Great Lakes National Program On the Web at: www.epa.gov/greatlakes U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Great Lakes National Program Office (GLNPO) Significant Activities Report December 2005 IN THIS ISSUE: • Great Lakes Restoration Strategy • New Wetlands Partnership • Toxics Strategy Update • Areas of Concern Progress • Tracking Changes in Lake Huron Food Web • Conservation and Native Landscaping Awards Great Lakes Restoration Strategy The final Great Lakes Regional Collabora- tion Strategy to Restore and Protect the Great Lakes was released at "Summit II" on Monday, December 12th at the John G. Shedd Aquarium in Chicago, Illinois. The Strategy was the result of a year-long process involv- ing 1,500 participants representing the entire spectrum of interested stakeholders within and outside government. Representatives of the Great Lakes Regional Collaboration also took the opportunity to sign a Great Lakes Regional Collaboration Resolution pledging their continued support for the Great Lakes Collaboration effort and actions to restore and protect the Great Lakes. The Strategy and Resolution can be viewed on the Web at: http ://www. glrc .us/strategy. html Background A Great Lakes Interagency Task Force was established by President Bush through an Ex- ecutive Order on May 18th, 2004 to undertake two major activities: Form a "Great Lakes Interagency Task Force" (IATF), and Pro- mote a "Regional Collaboration of National USEPA Administrator Steve Johnson, speaking on behalf of the federal members of the Great Lakes Regional Collaboration, addresses the participants at the GLRC Summit II meeting in Chicago, IL Significance" for the Great Lakes. On December 3rd, 2004, a Great Lakes Re- gional Collaboration Conveners Meeting was held in Chicago, Illinois, where the Conven- ers signed the "Great Lakes Declaration" and "Framework" documents affirming their commitment to the Great Lakes Regional Collaboration process and the development of a comprehensive strategy to restore and protect the Great Lakes. The "Framework" document established eight Issue Area Strat- egy Teams, comprised of representatives from all sectors of the Great Lakes commu- nity, as the working bodies responsible for drafting action plans for their issue areas to be incorporated into a comprehensive Great Lakes Strategy. Additional information on the Executive Order and Great Lakes Re- gional Collaboration is available on the Web ------- December 2005 Significant Activities Report Great Lakes Regional Collaboration Strategy to Re- store and Protect the Great Lakes cover page at: http://www.epa.gov/glnpo/collaboration/ taskforce/index.html The Strategy Teams completed their draft documents in late June, and a draft strategy document was released for public review and comment at "Summit I" on July 7th, 2005, in Duluth, Minnesota. The 60-day public com- ment on the draft strategy ended on Septem- ber 8th, 2005. In addition, six public meetings were held in locations throughout the Great Lakes basin in order to obtain further public input. The Executive Committee and Issue Area Strategy Teams met on October 6th and 7th, 2005 in Rochester, New York to review public comments and begin finalizing the strategy. The document released on Decem- ber 12th was the culmination of the year-long effort. (Contacts: Vicki Thomas, 312-886-6942, thomas.vicki@epa.gov or Nancy Gulden, 312-353-5006, guiden.nancy@epa.gov) New Wetlands Partnership On December 12th, USEPA's Assistant Ad- ministrator for Water, Ben Grumbles and USEPA Great Lakes National Program Man- ager/Region 5 Regional Administrator Tho- mas V. Skinner joined a meeting of the Na- tional Association of Manufacturers (NAM) to launch its new wetlands restoration initia- tive in the Midwest. The Chicago meeting was also attended by numerous local busi- ness leaders, who discussed a range of topics including federal tax incentives to foster pri- vate efforts to improve the Nation's water re- sources and habitats. Since the year 2000, NAM has served as the national program sponsor of Corporate Wetlands Restoration Partnership (CWRP), which was formed in 1999. CWRP matches every private dollar spent by corporations