The replica Seneca Chief, a floating museum and tribute to the original vessel that carried New York Governor DeWitt Clinton in 1825, will stop at ports in the Mohawk Valley, New York, to mark the 200th anniversary of opening of the Erie Canal. Read the full story by the Utica Observer Dispatch.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20251008-seneca-chief

Taaja Tucker-Silva

Nearly 30 agencies from Michigan, Indiana, and Ohio gathered in St. Ignace, Michigan, this week for a large-scale emergency response training simulating a midair plane crash over Lake Huron near the Mackinac County Airport. Read the full story by WWTV-TV – Cadillac, MI.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20251008-huron-training

Taaja Tucker-Silva

A federal judge ruled that the now-defunct Erie Coke Corporation on the shores of Lake Erie in Erie, Pennsylvania, must pay $700,000 for a multi-year conspiracy to violate the U.S. Clean Air Act, a decision some environmental activists said isn’t enough. Read the full story by WJET-TV – Erie, PA.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20251008-erie-coke-fine

Taaja Tucker-Silva

By Isabella Figueroa Nogueira
A recent collaborative study, conducted through the Great Lakes Indian Fish and Wildlife Commission, the College of Menominee Nation in Kenosha, Wisconsin, nine tribal entities and academic researchers to understand how climate change threatens the lake sturgeon and to develop adaptation strategies rooted in tribal knowledge.

The post Western and Indigenous knowledge will help lake sturgeon, study shows  first appeared on Great Lakes Echo.

Original Article

Great Lakes Echo

Great Lakes Echo

https://greatlakesecho.org/2025/10/08/western-and-indigenous-knowledge-will-help-lake-sturgeon-study-shows/

Great Lakes Echo

* WHAT...Temperatures as low as 30 will result in frost formation. * WHERE...Waushara, Calumet, Winnebago, Brown, Outagamie, and Waupaca Counties. * WHEN...Until 9 AM CDT this morning. * IMPACTS...Frost could harm sensitive outdoor vegetation. Sensitive outdoor plants may be killed if left uncovered.

Original Article

Current watches, warnings, and advisories for Brown County (WIC009) WI

Current watches, warnings, and advisories for Brown County (WIC009) WI

https://api.weather.gov/alerts/urn:oid:2.49.0.1.840.0.a7e2d85619ffa88a5832f45daf534e21795fa4d4.004.1.cap

NWS

* WHAT...Temperatures as low as 30 will result in frost formation. * WHERE...Waushara, Calumet, Winnebago, Brown, Outagamie, and Waupaca Counties. * WHEN...From 3 AM to 9 AM CDT Wednesday. * IMPACTS...Frost could harm sensitive outdoor vegetation. Sensitive outdoor plants may be killed if left uncovered.

Original Article

Current watches, warnings, and advisories for Brown County (WIC009) WI

Current watches, warnings, and advisories for Brown County (WIC009) WI

https://api.weather.gov/alerts/urn:oid:2.49.0.1.840.0.aa4906d049f5898e45fd77276863fa1cabf586a6.004.1.cap

NWS

* WHAT...Temperatures as low as 32 to 37 will result in frost formation, especially in sheltered areas. * WHERE...Waushara, Calumet, Winnebago, Brown, Outagamie, and Waupaca Counties. * WHEN...From 3 AM to 9 AM CDT Wednesday. * IMPACTS...Frost could harm sensitive outdoor vegetation. Sensitive outdoor plants may be killed if left uncovered.

Original Article

Current watches, warnings, and advisories for Brown County (WIC009) WI

Current watches, warnings, and advisories for Brown County (WIC009) WI

https://api.weather.gov/alerts/urn:oid:2.49.0.1.840.0.0c90172e82db65d9327ef5ea1f6f26f107b9fe9a.005.1.cap

NWS

How Buffalo, New York has adapted to and embraced an influx of climate migrants

Buffalo is not a place that typically makes national headlines outside of football season. But in late July, the city did exactly that for one hugely significant reason: it became the last large city in the U.S. Lower 48 to have never reached 100 F.

