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Kitesurfing - Massive Increase of Dumping in Lake MI

 
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Montessori Kiter

Since 18 Jul 2007
1 Posts
Crystal Lake
New Member



PostWed Jul 18, 07 9:54 am    Kitesurfing - Massive Increase of Dumping in Lake MI Reply with quote

We need your help here in the midwest USA...Lake Michigan is getting more and more polluted. Please read:

http://www.chicagokitesurfing.com/kiteboarding_messageboard/viewtopic.php?t=5542

#####BEGIN ARTICLE######
Several Great Lakes lawmakers this week urged federal regulators to block a BP refinery near the Illinois-Indiana border from dumping significantly more ammonia and industrial sludge into Lake Michigan.

Reacting to a story in Sunday's Tribune, members of Congress from Illinois, Indiana and Michigan contacted the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, demanding to know why the agency stood idle while Indiana regulators approved the oil company's proposal.

Chicago and the Chicago Park District, meanwhile, are planning to conduct a petition drive at beaches this weekend to encourage public opposition to BP's plans.
State officials exempted BP from Indiana environmental laws to clear the way for a $3.8 billion expansion, which will allow the Whiting, Ind., refinery to process more heavy Canadian crude oil. They justified the move in part by noting the project will create 80 new jobs.

Like most states, Indiana is authorized to administer the Clean Water Act and other federal environmental laws. The U.S. EPA frequently steps in to oversee permits and enforcement, but in this case the agency did not object to the state's decision.

The refinery already is one of the largest polluters on the Great Lakes, but under BP's new state permit it can release 54 percent more ammonia and 35 percent more sludge into Lake Michigan every day. Ammonia promotes algae blooms that can kill fish and trigger beach closings, while sludge contains concentrated heavy metals.

Federal and state regulators acknowledged this is the first time in years that a company has been allowed to dump more pollution into the lake, the source of drinking water for Chicago and dozens of other communities.

"We need to embarrass the BP leadership to do the right thing," U.S. Rep. Mark Kirk (R-Ill.) said Tuesday on WGN radio's "The Spike O'Dell Show." "In my book, BP, which tries to market itself as an environmentally friendly company, now stands for 'Bad Pollution.'"

Kirk and other lawmakers said they previously weren't aware of the BP permit. Among those demanding more information were U.S. Sens. Richard Durbin (D-Ill.) and Richard Lugar (R-Ind.) and Reps. Rahm Emanuel (D-Ill.), Dan Lipinski (D-Ill.), Pete Hoekstra (R-Mich.) and Vernon Ehlers (R-Mich.).

Durbin sent a letter to top EPA officials in Washington citing, among other things, a Clean Water Act provision that prohibits any decline in water quality even if limits on pollution discharges are met. The amounts allowed under BP's new permit remain at or below federal guidelines.

"It's our responsibility to support efforts to restore, rather than further degrade Lake Michigan," Durbin wrote.

The EPA is preparing a response to the congressional letters and calls, said Phillipa Cannon, a spokeswoman in the agency's regional office in Chicago. Indiana regulators, meanwhile, said they forced BP to discharge less pollution than the company had requested.

In an e-mail, a BP official said the company is spending $90 million to upgrade the refinery's water-treatment plant.

"Every step has been done properly, with the oversight of state and federal regulators and in full public view," wrote Scott Dean, a company spokesman.

But state and federal regulators agreed with BP that there isn't enough room at the 1,400-acre Whiting site to upgrade the water treatment plant enough to keep more pollution out of the lake. As a result, the company will be allowed to dump an average of 1,584 pounds of ammonia and 4,925 pounds of sludge into Lake Michigan every day.
####END ARTICLE####

We need you guys to take a moment to send a note of protest to these people regarding this decision, one or as many contacts as you have time for...PLEASE!

Lisa Madigan, attorney_general@atg.state.il.us
Rod R. Blagojevich, governor@illinois.gov

Senators Obama and Durbin you need to go to their site, and fill out the webform...then copy/paste the sample letter (above) into the form:

mark kirk, http://www.house.gov/kirk/zipauth.shtml
Obama, http://obama.senate.gov/contact/
Durbin, http://www.durbin.senate.gov/ Federal Trade Commission (FTC)

Mayor Richard Daley
Office of the Mayor
City Hall - 121 N. LaSalle, Room 507
Chicago, IL 60602
Print and Fax to: 312-744-8045

CITY of CHICAGO Ward and Alderman Listing:
http://www.ci.chi.il.us/
Click on "Your Ward and Aldermen" at bottom right of page

-----
Montessori Kiter
Montessori Pathways School
http://www.montessoripathwaysschool.com

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chanson

Since 31 Jan 2006
1873 Posts
WISCONSIN
Chimey



PostWed Jul 18, 07 11:11 am     Reply with quote

yeah, that's bullsh**...

