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K
Kent0242@aol.com
Wed, Dec 28, 2005 8:28 PM

Groups to study separating  Great Lakes and Mississippi River basins

(Published Wednesday, December 28, 2005  09:26:22 AM CST)

Associated Press

CHICAGO - More than 100 years ago, city  officials reversed the Chicago
River's flow to keep sewage and other filth  from spilling into drinking water in
Lake Michigan.

To do this, they dug the 28-mile Chicago  Sanitary & Ship Canal, a highly
lauded engineering accomplishment that  connects the Great Lakes to the Illinois
River and ultimately to the  Mississippi River.

But for environmentalists, the connection  of the Great Lakes and Mississippi
River basins has been a nightmare,  facilitating the spread of invasive
species and endangering the ecology of  states at both ends of the waterway.

Today, as more and more scientists say the  best way to halt invasive
species' expansion is to separate the two joined  basins - a project that could cost
billions of dollars - a group has  embarked on a study to examine doing just
that.

With $125,000 in funding from the Great  Lakes Fishery Trust, Great Lakes
Fishery Commission and the U.S.-Canada  International Joint Commission, the
Chicago-based Alliance for the Great  Lakes will spend the next year studying the
feasibility of permanently  separating the two watersheds.

"We're not saying hydrologic separation is  going to occur," said Suzanne
Malec, deputy commissioner of the city's  Department of Environment. "But it's
that extreme a situation that we need  to consider everything up to and
including that."

By some estimates, the invasive zebra  mussel costs the Great Lakes region $1
billion a year in damage and  control costs and has made its way downstream
to the Mississippi. Moving  upstream, the Asian carp jeopardizes the $4.5
billion annual Great Lakes  sport and commercial fishing industry. Other species
like the round goby,  mussels and spiny water fleas also cause financial and
ecological  headaches.

Basin separation would cost "in the tens of  billions," and raise many
questions, said Dick Lanyon of the Metropolitan  Water Reclamation District.

"No one has pointed their finger at a map  and said, 'The (point of
separation) goes here,"' he said.

Despite the logistics, the idea is gaining  in popularity.

In 2003, "hydrologic separation" was the  No. 1 recommendation of nearly 70
scientists, engineers and invasive  species experts attending the 2003 Aquatic
Invasive Species Summit,  convened by Chicago Mayor Richard Daley and the U.S.
Fish & Wildlife  Service.

Scientists say it's too early to expect a  permanent solution and hope the
study will facilitate more - and more  expensive - research.

"Large-scale feasibility studies for major  regional projects could take
$20-$30 million," said Chuck Shea, project  manager for the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers.

Janesville, WI Gazette
_http://www.gazetteextra.com/greatlakesstudy122805.asp_ 
(http://www.gazetteextra.com/greatlakesstudy122805.asp) 

Groups to study separating Great Lakes and Mississippi River basins (Published Wednesday, December 28, 2005 09:26:22 AM CST) Associated Press CHICAGO - More than 100 years ago, city officials reversed the Chicago River's flow to keep sewage and other filth from spilling into drinking water in Lake Michigan. To do this, they dug the 28-mile Chicago Sanitary & Ship Canal, a highly lauded engineering accomplishment that connects the Great Lakes to the Illinois River and ultimately to the Mississippi River. But for environmentalists, the connection of the Great Lakes and Mississippi River basins has been a nightmare, facilitating the spread of invasive species and endangering the ecology of states at both ends of the waterway. Today, as more and more scientists say the best way to halt invasive species' expansion is to separate the two joined basins - a project that could cost billions of dollars - a group has embarked on a study to examine doing just that. With $125,000 in funding from the Great Lakes Fishery Trust, Great Lakes Fishery Commission and the U.S.-Canada International Joint Commission, the Chicago-based Alliance for the Great Lakes will spend the next year studying the feasibility of permanently separating the two watersheds. "We're not saying hydrologic separation is going to occur," said Suzanne Malec, deputy commissioner of the city's Department of Environment. "But it's that extreme a situation that we need to consider everything up to and including that." By some estimates, the invasive zebra mussel costs the Great Lakes region $1 billion a year in damage and control costs and has made its way downstream to the Mississippi. Moving upstream, the Asian carp jeopardizes the $4.5 billion annual Great Lakes sport and commercial fishing industry. Other species like the round goby, mussels and spiny water fleas also cause financial and ecological headaches. Basin separation would cost "in the tens of billions," and raise many questions, said Dick Lanyon of the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District. "No one has pointed their finger at a map and said, 'The (point of separation) goes here,"' he said. Despite the logistics, the idea is gaining in popularity. In 2003, "hydrologic separation" was the No. 1 recommendation of nearly 70 scientists, engineers and invasive species experts attending the 2003 Aquatic Invasive Species Summit, convened by Chicago Mayor Richard Daley and the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service. Scientists say it's too early to expect a permanent solution and hope the study will facilitate more - and more expensive - research. "Large-scale feasibility studies for major regional projects could take $20-$30 million," said Chuck Shea, project manager for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Janesville, WI Gazette _http://www.gazetteextra.com/greatlakesstudy122805.asp_ (http://www.gazetteextra.com/greatlakesstudy122805.asp)