From: U.S. EPA <usaepa@service.govdelivery.com>
Date: Wed, Sep 3, 2014 at 12:37 PM
Subject: News Release: Great Lakes Restoration Initiative Provides Funding to Target Harmful Algal Blooms in Lake Erie
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September 3, 2014
Great Lakes Restoration Initiative Provides Funding to Target Harmful Algal Blooms in Lake Erie
WASHINGTON -- U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Gina McCarthy today announced that the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative (GLRI) will provide almost $12 million to federal and state agencies to protect public health by targeting harmful algal blooms (HABs) in western Lake Erie. The funding builds upon the GLRI's on-going efforts to reduce algal blooms and will be made available to Ohio, Michigan and Indiana state agencies and to the U.S. Geological Survey, the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
"The importance of clean water cannot be overstated, which is why the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative is taking further action to target harmful algal blooms in western Lake Erie," said EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy. "This important funding will address the immediate need for state and federal agencies to protect public health and build upon on-going efforts to reduce harmful algal blooms."
The new FY 2014 funding will be used to: · Expand monitoring and forecasting to help drinking water treatment plant operators and beach managers minimize health impacts associated with HABs; · Increase incentives for farmers in western Lake Erie watersheds to reduce phosphorus runoff that contributes to HABs; and · Improve measurement of phosphorus loads in Lake Erie tributaries.
In early August, the City of Toledo issued a "Do Not Drink" order for almost 500,000 people in northwest Ohio and southeast Michigan when a drinking water treatment plant was adversely impacted by microcystin, a toxin produced in connection with HAB outbreaks on Lake Erie. In addition to generating toxins that pose risks to human health, HABs create low oxygen "dead zones" and harm shoreline economies. On August 13, EPA Regional Administrator, Susan Hedman, convened a meeting of federal and state agencies to identify opportunities for collaboration to minimize HAB-related risks in the western Lake Erie Basin. GLRI funding announced today targets immediate needs identified during that meeting. The group will continue to focus resources on this issue in FY 2015 and beyond. McCarthy, who chairs the Great Lakes Interagency Task Force, which oversees the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative, made the announcement today at the task force meeting in Washington, D.C. Information about the GLRI: http://www.glri.us/
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Jeremy Tobias Matthews
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