At a time of rising temperatures and water levels, along with the threat of wildfires and smoke, many are reassessing where to live and Buffalo is embracing the “climate haven” tag.

Read Now at Great Lakes Now.

Original Article

Great Lakes Now

Great Lakes Now

https://www.greatlakesnow.org/2025/10/how-buffalo-new-york-has-adapted-to-and-embraced-an-influx-of-climate-migrants/

Stephen Starr, Great Lakes Now

How Buffalo, New York has adapted to and embraced an influx of climate migrants

Buffalo is not a place that typically makes national headlines outside of football season. But in late July, the city did exactly that for one hugely significant reason: it became the last large city in the U.S. Lower 48 to have never reached 100 F.

At a time of rising temperatures and water levels, along with the threat of wildfires and smoke, many are reassessing where to live and Buffalo is embracing the “climate haven” tag.

Read Now at Great Lakes Now.

Original Article

Great Lakes Now

Great Lakes Now

https://www.greatlakesnow.org/2025/10/how-buffalo-new-york-has-adapted-to-and-embraced-an-influx-of-climate-migrants/

Stephen Starr, Great Lakes Now

* WHAT...Temperatures in the lower to middle 30s will result in frost formation. * WHERE...Waushara, Calumet, Winnebago, Brown, Outagamie, and Waupaca Counties. * WHEN...From 3 AM to 9 AM CDT Wednesday. * IMPACTS...Frost could harm sensitive outdoor vegetation. Sensitive outdoor plants may be killed if left uncovered.

Original Article

Current watches, warnings, and advisories for Brown County (WIC009) WI

Current watches, warnings, and advisories for Brown County (WIC009) WI

https://api.weather.gov/alerts/urn:oid:2.49.0.1.840.0.a763e726b8327565385cc9d3263843e254e09b3a.003.1.cap

NWS

* WHAT...Temperatures as low as 32 will result in frost formation. * WHERE...Waushara, Calumet, Winnebago, Brown, Outagamie, and Waupaca Counties. * WHEN...From 3 AM to 9 AM CDT Wednesday. * IMPACTS...Frost could harm sensitive outdoor vegetation. Sensitive outdoor plants may be killed if left uncovered.

Original Article

Current watches, warnings, and advisories for Brown County (WIC009) WI

Current watches, warnings, and advisories for Brown County (WIC009) WI

https://api.weather.gov/alerts/urn:oid:2.49.0.1.840.0.040bc89a93ba4967932d41ddaf1189419de1e8f9.003.1.cap

NWS

How an unusual Door County landscape is helping researchers learn how Great Lake water levels affect groundwater and forests in coastal areas 

Landscapes tell a story. That can be obvious to the casual observer traveling around the state, whether it’s taking a scenic fall drive through the Driftless Area in southwest Wisconsin, exploring the potholes and drumlins of Kettle Moraine State Forest near Milwaukee, or kayaking among the water-etched sea caves off Lake Superior’s Apostle Islands.

To the trained eye, those landscapes also tell a story, but one goes beyond a quick photo and may provide answers to important research questions. University of Wisconsin-Madison Professor Steven Loheide, graduate student Eric Kastelic, Freshwater@UW summer students Lucie Carignan and Ella Flattum, and collaborators are focusing their collective scientific gaze on a particular section along Door County’s southeast coast for clues to a decades-old question: How do Great Lakes water level changes affect groundwater and forests along our coasts?

The Ridges Sanctuary is a 1,700-acre nature preserve tucked along the bottom half of Door County as it pokes into Lake Michigan just above the community of Bailey’s Harbor. Initially established in 1937 as Wisconsin’s first land trust, the sanctuary is a National Natural Landmark noted for a rich concentration of rare plants, including 25 species of orchids. What really sets this place apart from other preserves, however, is the 30 or so swales and crescent-shaped ridges that line the sanctuary from west to east.

