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Send Telegrams of Support for Plan Bv7

May 16th, 2013 | Posted by Lee


It’s not 1958 anymore. We need our governments to finish the job and implement Plan BV7 now. The Lake and River community need your help sending a strong message to Governor Cuomo and the IJC that 1950’s era water policy is not good enough.Telegram image

Click Here to send a telegram to Governor Cuomo or the IJC urging support for Plan Bv7 now.

When you are on the Telegramstop website

Copy and paste one of these messages, or write your own:

  • The science is in, Plan Bv7 essential to healthy environment, vibrant tourism economy for Lake Ontario and St. Lawrence River. No more 1958D!
  • New water levels plan needed to replace 1958D. Fifty year old plan has caused Northern Pike populations to decline by 70% on Lake Ontario and St. Lawrence River. I support Plan Bv7 and ask you to support it too.
  • 1958D is an old, outdated plan which is not working for anyone. Our businesses, families and communities deserve better. Tell IJC to implement Plan Bv7 today.
  • It’s not 1958 anymore. We are way overdue for new, modern water levels plan for Lake Ontario and St. Lawrence River. Tell IJC to implement Plan Bv7 today.

For telegrams to both Governor Cuomo and the IJC:

  • Use SAVTHERIV in the Promotion Code space to send a telegram for only $5.70 (a savings of $1.45) – a low cost investment in changing water levels policy.

For telegrams to Governor Cuomo:

Use the following information to complete the Telegram details:

  • To:  The Honorable Andrew Cuomo, Governor of New York State
  • Delivery Address:  NYS Capitol Building
  • City:  Albany
  • Zip:  12224
  • State:  New York
  • Country:  United States
  • Category:  Other

For telegrams to the International Joint Commission:

Use the following information to complete the Telegram details:

  • To:  Joseph Comuzzi, Chair
  • Delivery Address:  IJC, 234 Laurier Ave W, 22 Flr
  • City:  Ottawa
  • Zip:  K1P 6K6
  • State:  Ontario
  • Country:  Canada
  • Category:  Other
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Water Policy from the Fifties? We Must Be Mad!

May 13th, 2013 | Posted by Lee
We’ve pointed out on these pages how 1958D, developed on slide rules, is an outdated water levels regulation plan for the St. Lawrence River and Lake Ontario. It completely ignores the environmental damage it causes year after year resulting in significant harmto the people and businesses that rely on a healthy River.
And unlike most outdated, harmful policies from the Fifties it is still in place!
So in the week when New York celebrates “Water Week” and the Governor holds a tourism summit, we – the thousands of New Yorkers and visitors to New York who live, play and work on the Lake and River – need our governments to finish the job and implement Plan #Bv7Now.
Other things from the Fifties never worked. The difference? We moved on.
Check out our water levels information page, “Like” us on Facebook and stay tuned because next week, May 13th, we are going to announce how you can help take action for a modern water levels plan now.

The current water levels plan for the St. Lawrence River and Lake Ontario, Plan 1958D, was developed on slide rules in the fifties. Like many policies from then, it completely ignores the environmental damage it causes year after year resulting in significant harm to themad men with caption people and businesses that rely on a healthy River.

Unlike most outdated, harmful policies from the Fifties it is still in place!

We should be Mad!

Check back here Wednesday, May 15th, to see how you can help take action for a modern water levels plan, Plan #BV7NOW.

Plan Bv7 is essential to sustaining and growing tourism along the St. Lawrence River:

Plan Bv7 is essential to sustaining and growing tourism along the St. Lawrence River:

Our local tourism industry relies on the health of our region’s environment. Healthier Lake and River wetlands will support stronger populations of native fish and wildlife, improving the area’s hunting and fishing, and strengthening the recreational economies that rely upon them.

Plan Bv7 will also extend the average boating season by a few weeks, providing a boost to our River region tourism-based economy. As of mid-May 2013, River levels would be an inch and a half higher under Plan Bv7.

More than 50 organizations and over 9,100 people, including hunting and fishing clubs, Chambers of Commerce, local governments, environmental groups and recreational boaters have expressed their support for Plan Bv7.

We need our governments to finish the job and implement Plan #BV7Now.

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NY Celebrates Water Week, Should Push #Bv7Now

May 7th, 2013 | Posted by Lee

According to the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, “Water Week is a time to think about how fortunate we are for the state’s abundant water resources and how we can all help protect, restore and conserve it.”

