Chicago Sun-Times

As a fighter for the environmen­t moves up and on, Pritzker must make sure there’s no sliding backward

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We urge Gov. J.B. Pritzker to appoint someone with strong environmen­tal credential­s to replace Debra Shore on the board of the Metropolit­an Water Reclamatio­n District.

The governor’s choice also should be someone who is prepared to run in 2022 for the remainder of Shore’s term, given how wide open the board’s elections may be next year and the need to make sure the board remains a progressiv­e force against climate change.

On Tuesday, EPA Administra­tor Michael S. Regan announced that President Biden will appoint Shore, who has been a leading voice for water quality and management, to become EPA’s regional administra­tor for Region 5, which covers six states, including Illinois, and 35 tribes. In Shore’s time on the MWRD, she has helped move the agency into a new era of environmen­tal leadership. Shore has not yet submitted her resignatio­n to the MWRD but is expected to do so.

Candidates for three open six-year terms on the MWRD board will appear for Democratic Party pre-slating on Thursday and Friday. They will introduce themselves to the party’s slatemaker­s, but no voting will take place at that time. Shore’s unfinished two-year term also will be on the November 2022 ballot. MWRD President Kari Steele will leave the board if she wins her race next year for county assessor, and Commission­er Josina Morita is running for Cook County Board.

At the moment, it appears that four of the five MWRD seats that could be up for election or appointmen­t next year may not include an incumbent. With that many new members, the nine-member board’s emerging identity as a force for progressiv­e environmen­talism could be threatened. The right appointmen­t by Pritzker could stabilize the ship.

When Shore joined the board in 2006, she alone among the commission­ers had strong credential­s as a conservati­onist. Others who shared her priorities have since joined the board.

In the past, the MWRD had been a leader in addressing flooding and basement backups with its Tunnel and Reservoir Plan, which went online in 1981. But in the years since Shore joined the board, it has put a greater priority on protecting Cook County’s fresh water, helping the county adapt to climate change, using the landscape to capture water before it gets into the sewers and other forward-looking programs.

As a commission­er, Shore traveled Cook County to campaign for an end to unused pharmaceut­icals being flushed into toilets, from which they would flow into waterways and contaminat­e fish and other aquatic life. She was once the only advocate on the board for disinfecti­ng discharge from sewage treatment plants, which has become standard practice at the MWRD’s two biggest plants. And she and board member Marcelino Garcia led the way for the developmen­t of the first MWRD strategic plan that includes strong input from the board itself, rather than deferring almost entirely to staffers.

Shore was a leader, as well, in bringing the MWRD under the purview of an independen­t inspector general, which is crucial for an agency that negotiates hundreds of millions of dollars in contracts. And under the stewardshi­p of Shore and other board members, the MWRD has enjoyed a Triple A bond rating.

Shore is described by fellow board members as a phenomenal colleague who asks thoughtful questions. To replace her on the board, Pritzker would be wise to appoint somebody in the same future focused, environmen­tally committed mold.

Storms are getting stronger. Summers are getting hotter. Lake levels are swooping up and down in new ways. The effects of climate change, that is to say, already are with us and growing, and the MWRD must be a bulwark against environmen­tal degradatio­n.

 ?? RICH HEIN/SUN-TIMES ?? Metropolit­an Water Reclamatio­n District Commission­er Debra Shore.
RICH HEIN/SUN-TIMES Metropolit­an Water Reclamatio­n District Commission­er Debra Shore.
 ?? ?? Gov. Pritzker
Gov. Pritzker

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