Great
Lakes
National
Program
    U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency
  Great Lakes National Program Office
Significant Activities Report
On the Web at:
www.epa.gov/glnpo
 December 2002
 IN THIS ISSUE:
 • Presque Isle On the Mend
 • Winning the Battle in Lake
  Michigan
 • Tannery Bay Cleanup High-
  lighted
 • Carp News
 • Here they Come, From All Over
  the World
 • Dental Waste In Its Place
 • Toxics Linkages
 • International Coastal Wetlands
  Effort Nears Half-Way Mark
 • What Have They Done to the
  Bay?
 • Weighing the Evidence
 • New Sediment Cleanup Tool
 Presque Isle On the Mend
 Significant improvements in the environ-
 mental health of the Presque Isle Bay, Penn-
 sylvania Area of Concern (AOC) on Lake
 Erie has prompted the USEPA to upgrade
 the bay to an "AOC in recovery stage" from
 the previous designation of simply "AOC."

 The re-designation recognizes the improve-
 ments made over the 11 years since Presque
 Isle Bay was designated as an AOC.
 Presque Isle Bay is located in the northwest-
 ern corner of Pennsylvania on the southern
               shore of Lake Erie. Most of the watershed is
               comprised of urban and industrial areas
               within the City of Erie and Millcreek Town-
               ship.

               The request for a change in status was for-
               mally submitted to EPA on Oct. 2nd by the
               Pennsylvania Department of Environmental
               Protection. This is the first AOC in the na-
               tion to be upgraded to recovery status.

               In 1988, local citizens from Erie County,
               Pa. petitioned the International Joint Com-
               mission Science Advisory Board to recom-
               mend that the Bay be an AOC. In 1991, the
               Commission requested that the U.S. Gov-
               ernment make this designation after re-
               search concluded fish tumors and restric-
               tions of dredging activities indicated sub-
               stantial sediment contamination. The U.S.
               Department of State officially made the des-
               ignation on January 30, 1991.

               Several studies indicate improvements in
               the bay - the incidence offish tumors has
               dropped dramatically and sediments have
               proven less toxic than originally believed.
               Under EPA guidelines, the new status calls
                                        Presque Isle Bay on Lake Erie at Erie, Pennsylvania

-------
December 2002
                       Significant Activities Report
         for a pollution prevention plan, and a moni-
         toring program to reduce the risk of future
         degradation and ensure that recovery con-
         tinues.
         (Contacts: Mark Elster, 312-886-3857, el;
         ster.mark@epa.gov, or Larry Merrill, 215-
         814-5452, merrill.larry@epa.gov)

         Winning the Battle
         in Lake Michigan
         A recently published scientific paper shows
         the benefits of reducing phosphorus load-
         ings to Lake Michigan. High phosphorus
         loads in the 1960's and 70's spurred the
         Springtime population growth of diatoms,
         one of the most common types of phyto-
         plankton (tiny floating plants) in the lake.
         This explosive  diatom growth each
         Spring used up all the silica in the
         water, preventing further diatom
         growth in the Summer. Since only
         diatoms require silica for growth,
         Summer communities shifted to
         other types of phytoplankton, a de-
         parture from the historical condition
         of year-round dominance by diatoms.
         Public concern over the eutrophica-
         tion (premature aging) of the Great
         Lakes resulted in signing of the Great
         Lakes Water Quality Agreement in
         1972 between the United States  and Can-
         ada. As part of the effort to reverse the deg-
         radation of the lakes, phosphorus reduction
         programs were undertaken under the Agree-
         ment.
         The restoration of Lake Erie dramatically
         showed the success of the phosphorus con-
         trols. Evidence of recovery in Lake Michi-
         gan has been more elusive. But now, the pa-
         per "Evidence of Recovery from Phospho-
         rus Enrichment in Lake Michigan," pub-
         lished in the Canadian Journal of Fisheries
         and Aquatic Sciences, shows for the first
         time the benefits of phosphorus load reduc-
     tions to the Lake Michigan ecosystem. The
     paper uses 18 years of data, collected as part
     of the Great Lakes National Program Of-
     fice's annual open-lake monitoring program,
     to track a complex chain of interactions
     from phosphorus to silica to diatoms. The
     authors found that reductions in phosphorus
     loads, the main driver of diatom growth,
     have resulted in a steady increase in Spring
     soluble silica concentrations between 1983
     and 2000 as smaller annual diatom popula-
     tions have taken less silica with them as
     they die and settle to the bottom of the lake.
     With a smaller annual loss of silica, concen-
     trations of this element have been  able to
     build up steadily over the past twenty years.
     The reduction in Spring diatom populations,
     resulting from decreases in phosphorus
Stephanodiscus pan/us         Cyclotella ocellata

