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Updated: Monday, 14 Dec 2009, 8:24 PM EST
Published : Monday, 14 Dec 2009, 5:36 PM EST
TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. (AP) - Federal officials said Monday they would use $13 million in
Great Lakes restoration funds to step up the fight against invasive
Asian carp.
Lisa Jackson, head of the Environmental Protection Agency,
said the money will be used for engineering projects to prevent the
carp from slipping into Lake Michigan near Chicago. They include
closing conduits and shoring up low-lying lands between the Chicago
Sanitary and Ship Canal -- which leads to the lake -- and other
waterways.
The ravenous carp have been migrating northward in the
Mississippi and Illinois rivers for decades. Scientists say if they
get into the Great Lakes, they could gobble up plankton, interrupt
the food chain and devastate the $7 billion fishery.
Federal and state officials poisoned a six-mile section of
the canal this month to prevent the carp from getting closer to
Lake Michigan while an electrical barrier was taken down for
maintenance. They have promised to consider other measures.
Michigan officials are preparing a lawsuit demanding at least
temporary closure of shipping locks on the canal, part of a roughly
300-mile waterway linking the lake with the Mississippi. That's
opposed by tug and barge companies that haul millions of tons
of iron ore, coal and other cargo on the waterway.
While debate on a long-term plan continues, the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers will use some of the newly designated funds to
block potential bypasses between the sanitary and ship canal and
two nearby waterways believed already to have Asian carp: the Des
Plaines River and the I&M Canal.
Scientists fear the carp might be washed from those waterways
into the sanitary and ship canal above the electrical barrier
during flooding caused by heavy rains.
The rest of the money will provide DNA testing in hopes of
determining how far the carp have advanced, Army Corps spokeswoman
Lynne Whelan said.
Congress this fall appropriated $475 million to kick off a
comprehensive restoration of the Great Lakes, including cleanup of
contaminated harbors, wildlife habitat improvements and crackdowns
on runoff pollution and species invasions.
The $13 million to battle the Asian carp will be drawn from
that fund, which President Barack Obama requested.
The fund has "given us what we need to significantly and
immediately reduce the risk of Asian carp reaching the Great Lakes
and destroying such a valuable ecosystem," Jackson said.
Officials with federal agencies involved in the carp battle
met last week with members of Congress who pushed for spending up
to $30 million over the next year.
"I want to be clear that our work on this is not done and
we'll continue to aggressively work to protect the Great Lakes from
this dangerous creature," said Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich. "Allowing
the Asian carp into the Great Lakes is simply unacceptable."
Henry Henderson, Midwest director for the Natural Resources
Defense Council, said the planned spending was worthwhile but a
stopgap measure. Environmental groups want to sever the link
between the Great Lakes and Mississippi systems created by
engineers more than a century ago.
"We need a permanent solution, not a series of ad hoc
barriers," Henderson said.