These are the areas where Loheide, Kastelic, and team have concentrated their efforts. The sandy formations represent former beaches caused by changes in Lake Michigan water levels during the past millennia. Each is peppered with black and white spruce, balsam fir, and white pine. Between these ridges are swales, which are wet, lower areas, each containing their own collection of diverse marsh and bog flora. 

A drone photo of a ridge and swale ecosystem from above, showing parallel strips of forest and wetland next to Lake Michigan.

In ridge and swale ecosystems, forested ridges and marshy wetlands run in long strips parallel to the shore, like here at the Ridges Sanctuary.

 “What we’re interested in is how the Great Lakes and the changing water levels within the Great Lakes affect the ridge and swale ecosystems,” said Loheide. “There’s a tight connection between the surface water, the Great Lakes, and then the groundwater, which is underneath the subsurface but is feeding the wetlands and feeding the forests in these systems.”

Scientists have known for some time that water levels fluctuate in all five Great Lakes. Historically they change not just annually but over several decades with the record high being more than 6 feet higher than the record low. For Loheide, what he and his fellow researchers are most interested in are more recent water level changes.

“On short, seasonal scales, you might have a foot of variability from high water levels in one year to low water levels in that same year,” explained Loheide. “But when you look at it at a longer time frame, we see that there are cycles. For instance, in the early 2000s through about 2012-2013, we were in a low water state. That whole time, there were still ups and downs every year, but we were at low water levels, and then we went from near record lows then to record highs in 2017, 2018, and 2019. That really quick swing is something that we’re interested in.

“There’s always been a lot of variability, but we’re seeing what seems to be sometimes faster changes from low water level conditions to high water conditions, so more extremes.  And we’re actually going through the same thing right now,” said Loheide. “The high-water levels of 4-6 years ago are now dropping to below average water levels on Lake Michigan.”

Those faster water level changes could have greater impact on coastal ecosystems, and that’s where Loheide’s team has zeroed in their research efforts.

“Even since last year, lake levels have gone down about 10 inches. What does that mean for the groundwater system? Are we draining water out of the groundwater system? How much change in storage is there of our groundwater resource, and how does that affect other hydrologic and ecological processes?”

An illustrated cross-section graphic shows how the water from a lake merges with groundwater to form swales between ridges.

Great Lakes water levels impact the groundwater levels within ridge and swale ecosystems, as seen here in a cross-section created by Lucie Carignan.

Not just water and systems may be impacted, Loheide added.  “We’ve been studying trees and groundwater in Wisconsin for over a decade now, and we’ve been surprised by some of the things we’ve learned, that groundwater is used by trees. Even in a wet climate like Wisconsin where we get a lot of rain, we’re seeing that trees, particularly if they’re in sandy soils that drain really quickly, do depend on shallow groundwater, and if they have access to shallow groundwater, they do better.”

Given we know Great Lake levels fluctuate and those levels are connected to our coastal ecosystems, the team is looking at the Ridges and those funky swales lining the landscape to help them sketch out the rest of the story. “Our interest in the swales is knowing that we have lake levels that are driving changes in groundwater levels, how does that affect the ecosystem?” Loheide noted.  “How does that affect tree growth? How does that affect whether the forest might be vulnerable to either drought conditions where there’s limited water availability and the trees don’t have access to shallow groundwater, versus what happens during really high lake stages, and you end up with the roots of the plants being saturated, having low oxygen availability that can be fatal to the trees?”

The team has developed an ecohydrological observatory at The Ridges, which besides the cool name is also a great way to continuously monitor groundwater levels and changes that occur daily as the trees start to use water, from when the sun rises higher in the sky and exerts its considerable influence on the flora to when things start to shut down in the evening.

Loheide’s team, however, is looking beyond daily data. “We’re really hoping to leverage long-term data sets, and that’s coming from the trees themselves. If we core the trees, we can see variability in the annual growth. When conditions are good, when you’re getting the right amount of rain, when groundwater’s at the right level, we see larger growth rings. But, we see narrow growth rings during dry years or years where groundwater is not available, or even when groundwater’s too shallow,” said Loheide. “So that gives us an opportunity to not just have the data we collect during this two-year project, but to have a record that extends over a hundred years with some of these older trees.”

