Development of plans to restore degraded areas in the Great Lakes |
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Authors: | John H. Hartig Richard L. Thomas |
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Affiliation: | (1) Great Lakes Regional Office International Joint Commission, N9A 6T3 Windsor, Ontario, Canada;(2) National Water Research Institute, Canada Centre for Inland Waters, L7R 4A6 Burlington, Ontario, Canada |
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Abstract: | The International Joint Commission's Water Quality Board has identified 42 Areas of Concern in the Great Lakes ecosystem where Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement objectives or jurisdictional standards, criteria or guidelines, established to protect uses, have been exceeded and remedial actions are necessary to restore beneficial uses. As a result of the 1985 report of the Water Quality Board, the eight Great Lakes states and the Province of Ontario committed themselves to developing a remedial action plan (RAP) to restore all uses in each Area of Concern within their political boundaries. Each RAP must identify the specific measures necessary to control existing sources of pollution, abate existing contamination (e.g., contaminated sediments), and restore all beneficial uses. Points which must be explicitly addressed in each RAP include: geographic extent of problem, beneficial uses impaired, causes of problems, remedial measures and a schedule for implementation, responsible agencies, and surveillance and monitoring activities that will be used to track effectiveness of remedial actions. The jurisdictions are responsible for developing RAPs, and the International Joint Commission is responsible for evaluating the adequacy of each RAP and tracking progress in restoring beneficial uses. |
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Keywords: | Remedial action plans Degraded areas Great Lakes Ecosystem approach Public participation |
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