Erie-Western Pennsylvania Port Authority

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American Great Lakes Ports
Burns Harbor, Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit, Duluth, Erie, Green Bay, Milwaukee, Monroe, Oswego, Superior, Toledo

The EWPPA is a member of American Great Lakes Ports Association and the International Association of Great Lakes Ports. American Great Lakes Ports, an organization representing the 12 U.S. public port authorities on the Great Lakes, has adopted the following positions on federal issues for 2002.

Port and Maritime Security

AGLP supports enactment of federal legislation to enhance maritime security and protect America's commercial ports from acts of terrorism.

Ninety five percent of U.S. overseas trade is handled by the nation's seaports.  A terrorist act at one of America's major ports could severely disrupt commerce, negatively impact the economy and cripple critical industries.

Seaport security should be a partnership between local authorities and federal agencies such as the Coast Guard and Customs Service.  AGLP supports enhanced funding for these federal agencies to carry out this mission.  Furthermore, AGLP supports continuation and expansion of the port security grant program enacted by Congress in 2001.

Great Lakes ports tend to handle low risk cargo such as bulk grain, coal, iron ore, limestone, salt, etc.  Therefore, AGLP supports security regulations that are risk-based, flexible and are able to respond to local conditions.

Great Lakes Navigation Study

AGLP supports a comprehensive review of Great Lakes navigation infrastructure that will result in a  long range plan for the system's future.  AGLP encourages a full and equal partnership between Canada and the United States in this effort.

The Great Lakes Navigation Study was authorized by Congress in the Water Resources Development Act of 1999.  The study is to review the navigation improvements on the Great Lakes, such as harbors, connecting channels, locks, etc. and make recommendations to Congress for their maintenance and improvement.  Over the past two years, the Army Corps of Engineers and the St. Lawrence Seaway Development Corporation have been working on the "reconnaissance study" phase of that effort.

In mid-2002, the "feasibility study" phase of the project is expected to begin.  AGLP supports the inclusion of $2 million in the FY'03 Energy & Water Appropriation Bill for this purpose. 

Since the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence Seaway System is a binational waterway, Canadian participation in the study is critical.  In fact, over eighty percent of the St. Lawrence Seaway's infrastructure is in Canadian territory.  AGLP believes that Canada has to be a full and equal partner in the study effort for it's final recommendations to have any legitimacy.  AGLP opposes the United States moving forward on the study unilaterally.


 

Soo Locks

AGLP supports construction of a new lock on the St. Marys River at Sault Ste Marie, Michigan.

The U.S. and Canadian lock complex at Sault Ste Marie has connected Lakes Superior and Huron for nearly 150 years.  In 1986, Congress authorized the construction of a new large lock to modernize the facility.  The project stalled for a number of years due to difficulties related to local cost sharing.  In 1999, the Great Lakes Commission was successful in helping to negotiate a cost sharing agreement between the eight Great Lakes states.  In FY'02 Congress appropriated $1.5 million in the Army Corps of Engineers' construction budget to initiate work on the project.  AGLP supports an appropriation of $8 million of construction funds for the project in the  FY'03 Energy and Water Appropriations Bill.

Aquatic Nuisance Species

AGLP supports a national approach to the control of ANS.  AGLP supports reauthorization of the  National Invasive Species Act of 1996.

When not fully loaded, vessels must take on water -  or ballast - to maintain their stability.  In some cases, ballast water contains aquatic organisms which may be harmful to the environment.   Since 1994, ocean-going vessels transiting the Great Lakes/St. Lawrence Seaway have been required to exchange ballast at sea, prior to entering the St. Lawrence Seaway.  Ballast exchange has been identified as one means of reducing the likelihood of transfer of non-indigenous species.

In recent years, state and provincial  governments in the Great Lakes region and elsewhere have become impatient with the federal response to this problem.  A number of state legislatures have enacted their own ballast water legislation.

AGLP opposes state regulation of interstate and international shipping and believes that conflicting state statutes will lead to a chaotic regulatory environment that will cripple the shipping industry.  AGLP endorses a strong, uniform federal approach to the protection of the Great Lakes - and all U.S. waters -  from invasive species via ballast water.  AGLP urges that Congress adopt such an approach while reauthorizing the National Invasive Species Act in 2002.

Pilotage

AGLP supports the adoption of a more cost effective pilotage system that improves the efficiency and safety of the Great Lakes/St. Lawrence Seaway System. 

Indiana Port Commission/Burns International Harbor
Illinois International Port Authority
Cleveland-Cuyahoga County Port Authority
Detroit/Wayne County Port Authority
Seaway Port of Duluth
Erie-Western Pennsylvania Port Authority
Brown County Harbor Commission/Port of Green Bay
Port of Milwaukee
Port of Monroe
Port of Oswego Authority
Superior Board of Harbor Commissioners
Toledo-Lucas County Port Authority

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Erie-Western Pennsylvania Port Authority, 208 East Bayfront Parkway, Suite 201, Erie, PA 16507, 814-455-7557