Epa unveils great lakes restoration plan
Epa unveils great lakes restoration plan"
- Select a language for the TTS:
- UK English Female
- UK English Male
- US English Female
- US English Male
- Australian Female
- Australian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - EN
Play all audios:
Reporting from Washington — The Environmental Protection Agency on Sunday unveiled a five-year, $475-million plan to revitalize the Great Lakes, including cleaning up polluted water and
beaches, restoring wetlands and fighting invasive species such as Asian carp. Federal and state officials call the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative Action Plan “historically unprecedented”
in size, funding and coordination between branches of government. The plan calls itself light on study and heavy on action, seeking to heal the Great Lakes ecosystem from “150 years of
abuse” and to ensure that “fish are safe to eat; the water is safe to drink; the beaches and waters are safe for swimming, surfing, boating and recreating; native species and habitats are
protected and thriving; no community suffers disproportionately from the impacts of pollution; and the Great Lakes are a healthy place for people and wildlife to live.” Developed by 16
federal agencies, the plan requires annual progress reports from the EPA on restoration activities and the allocation of funding, which would come from the normal congressional
appropriations process. The plan sets concrete measures for progress on several key threats to the lakes and their surrounding communities. For example, it sets a goal to collect or prevent
the release of 45 million pounds of electronic waste, 45 million unwanted pills and 4.5 million pounds of household hazardous waste in the Great Lakes basin by 2014. It also sets out to
significantly reduce harmful algal blooms and to clean out 9.4 million cubic yards of toxic sediment. It promises a “zero-tolerance policy” toward invasive species, such as Asian carp, that
threaten to overrun native plants and wildlife. It calls for a 40% drop in the new detection of such species by 2014. The plan also seeks to cut damaging runoff from farms, cities and
suburbs into Great Lakes watersheds, which supply municipal drinking water and animal habitat, and to reduce beach pollution so recreation areas can stay open longer during the year. It
includes the first complete assessment of the lakes’ entire 530,000-acre coastal wetland, and a goal of restoring nearly 100,000 acres of wetlands and other habitat areas by 2014. Several
governors from Great Lakes states say the plan will boost their environmental quality -- and help energize a multibillion-dollar regional economy reliant on shipping, fishing and tourism.
Wisconsin Gov. James E. Doyle, the co-chairman of the Council of Great Lakes Governors, said in an interview that the plan was “what we would have laid out as Great Lakes governors if we
could have written it ourselves.” Cameron Davis, a senior advisor for Great Lakes issues to EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson, said the plan would “help bring the region together” behind a
common goal of restoring its signature waters. But the ultimate success, he said, would depend on nature -- much like the final outcome of a surgery depends on the patient’s capacity to
recover. “We can undertake everything that we commit to do,” Davis said, “but it’s still up to the ecosystem to respond.” [email protected] MORE TO READ
Trending News
History repeats as battle moves from grandpas to grandsons in karnataka's hassanBut a senior BJP leader, who wished not to be named, said the BJP-JDS alliance will be an advantage for Prajwal as a lar...
Kobe bryant, the influencer | thearticleJust over a week ago, on Sunday night, we learned of the death of Kobe Bryant. He had been killed alongside his 13-year-...
First huawei, now julian lewis — is johnson in control of uk security policy? | thearticleIn the space of two days Boris Johnson’s security policy has been partially derailed by not one but two serious rebellio...
A table of forgetful remembranceEvery year we gather some “foodie” friends for what has become a beloved tradition: Mock Thanksgiving. It’s like a dry r...
Real estate news headlines - 9NewsThe cheapest inner-city suburbs to get onto the property ladderA new snapshot of Australia's property market reveals wha...
Latests News
Epa unveils great lakes restoration planReporting from Washington — The Environmental Protection Agency on Sunday unveiled a five-year, $475-million plan to rev...
Turkish soldiers killed in an air attack, turkey blames syriaDAVID GREENE, HOST: Violence in northwestern Syria has been a humanitarian crisis for months now, with a million Syrians...
Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest: validated criteria for terminating resuscitation attemptsAccess through your institution Buy or subscribe Sasson C _ et al_. (2008) Prehospital termination of resuscitation in c...
What we can learn from the japanese about finding purpose | members only accessOne of the great pleasures of learning a foreign language is the discovery of terms denoting something we just don’t hav...
The page you were looking for doesn't exist.You may have mistyped the address or the page may have moved.By proceeding, you agree to our Terms & Conditions and our ...