of 1955. The Commission is authorized by state and U.S. federal law and dedicated to promoting a strong economy, healthy environment and high quality of life for the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence Basin and its residents. The Commission consists of governors’ appointees, state legislators, industry and nonprofit leaders and agency officials from eight states and two provinces. Associate membership for Ontario and Québec was established through the signing of a “Declaration of Partnership.” The Commission maintains a formal Observer program involving U.S. and Canadian federal agencies, tribal authorities, binational agencies and other regional interests. The Commission office is in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Learn more at www.glc.org.

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For media inquiries, please contact Beth Wanamaker, beth@glc.org.

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Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/news/data-sharing-051920

Beth Wanamaker

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Great Lakes organizations urge Congress to include Great Lakes investments in stimulus funding

GREAT LAKES BASIN – In a letter sent today, organizations representing the Great Lakes states, tribes, binational agencies, state legislators, municipalities, conservation organizations, labor, businesses, and ports joined their voices in urging Congress to include critical Great Lakes investments in legislation to stimulate economic recovery from the coronavirus pandemic.

“We urge you to invest in the Great Lakes to help our region and nation recover from the devastating coronavirus pandemic,” the letter reads. “Funding can be administered quickly through existing programs and swiftly generate job growth and new economic activity across the eight-state Great Lakes Basin. Environmental improvements, including ensuring safe drinking water for over 40 million people, will accelerate community recovery and revitalize the Great Lakes Basin economy while fueling the national economic recovery.”

Investments would modernize outdated water infrastructure to protect drinking water and public health; help communities respond to high lake levels and climate impacts; strengthen the Great Lakes navigation system; and accelerate funding for the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative to implement ready to launch cleanup projects that will spur economic development in coastal communities, while sustaining efforts to block the introduction of Asian carp and implement agricultural conservation practices to prevent harmful algal blooms.

These investments are endorsed by the Great Lakes CommissionGreat Lakes Fishery CommissionHealing Our Waters-Great Lakes CoalitionGreat Lakes and St. Lawrence Cities InitiativeChippewa Ottawa Resource AuthorityAmerican Great Lakes Ports AssociationGreat Lakes Metro Chambers CoalitionGreat Lakes-St. Lawrence Legislative Caucus and BlueGreen Alliance. They reflect broader priorities for investing in the Great Lakes as an economic powerhouse and natural treasure that were released by the groups earlier this year. 


The Great Lakes Commission, led by chair Sharon M. Jackson, Deputy General Counsel for Governor Eric J. Holcomb of Indiana, is an interstate compact agency established under the Great Lakes Basin Compact of 1955. The Commission is authorized by state and U.S. federal law and dedicated to promoting a strong economy, healthy environment and high quality of life for the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence Basin and its residents. The Commission consists of governors’ appointees, state legislators, industry and nonprofit leaders and agency officials from eight states and two provinces. Associate membership for Ontario and Québec was established through the signing of a “Declaration of Partnership.” The Commission maintains a formal Observer program involving U.S. and Canadian federal agencies, tribal authorities, binational agencies and other regional interests. The Commission office is in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Learn more at www.glc.org.

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For media inquiries, please contact Beth Wanamaker, beth@glc.org.

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Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/news/joint-stimulus-051220

Beth Wanamaker

Sightings of river otters along western Lake Erie at Ottawa National Wildlife Refuge in Ohio and Point Pelee National Park in Leamington, Ontario, and evidence of a return of river otter to Toronto Harbour, raise the prospects that they just might return one day to the Detroit River too.  Read the full story by Great Lakes Now.

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Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20200505-otters

Beth Wanamaker

Solutions to the Erie Shoreline flood and erosion problems will have to be solved with resilience, not in-water structures, consultant Peter Zuzek pointed out at Monday night’s meeting of the Chatham-Kent Council in Ontario.  Read the full story by the Chatham Voice.

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Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20200505-erosion

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Andrew Reeves traveled across 10 states, interviewing and shadowing countless experts, to get the truth behind the Asian carp invasion. Sifting through his findings, he published a 384-page book, “Overrun: Dispatches from the Asian Carp Crisis,” in March 2019.  Read the full story by BU News Service.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20200505-carp

Beth Wanamaker

Our recovery from this pandemic must include a sincere investment in water systems, including assuring access to reliable, affordable water in all households, strengthening underfunded and struggling water utilities, and modernizing the aging pipes, pumps and plants that deliver it.  Read the full story by Crain’s Chicago Business.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20200505-COVID

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Thirty five million people get their drinking water from one of the Great Lakes. But with rising temperatures, more rainfall and more nutrients running into the water, conditions become perfect for algae growth.  So, what’s the prognosis for drinking water near the Great Lakes? Read the full story by WORT – Madison, WI.

