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In two reports issued Thursday, the government promised more modest steps, including completion of a third electronic barrier this year. The Corps also will place screens near one of the locks, which already has been done at the other, and will study other technologies that could scare away the carp such as placing lights and noisemakers in the waterways, Quarles said. The Michigan attorney general's office, which has led the push for lock closure, said those measures were too little, too late. "It's just disappointing seeing things like this being portrayed as real action to confront the Asian carp threat when in reality so much more needs to be done," spokeswoman Joy Yearout said. "It's generating a false sense of security." Quarles said the locks might be occasionally closed for short periods to assist operations such as the spreading of fish poison in a section of the waterways last month, which killed 100,000 pounds of fish but turned up no Asian carp.
[Associated
Press;
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