Chicago Sun-Times

Great Lakes states went big for Biden — and he should go big for the Great Lakes

- BY THEODORE J. KARAMANSKI Theodore J. Karamanski is a professor of history at Loyola University Chicago and author of “Mastering the Inland Sea: How Lighthouse­s, Harbors, and Navigation­al Aids Transforme­d the Great Lakes and America.”

This year’s presidenti­al election was decided in large part by the Democratic Party’s ability to restore the so- called “blue wall” of Great Lakes states that Donald Trump breached in the 2016 election.

In the end, six of the eight American states that border on the Great Lakes contribute­d 105 electoral votes to Joe Biden’s victory, nearly 39% of the total electoral votes he received. The challenge now for elected officials in the Great Lakes region — and for others concerned with the health of the region’s economy and environmen­t — is to push an agenda that translates those electoral votes into investment.

For the 98,000 square miles of open water that compose the Great Lakes, the last four years can be characteri­zed as, at best, a waste of time. Trump liked to fish for votes in the region, but he cared little for the health of the waters that 40 million people rely upon.

Trump rewarded the Michigan and Wisconsin voters who brought him victory in 2016 by attempting to zero- out funding for the Great Lakes Restoratio­n Initiative. The funds were intended for efforts to combat the biggest threats to the Great Lakes ecosystem, with money to be spent on fighting harmful algae blooms, ensuring safe drinking water and controllin­g exotic species. The goal was to put the Great Lakes on a path that might someday allow fishermen to regularly and safely eat the native fish they catch.

In 2020, with his poll numbers sagging across the region, Trump reversed course and actually proposed a slight increase in funding for the Great Lakes Restoratio­n Initiative, but the short- term nature of his concern remains obvious. It is on full display at the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, where Trump’s appointees have gutted the environmen­tal regulation­s that protect our water.

The Great Lakes, a vast freshwater sea, may be the United States’ greatest natural resource. Yet too often the health and protection of those waters have been dismissed as a local concern. From the 1830s until the Civil War, Southern legislator­s repeatedly blocked efforts to build a safe navigation system on the lakes. The deaths of hundreds of mariners and passengers each year for want of safe harbors were dismissed, and federal interventi­on on what were said to be “northern lakes” was deemed unconstitu­tional.

The Republican Party, born to fight the expansion of slavery and rooted in the Great Lakes states, was strongly committed to investment in a maritime infrastruc­ture for the region. That came to pass after President Abraham Lincoln’s election, and those investment­s resulted in the lake states becoming the industrial heartland of the nation. They were democracy’s arsenal in the wars against fascism and communism.

While portions of the industrial belt have rusted, the inland navigation systems created in past centuries still help generate $ 33.5 billion in annual economic activity and support hundreds of thousands of jobs. Yet in recent decades critical features of that infrastruc­ture have been starved of investment.

Half of all harbors and navigation improvemen­ts are in failing condition. Many of the breakwater­s critical to recreation­al and commercial watercraft were built before World War I. Meanwhile, the federal government spends billions of dollars annually bailing out communitie­s on the hurricane- ravaged saltwater coasts.

It is time to challenge Sunbelt policies that stymie infrastruc­ture investment in the American heartland.

The threat of high water levels challenges the Great Lakes states, arising unexpected­ly after record low water levels only a few years before. This is a reminder of the complicate­d nature of our environmen­tal challenges and the impossibil­ity of ignoring human- triggered global climate change any longer. And the ability of the Great Lakes states to address their battered shorelines has been hamstrung by COVD- 19, which has hit the region especially hard and drained statehouse coffers.

The many challenges facing the Great Lakes should be high on both the budgetary and environmen­tal to do- list of the new administra­tion.

Among the most important priorities are fully funding the Great Lakes Restoratio­n Initiative, restoring water quality regulation­s and vigorously enforcing sanctions for violations. We need significan­t reinvestme­nt in Great Lakes maritime infrastruc­ture, including shoreline protection, harbor works and safe drinking water systems. We should design innovative interventi­ons to reduce farm fertilizer runoff, enable conservati­on agricultur­e, and increase research funding to manage the impact of exotic species on the lake ecosystem.

Investment­s in Great Lakes environmen­tal quality have consistent­ly proven to stimulate economic activity, job creation and improved property values. More than ever, we need national reinvestme­nt in a priceless resource.

The blue wall of Great Lakes states tilted the 2020 election in Joe Biden’s favor in 2020. If the new administra­tion tends that wall better than Donald Trump did, it may well be there to lean on again in four years.

INVESTMENT­S IN GREAT LAKES ENVIRONMEN­TAL QUALITY HAVE CONSISTENT­LY PROVEN TO STIMULATE ECONOMIC ACTIVITY, JOB CREATION AND IMPROVED PROPERTY VALUES. MORE THAN EVER, WE NEED NATIONAL REINVESTME­NT IN A PRICELESS RESOURCE.

 ?? PAT NABONG/ SUN- TIMES ?? Blocks of concrete line the lakefront near 51st Street in June. Chicago had previously installed barriers to prevent soil erosion due to high water levels in Lake Michigan.
PAT NABONG/ SUN- TIMES Blocks of concrete line the lakefront near 51st Street in June. Chicago had previously installed barriers to prevent soil erosion due to high water levels in Lake Michigan.

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