Lethbridge Herald

Great Lakes mayors strive to save ecological initiative

-

A group representi­ng Great Lakes region mayors in the U.S. and Canada is sounding the alarm against potentiall­y drastic cuts to an ecological recovery initiative for the Great Lakes.

The Trump administra­tion’s potential cuts to the Great Lakes Restoratio­n Initiative were reported by the Detroit Free Press last week. They would slash annual funding for the $300-million program to $10 million.

The initiative combats invasive species, curbs nutrient-fuelled algae blooms, cleans up toxic messes and restores sensitive fish and wildlife habitat.

“Cuts of this magnitude would be devastatin­g to the efforts of our two countries over the past five decades to restore the resource,” David Ullrich, executive director of The Great Lakes and St. Lawrence Cities Initiative, told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel for a story published Sunday. His group represents mayors from more than 125 U.S. and Canadian cities in the Great Lakes basin.

Ullrich said the cuts would also undermine all of the lake restoratio­n and protection efforts underway by local government­s, which are collective­ly far more significan­t than the federal restoratio­n initiative launched by the Obama administra­tion in 2010.

“Local government­s have been investing at over $15 billion per year ... well beyond the federal government­s’ investment­s,” Ullrich said, “and this would be a major step back from the responsibi­lity shared for this resource.”

Conservati­on groups have also criticized the potential cuts.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada