Environmental
groups applaud Attorney General and Governor Fighting Bush
Administrations decisions involving invasive species
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FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE:
July 17, 2004
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CONTACTS:
James Clift
Michigan Environmental Council
517-487-9539
jamesmec@voyager.net
Jeff Irwin
Michigan League of Conservation Voters
734-222-9650
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Attorney
General Mike Cox joins lawsuit opposing EPA decision not to
regulate invasive species in ballast water as a pollutant
under the Clean Air Act.
Governor
Granholm joins petition urging the Coast Guard to work more
aggressively to halt introduction of new invasive species.
Invasive species (harmful, foreign organisms that have been
introduced to the Great Lakes) damage ecosystems, businesses
and communities along the Great Lakes. These species are introduced
in large part through specific shipping practices, such as the
release of ballast water.
In 2003,
the Bush Administrations EPA determined that releasing
ballast water containing invasive species was not regulated
under the Clean Water Act, and therefore not regulated by the
U.S. EPA. In response to this ruling, the State of New York
filed suit against the EPA to include the introduction of invasive
species as a permitted activity. Since then, Minnesota, Illinois
and Wisconsin have joined New York in its suit.
Joining
our neighbors in calling on the EPA to protect the Great Lakes
from invasive species that could permanently alter their ecology
is critical, said James Clift, Policy Director at the
Michigan Environmental Council. The failure of the Bush
administration to make this a top priority is troubling given
the precious nature of the resource.
The Attorney
General joins the States of New York, Minnesota, Illinois and
Wisconsin and others in filing an amicus brief against the EPA.
The
Great Lakes have been plagued by invasive species for years
they not only affect the vitality and character of our
Great Lakes, they also affect Michigan's critical tourism economy,
said Jeff Irwin, the Executive Director of the Michigan League
of Conservation Voters. I hope that this move by our Attorney
General signals to the President the importance of stopping
the next zebra mussel or sea lamprey from entering the Great
Lakes.
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