The local media is reporting that
the first asian carp has been found in a Chicago waterway. A commercial angler landed a 19-pound carp in Lake Calumet, a few miles downstream from Lake Michigan. This follows the recent fish kill on the Calumet River that didn't find any carp, and the kill a few months ago on a canal near Joliet that found one of the bottom-feeding exotics. Just to recap, there long have already been reports of the carp in inland Chicago parks. The carp already likely has infiltrated northeast Illinois via the Des Plaines River system, which flows all the way to southeast Wisconsin and is barely separated from the Chicago River (and the Great Lakes). Carp DNA already has been found in the Calumet and Lake Michigan.
Michigan pols are
already reacting to the latest carp news, and this likely will revive the topic since the Supreme Court declined to hear the case few months ago.
Elsewhere, U.S. Senate candidate Alexi Giannoulias
believes that the Chicago River should be re-reversed. So now one of our greatest engineering marvels has become a campaign issue. Maybe we can go back to the old Chicago portage that Marquette and Jolliet used to get from Lake Michigan to the Illinois River. I stick by
my previous post that we need to keep the current system, in part because sending sewage toward St. Louis is as Chicago as it gets. The
Ward Room blog comes out in favor of the re-reversal, agreeing with most environmentalists.
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