Illinois to Michigan: Put your
money where the carp is
Michigan’s $8 million offer welcome, but
should be put toward immediate efforts, not 10 years from now
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[December 18, 2018]
Governor Bruce Rauner said Monday that Illinois is happy to accept
$8 million from the State of Michigan to put toward the fight to
keep Asian carp out of the Great Lakes — provided the funds can be
used now to advance the effort. Unfortunately, Michigan Gov. Rick
Snyder’s current offer of financial assistance isn’t applicable
until 2028.
Rauner sent a letter today to Snyder with a counterproposal to
continue the fight against Asian carp. The Illinois governor said
the best way to reduce the risk of Asian carp invasion is to enhance
commercial fishing strategies in the Upper Illinois River and the
Alton, LaGrange and Peoria pools today. Putting the $8 million to
use on these ongoing efforts would dramatically reduce the risk
prior to construction of a deterrent barrier at Brandon Road, which
won’t begin until 2022.
Brandon Road Lock and Dam in Will County is the planned site for
construction of a first-of-its-kind flushing lock, engineered
channel, and acoustic fish deterrent with an electric barrier system
to prevent the upstream transfer of Asian carp and other aquatic
nuisance species. The projected construction cost of the project
approaches $800 million.
“Gov. Snyder’s offer of operations and maintenance support isn’t of
much use until the Brandon project is complete in 2028,” Rauner
said. “In that context, the Michigan offer lacks the true sense of
urgency required to protect the Great Lakes for the next decade.”
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In his letter to Snyder, Rauner said scientists at the Illinois Department of
Natural Resources estimate an investment of $8 million would double current
contractual commercial fishing and monitoring efforts and allow for expanded
efforts and a significant reduction in Asian carp breeding and juvenile
populations.
Rauner sent Snyder an initial draft intergovernmental agreement suggesting the
two states continue working together on their mutual goal of fighting Asian carp
migration. Continued collaboration is necessary to ensure ongoing protection for
the Great Lakes while additional measures at Brandon Road are engineered and
designed. The states were successful in a mutual effort this year to accelerate
the Brandon Road timeline with the federal government.
“In the meantime,” Rauner said, “I will encourage the incoming administration to
seriously consider your fair-share funding formula, applied to construction as
well as operations and maintenance, after they are fully briefed on the issue
and project.”
[Office of the Governor Bruce Rauner] |