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Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20200505-drinking-water

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Great Lakes Commission urges Congress to include Great Lakes investments in stimulus

Ann Arbor, Mich. – In a letter sent yesterday, the Great Lakes Commission called on Congressional appropriators to include critical Great Lakes investments in any economic stimulus response to the coronavirus pandemic. The investments include modernizing outdated water infrastructure to protect drinking water and public health, fully funding the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative to clean up pollution across the region and supporting programs that help prevent harmful algal blooms and bolster producers and the Basin’s farm economy. 

“With nearly one-third of U.S. and Canadian economies centered around the Great Lakes Basin, revitalizing the Great Lakes economy will accelerate and stabilize our national recovery,” the letter reads. “Congress has been a vital partner in efforts to maximize the Great Lakes as an environmental and economic asset for the region, the nation and North America. These investments will address important priorities while quickly stimulating economic activity in hard-hit communities.”  

The investments reflect longstanding Great Lakes Commission priorities for strengthening the economic and environmental health of the eight-state region. They are aligned with the Commission’s Great Lakes 2020: Vision for a Healthy and Resilient Great Lakes Basin.  

The Great Lakes Commission convenes the states and provinces—Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, New York, Ohio, Ontario, Pennsylvania, Québec and Wisconsin—to speak collectively for a healthy, vibrant Great Lakes Basin. Established by the Great Lakes Basin Compact and authorized by Congress, the Commission promotes, plans for, and invests in the use, development and conservation of the Great Lakes Basin.  


The Great Lakes Commission, led by chair Sharon M. Jackson, Deputy General Counsel for Governor Eric J. Holcomb of Indiana, is an interstate compact agency established under the Great Lakes Basin Compact of 1955. The Commission is authorized by state and U.S. federal law and dedicated to promoting a strong economy, healthy environment and high quality of life for the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence Basin and its residents. The Commission consists of governors’ appointees, state legislators, industry and nonprofit leaders and agency officials from eight states and two provinces. Associate membership for Ontario and Québec was established through the signing of a “Declaration of Partnership.” The Commission maintains a formal Observer program involving U.S. and Canadian federal agencies, tribal authorities, binational agencies and other regional interests. The Commission office is in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Learn more at www.glc.org.

Contact

For media inquiries, please contact Beth Wanamaker, beth@glc.org.

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Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/news/stimulus-042920

Beth Wanamaker

Across Michigan, government leaders, elected officials and emergency managers are nervous, too. They’re looking at ongoing record or higher than average Great Lakes levels, knowing that the next two months will be pivotal for flooding risks and erosion damage. Read the full story by MLive.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20200327-high-water

Beth Wanamaker

Mayor Lori Lightfoot has shut down the city’s lakefront trails and parks, the popular 606 trail and downtown’s Riverwalk “until further notice,” warning the spread of coronavirus at the crowded spaces was putting the city in danger. Read the full story by Crain’s Chicago Business.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20200327-chicago

Beth Wanamaker

The Blue Water Bridge will no longer accept cash transactions from any travelers to help slow the spread of the novel coronavirus. Customers who attempt to pay with cash will be prohibited from crossing. To further reduce the risk of transmission, MDOT is asking commuters to use hand sanitizer before providing their cards to the toll collectors. Read the full story by Great Lakes Now.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20200327-border

Beth Wanamaker

The Lake Erie Committee of the Great Lakes Fishery Commission set its lakewide Total Allowable Catch (TAC) on Thursday for Ohio and the other state and provincial members of the Lake Erie Committee. The walleye TAC is a 20% boost over last year’s 8.5 million fish, which was a 20% increase from the 7.1 million walleye in 2018. Read the full story by Cleveland Plain Dealer.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20200327-walleye

Beth Wanamaker

Michigan DNR chief of parks and recreation Ron Olson said there has been an increase of fishers in a time where unemployment claims have surged. If fishermen and other outdoor enthusiasts do not follow social distancing protocols, restrictions could be implemented. Read the full story by the Detroit Free Press.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20200327-dnr

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According to the Toledo Lucas County Port Authority, when it comes to the inspection of cargo ships, the crew will now be checked out as well as the cargo. Agencies like the Coast Guard and Customs will be making sure the crew is healthy, and in some cases the crew may not be able to disembark from the freighter. Read and view the full story by WTVG TV – Toledo.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20200327-toledo

Beth Wanamaker

The International Joint Commission is hosting a webinar on high water levels in Lake Ontario and the St. Lawrence River on April 3rd, 2020. Canadian Co-Chair Pierre Béland and U.S. Co-Chair Jane Corwin will host the event, with a French language webinar taking place at 9:30am (EDT) and the English language webinar being held at noon (EDT). Read the full story by the Kingston Herald.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20200327-ijc

Beth Wanamaker

The International Joint Commission is hosting a webinar on high water levels in Lake Ontario and the St. Lawrence River on April 3rd, 2020. Canadian Co-Chair Pierre Béland and U.S. Co-Chair Jane Corwin will host the event, with a French language webinar taking place at 9:30am (EDT) and the English language webinar being held at noon (EDT). Read the full story by the Kingston Herald.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20200327-ijc

Beth Wanamaker