For any of you who have been following “the one that got away” story of the litigation over Asian carp, the story continues today. As you may reacall, the Supreme Court has washed their hands of the fishy case, so now the battle over the carp has adjourned to a lower federal court. Five states; Michigan, Wisconsin, Ohio, Minnesota and Pennsylvania filed their suit against federal government, Chicago’s water department and others in U.S. District Court in northern Illinois on July 19. The suit seeks to have the Chicago shipping locks leading to Lake Michigan closed after an actual Asian carp was found near the lake in June. The Supreme Court has twice refused to close the locks.

The Journal-Sentinel reports the plaintiffs want the locks immediately shut and ask they remain that way except in case of emergency. The suit also seeks an increase in the programs for netting or poisoning the crafty carp and to re-erect a barrier between Lake Michigan and the Mississippi River basin that was destroyed over 100 years ago.

“I am suing to protect the Great Lakes and to protect the Wisconsin jobs that depend on the health of the Great Lakes. The introduction of Asian carp into Lake Michigan will irreversibly damage this important resource. The time for action is now,” Wisconsin Attorney General J.B. Van Hollen told the Journal-Sentinel.

Those opposed to the action do not like the idea of plugging the canal system to re-establish the separation between the Great Lakes and Mississippi basin. They say that could deal a major blow to the shipping traffic on the canals and the industries that depend on the goods they carry.

Related Resources:

  • MN Attorney General sues Feds over Asian carp (KARE11.com)
  • Carp-e-Diem? Supreme Court Again Refuses to Close Locks to Asian Carp (FindLaw’s Decided)
  • One Fish, Two Fish: Feds to Spend $75 Mil on Asian Carp Problem (FindLaw’s Legally Weird)
  • Quit Your Carping: Michigan Files Lawsuit over the Asian Carp (FindLaw’s Legally Weird)
  • Invasive Species: Asian Carp (USGS)

 

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