Ontario is investing $1.5 million into a new Local Blue Economy Growth Fund aimed at protecting the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence River Basin through projects that improve water quality, reduce pollution, and strengthen climate resilience. The funding will support municipalities and First Nations communities with initiatives such as stormwater filtration systems, rain gardens, and other green infrastructure projects. Read the full story by CKNX – Wingham, ON.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20260508-ontario-greatlakes-protection

Hannah Reynolds

Wisconsin conservation groups and wildlife agencies are working to help the endangered Great Lakes piping plover recover by restoring sandy nesting habitats in places like Green Bay’s Cat Island and closely monitoring nests and chicks each breeding season. The efforts have helped the bird rebound in Wisconsin, with the state recording 11 nesting pairs in 2025 — one of the strongest totals in the Great Lakes region. Read the full story by the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20260508-wisconsin-pipingplover-comeback

Hannah Reynolds

Federal staffing and funding delays are threatening protections for endangered Great Lakes piping plovers in Michigan as the birds return to nest along Lake Michigan shorelines this spring. Conservation groups warn that postponed seasonal hiring and support could leave nests and chicks more vulnerable to predators, human disturbance, and habitat loss during the critical breeding season. Read the full story by MLive.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20260508-greatlakes-pipingplovers-nesting-michigan

Hannah Reynolds

NOAA’s Thomas Jefferson is making its first routes on the Great Lakes this summer since 2022, with the task of mapping the waters of western and central Lake Erie, along with eastern Lake Ontario. The goal of this work is to improve navigation safety. Read the full story by CBS News.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20260508-noaa-research-ship-lake-erie

Hannah Reynolds

The U.S. Senate unanimously passed bipartisan legislation led by Gary Peters that would strengthen pipeline safety nationwide by increasing federal funding for inspections, improving cybersecurity protections, and supporting new leak-detection technology research. The bill also includes a proposal to establish a National Center of Excellence for hazardous liquid pipeline leak detection in the Great Lakes region to help prevent and respond to potential oil spills. Read the full story by The Alpena News.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20260508-bipartisanbill-us-pipeline-gary-peters

Hannah Reynolds

NOAA’s early 2026 forecast predicts a mild to moderate harmful algal bloom in western Lake Erie this summer, with bloom severity expected to fall between 2 and 5.5 on the agency’s scale. Scientists say the blooms are driven largely by phosphorus runoff flowing into the lake, especially from the Maumee River watershed, and can threaten drinking water, tourism, and aquatic ecosystems. Read the full story by The Plain Dealer.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20260508-lake-erie-algalblooms-forecast

Hannah Reynolds

People living along the Lake Ontario shoreline are keeping a close eye on water levels, which rose significantly after one of the wettest early springs on record. Despite their concern, they’re starting to see some positive signs after two devastating floods in the past decade. Read the full story by Spectrum News.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20260508-lake-ontario-levels-flooding-fears

Hannah Reynolds

Crews in Erie, Pennsylvania, are working to raise the historic 115-year-old tugboat G Tug Hawaii, which has been submerged in Presque Isle Bay since late 2025 after sinking near the Bayfront. Officials hope salvaging the former Great Lakes Towing vessel will preserve an important piece of regional maritime history while preventing further deterioration underwater. Read the full story by Erie Times-News.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20260508-work-ongoing-tugboat-g-tug-hawaii-lakeerie

Hannah Reynolds

The Great Lakes Aquarium is asking local anglers and community members to donate smelt to help feed its river otters after seasonal shortages made it difficult to secure enough of the fish. The aquarium says smelt are an important part of the otters’ diet, and donated catches can help keep the animals healthy and active. Read the full story by WUBE – Cincinnati, OH.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20260508-greatlakes-aquarium-smelt-donations-needed-otters

Hannah Reynolds

Explore the surprising culture of surfing on Lake Michigan, highlighting how strong winds and long stretches of open water can create surfable waves along Michigan’s shoreline. Experts explain the science behind Great Lakes wave formation and why freshwater surfing has become a unique part of life around the lake. Read the full story by Michigan Public.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20260508-surfinglakemichigan

Hannah Reynolds

On Ohio’s Kelleys Island, Tom and Paula Bartlett have spent years catching and banding birds. Their work has helped shape our understanding of how birds migrate through the Great Lakes.

Watch the full segment on the Great Lakes Now YouTube channel.

#GreatLakes #Birds #Birding #Science #Wildlife #Short
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The post One Couple’s Mission to Band 100,000 Birds appeared first on Great Lakes Now.

Original Article

Great Lakes Now

Great Lakes Now

https://www.greatlakesnow.org/2026/05/07/one-couples-mission-to-band-100000-birds/

Great Lakes Now

Join a livestreamed expedition to the deepest point in the Great Lakes! Explore a hidden underwater world from your own screen and have your questions answered LIVE.