Graduate student Eric Kastelic and undergraduate researcher Lucie Carignan check in on a groundwater monitoring well that they installed at the Ridges Sanctuary, which gives them groundwater level measurements multiple times every hour.

Graduate student Eric Kastelic and undergraduate researcher Lucie Carignan check in on a groundwater monitoring well that they installed at the Ridges Sanctuary, which gives them groundwater level measurements multiple times every hour.

 
Close up of Eric Kastelic's hand holding a pencil-sized tree core.

By taking tree cores of red and white pine trees, the research team can analyze tree growth patterns going back almost 150 years.

The two-year project window Loheide references comes from funding through the Aquatic Science Center’s Water Resources Institute. Additional work was done by Joe Binzley (Hilldale Undergraduate Researcher 2025, UW-Madison) and collaborators from the Ridges Sanctuary, UW-Platteville TREES Lab, and the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources. 

Loheide said that the findings his team develops could be used to better understand how extreme changes in water levels impact groundwater and flora not only at the Ridges but also for other areas throughout the Great Lakes.  

“We’re hopeful that we can use remote sensing tools to try to compare other sites, and if satellite data can show us how transpiration or water use might be changing,” Loheide said. “There are new satellites out there that are at fine scale that we might actually be able to see and map out the spatial variability within ridge and swale wetlands, and then also compare among them what the response is. 

“We’re excited about what the future holds.” 

The post The Swale Tale first appeared on Wisconsin Sea Grant.

Original Article

News Releases | Wisconsin Sea Grant

News Releases | Wisconsin Sea Grant

https://www.seagrant.wisc.edu/news/the-swale-tale/

Andrew Savagian

Millions in loans to replace lead pipes pumping water into Chicago homes remain unspent

By Keerti Gopal & Juanpablo Ramirez-Franco

This story is a partnership between GristInside Climate News, and WBEZ, a public radio station serving the Chicago metropolitan region. 

Millions of dollars in federal and city loans dedicated to replacing lead pipes that pump water into people’s homes remain unused, a city official said, at the same time that officials are struggling to keep up with state and federal deadlines to warn people of the risks.

Read Now at Great Lakes Now.

Original Article

Great Lakes Now

Great Lakes Now

https://www.greatlakesnow.org/2025/10/lead-pipes-chicago-city-council-notification-federal-loans-unspent/

Inside Climate News and Grist

The Great Lakes St. Lawrence Governors and Premiers Leadership Summit finished in Quebec City, Quebec, over the weekend. The biennial meeting is the group’s first since U.S. President Donald Trump returned to the White House in January. Read the full story by The Canadian Press.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20251006-greatlakes-biennial-meeting

Autumn McGowan

With all the legal appeals exhausted, and the municipality of South Bruce Peninsula in Ontario conceding that the beach belongs to the First Nation, it was time for Saugeen First Nation’s Saugeen Beach Victory Celebration on Saturday, October 4. Read the full story by The Owen Sound Sun Times.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20251006-saugeen-celebration

Autumn McGowan

A project to restore Great Lakes coastal habitat includes rebuilding a barrier beach along the shoreline, re-establishing historic wetlands and clearing invasive cattails at Lynde Shores Conservation Area in Ontario. Read the full story by Durham Region News.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20251006-lynde-shores-conservation

Autumn McGowan

Gannon University’s Project NePTWNE marked a significant milestone with the opening of the Center for Lake Erie Education and Research (CLEER) at the Blasco Library in Erie, Pennsylvania. The new center, part of Gannon University’s initiative to foster a community of Lake Erie stewards, offers interactive exhibits and educational experiences focused on the Great Lakes. Read the full story by WJET-TV – Erie, PA.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20251006-gannon-lakeerie-center

Autumn McGowan

By Eric Freedman 

 The Michigan Court of Appeals has cleared the city of South Haven of liability in the 2020 drowning of an 18-year-old swimmer at a public beach on the Lake Michigan coast.

