[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 105 (Thursday, July 14, 2011)]
[House]
[Page H5028]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
GREAT LAKES THREATENED
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from New
York (Mr. Higgins) for 5 minutes.
Mr. HIGGINS. Mr. Speaker, the Great Lakes are one of the most
overlooked and unappreciated national assets. They are the largest
source of freshwater in the world and contain 20 percent of the
freshwater on Earth.
The Great Lakes face many challenges. Agricultural runoff, sewer
overflows, and other pollution makes its way into the Great Lakes from
across the northeast and the Midwest, leading to unsafe water quality
and public health concerns. Also, invasive species hitch a ride in the
ballast water of oceangoing vessels, like the zebra mussel, or swim up
the Mississippi River, like the Asian carp, and threaten to alter the
lakes' fragile, closed ecosystem.
In recognition of the importance of the Great Lakes and to combat the
threats to their health, in 2010, 11 Federal agencies announced a plan
to implement the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative, an ambitious
action plan to remove toxins, clean up the lakes, and protect them from
further pollution and invasive species.
I am concerned that funding for this important program has been
uneven. It was funded at $475 million in fiscal year 2010, fell to $300
million this year, and is funded at just $250 million in the fiscal
year 2012 Interior Appropriations bill the House will consider next
week.
However, the mere existence of this special cleanup funding is
evidence that Congress and the administration recognize the Great Lakes
are a unique natural resource that deserves protection.
In 1969, the Cuyahoga River famously caught fire, symbolizing the
abysmal water quality of the water in the Great Lakes basin.
Legislation from the Clean Water Act and the Great Lakes Restoration
Initiative has gone a long way toward returning the lakes to good
health. However, the Great Lakes face a new threat beyond water
quality: the diversion or removal of water from the Great Lakes basin.
In recognition that due to national and global trends, the value of
freshwater will increase, as will the incentive to remove it from the
Great Lakes, the eight States that border the Great Lakes entered into
a compact with each other and two Canadian provinces on the use of
Great Lakes water. Congress ratified the agreement, and it was signed
into law by President Bush in 2008.
Among the most important provisions of the compact are restriction on
the removal or diversion of water from the Great Lakes basin. The
underlying goal was to prevent any one State from plundering the
freshwater in the Great Lakes.
So it is with great concern that I learned yesterday that the Ohio
State legislature had passed legislation to permit businesses to remove
5 million gallons of water a day from Lake Erie. In New York, we are
about to adopt a far more reasonable limit by requiring a permit for
the withdrawal of 100,000 gallons per day. The Ohio bill, if adopted,
would violate the spirit of the historic Great Lakes compact and force
a race to the bottom among the eight signatory States, which will
result in an accelerated level of diversions and further reduce the
water level in the Great Lakes beyond the impact of Ohio businesses.
Such an outcome is unacceptable.
The consequence of such a large scale removal of water from the Great
Lakes basin would have a devastating environmental and economic impact
in my community. Water levels in the Great Lakes are already on the
decline, and the additional large-scale removal of water will lead to
algae blooms and reduced water quality, negatively impacting aquatic
wildlife and the associated fishing industry, and reduce recreational
boating and commercial shipping activities.
In my community of western New York, this action would threaten the
progress we are making in Buffalo toward reclaiming the waterfront as
an engine of recreational and economic opportunities.
I wrote to Ohio Governor John Kasich yesterday encouraging that he
conclude, as have his predecessors Bob Taft and George Voinovich, that
this legislation poses a danger to the health of our greatest regional
asset, and suggesting that he veto this ill-advised legislation. I hope
that he will heed that advice so advocates for the Great Lakes can
focus attention on the restoration initiative and on cleaning up the
lakes instead of having to fight to protect them from massive
withdrawals of freshwater for profit when the issue was supposed to
have been settled years ago.
Now more than ever, it is critical that the Great Lakes remain
vigilant and united against the threat of water diversion.
____________________