for wetlands restora- tion with about $4 in federal funds and joins America's corporate leaders with federal, state, and local governments; non- governmental organizations; and academia in restoring and protecting the nation's wet- lands and aquatic habitats. So far, the pro- gram has resulted in the restoration of more than 6,000 acres and stream miles, mostly in the Northeast. NAM President John Engler, who once served as governor of Michigan, recently sent some 400 letters encouraging corporate involvement in the program. More than 200 companies now participate in the CWRP voluntary effort, many of which are also NAM members. (Contact: Judy Beck, 312-353-3849, beck. judy@epa.gov) Toxics Strategy Update A Great Lakes Binational Toxics Strategy Stakeholder Forum was held on December 6th and 7th in USEPA's Chicago Valdas Adamkus Conference Center. The Featured Page 2 U.S. EPA Great Lakes National Program Office ------- Significant Activities Report December 2005 Keynote speaker was Clive Davies, who dis- cussed USEPA's "Design for the Environ- ment Program." The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency's Carrie Lohse Hanson, who serves as the United States co-chair of the Lake Superior Chemical Committee, gave a presentation about Minnesota's PCB transformer project on December 6th. The presentation was very well received, and some members of the PCB workgroup immediately followed up with re- quests for assistance with their PCB trans- former inventories. Some ideas that resulted from the presentation and discussions that followed include: that the Great Lakes Bina- tional Toxics Strategy's Utility Solid Waste Activity Group will combine the data with some other utility data to try to better predict the GE transformer suspects. Representatives from the Council of Great Lakes Industries emphasized the importance of financial in- centives for successful PCB transformer phase-outs. USEPA Region 5's Tony Martig will work with the Lake Superior group to further get the word out using the Minnesota project as a pilot. The Utility Solid Waste Activity Group distributed it's excellent flyer called "Promoting the Voluntary Phase-down of PCB-containing Equipment." The speakers' PowerPoint presentations can be viewed at http://www.epa.gov/glnpo/bns/ reports/stakesdec2005/index.html. (Contacts: Ted Smith, 312-353-6571, smith. edwin@epa.gov or Elizabeth LaPlante, 312-353-2694, laplante.elizabeth@epa.gov) Areas of Concern Progress Ashtabula Cleanup Moves Closer On December 9th, USEPA GLNPO signed a Project Agreement with the Ashtabula City Port Authority to undertake the remediation of a 1-mile stretch of the Ashtabula River in Pleasure boats on the Ashtabula River Ashtabula, Ohio. The $50 million project in- volves the dredging and disposal of approxi- mately 600,000 cubic yards of PCB- contaminated sediments upstream of the 5th Street Bridge. Construction of the disposal facility is expected to commence in early 2006, with dredging scheduled to begin in Fall 2006. The cleanup will be conducted un- der GLNPO's Legacy Act authority and funding. For more information about the Ashtabula cleanup, see: http://www.epa.gov/ glnpo/sediment/legacy/ashtabula/index.html. (Contact: Scott Cieniawski, 312-353-9184, cieniawski.scott@epa.gov) Oswego River, New York The updated Oswego River Area of Concern Stage 3 Deli sting Document was posted on December 14th on the New York Department of Environmental Conservation Web Site at: http://www.dec.state.ny.us/website/dow/ oswdlist.html. This posting started a 45-day public-comment period, which was an- nounced also on December 14th at http:// www.dec. state.ny.us/website/enb/index.html. The comment period closes January 30th, 2006, with finalization of the document ex- pected March 2006. (Contacts: Barbara Belasco, 212-637-3848, belasco.barbara@epa.gov or Mark Elster, 312-886-3857, elster.mark@epa.gov) U.S. EPA Great Lakes National Program Office Page3 ------- December 2005 Significant Activities Report Presque Isle Bay, Pennsylvania Work is underway under a GLNPO grant to establish fish-tumor reference sites in order to develop a supportable delisting target for this Beneficial Use Impairment. To