    Some common Lake Michigan diatoms
     loading, has also meant more silica 'left
     over' for Summer diatom growth, bringing
     about a return of substantial Summer dia-
     tom populations in the lake for the first time
     in over thirty years. Therefore, while annual
     diatom production has decreased, it has also
     become more 'spread out' over the year, as
     was the case in the lake before it was im-
     pacted by excessive phosphorus loading.
     The Summer diatom response to increased
     silica was particularly apparent beginning in
     the early 1990s. It thus appears that the
     phytoplankton community has begun to
     shift back towards its historical condition of
 Page 2
    U.S. EPA Great Lakes National Program Office

-------
Significant Activities Report
                               December 2002
        year-round diatom dominance. These re-
        sults provide the first conclusive evidence
        that phosphorus load reductions are having
        a positive impact on the Lake Michigan
        ecosystem.

        The authors of the paper were Rick Bar-
        biero of DynCorp; and Marc Tuchman,
        Glenn Warren and David Rockwell from
        GLNPO. The paper is in the October 2002
        (Volume 59, Number 10) of the Canadian
        Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
        on pages 1639 to 1647.
        (Contacts: Marc Tuchman, 312-353-1369,
        tuchman.marc@epa.gov; Glenn Warren,
        312-886-2405, warren.glenn@epa.gov: or
        David Rockwell, 312-353-1373, rockwell.
        david@epa.gov)

        Tannery Bay Cleanup Highlighted
        On November 7th, a press conference was
        held in Whitehall, Michigan to highlight the
        sediment cleanup  activities at the White
        Lake, Tannery Bay site. This  project is a
        joint effort between the Michigan Depart-
        ment of Environmental Quality (MDEQ)
        and USEPA. When completed, about
        75,000 cubic yards of tannery waste con-
        taminated with chromium, arsenic and mer-
        cury will be removed.
         Suction dredge removing Tannery Bay sediments


        The sediment contamination was the result
        of some 30 years of discharges from the
        tannery (1944 through 1976). A settlement
reached between MDEQ and Genesco, Inc,
provided $3.3 million towards the project.
The remaining funds were supplied by a
grant for $500,000 from GLNPO to MDEQ
and from Michigan Clean Michigan Initia-
tive Funds.
The press conference was attended by Tom
Skinner, USEPA Region 5 Administrator
and Great Lakes National Program Man-
ager; Russell J. Harding, Department of En-
vironmental Quality Director; Dennis L.
Schornack, International Joint Commission
U.S. Section Chairman; Norm Ullman,
Mayor of Whitehall,  and other local offi-
cials.

Another cleanup in White Lake, at the Occi-
dental Chemical site  is slated for the sum-
mer of 2003.
Contact: Marc Tuchman, 312-353-1369,
tuchman.marc@epa.gov).

Carp News
USEPA, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers,
and the State Department worked in part-
nership to provide  emergency funding to
buy and install a backup power system for
the existing aquatic nuisance species  disper-
sal barrier in the Chicago Sanitary and Ship
Canal near Lockport, Illinois. The backup
power will ensure operation of the barrier in
the event of a failure with the primary
power system. USEPA's Office of Water
provided $150,000 for the purchase. The
Army Corps  constructed the barrier under
the authority of the Nonindigenous Aquatic
Nuisance Prevention and Control Act of
1990 as a demonstration of an innovative
technology for preventing the migration of
aquatic nuisance species between the Great
Lakes and Illinois River basins. The Corps
is continuing the operation of the barrier as
the only line of defense against the immi-
nent threat of Asian carp migrating into the
Great Lakes from the Illinois River. Two
U.S. EPA Great Lakes National Program Office
                                        Page3

-------
December 2002
                   Significant Activities Report
                 Dispersal Barrier Control Room
          (Photo courtesy of Phil Moy, Wisconsin Sea Grant)

         species of asian carp are advancing their
         way up the Illinois from the Mississippi
         River toward the Great Lakes and have the
         potential to severely impact the biological
         integrity of the Great Lakes.  (See related
         stories in the May and September-October
         2002 issues of the Significant Activities Re-
         port).
         (Contact: Scott Cieniawski, 312-353-9184,
         cieniawski.scott@epa.gov)

         In related news, on November 25th, U.S.
         Congresswoman Judy Biggert convened a
         roundtable discussion at the Romeoville, Il-
         linois Village Hall on the Asian Carp and
         the dispersal barrier project.  The dispersal
         barrier and a large segment of the Chicago
         Sanitary and Ship Canal resides in her dis-
         trict. In attendance were representatives
         from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers; the
         International Joint Commission; the Great
         Lakes Fisheries Commission; the Fish and
         Wildlife Service, the Mississippi Interstate
         Cooperative Resource Association
         (MICRA); and the Illinois Natural History
         Survey.

