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E-M:/ Farm bill and the Great Lakes
- Subject: E-M:/ Farm bill and the Great Lakes
- From: "Alex J. Sagady & Associates" <ajs@sagady.com>
- Date: Wed, 28 May 2008 17:04:24 -0400
- Delivered-to: enviro-mich-archive@glc.merit.edu
- Delivered-to: enviro-mich@glc.merit.edu
- List-name: Enviro-Mich
- Reply-to: "Alex J. Sagady & Associates" <ajs@sagady.com>
News release from the Great Lakes
Commission.
Contact: Tom Crane
E-mail:
tcrane@glc.org
Phone:
734-971-9135
Fax: 734-971-9150
For immediate
release
May 28, 2008
2008 Farm Bill important for the
Great Lakes
Ann Arbor, Mich. ? Passage by
Congress of the 2008 Farm Bill (H.R. 2419) means some good news for the
Great Lakes. Provisions of the bill will help efforts to control soil
erosion in the Great Lakes basin, and support research on a deadly fish
virus in the lakes, among other priorities.
As a member of the Farm Bill Conference Committee and Senate Agriculture
Committee, Michigan Senator Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.) played a leading
role in crafting the Food, Conservation and Energy Act, also known as the
Farm Bill, which was approved by Congress this month. Sen. Stabenow was
instrumental in reauthorizing the only Great Lakes-specific Farm Bill
program, the Great Lakes Basin Program for Soil Erosion and Sediment
Control, and adding language linking the program to the Great Lakes
Regional Collaboration Strategy (GLRC) to restore and protect the Great
Lakes. The GLRC strategy was adapted in 2005 by a partnership of federal,
state, municipal and tribal interests following a year-long
collaboration.
Beyond the Great Lakes-specific provisions of the Farm Bill, many
national conservation measures included in the bill will benefit the
Great Lakes region. The bill included increased funding and policy
improvements for the Environmental Quality Incentives Program and the
Conservation Stewardship Program to reward farmers for land and water
conservation practices. It also boosted funding for Wetland Reserve and
Grassland Reserve programs to protect water resources and expand wildlife
habitat.
Created by the legislation were both a new conservation loan program to
leverage additional funding for agriculture conservation and a new
cooperative conservation program to more effectively address natural
resource concerns.
?We are pleased that the 2008 Farm Bill includes important provisions to
protect and restore the Great Lakes. We congratulate Sen. Stabenow and
other members of the Great Lakes Congressional Delegation for their
leadership and dedication to protecting the Great Lakes,? said Michigan
Lt. Gov. John Cherry, chair of the Great Lakes Commission. ?This is one
piece of federal legislation that acknowledges the value of the Great
Lakes and the wisdom of investing in their protection.?
The Commission also commends Rep. Collin Peterson (D-Minn., 7th
District), chair of the House Agriculture Committee, for his leadership
in guiding the bill through the legislative process.
The Great Lakes Basin Program ? which gained renewed support in the Farm
Bill ? is administered by the Great Lakes Commission, with funding
provided by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Natural Resources
Conservation Service. The Basin Program supports improved erosion and
sediment control and sound landuse practices through demonstration
grants, technical assistance and information/education projects. Grant
recipients include conservation districts and other nonfederal units of
government, nonprofit organizations and academic institutions in all
eight states of the Great Lakes basin. Over the past 17 years, the Basin
Program has supported nearly 400 projects and invested almost $12 million
in water quality improvement efforts. These projects have prevented an
estimated 250,000 tons of sediment and 900,000 pounds of phosphorus from
entering the Great Lakes and tributaries. Sediment pollution covers
spawning beds, suffocates aquatic vegetation habitat, and increases the
cost of treating potable water and maintaining drainage infrastructure.
Phosphorus pollution can lead to excess growth of plants and algae and
rob lakes and rivers of oxygen.
Another provision of the Farm Bill authorizes research grants for the
study of viral hemorrhagic septicemia (VHS), a lethal fish virus that has
been blamed for several large-scale fish die-offs in the Great Lakes
since 2005.
The Great Lakes
Commission, chaired by Lt.
Gov. John Cherry (Mich.), is a nonpartisan, binational compact agency
established under state and U.S. federal law and dedicated to promoting a
strong economy, healthy environment and high quality of life for the
Great Lakes-St. Lawrence region and its residents. The Commission
consists of governors' appointees, state legislators, and agency
officials from its
eight member
states.
Associate
membership for Ontario and
Québec was established through the signing of a
"
Declaration of
Partnership." The
Commission maintains a formal
Observer
program involving U.S. and
Canadian federal agencies, tribal authorities, binational agencies and
other regional interests. The Commission offices are located in Ann
Arbor, Michigan.
==========================================
Alex J. Sagady & Associates
http://www.sagady.com
Environmental Enforcement, Permit/Technical Review, Public Policy,
Expert Witness Review and Litigation Investigation on Air, Water and
Waste/Community Environmental and Resource Protection
Prospectus at:
http://www.sagady.com/sagady.pdf
657 Spartan Avenue, East Lansing, MI 48823
(517) 332-6971; ajs@sagady.com
==========================================