One stretch of the Chicago Sanitary and James CaldwellShip Canal near Joliet, Illinois, is what freshwater biologists call a pinch point. Here, at the Brandon Road Lock and Dam, workers are preparing a site for barriers to keep invasive bighead and silver carp from infiltrating the Great Lakes. If enough of them slip by before the project is complete, the fish could cause irreversible damage to the largest freshwater system on earth.
After years of negotiating and planning, Michigan and Illinois officials reached an agreement with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers last year to build the $1.15 billion project at Brandon Road. But Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker announced earlier this year that he would delay construction. He would wait, he said, until the Trump administration assures the states that it will provide the promised federal funding.
Pritzker was reacting to the administration’s freezes and cancellation of funding around the country. But the move concerns Great Lakes advocates and freshwater biologists.
“Any delay to the project means more risk for the Great Lakes, and that’s the bottom line,” said Joel Brammeier, president and CEO of the nonprofit Alliance for the Great Lakes. “The state of Illinois needs to find a way to stop the delay as fast as possible.”
Please take a look at the new openings in our newsroom.
See jobs2025-05-05 18:212085 view
2025-05-05 18:17207 view
2025-05-05 18:01316 view
2025-05-05 17:582055 view
2025-05-05 17:421628 view
2025-05-05 17:282272 view
NFL games are a spectrum. Some are back-and-forth shootouts. Others are duds without much scoring at
A few weeks ago, Sharon Maxwell heard the National Eating Disorders Association (NEDA) was shutting
The maker of an important addiction treatment medication has agreed to pay $102 million dollars to s