We at Save The River could not agree more and we urge the Governor to take action now on Plan Bv7 – a modern water levels plan that will help protect, restore and conserve Lake Ontario and the St. Lawrence River, both vital waterbodies to the state and local economy.

This outdated water levels regulation plan for the St. Lawrence River and Lake Ontario which completely ignores the environmental damage it causes year after year is causing significant harm to the people and businesses that rely on a healthy River.
Unlike most policy from the Fifties, it is still in place!
We need our governments to finish the job and implement Plan #Bv7Now.
Check out our water levels information page, “Like” us on Facebook and stay tuned to find out how you can help take action for a modern water levels plan now.

We’ve pointed out on these pages how 1958D, developed on slide rules, is an outdated water levels regulation plan for the St. Lawrence River and Lake Ontario. It completely ignores the environmental damage it causes year after year resulting in significant harmbelt to the people and businesses that rely on a healthy River.

And unlike most outdated, harmful policies from the Fifties it is still in place!

So in the week when New York celebrates “Water Week” and the Governor holds a tourism summit, we – the thousands of New Yorkers and visitors to New York who live, play and work on the Lake and River – need our governments to finish the job and implement Plan #Bv7Now.

Other things from the Fifties never worked. The difference? We moved on.

Check out our water levels information page, “Like” us on Facebook and stay tuned because next week, May 13th, we are going to announce how you can help take action for a modern water levels plan now.

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Thank You! And the Winners Are . . .

May 6th, 2013 | Posted by Lee

We had an amazing response to our survey.

We are still analyzing the answers and comments, but many members, friends and supporters went to the site and gave us what we are sure will be excellent feedback.

As we promised, several of you who participated were also chosen at random to receive tokens of our appreciation.Heron Walking

The winners are:

Rock for the River 10 Concert Tickets

    • Carrie Kerr
    • Rosemary Marcus

This Year’s T-Shirt

    • Brian Breheny
    • Erica Demick
    • Bruce Mallette

This Year’s Calendar

    • Lauren Bloch
    • Jane Carver
    • Mary Lou Cerio
    • Audie Cerow
    • Karyn Graves
    • Kathleen Wiley
    • Lisa Wolverton
    • Rebecca Yerdon

A free one year Membership in Save The River

    • Regan Brown
    • Christina Clark
    • Sarah Gregware
    • Skye Heritage
    • Valerie Johnson
    • Patrick Lulianello
    • Jeff Ridal
    • Susan Rankin
    • Katie Stark
    • Janet Sullins

Thanks so much to everyone who participated. Now we’re off to analyze the survey.

Canoes on shore

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Made in the 50’s; our water levels plan

April 29th, 2013 | Posted by Lee

50's Boat

Some things made in the Fifties still work. Many do not .  .  . like the current water levels plan.

Its time for a modern plan, its time for #Bv7Now.

Plan Bv7 is essential to sustaining and growing tourism along the St. Lawrence River:

Our local tourism industry relies on the health of our region’s environment. Healthier Lake and River wetlands will support stronger populations of native fish and wildlife, improving the area’s hunting and fishing, and strengthening the recreational economies that rely upon them.

Plan Bv7 will also extend the average boating season by a few weeks, providing a boost to our River region tourism-based economy. As of  mid-April 2013, River levels would be an inch and a half higher under Plan Bv7.

More than 50 organizations, including hunting and fishing clubs, Chambers of Commerce, local governments, environmental groups and recreational boaters have expressed their support for Plan Bv7

We need our governments to finish the job and implement Plan #Bv7Now.
Check out our water levels information page, “Like” us on Facebook and stay tuned to find out how you can help take action for a modern water levels plan now.
We need our governments to finish the job and implement Plan #Bv7Now.

Check out our water levels information page, “Like” us on Facebook and stay tuned to find out how you can help take action for a modern water levels plan now.
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Citizen support for Plan Bv7 continues to grow

April 18th, 2013 | Posted by Lee

Expressions of support  from Lake Ontario and St. Lawrence River community have more than quadrupled since July 2012.

Much of the new support for Plan Bv7 came from the south shore of Lake Ontario.

