Gary Wilson

May 10 2013 | | 6 Comments
chicagoview

While playing small ball is necessary, we should reach higher. If the Great Lakes region was a country, it would have the fourth largest economy in the world.
It deserves world-class solutions to its problems.

Apr 26 2013 | | 5 Comments
chicagoview

Why does every gain in Great Lakes protection seem to be offset by a loss?

This zero-sum game is a losing proposition.

Apr 12 2013 | | 7 Comments
chicagoview

We’ve got a GLEC and now a GLAB.

What’s the next regional group to emerge?

How about a commission charged with whittling the list of Great Lakes agencies, boards, committees, initiatives, councils and collaboratives?

Mar 29 2013 | | 8 Comments
chicagoview

Let’s invest a significant amount of Great Lakes restoration funding in Detroit and the Detroit River. The whole region suffers if Detroit languishes.
It’s an investment that makes more sense than pouring yet more funds into the region’s most economically advantaged cities.

Mar 15 2013 | | 4 Comments
chicagoview

The ever growing corporate interest in the Great Lakes has been influential in public policy, and may prove dangerous for the Basin’s natural resources.

Examples include companies that bottle and export water, and legislation in Ohio, Wisconsin and Michigan that benefit industries over the environment.

Mar 1 2013 | | 7 Comments
chicagoview

Great Lakes advocates should focus less on federal funding and more on state issues, such as mining threats, groundwater conservation and risky oil shipments.

Feb 15 2013 | | 7 Comments
chicagoview

We play a lot of defense on environmental problems. Maybe it’s time to get out ahead of one. Groundwater threats are underground in more ways than one. It’s time to really shine a spotight on them.

Feb 1 2013 | | 12 Comments
chicagoview

Lake Superior faces environmental threats as diverse as crude oil tankers and mining.

Cities on other Great Lakes should care.

We aren’t immune from each others’ problems.

Jan 18 2013 | | 6 Comments
chicagoview

Can pollution be a revenue stream?

Taxing externalities can appeal to both ends of the political spectrum.

And it brings the focus on prevention – the cheapest way to protect the Great Lakes.

Jan 4 2013 | | 7 Comments
chicagoview

Ohio and Lake Erie have been in the spotlight for the last few years as the most vulnerable of the Great Lakes.
Michigan will always be the center of Great Lakes attention because of geography.
But now the spotlight shifts to Wisconsin. Here’s why.