         Short presentations were made by Con-
         gresswoman Biggert, IJC Commissioner
         Dennis Schornack (IJC); and the Corps of
         Engineers on the status of the barrier; and
 Jerry Rasmussen from MICRA on the Asian
 Carp threat. After the presentations, Con-
 gresswoman Biggert led a discussion and
 inquired as to the kinds  of monitoring un-
 derway to determine the effectiveness of the
 barrier and plans to construct a second bar-
 rier. She voiced her support for the effort,
 including the continued operation of the ex-
 isting barrier. Following the briefing a visit
 to the site was conducted by the Army
 Corps of Engineers.
 (Contact: Marc Tuchman, 312-353-1369,
 tuchman.marc@epa.gov)

 Here they Come,
 From All Over the World
 After EPA Headquarters, EPA Region 5 and
 the Great Lakes National Program Office
 receive the greatest number of foreign visi-
 tors to EPA. Fiscal year 2002 (ending Sep-
 tember 30, 2002) saw a  total of 223 foreign
 visitors to Region 5. Over one-third of the
 visitors met with GLNPO staff. The coun-
 tries represented included Argentina, Arme-
 nia, Brazil, Canada, Chile, China, Estonia,
 Germany, India,  Ireland, Israel, Korea, Lat-
 via, Lithuania, Japan, and Poland. Most of
 the visitors wanted to learn how EPA han-
 dles the kinds of issues that these countries
 are facing or will soon be confronting.
                                                      GLNPO receives visitors from all over the globe
 Page 4
U.S. EPA Great Lakes National Program Office

-------
Significant Activities Report
                                December 2002
        There are several reasons for the visitors'
        keen interest in the Great Lakes:
        •  Many of the visitors' countries now
           have the kinds of problems that the
           Great Lakes faced 20 to 30 years ago
           and the visitors want to learn how the
           Great Lakes were restored.
        •  Since many of their countries have
           trans-boundary pollution issues (their
           waters are being impacted by other
           countries), they are eager to learn how
           about the binational efforts to protect
           and restore Great Lakes, which are seen
           as a model for international cooperation
           to protect a shared resource.
        •  Finally, many of them are interested in
           how the ecosystem approach is used to
           attack problems holistically instead of
           piecemeal like the traditional media by
           media approaches.
        (Contacts: Tony Kizlauskas, 312-353-8773,
        kizlauskas.anthony@epa.gov or Sirtaj Ah-
        med, 312-886-4445, ahmed.sirtaj(giepa.gov)

        Dental Waste In Its Place
        A symposium was held on December 2nd, in
        Chicago,  Illinois entitled "Dental Mercury:
        Reducing the Environmental Impact." The
        meeting was sponsored by the Great Lakes
        Binational Toxics Strategy (mercury is one
        of the chemicals targeted for reductions by
        that program). Over 70 people attended, in-
        cluding members of the dental community,
        academia and government from both the
        United States and Canada. Presentations in-
        cluded:
        •  Assessing the Fate and Impact of Dental
           Amalgam, three separate presentations
           by Philip Watson, University of To-
           ronto; Jay Vandeven, Environ Corpora-
           tion; and Peter Berglund, Metropolitan
           Council Environmental Services,
        •  Amalgam Recycling Potential, presented
           by James Drummond, University of Illi-
           nois-Chicago,
    Waste Management Strategies and Op-
   portunities, presented by Linda Samek,
    Ontario Dental Association,
   Evaluation of Amalgam Separation
   Equipment, presented by P.L. Fan,
   Practical Considerations in Managing
   Dental Wastes and Amalgam Separa-
    tors, presented by Kevin McManus, EBI
    Consultants, and
    The Proper Place for Dental Waste:
   Dental School Curriculum Develop-
   ment, presented by Nancy Larson, Kan-
    sas State University.
    Dental amalgam can be a significant source
           of mercury to wastewater