This updated compendium of support includes:

  • 9,170 expressions of citizen support through petitions and letters in support of Plan Bv7.  Last Fall this number stood at 1,962.
    • 1,000  letters and 3,331 petition signatures from Monroe County
    • 316 letters and 885 petition signatures from Onondaga County
    • 239 letters and 828 petition signatures from Erie County
    • 115 letters and 601 petition signatures from Jefferson County
    • 52 letters and 125 petition signatures from Niagara County
    • 23 letters and 115 petition signatures from Seneca County
    • 76 letters and 127 petition signatures from Wayne County
    • 17 letters and 37 petition signatures from Cayuga County

PRESS RELEASE- Support for Bv7 Surges (STR)

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Disappointment with new EPA Ballast Water Regulations

April 4th, 2013 | Posted by Lee
Save The River has long been a proponent of stringent ballast water regulations for all ships entering or transiting the St. Lawrence River and Great Lakes as the only means of stopping the introduction and spread of aquatic invasive species. Since 1959, when the St. Lawrence Seaway opened the River and Lakes to direct ocean-going shipping, 65% of species discovered have been attributed to ballast water release. River communities know the serious impact aquatic invasive species have on the health of the St. Lawrence River and our local economy. The cost of zebra and quagga mussel control alone is estimated at $500 million per year over the next five years and the impact on indigenous species such as bass from invaders like the round goby cannot yet be calculated.
While we have applauded incremental steps to clean up ballast water in the past such as the Seaway’s requiring salt water flushes of ocean-going vessels, we have steadfastly maintained that the goal must be zero discharges of non-native species in ballast water. This past week the EPA had an opportunity to make significant progress toward that goal. Instead it finalized regulations that limit, but do not eliminate the number of organisms that can be dumped into our River.
It is disappointing that almost 40 years after the enactment of the Clean Water Act it took a lawsuit to force the EPA to act to protect the nation’s waterways at all and that when it did act, it did so in such weak manner.  Significantly the EPA regulations set out:
a weak standard – the EPA accepted the industry endorsed ‘IMO’ standard, which from our perspective (and that of the state of California, with a standard 100x more protective) represents the bare minimum for regulation and is not protective of the River, with no requirements on ships that only transit the Lakes;
a weak timeline – the EPA expects all ships to be compliant by 2018, but with no apparent recourse if ships do not meet that deadline; and
no mechanism to strengthen standards or improve technology – our concerns come straight from an industry spokesman, who stated, “EPA’s final rules now end the debate over ballast water regulation.”
No one should be lulled into a sense that our River and the economy that depends on it are safe with these standards. The next destructive invasive species may be only a ballast discharge away.

Save The River has long been a proponent of stringent ballast water regulations for all ships entering or transiting the St. Lawrence River and Great Lakes as the only means of stopping the introduction and spread of aquatic invasive species. Since 1959, when the St. Lawrence Seaway opened the River and Lakes to direct ocean-going shipping, 65% of species discovered have been attributed to ballast water release. River communities know the serious impact aquatic invasive species have on the health of the St. Lawrence River and our local economy. The cost of zebra and quagga mussel control alone is estimated at $500 million per year over the next five years and the impact on indigenous species such as bass from invaders like the round goby cannot yet be calculated.

While we have applauded incremental steps to clean up ballast water in the past such as the Seaway’s requiring salt water flushes of ocean-going vessels, we have steadfastly maintained that the goal must be zero discharges of non-native species in ballast water. This past week the EPA had an opportunity to make significant progress toward that goal. Instead it finalized regulations that limit, but do not eliminate the number of organisms that can be dumped into our River.

It is disappointing that almost 40 years after the enactment of the Clean Water Act it took a lawsuit to force the EPA to act to protect the nation’s waterways at all and that when it did act, it did so in such weak manner.  Significantly the EPA regulations set out:

a weak standard – the EPA accepted the industry endorsed ‘IMO’ standard, which from our perspective (and that of the state of California, with a standard 100x more protective) represents the bare minimum for regulation and is not protective of the River, with no requirements on ships that only transit the Lakes;

a weak timeline – the EPA expects all ships to be compliant by 2018, but with no apparent recourse if ships do not meet that deadline; and

no mechanism to strengthen standards or improve technology – our concerns come straight from an industry spokesman, who stated, “EPA’s final rules now end the debate over ballast water regulation.”

No one should be lulled into a sense that our River and the economy that depends on it are safe with these standards. The next destructive invasive species may be only a ballast discharge away.

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Shocking Discovery – Sea Monkeys latest invasive species in River!

April 1st, 2013 | Posted by Lee

Environmentalists, scientists, government officials and tourism officials were dismayed to wake up to the news this morning that a new and potentially devastating invasive species has been found in the St. Lawrence River – Sea Monkeys.