The post Michigan court clears South Haven in beach drowning suit  first appeared on Great Lakes Echo.

Original Article

Great Lakes Echo

Great Lakes Echo

https://greatlakesecho.org/2025/10/05/michigan-court-clears-south-haven-in-beach-drowning-suit/

Eric Freedman

At 938 PM CDT, Doppler radar was tracking a line of strong thunderstorms extending from 7 miles northeast of New London to 18 miles east of Kewaunee, or extending from 20 miles south of Shawano to 18 miles east of Kewaunee, moving east at 15 mph. HAZARD...Wind gusts up to 30 mph and pea size hail. SOURCE...Radar indicated. IMPACT...Gusty winds could knock down tree limbs and blow around unsecured objects. Minor damage to outdoor objects is possible. Locations impacted include... Green Bay, Appleton, Kewaunee, Bay Shore Park, New London, Algoma, Luxemburg, Denmark, Black Creek, Bellevue, Oneida, De Pere, Howard, Ashwaubenon, Allouez, Suamico, Ledgeview, Hobart, Seymour and Wrightstown.

Original Article

Current watches, warnings, and advisories for Brown County (WIC009) WI

Current watches, warnings, and advisories for Brown County (WIC009) WI

https://api.weather.gov/alerts/urn:oid:2.49.0.1.840.0.05ef59ecfe32a7256a0ee17541425f0b7e6f3559.001.1.cap

NWS

In the middle of Lake Superior, near the boundary between Canadian and US waters, sits the Superior Shoal, a mountain that’s completely underwater. Known to some as the “Freshwater Everest,” filmmakers and researchers are now exploring it with underwater drones. Read the full story by Bridge Michigan.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20251003-superior-drone-exploration

Nichole Angell

The Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes and Energy announced Wednesday that, after decades of community engagement and cleanup efforts, a west Michigan Lake has been removed from a list of the most polluted sites in the Great Lakes region. Read the full story by Michigan Advance.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20251003-mukegon-cleanup

Nichole Angell

It’s ‘see ya later alligator’ for the newest resident at Detroit’s Belle Isle. An alligator was captured on cell phone footage by a woman who was paddle-boating at Belle Isle on Sunday. The animal has now been captured and found a new home in Westland, Michigan, at the Great Lakes Serpentarium. Read the full story by WJBK-TV – Detroit, MI.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20251003-alligator-rehome

Nichole Angell

Despite a 55% cut to its portion of H2Ohio funding, the Ohio Department of Natural Resources is “still in the fight” to build, expand, or enhance wetlands as a means of controlling western Lake Erie algal blooms. Read the full story by The Toledo Blade.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20251003-wetland-protection

Nichole Angell

The Ohio Department of Natural Resources will release 2,000 fingerling sturgeon into the Cuyahoga River, hoping that in 15 to 20 years they will come back to reproduce. The goal is to reestablish a healthy sturgeon population in Lake Erie that was depleted starting in the 1800s. Read the full story by The Plain Dealer.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20251003-sturgeon-stocking

Nichole Angell

A coalition of maritime groups says the St. Lawrence-Great Lakes waterway is the logistical and industrial backbone of North America and will require major infrastructure investments, a faster shift to new energy sources, and a stronger shipbuilding industry.  Read the full story by the Welland Tribune.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20251003-st-lawrence-investment-need

Nichole Angell

2025 Fox-Wolf Watershed Impact Awards Honor Local Conservation Heroes On October 2, the Fox-Wolf community gathered at The Hillside at Plamann Park in Appleton for the 2025 Happiest Hour. It was an evening of celebration, recognition, and connection. Together we honored the people and partners whose work is making a real difference [...]

The post Celebrating #WatershedWins at the 2025 Happiest Hour appeared first on Fox-Wolf Watershed Alliance.

