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States Approve Compact To Protect Great Lakes

Alice Kreit/NPR
Cameron Davis, president of the advocacy group Alliance for the Great Lakes, calls the lakes a "finite, non-renewable natural treasure."
David Schaper/NPR /
Cameron Davis, president of the advocacy group Alliance for the Great Lakes, calls the lakes a "finite, non-renewable natural treasure."

The vast majority of the fresh surface water in the United States may soon be off-limits to thirsty parts of the nation and the world. The eight Great Lakes states are on the verge of sending to Congress an accord that would keep water from being diverted out of the Great Lakes watershed.

Last Thursday, Pennsylvania's Senate approved the compact and Gov. Ed Rendell has said he plans to sign on, making it the final state to approve the agreement.

The five Great Lakes — Superior, Huron, Michigan, Erie and Ontario — contain about 90 percent of the fresh surface water in the U.S. and about one-fifth of the entire world's supply. The Great Lakes Water Compact aims to protect the lakes from large-scale water diversions.

Looking out over the clear blue-green waters, the lakes seem like oceans that go on endlessly.

"As a kid, I used to look out over Lake Michigan and say, 'My God, it goes on forever. We never have to worry about this'," says Cameron Davis, president of the Alliance for the Great Lakes. "But, it's not true. This is a finite, non-renewable natural treasure."

"Less than 1 percent of these great lakes are renewed every year through rain and snow melt and things like that. So what that means is, we have to make sure that the water that we have stays here and doesn't get squandered," says Davis, who grew up a few blocks from the Lake Michigan beach in Evanston, Ill.

In addition to Pennsylvania, the Great Lakes compact has been approved by the states of Minnesota, Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio and New York.

"The compact, for the very first time, will provide uniform binding water use standards for the eight Great Lakes states and two Canadian provinces. First time ever we've all been playing off the same sheet music when it comes to how we use this amazing natural resource," says Davis.

Some of the beaches, he says, with their finely grained sands and clear waters, rival those in the Caribbean. But the lakes were often taken for granted by those who lived closest to them. Then, 10 years ago, something happened to change that.

"In 1998, there was a Lake Superior-based company in Ontario that proposed to take water by tanker out of Lake Superior to Asia," says David Naftzger, executive director of the Council of Great Lakes Governors.

While the proposal didn't get very far, it rang alarm bells that spurred the Great Lakes governors to take action. In 2001, they agreed to a framework to begin negotiating the compact. By 2005, they had a deal to take to their state legislatures. This was done even though the states' governors, and their political parties, all turned in the interim.

"It was a long and sometimes difficult process," Naftzger says.

The compact, first and foremost, requires those within the Great Lakes basin to take better care of it. The Great Lakes states are required to develop water conservation plans and water quality standards. The compact also prohibits large-scale diversions of Great Lakes water outside of the basin.

"It says clearly that the Great Lakes should not be the long-term water supply answer for any other part of the world or any other part of the country," Naftzger says.

Many experts say shipping or piping Great Lakes water to Southwest desert towns or drought-stricken Southern cities is still far too expensive to be a legitimate threat to the lakes. The real threat, they say, is from within the region — from cities and towns just outside the watershed that want to tap into the Great Lakes' water supply.

"It has been very frustrating to be able to see the lake from a couple of higher points in the city, but not being able to obtain the water," says Jack Chiovatera, mayor of New Berlin, Wis. His city of 38,000 people straddles the Lake Michigan watershed divide, so only about a third of residents drink and shower in water from Lake Michigan. The rest get water from underground aquifers, some of which are contaminated with radium. The compact would allow communities that straddle the watershed divide to take lake water, as long as they treat it and return it to the lake.

But the compact still needs to be approved by Congress, and "the chances of the compact passing in Congress are better the sooner it gets there," according to Noah Hall, executive director of the Great Lakes Environmental Law Center and a professor of water law at the University of Michigan and Wayne State University. He says that while Congress usually defers to the states most affected by water compacts, this compact is unique because it governs so much of the nation's fresh water supply.

"As we're seeing droughts and water shortages in other parts of the country, I think that there's a legitimate concern that Congress might be reluctant to lock up the Great Lakes and prevent diversions to other parts of the country," Hall says.

He and other Great Lakes advocates want to get the compact through Congress before 2010. That's when a new census will be taken, which will likely result in the Great Lakes states losing anywhere from a few to a dozen seats in Congress, seats that will likely shift to states in the growing — and parched — South and West.

Copyright 2023 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

David Schaper is a correspondent on NPR's National Desk, based in Chicago, primarily covering transportation and infrastructure, as well as breaking news in Chicago and the Midwest.
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