Artemia salina x nyos

After the discovery of thousands of tiny carcasses, and hundreds of floating packages of “Sea Monkey Food”, biologists raced to discover what they were dealing with. Resembling tiny mermaids (and possibly brine shrimp) it took 68 year old Mervin Smenkle, biologist and avid comic book reader as a child, only seconds to proclaim the River is facing an onslaught of Artemia salina x nyos.

Awakened early this morning, a shocked and clearly shaken Lee Willbanks, Executive Director of Save The River, stated, “We knew the River was suffering from 186 other invasive species, legacy pollution, and a 50 year old water levels management plan – now we have to deal with another relic from the past. How much more can the River and our communities take.”

Speculation centers on the possibility that, much like Plan 1958DD, which has been left lying around wreaking havoc on the environment for the last 50 years, the ecological and economic costs of sea monkeys is about to be felt. Ironically the return now on the 50th anniversary of 1958D, of these seemingly harmless and adorable creatures, purchased in the millions by gullible young comic book readers in the ’50’s only to be discarded as dead up and down the River may significantly divert attention from the effort to get Plan Bv7 adopted.

Standing on the shore in Clayton. a local civic leader who asked to remain anonymous, said, “River region businesses, citizens and visitors have struggled right along with the River to adapt to every circumstance that’s been thrown at us – invasives from all over the world, an out-dated water levels plan, but this could be it. We’re just afraid once the kids see them, they’ll want to keep replacing them. It’ll decimate our budgets and divert our attention from more pressing matters.”

Discovered Sea Monkey Ad

Along with the food packets, the discovery of advertising for the creatures discarded near the Clayton docks, has raised suspicions that the sea monkey crisis is a manufactured one to distract government officials, business leaders and concerned River citizen from the more pressing effort to have New York’s Governor Cuomo endorse Plan Bv7 and have the International Joint Commission adopt the plan which will restore tens of thousands of acres of wetlands and reverse the decline in populations of Northern Pike, Common Tern and other indigenous and valuable species.

Said Willbanks, “If that’s the case its truly tragic, Bv7 is a modern levels management plan developed after years of research that will return the River to health with little cost to the State. On the other hand the cost of controlling sea monkeys is currently incalculable. But we River folk are hardy, we’ll get through this – just like we’ll keep pushing on Bv7.”

P.S. APRIL FOOLS!! (but not about the need for Bv7)

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Waterkeeper Alliance Launches New PSA

January 17th, 2013 | Posted by Lee

Check out the new Waterkeeper PSA. We are very proud to be part of an organization that works to assure swimmable, drinkable, fishable water around the globe.

Celebrate Clean Water Act, Ask Governor to Support Bv7

October 19th, 2012 | Posted by Lee

See full letter, published as a special commentary, in the Watertown Daily Times.

Thursday, October 18th was the 40th anniversary of the signing of the federal Clean Water Act. After being used for decades as dumping grounds for all manner of industrial, commercial, agricultural and household waste, it began a restoration of America’s waterways that we benefit from today. Where once most of the nation’s waterways were literally unapproachable, many are now swimmable, fishable and drinkable again. Many others are on the path to recovery.

As a nation we should celebrate the progress that has been made to heal our rivers and lakes, bays and streams. But as we do, we should also take a moment to consider what remains to be done even in our own backyard.

Sadly, we now know there are some threats to a healthy River that are masked by the beauty of its surface and shore. Among these are: legacy pollution – toxins released before there was a Clean Water Act, such as PCBs from past industrial activities; myriad invasive species that have crowded out indigenous plants and fish and upset the ecological balance in ways we are still discovering; and a water levels control plan – 1958DD – made necessary by the construction of the Seaway, that has been damaging the River for 50 years.

The new plan – Bv7 – developed after 10 years of research and consultation with stakeholders all along Lake Ontario and the St. Lawrence will reverse this damage by halting the trend toward monoculture wetlands. Plan Bv7 will achieve these benefits through a return to more natural levels and flows that are neither extreme nor frequent. In most years it will provide a longer recreational and commercial boating season by avoiding the rapid draw down of the Lake and River in the fall, increase hydropower production and lead to conditions that rebuild beaches naturally.

We, who love the River and believe it can be restored, call on Governor Cuomo to seize this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity and join every elected official and candidate in districts bordering the River to support the implementation of Plan Bv7. That would be a great way to celebrate the Clean Water Act.

Click here to write to Governor Cuomo.

Sign our petition here.

Click here to donate to help Save The River fight for Bv7.

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