Original Article

Fox-Wolf Watershed Alliance

Fox-Wolf Watershed Alliance

https://fwwa.org/2025/10/03/2025-happiest-hour-wrap/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=2025-happiest-hour-wrap

Fox-Wolf Watershed Alliance

By Clara Lincolnhol   

The Michigan Department of Transportation is developing a plan to potentially construct the state’s fourth passenger rail route. The proposed east-west route would carry passengers across the Lower Peninsula, connecting Holland and Grand Rapids with Detroit.

The post New passenger train route between Holland and Detroit to be explored first appeared on Great Lakes Echo.

Original Article

Great Lakes Echo

Great Lakes Echo

https://greatlakesecho.org/2025/10/03/new-passenger-train-route-between-holland-and-detroit-to-be-explored/

Clara Lincolnhol


CHICAGO, IL (October 2nd, 2025)  — The Alliance for the Great Lakes is celebrating the announcement that Muskegon Lake has been officially delisted as an Area of Concern. Muskegon Lake was devastated by decades of industrial pollution and poor shoreline management. In 1987 it was declared a Great Lakes Area of Concern. An AOC is a geographic area with significant impairment and environmental degradation that has occurred as a result of human activities at the local level. There are 24 remaining AOCs in the Great Lakes basin. 

Alliance for the Great Lakes Adopt-a-Beach volunteers cleaning shoreline litter at Muskegon Lake.
Alliance for the Great Lakes Adopt-a-Beach volunteers cleaning shoreline litter at Muskegon Lake. PC: Lloyd DeGrane

Since then, the Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy, the U.S. Federal Government, the City of Muskegon, and the Muskegon Lake Watershed Partnership comprised of concerned citizens, academic researchers, local business owners, philanthropic representatives, local government, retirees, riparian property owners, recreational users, environmental advocates, and industry representatives worked in collaboration to delist Muskegon Lake. The focus of the work was on the remediation of contaminated sediments and habitat restoration surrounding the lake.  

“This is a huge day for Muskegon. We are proud to have provided the scientific underpinning to inform the restoration activities that has led to the de-listing of Muskegon Lake and we celebrate with our partners and the entire community,” said Dr. Alan Steinman, former Director of Grand Valley State University’s Annis Water Resources Institute, and a Member of the Board of Directors of the Alliance for the Great Lakes.  

“The Alliance applauds this milestone that demonstrates that a commitment to Great Lakes restoration projects can lead to success for local communities and the region. Bringing Muskegon Lake back from the brink also serves as an example of the good work that critical programs like the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative can accomplish. Every dollar spent by the GLRI brings at least three dollars back in economic activity; in the case of Muskegon Lake, the return on investment is even greater and was shown to be six to one,” said Alliance for the Great Lakes President and CEO Joel Brammeier.  

### 

Contact: Don Carr, Media Director, Alliance for the Great Lakes dcarr@greatlakes.org 

More about Great Lakes restoration

Read more about the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative, one of the most important tools in the region’s toolbox to support on-the-ground restoration projects, from wetland restoration to cleaning up toxic hot spots.

Read more

The post Muskegon Lake Area of Concern Delisted appeared first on Alliance for the Great Lakes.

Original Article

News - Alliance for the Great Lakes

News - Alliance for the Great Lakes

https://greatlakes.org/2025/10/muskegon-lake-area-of-concern-delisted/

tfazzini

Could climate migration bring new life to shrinking towns in Michigan’s U.P., or will rising costs and lagging infrastructure get in the way of population growth? Read the full story by Great Lakes Now.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20251001-burden-climate-migration-impact-michigan-upper-peninsula

Hannah Reynolds

A recent collaborative study conducted by nine Indigenous entities and academic researchers was conducted to understand how climate change threatens the lake sturgeon and to develop adaptation strategies rooted in tribal knowledge. Read the full story by Capital News Service.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20251001-western-indigenous-knowledge-lakesturgeon

