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Senators pushing to increase Great Lakes cleanup funding

Shiawassee National Wildlife Refuge (file photo)
steve carmody
/
Michigan Radio
Shiawassee National Wildlife Refuge (file photo)
Shiawassee National Wildlife Refuge (file photo)
Credit steve carmody / Michigan Radio
/
Michigan Radio
Shiawassee National Wildlife Refuge (file photo)

U.S. Senators Debbie Stabenow and Gary Peters are pushing an expansion of a program designed to protect the Great Lakes.

The current Great Lakes Restoration Initiativeis set to expire in 2021.

Stabenow says her bill would reauthorize the initiative for an additional five years.   The bill would continue the program through 2026 and gradually increase its annual appropriation from the current $300 million to $475 million.

The Trump administration has repeatedly tried to slash fundingfor the Great Lakes program.

But Stabenow believes the reauthorization bill will not face opposition from the president.

“This will be part of a larger budget bill,” says Stabenow, “And so, I don’t anticipate that they will do that.”

Michigan environmental groups support a proposal to reauthorize a program helping restore the Great Lakes. 

Rich Bowman is with the Nature Conservancy. He says the funding questions have caused some problems.

“We’ve had some cases where things probably haven’t happened on the timeline that we’d like them to have, but they always eventually happened,” says Bowman.

The program focuses on some of the Great Lakes' most longstanding environmental problems, including industrial toxic pollution, invasive species, runoff that causes algae blooms and wildlife habitat loss.

In Michigan, it has provided a combined $762 million for 880 projects, including restoring native fish populations in the Detroit River and removing 200 tons (181 metric tons) of marine debris from Belle Isle in Detroit.

Copyright 2019 Michigan Radio

Steve Carmody has been a reporter for Michigan Radio since 2005. Steve previously worked at public radio and television stations in Florida, Oklahoma and Kentucky, and also has extensive experience in commercial broadcasting. During his two and a half decades in broadcasting, Steve has won numerous awards, including accolades from the Associated Press and Radio and Television News Directors Association. Away from the broadcast booth, Steve is an avid reader and movie fanatic. Q&A