News Sun
Feb 05, 2005
Funding for Great Lakes cleanup doubled
News Sun Staff
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency said Friday it will
receive double the amount of money allocated last year to clean
up the Great Lakes.
Funding in the buget for fiscal year 2006 for the Great Lakes
Legacy Act will be $50 million, the EPA said.
The announcement drew praise from U.S. Rep. Mark Kirk, R-Highland
Park.
"Protecting our Great Lakes is critical to preserving our
way of life and our children's environmental heritage," the
congressman said. "The increased funding in the president's
budget will help clean up many areas of concern on our Great Lakes,
including my No. 1 priority, Waukegan Harbor."
Cleaning up the harbor, according to one estimate, adds more
than $800 million to Lake County property values and increase
the value of a home in Waukegan by $53,000. Kirk said redevelopment
of the city's shoreline could bring more than $1.2 billion in
economic development.
"Waukegan's true economic potential lies in the environmental
clean up of the harbor," he added.
Kirk said he is working with other Great Lakes congressmen on
more comprehensive legislation addressing the basin's restoration,
noting mcercury pollution and invasive species are two of the
issues.
"Pregnant women in Illinois now show tests with 14 times
background mercury level in their blood," he said. "We
have a statewide fish advisory warning people to limit their consumption.
The federal government cannot afford to put off action any longer.
The time to act is now."
Copyright© 2005
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