$20.5 billion effort gives cleanup priority
Wednesday, August 24, 2005
...About two-thirds of the plan's estimated price tag will go toward correcting sewage overflow problems, which dump billions of gallons of raw sewage into the Great Lakes annually, and cleaning up polluted sediment at 31 harbors and rivers around the Great Lakes...
The plan proposes to improve water quality at beaches, virtually eliminating discharges of mercury, pesticides and toxic pollution, and restoring 550,000 acres of wetlands, which serve as water purifiers.
But it does not mention global warming and its impact on the Great Lakes, an omission pointed out by Cleveland resident Randy Cunningham...
Comments about the plan can be submitted via the Web; or mailed to: Comments, Great Lakes Regional Collaboration, c/o U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Great Lakes National Program Office, 77 W. Jackson Blvd. (G-17J), Chicago, IL 60604-3511. The deadline for comments is Sept. 9.
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