🗓 June 6, 2026
🕐 1 P.M.

More than 400 meters (1,300 feet) beneath Lake Superior likes a place that no light reaches and few people have ever seen. Great Lakes Now is teaming up with freshwater explorers Yvonne Drebert and Zach Melnick to send cameras back to the bottom and explore the area for the first time in 40 years.

What we’re hoping to see:
• The kiyi, a rare deepwater fish that is believed to live only in Lake Superior.
• Alien looking deepwater sculpin
• Forests of colorful hydra
• The deepwater-adapted siscowet lake trout

Along for the voyage is Michigan DNR fisheries biologist Shawn Sitar, who has been investigating the recent appearance of “zombie fish,” emaciated siscowet turning up across Lake Superior, many of them from the deepest parts of the lake.

Watch live and ask questions in real time as Drebert, Melnick, and Sitar guide you through the depths of one of the largest lakes on Earth.

⚠ The date and time of this livestream are subject to change due to weather conditions. Sign up for the Great Lakes Now newsletter to get reminders and updates delivered directly to your inbox: https://www.greatlakesnow.org/great-lakes-now-newsletter/

Follow Great Lakes Now and Hidden Below: The Great Lakes on social media to stay updated about the expedition:

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/greatlakesnow | https://www.facebook.com/HiddenBelowGreatLakes
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/greatlakesnoworg | https://www.instagram.com/hiddenbelowgreatlakes

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Newsletter: https://www.greatlakesnow.org/great-lakes-now-newsletter/

To learn more about supporting Detroit PBS and Great Lakes Now, visit https://www.detroitpbs.org/

The post Superior Maximus | Hidden Below: Live appeared first on Great Lakes Now.

Original Article

Great Lakes Now

Great Lakes Now

https://www.greatlakesnow.org/2026/05/07/superior-maximus-hidden-below-live/

Great Lakes Now

Research Project Study Looking For Input on Pet Welfare, Invasive Species Messaging Original Story: Wisconsin Sea Grant Wisconsin Sea Grant is doing a research project about messaging related to pet welfare and invasive species. As a college student in Wisconsin we are interested in your opinions about messaging on this topic since you may [...]

The post College Student? Help Pet Welfare By Taking This Survey appeared first on Fox-Wolf Watershed Alliance.

Original Article

Fox-Wolf Watershed Alliance

Fox-Wolf Watershed Alliance

https://fwwa.org/2026/05/06/college-student-help-pet-welfare-by-taking-this-survey/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=college-student-help-pet-welfare-by-taking-this-survey

Chris Acy

By Christian Thorsberg, Circle of Blue

The Great Lakes News Collaborative includes Bridge Michigan, Circle of Blue, Great Lakes Now at Detroit PBS, Michigan Public and The Narwhal who work together to bring audiences news and information about the impact of climate change, pollution, and aging infrastructure on the Great Lakes and drinking water. This independent journalism is supported by the Charles Stewart Mott Foundation. Find all the work HERE.


More than two years have passed since the Agriculture Improvement Act — better known as the Farm Bill — expired, leaving the nation’s primary agricultural policy framework in a state of prolonged uncertainty.

The bill, which steers the economics, logistics, and environmental priorities of America’s food production and land and water use, is one of the largest pieces of legislation authored by Congress. The 2018 package, which lapsed in 2023, is more than 500 pages long. 

Two full legislative sessions have come and gone without the approval of a new five-year Farm Bill, and this year is unlikely to yield more productive results. The U.S. House Agriculture Committee passed a new version of the bill out of committee earlier this month, but its chances of gaining Senate approval, policy experts tell Circle of Blue, are slim.

The absence of a new Farm Bill has been temporarily stop-gapped with consecutive one-year extensions of the 2018 bill, in 2024 and 2025. But these interim fixes have been vulnerable to cuts, with environmental protections and funding taking acute hits. 

Last year, hundreds of Farm Bill-supported conservation programs and grants administered by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) and Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) were paused or cancelled by the Trump administration. Many were stalled or eliminated on grounds of diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI).

Some of these grants include those administered by Regional Conservation Partnership Program (RCPP), a USDA effort that subsidizes farmers who address “natural resource challenges” on their lands, including water pollution, invasive species, and flooding.

Responding to a September FOIA request from Circle of Blue, the agency in February declined to release records identifying specific projects affected by cancellations, but acknowledged that at least 69 RCPP projects tied to those decisions are under legal review.

Each passing year without a new bill, environmental advocates say, is a missed opportunity to enshrine reliable funding for programs, including the RCPP, that prioritize healthy watersheds. 

Conservation-Minded Farmers Absorb Losses

Many farmers around the Great Lakes, still reeling from the financial impact of last year’s sudden changes, have testified to their positive impact on local watersheds. 

