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Great Lakes Binational Toxics Strategy

Stakeholder Forum - 1998

IMPLEMENTING THE BINATIONAL TOXICS STRATEGY
Integration Workgroup

Summary of the Integration Group Meeting
June 19 1998


Attendees

Gary Gulezian, U.S. EPA - GLNPO
Ron Shimizu, Environment Canada
Elizabeth LaPlante, U.S. EPA - GLNPO
Alan Waffle, Environment Canada
Anthony Kizlauskas, U.S. EPA - GLNPO
Beverly Thorpe, Ontario Environmental Water Policy Branch
Carri Lohse-Hanson, MPCA
David Macarus, U.S. EPA
Dan Hopkins, U.S. EPA
Kaushalya Khanna, U.S. EPA
Alexis Cain, U.S. EPA
Dale Evarts, U.S. EPA Great Waters Program
Debbie Siebers, U.S. EPA - GLNPO
Vicki Thomas, U.S. EPA - GLNPO
Susan Hedman, Environmental Law and Policy Center
Griffin Sherbin, Consultant, Environment Canada
Tim Brown, Delta Institute and Lake Michigan Foundation
Morag Simpson, Greenpeace Canada
John Jackson, GLU and Lake Superior Forum
Stephane Gingras, Great Lakes United
Tim Eder, National Wildlife Federation
Paula Labadie, BASF
JimBredin, Michigan DEQ
Marianne Lines, Canadian Ctr for Pollution Prevention
Margaret Wooster, Great Lakes United
Guy Williams, National Wildlife Federation
Werner Braun, Council of Great Lakes Industries
George Kuper, CGLI
Martha Prothro, Ross & Associates (Facilitator)
John Menkedick, Battelle (Facilitator)
Anne Dettelbach, R&A (Facilitator)

Welcome and Introductions

Gary Gulezian, Director of U.S. EPA Great Lakes National Program Office (GLNPO), opened the meeting and turned it over to Martha Prothro, the meeting facilitator. After welcoming the group, Ms. Prothro observed that the Integration Group faces two major challenges: (1) providing leadership on cross-cutting issues and (2) focusing on action. She encouraged the group to focus their efforts on helping the substance-specific workgroups avoid "bogs, blind alleys, and barriers" and achieve "reductions and an appropriate degree of rigor."

Note: Because the group was eager to discuss substantive issues at this meeting, it did not spend much time reviewing the "Integration Group Strawman Tasks and Goals" list distributed by the facilitator or discussing its mission. Integration Group members were encouraged to review this document and forward any comments, additions, or modifications to the facilitator. A revised "Tasks and Goals" list will be distributed to the meeting attendees for discussion and resolution.

Expectations

Ron Shimizu (Environment Canada) thanked the participants for their interest and expressed his hope that this group could make a major contribution to servicing the substance-specific groups of the Binational Toxics Strategy (BNS) by focusing on cross-cutting issues. He reminded the group that they should focus on action. Gary Gulezian described his interest in having the Integration Group be a "communications nexus" across the other workgroups. He encouraged the group to "enable" the success of the substance-specific workgroups.

Werner Braun (CGLI) next provided an industry perspective. He described three challenges facing the BNS effort: (1) encouraging broad-based, comprehensive stakeholder participation; (2) staying focused on goals and acknowledging when we have reached them; and (3) developing a process for determining baselines and loadings so that practical, cost-effective options can be identified and implemented and so that limited resources can be directed to the most severe problems.

Jack Manno (Great Lakes Research Consortium) provided an environmental group perspective. He mentioned pressures environmental group members are feeling to demonstrate to their constituents that the BNS will meet Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement goals. He then described "an ideal BNS" as being one which would include, at a minimum, the following features: (1) high-level agency coordination and participation; (2) legally binding measures; (3) coordination and consistency with related local, regional, and national programs; and (4) processes to encourage development of companion/far-reaching efforts focused on the same goals (e.g., through energy conservation or use-tree and lifecycle approaches). He encouraged the group to understand that voluntary efforts are not workable in the absence of regulations and to remember that challenge goals should be seen as interim steps to virtual elimination goals set forth in the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement. Guy Williams (National Wildlife Federation) encouraged the group to keep a "personal face" on the issues under discussion in order to keep motivation and commitment high.

