FYI
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chicagotribune.com
Great Lakes plan all washed up
Hit with hurricane
sticker shock, the Bush administration nixes $20 billion restoration
By
Michael Hawthorne
Tribune staff reporter
Published October 7,
2005
After a year of promises to make the Great Lakes a greater
national
priority, the Bush administration is pulling back from an ambitious
$20
billion plan to restore and protect the world's largest source
of
freshwater.
Three months after the plan was released for public
comment, administration officials are finalizing a report to President Bush that
concludes federal spending on the Great Lakes should remain "within current
budget projections," meaning no new money should be allocated.
Instead,
federal, state and local officials should concentrate on "improving the
efficiency and effectiveness of existing programs," according to the draft
report, a copy of which was obtained by the Tribune.
Without the
administration's support, Congress likely will not endorse more aggressive--and
more expensive--efforts to clean up contaminated ports, fix aging sewer systems,
block invasive species and improve the shoreline. Legislation calling for
more spending on the Great Lakes already is bottled up in House and Senate
committees.
An electronic copy of the administration report, dated Sept.
26, does not specifically mention the recent hurricanes that devastated the Gulf
Coast.
But political leaders and environmental activists throughout the
Great Lakes region have worried their goals would be sidetracked by skyrocketing
costs to clean up the hurricane damage.
"We're still in an era of
post-Katrina sticker shock," said U.S. Rep. Mark
Kirk (R-Ill.), who is
leading a bipartisan group of lawmakers asking for $4 billion over five years to
tackle problems facing the lakes.
The administration is scaling back its
plans even as federal, state, tribal
and local officials meet this week in
Rochester, N.Y., to discuss how best to spend the proposed $20
billion.
Bush formed the group during his re-election campaign last year
and ordered it to hammer out a restoration plan within a year.
The
group's deliberations formally began in December with an elaborate
ceremony
at the Chicago Hilton and Towers featuring Native American
drummers,
bagpipers and speeches from Mayor Richard Daley, governors and Cabinet
officials.
A spokeswoman for the White House Council on Environmental
Quality said the administration hasn't made a final decision.
However,
another administration official involved in the deliberations said the report is
nearly done and reflects the views of many top federal
officials.
"The
federal government will consider the [Great Lakes] plan an advisory document
only, and will weigh its recommendations against all other competing priorities
within the federal budget," the report states.
Kirk and other lawmakers
from the region have been trying to win more
congressional support for their
efforts to improve the Great Lakes. They already are urging potential
presidential candidates to make the issue part of their campaign agendas during
the next election.
"As we enter a lame-duck presidency, the vision of
Congress becomes much more important," Kirk said. "We'll take what we can get
from the
administration but we have to move forward."
For most of the
last year, public pronouncements about the Great Lakes from Bush administration
officials have suggested sweeping changes were in the works.
"The unique
nature of these majestic lakes and their role in the cultural,
economic and
environmental well-being of our nation requires us to take bold action in their
defense," Stephen L. Johnson, administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, said when the proposed restoration plan was released in
July.
Three months later, the administration report says top officials at
the EPA and other federal agencies have serious concerns about the wish list,
which called for $20 billion in new federal spending on the lakes in the next 15
years.
The proposal "does not take into account the ongoing federal,
state, tribal and local investments in the Great Lakes and how to focus those
substantial resources to maximize results," the memo states.
Federal
programs related to the Great Lakes already will cost about $5
billion during
the next decade, the memo states.
Many of the problems facing the lakes
will cost considerably more to fix.
Cleaning up 31 toxic hot spots around the
lakes is estimated to cost up to $4.5 billion alone. In the Chicago area, the
sites include Waukegan Harbor, the Grand Calumet River and the Indiana Harbor
and Ship Canal.
The most expensive item on the wish list is nearly $14
billion to upgrade
sewage systems in cities around the lakes. Beaches
occasionally are closed following chronic sewage overflows. But financing sewer
improvements is a perennial battle in Congress.
For instance, the
president's budget request this year included no money to continue work on the
Deep Tunnel project, a system of tunnels and reservoirs in the Chicago area that
captures storm run-off and helps keep human and industrial waste out of Lake
Michigan.
Attempts to boost spending on the Great Lakes have been
hampered in part by a Government Accountability Office report that found little
coordination between federal and state efforts and few ways to measure
progress.
But after a year of debate, many of those involved in efforts
to improve
existing programs say more money is needed to help the lakes, the
source of one-fifth of the world's freshwater. They point to other
multibillion-dollar initiatives to restore the Everglades and Chesapeake
Bay.
"I don't think we will bring the lakes back to health with
existing
budgets," said Cameron Davis, executive director of the Alliance for
the
Great Lakes. "There is a significant national interest in the Great
Lakes
that deserves a significant national
investment."