[cid:image001.gif at 01CC26AD.F20F04D0]<http://www.ohio.com/> Honor the compact June 09,2011 06:30 AM GMT Honor the compact Eight states and two Canadian provinces have pledged to manage well the Great Lakes. Will Ohio soon become the renegade? Published on Thursday, Jun 09, 2011 The Great Lakes Compact represents a signal accomplishment, eight states and two Canadian provinces coming together to manage more effectively one of the world's most precious natural resources. The compact took effect in 2008. Now states are moving to turn the aim into reality. At the Statehouse, unfortunately, Republican lawmakers are pushing for quick action on legislation that fails to meet the compact's spirit and letter. State Sen. Timothy Grendell and state Rep. Lynn Wachtmann appear driven to serve a narrower set of business interests, their proposal paying too little heed to the $10 billion a year industry around Lake Erie, including tourism and recreational and commercial fishing. They claim to take a comprehensive view of protecting the Lake Erie basin. Yet the bill would leave rivers and streams vulnerable to harm, overlooking that adverse activity on a small stage can ripple through the whole. The compact focuses rightly and heavily on preventing excessive diversions of water. Yet Grendell and Wachtmann would allow a new or expanding business to draw as much as 5 million gallons a day from Lake Erie without a permit or government review. The threshold would be 2 million gallons for a rivers and groundwater, and 300,000 for ''high quality'' streams. The combination rates as much more generous than neighboring states. For instance, Michigan requires an adverse impact assessment at 100,000 gallons per day. At 2 million gallons? All businesses must enter the regulatory program. Indiana allows for 5 million gallons daily from Lake Michigan. What many Ohioans know is that Lake Erie is a much different body of water, shallower and having significantly less flow. No surprise, then, that the other states bordering Lake Erie have proposed or established more stringent thresholds than Ohio. Grendell and Wachtmann would sound an alarm if Lake Erie's water level dropped one inch during a five-year period, or a related river declined by a half-inch. Neither of these standards has a firm basis in science. The proposal carves a loophole around the compact requirement for all users to set up water conservation programs. It provides the state Department of Natural Resources with the mechanisms to collect and analyze information, yet fails to supply the agency with the necessary authority to act. The department would have the authority to write rules governing the compact. Still, the legislature would have the final say, a ''we don't trust you'' intrusion into what usually is an executive process, an agency acting after full public comment. The legislation poses as business friendly, the stress on economic growth and jobs, a handy rationale for acting swiftly. Troubling is the limited concept of what is economically sound. Legislation implementing the Great Lakes Compact must take a broader and more careful approach, keeping in mind tourism and recreation, enlightened stewardship and the commitment to regional partners. In their rush, Republicans in charge of the Statehouse risk failing to strike the essential balance for Ohio to do its part in managing well the Great Lakes. Find this article at: http://www.ohio.com/editorial/opinions/123529724.html Copyright (c) 2008 Ohio.com Kristy Meyer, M.S. Director of Agricultural & Clean Water Programs Ohio Environmental Council 1207 Grandview Ave., Ste. 201 Columbus, OH 43212 Direct Phone: (614) 487-5842 OEC Phone: (614) 487-7506 Kristy at theOEC.org Twitter.com/AgWaterKristy<http://www.twitter.com/AgWaterKristy> [cid:image004.gif at 01CC26AD.F20F04D0]<http://www.twitter.com/OhioEnviro> [cid:image005.gif at 01CC26AD.F20F04D0] <http://www.facebook.com/OhioEnvironmentalCouncil> Go green, give green! Sign up for our Green Giving club<http://www.theoec.org/GreenGiving.htm> to support the issues you believe in. Please think of the environment before you print this email. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://www.great-lakes.net/lists/glin-announce/attachments/20110609/3ab412c4/attachment.html -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... 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