Hannah Reynolds

Scientists used an autonomous underwater vehicle to explore shipwrecks in Lake Michigan for the first time. The expedition highlighted the significant challenges of exploring the Great Lakes, even with advanced tools. Read the full story by the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20251001-underwater-robot-deep-scans-lake-michigan-shipwrecks

Hannah Reynolds

In New York, Farmers across five Finger Lakes counties are receiving major support for conservation projects that reduce runoff, manage nutrients, and improve long-term water quality throughout the state. Read the full story by Fingerlakes1.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20251001-fingerlakes-award-waterquality

Hannah Reynolds

An $8 billion data center campus is coming to Port Washington, Wisconsin. The city’s common council unanimously approved the development in August, despite dozens of residents sharing their concerns over the potential environmental impacts and energy needs of the massive facility. Read the full story by Spectrum News 1. 

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20251001-port-washington-data-center-watersupply

Hannah Reynolds

A person holding their new certified Wisconsin Clean Marina sign.

Kevin Holsten, manager of SkipperBud’s Oshkosh Marina, holding his new certified Wisconsin Clean Marina sign.  Credit: Wisconsin Sea Grant

SkipperBud’s Oshkosh Marina has received a Wisconsin Clean Marina designation from Wisconsin Sea Grant and its partners for the marina’s efforts to prevent pollution and protect fish, wildlife, and public health.

Wisconsin’s Clean Marina Program launched in 2010 to promote clean and safe waterways for the state’s marine industry through best practices while meeting state and federal pollution and safety laws. There are 26 marinas currently certified, and this is the fourth SkipperBud’s to receive certification. 

“SkipperBud’s Oshkosh Marina implemented a number of changes, including clean fueling practices, posting signage on best boater practices, and installing a boat-washing area,” said Theresa Qualls, Wisconsin Clean Marina Program coordinator.

SkipperBud’s Oshkosh Marina is a full-service marina on Lake Butte des Morts, which is part of the Winnebago Pool (a group of interconnected lakes) and connected to Lake Winnebago by the Fox River. Many boaters double as anglers due to the lake’s impressive walleye, largemouth bass, and northern pike populations. The lake is also home to many native wetland plants like American lotus and wild rice, which provide food for wildlife and improve water quality.

Protecting this special region is just one of many reasons SkipperBud’s team wanted to become a Clean Marina. “We are committed to keeping Wisconsin waters free of pollution, and following sustainable practices is one way to ensure that,” said Marina Manager Kevin Holsten. 

After having recently gone through the same process, John Swise, the manager of SkipperBud’s Madison Marina, assisted the Oshkosh team, helping to guide them toward their own certification.

“Working with both Kevin and John was so encouraging to see how two marinas can work together to achieve the common goal of environmental sustainability,” said Qualls.

Marinas and related industries contribute more than $2.7 billion to Wisconsin’s economy. The Wisconsin Clean Marina Program is administered by the University of Wisconsin Sea Grant Program in partnership with the Wisconsin Marine Association, Wisconsin Coastal Management Program, Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources, and Fund for Lake Michigan.

For more information:

Theresa Qualls, Wisconsin Clean Marina Program, (920) 465-5031, quallst@uwgb.edu

###

The University of Wisconsin Aquatic Sciences Center administers Wisconsin Sea Grant, the Wisconsin Water Resources Institute, and Water@UW.  The center supports multidisciplinary research, education, and outreach for the protection and sustainable use of Wisconsin’s water resources.  Wisconsin Sea Grant is one of 34 Sea Grant programs supported by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in coastal and Great Lakes states that encourage the wise stewardship of marine resources through research, education, outreach and technology transfer.

 

The post SkipperBud’s Oshkosh Marina certifies as Wisconsin Clean Marina first appeared on Wisconsin Sea Grant.

Original Article

News Releases | Wisconsin Sea Grant

News Releases | Wisconsin Sea Grant

https://www.seagrant.wisc.edu/news/skipperbuds-oshkosh-marina-certifies-as-wisconsin-clean-marina/

Andrew Savagian