learn more about the Presque Isle Bay Area of Concern, goto: http://www.epa.gov/glnpo/ aoc/presque.html (Contact: Scott Ireland, 312-886-8121, ire- land.scott@epa.gov) Torch Lake, Michigan The Michigan Department of Environmental Quality, with support from USEPA, collected samples to determine PCBs in the water col- umn. The sampling is being done to deter- mine whether the sources of PCBs found in Torch lake fish are inside the AOC or outside the AOC. This work will allow the State and local citizens group to determine if the fish- consumption advisory Beneficial Use Impair- ment can be delisted. Results are expected in April 2006. More information about the Torch Lake Area of Concern is available on the Internet at: http://www.epa.gov/glnpo/ aoc/trchlke.html. (Contact: Brenda Jones, 312-886-7188, jones.brenda@epa.gov) Waukegan Harbor Preliminary Design Document Finalized On December 16th, USEPA in cooperation with their contractor, CH2M Hill, finalized the "Preliminary Design Document, Wauke- gan Harbor Area of Concern, Waukegan, Illi- nois." The document provides preliminary cost estimates for the dredging and disposal of 290,000 cubic yards of PCB-contaminated sediments in the harbor. Three disposal op- tions are evaluated, with cost estimates rang- ing from $45 to $75 million. USEPA, the U. S. Army Corps of Engineers, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Map of the Torch Lake Area of Concern Illinois EPA, and the City of Waukegan are coordinating efforts with other stakeholders to select a final remedy for site and identify source of funding for implementation. The parties are also discussing whether there is a need for additional data prior to the selection of a final cleanup plan. See http://www.epa. gov/glnpo/aoc/waukegan.html to learn more about the Waukegan Harbor Area of Con- cern. (Contact: Scott Cieniawski, 312-353-9184, cieniawski.scott@epa.gov) Tracking Changes in Lake Huron Food Web GLNPO grantee Dr. Mary Balcer and con- tract scientist Dr. Rick Barbiero presented recent data on Lake Huron phytoplankton and zooplankton at the 2005 Midwest Fish and Wildlife Conference held in Grand Rap- ids, Michigan from December 11th to 14th. As a part of a robust two-day discussion be- tween lower food web and fishery research- Page 4 U.S. EPA Great Lakes National Program Office ------- Significant Activities Report December 2005 Great Lakes Food Web Commercial Fish Sport (Trout, Salmon, and Walleye) (Alawile, Bloater, DJDOreia Smell, Seulpin) How Diporeia fits into the Great Lakes food web (Graphic courtesy of NOAA) ers, GLNPO's monitoring data helped shed light on recent disruptions in the Lake Huron food web. Lake Huron suffered a huge de- cline of forage fish (primarily non-native ale- wife) in 2003, likely due to declines in in Di- poreia populations and high levels of preda- tion. Diporeia, an amphipod that looks like a miniature freshwater version of shrimp, are an important food item for both native and non-native fish species. As a result, fish in upper trophic levels now face a sharply re- duced food supply. GLNPO's data suggest that availability of zooplankton is likely a limiting factor for forage fish populations. Lake Huron continues to support a healthy level of phytoplankton and nutrients, so over- all water quality conditions should be able to support a healthy fishery. However, the cur- rent species composition and size of zoo- plankton is indicative of very high levels of predation, which indicates that forage fish now face a limited food supply. The Lake Huron fisheries management community is using the GLNPO data to assess the pros- pects for recovery of prey fish, particularly the native lake herring, which is believed to have been suppressed by previously high numbers of alewives and smelt. These lower food web findings, which re- sulted from collaboration between GLNPO, contracting laboratories, and a cooperative grant with University of Wisconsin at Supe- rior, made good use of GLNPO's unparal- leled zooplankton and benthos datasets to ex- plain how the lower trophic levels (zooplankton and amphipods) might be af- fecting - and be affected by - the recent changes in the fish