Those beaches already can get kinda nasty...
I just sent over the reply!

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Shallow Dive Design, 2nd Wind Sports, Airush, Trident Sports

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boardrider

Since 05 Apr 2006
1034 Posts
Ventura, CA
XTreme Poster



PostWed Jul 18, 07 11:52 am     Reply with quote

TOtal Crap. The Great Lakes are gorgeous. + they are super fun Kboard spots.

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Speedo

Since 07 May 2007
262 Posts

Obsessed



PostWed Jul 18, 07 12:32 pm     Reply with quote

im sending my protest letters now

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J.P.

Since 10 Mar 2005
638 Posts

Addicted



PostWed Jul 18, 07 12:33 pm     Reply with quote

boardrider wrote:
TOtal Crap. The Great Lakes are gorgeous. + they are super fun Kboard spots.



Tell me about!

Having grow up in Michgan, I've spent many hours on all of them & it's really sad to see to see the region has forgot what happened to Lake Erie ~30-40 years ago.
Pollution flowing out of Detroit was so bad that at one point the lake was declared dead. Completely DEAD.

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chanson

Since 31 Jan 2006
1873 Posts
WISCONSIN
Chimey



PostWed Jul 18, 07 12:37 pm     Reply with quote

Quote:
Pollution flowing out of Detroit was so bad that at one point the lake was declared dead. Completely DEAD.


Dude, thats crazy....

I still don't feel like I'm in the pristine great lakes untill I get way up north, Lake Superior, or Northern Wisco. Yooperville eh! Confused

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pdxmonkeyboy

Since 16 May 2006
6081 Posts
forever labled as the
retired kiter & motorhead Unicorn Master



PostWed Jul 18, 07 12:52 pm     Reply with quote

J.P. wrote:
Pollution flowing out of Detroit was so bad that at one point the lake was declared dead. Completely DEAD.


No it wasn't. I think your a victim of urban legend.

From wikipedia..

" Lake Erie infamously became very polluted in the 1960s and 1970s. Urban legend has described it as a dead lake, but both sport and commercial fishing have continued without interruption to the present day"

Last edited by pdxmonkeyboy on Wed Jul 18, 07 1:05 pm; edited 1 time in total

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pkh

Since 27 Feb 2005
6549 Posts
Couve / Hood
Site Lackey



PostWed Jul 18, 07 12:57 pm     Reply with quote

pdxmonkeyboy wrote:
J.P. wrote:
Pollution flowing out of Detroit was so bad that at one point the lake was declared dead. Completely DEAD.


No it wasn't. I think your a victim of urban legend.

From wikipedia..

" Lake Erie infamously became very polluted in the 1960s and 1970s. Urban legend has described it as a dead lake, but both sport and commercial fishing have continued without interruption to the present day"


Mmmmm Lake Erie, that's good sport fishing!


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J.P.

Since 10 Mar 2005
638 Posts

Addicted



PostWed Jul 18, 07 1:22 pm     Reply with quote

pdxmonkeyboy wrote:
J.P. wrote:
Pollution flowing out of Detroit was so bad that at one point the lake was declared dead. Completely DEAD.


No it wasn't. I think your a victim of urban legend.

From wikipedia..

" Lake Erie infamously became very polluted in the 1960s and 1970s. Urban legend has described it as a dead lake, but both sport and commercial fishing have continued without interruption to the present day"


why did you omit the following???
which BTW, is the continuation of your quote...

"Pollution in the lake did not get much attention until the great Cuyahoga River Fire in June of 1969. Pollution from Cleveland and other Ohio cities had so contaminated this tributary of Lake Erie with petrochemicals that it actually caught on fire. The fire embarrassed state officials and prompted the U. S. Congress to pass the Clean Water Act of 1969."

Trust me when I write, if you would have seen the lake back in the day, you wouldn't have even drop a toe in it.

Speaking of feet, how's your's coming along?

John

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pdxmonkeyboy

Since 16 May 2006
6081 Posts
forever labled as the
retired kiter & motorhead Unicorn Master



PostWed Jul 18, 07 3:11 pm     Reply with quote

Dude, you are the undisputed king of the quotes. hands down, and you can quote me on that. Smile


I omitted it because it doesn't speak to the incorrect notion the the lake was biologically dead.


Phil, you don't know how true your cartoon is. I once pulled up a walleye with only one eye!! Fish with tumors were also common. Great fishing though (just don't eat them).

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