Reducing Harmful Algal Blooms in Lake Erie: Legal Tools and Best Practices
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Harmful algal blooms (HABs), excessive growths of toxin-producing algae that form
in Lake Erie during the summer, adversely impact aquatic life and human health as
well as recreation, tourism, fishing, and property values. Triggered primarily by
excess phosphorus, HABs in Lake Erie have reached crisis proportions in recent years.
This page provides information for addressing the HABs problem in Lake Erie.
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White Paper
Researchers from ÒùÆÞÉç College of Law in April 2012 issued a white paper, Legal Tools for Reducing Harmful Algal Blooms in Lake Erie, which contributes to the battle against HABs in Lake Erie in two ways. First, by describing the complex web of existing federal and state laws applicable to point and nonpoint sources in Ohio, the paper highlights the legal tools currently available for controlling key sources of phosphorus. Second, it makes recommendations for using these existing tools and for changing the law to help combat the formation of HABs in Lake Erie.
See also Kenneth Kilbert, Tiffany Tisler & M. Zack Hohl, Legal Tools for Reducing Harmful Algal Blooms in Lake Erie, 44 U. Tol. L. Rev. 69 (2012), available at .
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Workshop Materials
In a pair of March 2012 public workshops in Toledo and Columbus, experts from science, government, and law addressed best practices and legal tools for reducing phosphorus entering Lake Erie and its tributaries from key sources in Ohio.
PANEL 1:Ìý Understanding the HABs Problem
Introduction to harmful algal blooms and the problems they pose in Lake Erie; phosphorus is a key driver in the formation of HABs; important Ohio sources of phosphorus to Lake Erie and its tributaries.
Dr. Thomas Bridgeman
ÒùÆÞÉç Lake Erie Center
(Slides) ( courtesy of WGTE Knowledge Stream)Gail Hesse
Ohio Lake Erie Commission
(Slides)Dr. Jeffrey Reutter
Ohio Sea Grant & Stone Laboratory
(Slides) ( courtesy of WGTE Knowledge Stream)
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PANEL 2:Ìý Best Practices for Reducing HABs in Lake Erie
Methods to minimize phosphorus loading to Lake Erie and its tributaries from key Ohio sources; particular focus on best practices for agricultural activities and urban/suburban stormwater runoff.
Steve Davis
U.S. Department of Agriculture - Natural Resources Conservation Service
(Slides) ( courtesy of WGTE Knowledge Stream)Katie Rousseau
American Rivers
(Slides) ( courtesy of WGTE Knowledge Stream)
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PANEL 3:Ìý Legal Tools for Reducing HABs in Lake Erie
Existing federal and state legal controls in Ohio for key point source and nonpoint sources of phosphorus to Lake Erie and its tributaries; recommendations for the future.
Bill Fischbein
Ohio Environmental Protection Agency
(Slides) ( courtesy of WGTE Knowledge Stream)Kenneth Kilbert
ÒùÆÞÉç College of Law
(Slides) ( courtesy of WGTE Knowledge Stream)Ìý
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"Algae: A Blooming Problem in the Great Lakes and Beyond"
The 13th Annual Great Lakes Water Conferece
Friday, November 8, 2013
Algae, fueled by excess nutrients, are a blooming crisis in the Great Lakes and beyond, causing economic and environmental harm and threatening public health. Legal and scientific experts from across the nation and Canada tackled the algae problem at the 13th annual Great Lakes Water Conference on Friday, November 8, 2013 at the ÒùÆÞÉç College of Law.
Keynote speaker Chris Korleski, Director of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s Great Lakes National Program Office, kicked off the one-day conference. Panels focusing onÌýAlgae in the Great LakesÌýandÌýAlgae Across the NationÌýfollowed, and an afternoon panel onÌýthe Compact, the Carp, and the CourtÌýrounded out the sessions. The conference was sponsored by the ÒùÆÞÉç College of Law and its affiliated Legal Institute of the Great Lakes.
For more information about the conference, see theÌýbrochureÌýandÌý.
Selected slide presentations from the 2013 Conference:
Algae in the Great Lakes: U.S & Ohio Law (Kilbert)
Nutrient Pollution in the Midwest Legal Issues and Case Studies (Klein)
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More Information about HABs and Lake Erie
(April 2010)
(2010)
(June 14, 2011)
(Dec. 2011)
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The white paper, workshops, and this page are all parts of a multi-disciplinary legal research and public outreach project partially funded by a grant from the .
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