Ross Bishop, a farmer in the town of Jackson, Wisconsin, has used no-till practices for nearly 30 years on his 700-acre plot to manage flooding, drought, and water contamination. This proved especially effective in August, when more than nine inches of rain fell on his property in the span of 24 hours. The sheets of water that ran through his land and cover crops carried no sediment, according to the Milwaukee Metropolitan Sewage District — a far cry from the two millimeters of soil that erode off the average midwestern field every year, often carrying fertilizers that pollute water sources. 

Frozen USDA grant programs that support Bishop’s no-till work cost him $44,000 last growing season, he estimates. 

“The healthy farming practices that we do here are definitely keeping soil in the field,” Bishop told Circle of Blue. “If it erodes, you’re losing organic matter, so there’s a lot of value in these practices, and you need to show you’re making money by doing it. We’re all in trouble right now with economics.”

In northwest Indiana, Tom Eich has slowly been expanding his farming acreage since he began running Kankakee Valley Homestead in 2017. His vegetable plots grew from a quarter-acre to three acres, then 45 acres in 2024.  Before last growing season, supported by two USDA-funded programs — Local Food Purchase Assistance and Local Food for Schools — he made the decision to expand his farm to 150 acres for 2025.

The ink wasn’t even dry on the lease for these new plots when Eich received word that those grants had been canceled. Of the roughly 100 extra acres he acquired, he could only afford to grow vegetables on roughly one-fifth of this land.

“The beginning of the year left us with debt that we’re still kind of finishing paying up and unfortunately, that minimal cash flow throughout the year had ripple effects,” Eich said. “I wasn’t able to afford the normal help that we had on the farm. I wasn’t able to grow as much this year. Then we weren’t able to bring as much to the market.”

The Kankakee River, which is one of the most-polluted rivers in Indiana, runs through Eich’s farm. He says he’s the only one of his neighbors who doesn’t plant his crops right up to its banks, and instead has a line of trees and native plants that help combat flooding and preserve water quality. It’s a sacrifice he’s willing to make even without reimbursement from the USDA, but it’s not a luxury every farmer can afford. 

“Instead of putting into the program, they could potentially make more money farming it. So they still do that,” Eich says. “For the most part, a lot of the people that were doing it were doing it out of a mind of conservation, rather than necessarily the payback. But there are people for whom [grants] did make a real difference, and they are going to have to adapt.”

Further south, near Culver, Indiana, the impact and timing of grant cancellations added up quickly. A USDA cost-sharing cover crop research grant that was cancelled last February put Chad Gard, a farmer at Hole in the Wood Farms, in an $8,000 hole to start the spring. That snowballed, Gard said, into about $160,000 worth of losses over the year. Roughly 80 percent of his farm “went to weeds” instead of crops.

This meant that Gard wasn’t able to focus as closely on efforts to improve watershed quality and biodiversity.

“We work really hard to make sure that we’ve got buffer areas so we don’t have runoff from our fields,” Gard said. “We don’t use any synthetic chemicals at all, we’re careful not to use excess compost or leave our manure, you know, where it would run into the waterways, because that’s all ending up in the groundwater and in the river.”

Since he started implementing these practices several years ago, Gard said he has noticed the waters in the wetland woods adjacent to his land containing fewer algae, a sign of decreased nitrogen. The population of singing frogs has increased. Clearing invasive species like honeysuckle and silver maple from the outskirts of his land has brought birds back to the landscape. 

“The environment has been responding,” he said. “But if I spend 100 hours clearing out honeysuckle, I’m not spending that producing lettuce that I could sell and make income from. With a grant paying a portion of it, it’s a little easier to justify the expense.”

Even programs whose grants have remained untouched are dealing with the ramifications of defunded farmer outreach and education programs. Many of these rural efforts rely on word-of-mouth communication and trust. A year of instability has ruptured this grassroots momentum. 

In 2023, Ducks Unlimited was awarded $8.8 million through the USDA’s Regional Conservation Partnership Program to “restore and protect 800 acres of wetlands and associated upland areas” in priority watershed areas in Wisconsin.

But getting this program off the ground, even years later, has been difficult. “Finding agronomists to deliver these programs can be challenging,” Joe Genzel, the organization’s regional communications coordinator, told Circle of Blue in September. “It’s a very specialized position. Finding a biologist who can talk the talk to farmers is extremely niche.”

The post Stalled Farm Bill, slashed grants undercut farmers’ water protection efforts appeared first on Great Lakes Now.

Original Article

Great Lakes Now

Great Lakes Now

https://www.greatlakesnow.org/2026/05/06/stalled-farm-bill-slashed-grants-undercut-farmers-water-protection-efforts/

Circle of Blue