The Standard (St. Catharines)

Potentiall­y ‘catastroph­ic’

Canadian, U.S. mayors seek to challenge diversion of water from Great Lakes

- DIANA MEHTA THE CANADIAN PRESS

A group of mayors from Canada and the U.S. is trying to challenge a recent decision allowing an American city to draw water from the Great Lakes, arguing that it sets a dangerous precedent.

The Great Lakes and St. Lawrence Cities Initiative asked Monday for a hearing with the group of eight states that make up what’s known as the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence River Basin Water Resources Council.

In June, the council gave the Wisconsin city of Waukesha the green light to divert water from Lake Michigan, making it the first exception to an agreement banning diversions of water away from the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence River basin.

The Great Lakes and St. Lawrence Cities Initiative, which represents more than 100 local government­s on both sides of the border, is now looking to fight that decision.

“This is just the beginning of something that could potentiall­y grow and just be catastroph­ic,” Sandra Cooper, the mayor of Collingwoo­d, Ont., and the group’s secretary-treasurer, said of Waukesha’s diversion. “There was no opportunit­y for public input with our Great Lakes community and I think that’s a downfall of the whole process.”

The group argues that the area to be serviced by Waukesha’s diversion is too large, the return flow of treated water to Lake Michigan hasn’t been analysed enough and there wasn’t enough public participat­ion in the process dealing with the city’s request.

It has also written to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and U.S. President Barack Obama asking for “appropriat­e action” to stop Waukesha’s diversion of water from Lake Michigan.

Waukesha, a city of about 70,000 people, asked for permission to take water from the Great Lakes because its own aquifer is running low and the water is contaminat­ed with high levels of naturally occurring cancer-causing radium.

Waukesha argued that although it’s located outside the boundary of the Great Lakes basin, it is part of a county straddling that geographic­al line and should be allowed access to the lake’s water.

The request created significan­t concern on both sides of the border, but after making a series of amendments to Waukesha’s original applicatio­n, the eight states adjoining the Great Lakes — who had final say on the matter after input from Ontario and Quebec— gave the city’s proposal unanimous approval.

The Great Lakes and St. Lawrence Cities Initiative said it’s now fighting to ensure the long-term integrity of the agreement meant to protect the Great Lakes.

“There was already a region that was establishe­d that could draw from the Great Lakes basin. That region is now being expanded. What says down the road that those southern States who are having difficulty with water aren’t going to start drawing more water from our Great Lakes basin,” said Randy Hope, the mayor of Chatham-Kent municipali­ty in southweste­rn Ontario, who is on the group’s board of directors.

“It’ll lower our waterways, it’ll have eco and social and economic effects that people cannot determine at this time.”

The Great Lakes support 33 million people, including 9 million Canadians and eight of Canada’s 20 largest cities, according to the federal government.

 ?? JOHN FLESHER/AP FILES ?? A group of mayors from Canada and the U.S. have requested a hearing to challenge a recent decision allowing Waukesha, Wis., to draw water from the Great Lakes. The Fox River flows through downtown Waukesha in this file photo.
JOHN FLESHER/AP FILES A group of mayors from Canada and the U.S. have requested a hearing to challenge a recent decision allowing Waukesha, Wis., to draw water from the Great Lakes. The Fox River flows through downtown Waukesha in this file photo.

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