community. (Contact: James Schardt, 312-353-5085, schardt.james@epa.gov) Conservation and Native Landscaping Awards The 2005 Conservation and Native Land- scaping Awards were presented at the Mor- ton Arboretum on December 6th. Working in partnership with Chicago Wilderness organi- zation, USEPA provided awards to 14 or- ganizations in the Chicagoland area repre- senting park districts, municipalities, home- owner associations, institutions, and corpora- tions. Winning projects included native plant gardens, prairie communities, wetland / shoreline restoration projects, two conserva- tion development sites, and an infill site with excellent storm water management features. USEPA sent out a news release to Chicago area media outlets and the Daily Herald - Lisle/Naperville edition ran a front-page story on the awards. Lawn & Landscape Magazine contacted the USEPA Office of Public Affairs to express interest in writing and article on the awards for their magazine. USEPA showcased slides about the awards program and the winning sites on December 9th, during the Illinois American Society of Landscape Architects annual awards dinner held in Chicago. The 2005 Conservation and Native Land- scaping Award winners in the various cate- gories were: U.S. EPA Great Lakes National Program Office PageS ------- December 2005 Significant Activities Report Conservation Development: Subdivisions and Infill Sites • Sanctuary of Bull Valley, McHenry County, a 300-acre development with ap- proximately 47% of the land set aside as dedicated open space, including prairie, savanna, and forested areas. • Alps Development - Tuscan Hills Green Garden Township, Will County, Illinois, for a 95-acre development with approxi- mately 54% open space. Native plants will cover much of the open space. • Villa Park Police Station, Villa Park Mu- nicipal building, Villa Park, Illinois for developing an area with 3 major compo- nents utilized to prevent runoff from the site: a "Green Roof," bio-retention swales, and permeable paving in the parking lot. Native Landscaping Sites: Corporations (for profit) • ComEd, for restoring and maintaining a high quality Buffalo Grove, Illinois prai- rie community on their right-of-way. • Motorola Schaumburg, Illinois for native landscaping around a pond area with path. • Abbott Labs, Abbott Park, Illinois for the Abbott Park North Prairie restoration, in- cluding managing for a population of rare white fringed orchids. Native Landscaping Sites: Local Governments • St. Charles Park District, St. Charles, Illi- nois for the St. Charles Native plant gar- den at its community center. • Gary Park District, Gary, Illinois, for its native landscaping around the pond area of Jaycee Park. • 63rd St. Beach, Chicago, Illinois by the Chicago Park District, Chicago Depart- ment of Transportation, and Illinois De- partment of Transportation (Terry Guen Award-winning native landscaping project around the pond area of Jaycee Park in Gary, Illinois Design Associates) for a 3-acre native grassland (dunes-type ecosystem). • Oakbrook Terrace Park District, Oak- brook Terrace, Illinois for its Lake View Nature Center which includes 3 native plant gardens: butterfly, sensory, and- teaching. Native Landscaping Sites: Public Institutions • Chicago Botanic Garden, Glencoe, Illi- nois for its lakeshore restoration, restor- ing 2.5 miles of shoreline. • Morton Arboretum, Lisle, Illinois for its lakeshore /wetlands restoration. Homeowner Associations • The Madison Club, Burr Ridge, Illinois (Pizzo & Associates) for restoration of an oak-hickory savanna and open water wet- land in a subdivision setting affecting 13 acres. • Harbor Springs, Aurora, Illinois (Pizzo & Associates) for an open water wetland restoration affecting 6 acres. (Contacts: Danielle Green, 312-886-7594, green.danielle@epa.gov or Bob Newport, 312-886-1513, newport.bob@epa.gov) Page 6 U.S. EPA Great Lakes National Program Office ------- Significant Activities Report December 2005 Upcoming Events November 1-3 2006 State of the Lakes Ecosys- tem Conference (SOLEC) 2006 Milwaukee, Wisconsin 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. U.S. EPA Great Lakes National Program Office Page 7 ------- |