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Northeast-Midwest Institute News

Upcoming Congressional Briefing on Asian Carp Control

Asian Carp Management and Control in the
Ohio River and Upper Mississippi River Basins.

Wednesday, September 6, 2017
12:00 PM - 1:00 PM
2043 Rayburn House Office Building

The Northeast-Midwest Institute's Mississippi River Basin Program will hold a Congressional briefing  in conjunction with the Mississippi River Cooperative Resource Association (MICRA), Congressman Mike Kelly (PA-03), and Congressman Ron Kind (WI-03) on Thursday, September 6, from 12:00 PM to 1:00 PM. Lunch will be served.
 
The briefing will provide Congressional staff, regional and environmental organizations, and interested members of the public the opportunity to hear directly from stakeholders from the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers about the ongoing efforts to control the spread of Asian carp. The briefing will include an overview of current efforts to monitor, control, remove, and deter the spread of Asian Carp, as well as a discussion of the role of public-private partnerships in these efforts.

The list of speakers includes:
  • Mr. Mike Weimer, US Fish and Wildlife Service
  • Mr. Nick Frohnauer, MN Department of Resources
  • Mr. Ron Brooks, KY Department of Fish and Wildlife
  • Mr. Andre Raghu, Blue Shores Fishery
  • Mr. Greg Conover, MICRA, US Fish and Wildlife Service
Presentations will be followed by a Q + A session with the panel. Representatives from the US Army Corps of Engineers and US Geological Survey will also participate.


For more information, please contact  Joe Vukovich, Senior Policy Analyst for the Mississippi River Basin Program at the Northeast-Midwest Institute.
This Week in Washington

This week was the final week of recess for Congress. When they reconvene on Tuesday, they will have a daunting to-do list. Congress must reach a funding deal by Sept. 30 in order to keep the government open. They face a Sept. 29 deadline to increase the debt ceiling or else the federal government will default on its debt.

They also must decide how to handle relief funding for the aftermath of Hurricane Harvey. Initial estimates are that the monetary cost of the hurricane may reach $190 billion, vastly outstripping the approximately $1.3 billion which the Federal Emergency Management Administration has available to spend on disaster relief.
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