Later, several case studies were presented to
show the impacts of mercury amalgam and
the practical applications of the mercury re-
duction techniques presented earlier:
•  Duluth, Minnesota, presented by Tim
   Tuominen, Western Lake Superior Sani-
   tary District,
•  Toronto, Ontario Canada Sewer Use
   By-Law, presented by Robert Krauel,
   Environment Canada,
•  King County, Washington,  presented by
   Gail Savina, King County Hazardous
   Waste, and
•  Northeast Ohio, presented by Keith
   Linn, Northeast Ohio Regional Sanitary
U.S. EPA Great Lakes National Program Office
                                         PageS

-------
December 2002
                   Significant Activities Report
            District.

         Finally, a closing panel discussion: Charting
         a Path Forward was led by Navy Com-
         mander Dr. John Kuehne, DDS from the
         Naval Institute for Dental and Biomedical
         Research and Dr. Keith W. Suchy, DDS, the
         Secretary of the Chicago Dental Society.

         Proceeds of this Symposium should be pub-
         lished in January 2003.
         (Contact: Alexis Cain, 312-886-7018, cain.
         alexis@epa.gov)

         Toxics Linkages
         Over 80 people attended the Semiannual
         Stakeholder Forum of the Great Lakes Bi-
         national Toxics Strategy (GLBTS) in Chi-
         cago on December 3rd. The theme of the
         gathering was "Linkages." Invited speakers
         showed how the toxics reduction activities
         of the GLBTS were related to other such re-
         duction efforts at various scales from local
         to global. Greg Filyk, the Acting Chief of
         the Hazardous Air Pollutants Group at En-
         vironment Canada in Ottawa spoke about
         global toxic reductions efforts. Victor Shan-
         tora, the Acting Executive Director of the
         North American Commission for Environ-
         mental Cooperation on the Commission for
         Environmental Cooperation spoke about
         that organization's coordinated toxics re-
         duction efforts between the U.S., Canada,
         and Mexico. Finally, Kevin  Schnoes of the
         Chicago Department of Environment, de-
         scribed the City of Chicago's efforts to help
         industry reduce the use and releases of toxic
         substances through its "Industrial Outreach
         Program."

         As in past GLBTS Stakeholder Forums, the
         GLBTS Workgroup Chairpersons provided
         updates on their groups efforts to reduce
         specific toxics, including PCBs, dioxins and
         furans, mercury, benzo(a)pyrene, hexa-
  Toxics can be transported around the globe by air,
 so coordinated cooperative control efforts are needed
 chlorobenzene, pesticides, alkyl-lead, and
 octachlorostyrene. The annual summary of
 progress under the Great Lakes Binational
 Toxics Strategy will be available in Febru-
 ary 2003. For more information on the
 Great Lakes Binational Toxics Strategy, and
 its toxics reduction activities, visit their
 Web Site at: http://www.epa.gov/glnpo/bns
 (Contact: Ted Smith, 312-353-6571, smith.
 edwin@epa.gov)

 International Coastal Wetlands
 Effort Nears Half-Way Mark
 In September 2002, USEPAs Great Lakes
 National Program Office awarded the third
 and final Cooperative Agreement to the
 Great Lakes Commission to support the
 work of the Great Lakes Coastal Wetlands
 Consortium. All three Cooperative Agree-
 ments have been funded at $400,000, with
 another $200,000 in match from the Con-
 sortium members.

 There are 41 member organizations, includ-
 ing scientific and policy experts drawn from
 key U.S. and Canadian federal agencies,
 state and provincial agencies, non-
 governmental organizations, and other inter-
 est groups with responsibility for coastal
 wetlands monitoring. This is an unprece-
 dented assembly of coastal wetlands exper-
 tise. In addition, other members are brought
 in as small project teams are formed to ad-
 Page 6
U.S. EPA Great Lakes National Program Office

-------
Significant Activities Report
                                December 2002
              Coastal wetlands around Search Bay
                   in northern Lake Huron
                  (Photo by Ted Cline, 1996)

        dress discrete project elements and pilot
        studies. The Consortium is coordinated by
        staff at the Great Lakes Commission in Ann
        Arbor, Michigan. The Consortium is just
        finishing its second year of a 4-5 year pro-
        ject. The ultimate goal of the Consortium is
        to design an implementable, long-term
        monitoring program for Great Lakes coastal
        wetlands. This will allow the United States
        and Canada to better fulfill the reporting re-
        quirements under the Great Lakes Water
        Quality Agreement. The biennial State of
        Lakes Ecosystem Conference is the report-
        ing platform utilized by the two countries.
        For more information on this project, go to
        www.glc.org/wetlands.
        (Contacts:  DuaneHeaton, 312-886-6399,
        heaton.duane@epa.gov: Karen Rodriguez,
        312-353-2690, rodriguez.karen@epa.gov:
        or John Schneider, 312-886-0880, schnei-
        der .j ohn@epa. gov)