Meeting Ground Rules

The group agreed to abide by five overarching principles during the kickoff meeting and in future meetings. Several participants expressed interest in seeing a more formal set of ground rules. The agreed-to principles are:

  1. Focus
  2. Brevity
  3. Listening
  4. Respect
  5. Closure

It was observed that "closure" does not necessarily mean consensus although the group may wish to reach consensus in certain cases. (Under the Federal Advisory Committee Act, U.S. EPA would have to seek a special charter for the group if consensus were required for the advice to the Agency.)

Public Recognition/Incentives Program Discussion

The group engaged in a fairly lengthy and lively discussion of recognition/incentives programs and the ways in which environmental agencies can encourage "beyond compliance" behaviors related to achieving BNS challenges. Key comments from the open discussion are included below.

Possible Follow-up Actions on Recognition/Incentives Programs

The Integration Group discussed several follow-up actions that could be of benefit and interest to the overall BNS effort and the work of the workgroups.

Membership Targeting and Recruitment

Several chemical-specific workgroups requested Integration Group assistance in recruiting participants to their group. In its discussion of this issue, meeting participants made the following points and observations.

Possible Follow-up Actions on Membership Recruitment

Reporting on Progress

The group discussed two different types of reporting: (1) progress on challenge goals and (2) activity/status reports. The general feeling of the group was that the governments should be responsible for reporting. The Integration Group does see an advisory role for itself in the development of appropriate reporting mechanisms (e.g., to ensure that the selected processes are "transparent" and accessible to the public and the workgroups).

The group discussed the importance of innovative reporting tools (e.g., case studies of successful ventures, innovative partnerships) and of making BNS information widely available to the public. The group agreed on the value and importance of publicizing success stories. The group was also reminded that a report from the BNS effort is expected at SOLEC in October.

The discussion touched on possible limitations associated with using the World Wide Web as a communication tool, the importance of clearly attributing Web postings to sponsoring organizations or individuals (and not the BNS), and the importance of providing public access to governmental decision-making processes. The Integration Group will continue to track these issues as part of its ongoing work.

Possible Follow-up Actions for Reporting on Progress

The Integration Group suggested that as part of its review of recognition/incentive programs, the governments should propose appropriate reporting mechanisms and measures for early group review and, ultimately, the Integration Group to review and provide input on.

Process for Addressing Other Issues Raised by the Workgroups

Before lunch, attendees ranked cross-cutting issues arising out of the chemical-specific workgroups for the 2:00pm session (for Integration Group attention). The highest ranked issues were to be discussed at this meeting.

Member Issue Ranking

Rank  Votes Issue
18 Long-range transport
17 Sediments
14 Incineration
4 (tie)  7 International
4 (tie)  I 7 Non-Level
4 Challenge Goals

Long-Range Transport (LRT)

The Integration Group briefly discussed long-range transport and how the BNS could be used to obtain more reductions from sources outside the Great Lakes Basin. The following observations were made.

Possible Follow-up Activities on LRT

Sediments

Next, the Integration Group discussed (1) whether contaminated sediments are considered "sources" in the context of the BNS and (2) whether a new "Sediments" workgroup should be convened. It was determined that sediments are covered in a separate challenge in the BNS; the chemical-specific BNS challenges are not intended to include contaminated sediments. Chemical-specific workgroups can consider sediments as sources but need not include them in inventories toward achieving the BNS challenge goals. A few key comments from the discussion follow.

Possible Future Actions on Sediments

Next Steps for the Integration Group

The Integration Group did not schedule its next meeting but instead asked the government leads and contractors to keep a running list of Integration Group issues and to call the meeting when a full day's work had accumulated. One participant speculated that this would occur about six weeks after the chemical-specific workgroups meet. (Each workgroup, however, is responsible for setting its own schedule.) The attendees also encouraged the governments to frame the issues as completely as possible (based largely on the ideas generated at this meeting) so that the group can focus on decisions and guidance.

 


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