Great Lakes Compact
Milwaukee Riverkeeper worked in collaboration with groups locally and throughout the Great Lakes Region to advocate for passage of the Great Lakes Compact, to protect Lake Michigan and the Great Lakes from water diversions and other threats to lake health. We continue to monitor the implementation of the compact locally.For up-to-date information on The Great Lakes Compact, check out the news links on the right-hand side.
Milwaukee Riverkeeper worked with state and federal partners and with our members to advocate for passage of a strong Great Lakes Compact., and in 2008 the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence River Basin Water Resources Compact was signed into law.
The process has been long with its first major accomplishment in
2005 when following a nearly five-year negotiation, the Governors of Illinois, Indiana , Michigan , Minnesota , New York , Ohio , Pennsylvania and Wisconsin reached agreement on the Compact. The Compact provides a comprehensive management framework for achieving sustainable water use and resource protection. The eight Great Lakes States reached a similar, good faith, agreement with Ontario and Québec.
• Economic development will be fostered through sustainable use and responsible management of Basin waters.• In general, there will be a ban on new diversions of water from the Basin but limited exceptions could be allowed in communities near the Basin when rigorous standards are met.
• Communities that apply for an exception will have a clear, predictable decision making process; standards to be met; and, opportunities to appeal decisions. These processes and standards do not exist under current law.
• The States will use a consistent standard to review proposed uses of Basin water. The States will have flexibility regarding their water management programs and how to apply this standard.
• Regional goals and objectives for water conservation and efficiency will be developed, and they will be reviewed every five years. Each State will develop and implement a water conservation and efficiency program that may be voluntary or mandatory.
• There is a strong commitment to continued public involvement in the implementation of the Compact.
A broad, bi-partisan consensus has been built in support of the Compact. The Compact was developed in collaboration with regional partners who have also played a key role in its implementation. Members of Congress, Mayors, local government officials and stakeholders have all been instrumental.
Waukesha Water Diversion
Waukesha is certainly between a rock and a hard place. The city currently pumps its drinking water from adeep aquifer approximately 1000 feet below the ground, which is highly
energy intensive and costly. This pumping has caused water levels in the deep aquifer to decrease between 500 and 600 feet, and the quality ofthe groundwater at greater depths continues to deteriorate, containing radium that is unsafe for human health and exceeds EPA standards. Waukesha has been investigating a Great Lakes diversion as one way of obtaining a safe, sustainable water supply in the future.
To find out more about Waukesa and how it relates to the Great Lake Compact Lick Here