        What Have They Done to the Bay?
        The zebra mussel invasion of Bay has
        changed the Saginaw Bay ecosystem. It has
        caused a shift of energy flow from pelagic
        (open water) to the benthic (bottom) com-
        ponents, potentially impacting every com-
        ponent of the food web. To help understand
        this phenomenon, working under a grant
        from GLNPO, the State University of New
York - Buffalo developed a "coupled ben-
thic-pelagic ecosystem model" for Saginaw
Bay.

The model helps quantify how primary pro-
duction is partitioned between pelagic and
benthic communities and how the distribu-
tion varies with zebra mussel densities and
nutrient loadings. The Final Report for the
grant describes the overall modeling ap-
proach and the linkage of different models
to synthesize the physical, chemical, and
biological processes of Saginaw Bay as it
undergoes invasion by  zebra mussels. The
integration of eutrophication and toxic
chemical models with a benthic-pelagic
coupling represents an  ecosystem modeling
approach. The principle outcomes of this
work are the better understanding of the
ecosystem stress-response relationships and
the benthic-pelagic  coupling in the Saginaw
Bay ecosystem, and the use of the model to
forecast the possible future states of the bay
as a result of changes in external stressors
such as nutrient loadings  and zebra mussel
densities.
(Contact: DuaneHeaton,  312-886-6399,
heaton. duane@epa. gov)
                                                       Saginaw Bay from NASA Image Collection
U.S. EPA Great Lakes National Program Office
                                         Page 7

-------
December 2002
                                                      Significant Activities Report
         Weighing the Evidence
         On November 22nd, GLNPO's
         Scott Cieniawski was in
         Saginaw, Michigan to deliver a
         presentation entitled Using the
         Weight of Evidence Approach
        for Making Sediment Manage-
         ment Decisions at the confer-
         ence for the Michigan State-
         wide Public Advisory  Council
         sponsored by the Great Lakes
         Commission. The presentation
         focused on the use of multiple
         lines of evidence (sediment
         chemistry, whole sediment tox-
         icity testing, benthic commu-
         nity assessments, and bioac-
         cumulation studies) to monitor
         the impact of contaminated
         sediments on beneficial uses in the Great
         Lakes Areas of Concern. The talk also
         touched  on the expected completion of the
                                 Sustainable
                                 Fisheries Foun-
                                 rdation's Guid-
                                 ance Manual to
                                 Support the As-
                                 sessment of
                                 Contaminated
                                 Sediments in
                                 Freshwater Eco-
                                 systems, sched-
                                 uled for publica-
                                 tion in early
         2003. The guidance manual provides an in-
         depth discussion of the "weight-of-
         evidence" approach and identifies the
         strengths and weaknesses of each line of
         evidence.
         (Contact: Scott Cieniawski, 312-353-9184,
         cieniawski.scott@epa.gov)
Balance scale
                       Great Lakes Areas of Concern in the U. S. and those shared with Can-
New Sediment Cleanup Tool
On November 27th, President Bush signed
the Great Lakes Legacy Act into law. The
Act authorizes the expenditure of up to $50
million per year for 5 years, starting in Oc-
tober 2003 to help cleaning up contami-
nated sediment sites at Great Lakes Areas of
Concern. It also authorizes up to $3 million
per year for research and development on
innovative treatment technologies and $1
million per year for education/outreach ac-
tivities. Congress would still have to appro-
priate the funds for the program in order for
it to go forward. Information on Areas of
Concern can be found at: http://www.epa.
gov/glnpo/aoc.
(Contact: Marc Tuchman, 312-353-1369,
tuchman.marc@epa.gov)
                                    We welcome your questions, comments or
                                    suggestions about this month's Significant
                                    Activities Report. To be added to or re-
                                    moved from the Email distribution of the
                                    Significant Activities Report, please contact
                                    Tony Kizlauskas, 312-353-8773,
                                    kizlauskas.anthony@epa.gov.
 PageB
                                   U.S. EPA Great Lakes National Program Office

-------