Tammy Baldwin offers bill to protect Mississippi River modeled on successful Great Lakes program

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A proposal to create a federal funding program to protect the Mississippi River is back in front of Congress — and this time, a Wisconsin politician is leading the charge.

Democratic Sen. Tammy Baldwin is set to introduce the Mississippi River Restoration and Resilience Initiative in the Senate on Wednesday. Democratic Rep. Betty McCollum of Minnesota will bring the same bill forward in the House.

The proposal is nearly the same as one introduced by McCollum in 2021. It's modeled after programs that protect other major bodies of waters across the U.S., like the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative and the Chesapeake Bay Program.

Advocates for the Mississippi River argue that the river is long overdue to have its own such program. Millions of people up and down a swath of the central United States rely on it for drinking water, commerce and recreation, and its floodplains provide food and habitat for hundreds of fish and wildlife species. But the river and its floodplain are facing a multitude of challenges, from extreme weather to habitat loss to persistent agricultural and industrial pollution. That pollution contributes to the Dead Zone in the Gulf of Mexico, which last year was almost as big as Yellowstone Park.

More: A federal funding program with bipartisan support helped clean up the Great Lakes. Could it work for the Mississippi River, too?

In the past few years, the river has experienced the impacts of a changing climate, said Kelly McGinnis, executive director of the Mississippi River Network. Last spring, communities along the upper river saw near-record floodwaters, bookended by severe droughts that slowed shipping traffic to a crawl.

"If anything, since (this legislation) was first introduced, the conditions of the world we live in just keep showing us that there is an urgent need to address these problems, and they're not solving themselves," McGinnis said.

Baldwin told the Journal Sentinel that she hears concerns from constituents on Wisconsin's western border about flooding and invasive species on the river. Representing a state that touches both the river and the Great Lakes, she said she's seen the success of the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative and that it is "so appropriate and needed that we have a Mississippi River restoration initiative."

In a news release, McCollum said there's more work to be done for the Mississippi, "with decades of pollution having damaged the river's ecosystem, and new challenges emerging for communities up and down the corridor."

"From the northernmost headwater communities, to where I grew up along the river in South St. Paul, to the Middle Mississippi where it meets the Ohio River, and all the way down to the Mississippi Delta — the health of this great river deserves our attention and our investment," she said.

What is the Mississippi River Restoration and Resilience Initiative?

The Mississippi River Restoration and Resilience Initiative is meant to create a non-regulatory, holistic program for the river — which touches 10 states — that would catalog its problems and figure out solutions.

A map of the Mississippi River basin, including the Mississippi River (bold line) and its major tributaries, based on U.S. Geological Survey data.
A map of the Mississippi River basin, including the Mississippi River (bold line) and its major tributaries, based on U.S. Geological Survey data.

The program would be housed within the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, and program funding would fall into four main buckets: improving water quality, restoring habitats, reducing the presence of invasive species and creating natural infrastructure to protect against flood damage.

In the two years after its passage, EPA staff would meet key stakeholders along the river — municipalities, tribal governments, nonprofit organizations and universities — to craft an action plan, identifying which projects should receive funding. A portion of those funds would be directed to disadvantaged or low-income communities and communities of color, which disproportionately experience the effects of runoff pollution, low-quality drinking water and severe weather events.

Alongside the action plan would be a science plan, which would create three regional hubs at universities in the 10 border states for research on the river’s challenges.

More: The Mississippi River is central to America's story. Why doesn't it get more love?

The bill is largely similar to the one proposed in 2021, with a few key differences. First, it doesn't appropriate a specific amount of money the program would receive — about $300 million annually in McCollum's original version.

Second, 5% of whatever funding is allocated would be set aside for tribal organizations and governments, and managed by the Bureau of Indian Affairs. Whitney Clark, executive director of the Minnesota-based nonprofit Friends of the Mississippi River, said that change was made after speaking with tribes involved in the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative, which made an adjustment in 2020 to give tribes more direct control over funding.

More: Great Lakes tribes’ knowledge of nature could be key to navigating climate change. Will enough people listen?

McGinnis said removing the appropriations language could slow the speed of the bill's impact if passed, but that she understands it may be a necessary change to bring some lawmakers on board. If it passes, she said, assigning a funding mechanism to the plan would be the next step.

Bill mirrors the Great Lakes program, but faces a difficult political climate

The Great Lakes program, on which the Mississippi River bill is based, is widely considered a success story. To date, it has funded more than 7,500 projects totaling more than $3 billion, and it got a billion-dollar boost from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law. Republicans and Democrats alike have voted to increase funding for the initiative nearly every year since it passed.

But the political climate under which this bill is being introduced is different, and bipartisanship is rare. Though McCollum's original bill was endorsed by close to 150 people and groups, it failed to garner any Republican support and did not have a companion bill in the Senate.

People fish at the Reno Bottoms in the Mississippi River a result of the degradation of the floodplain forests due to a decade of high water on the river, excess flooding and invasive species as the Fish and Wildlife Service works to restore these areas on Tuesday July 18, 2023 in De Soto, Wis.
People fish at the Reno Bottoms in the Mississippi River a result of the degradation of the floodplain forests due to a decade of high water on the river, excess flooding and invasive species as the Fish and Wildlife Service works to restore these areas on Tuesday July 18, 2023 in De Soto, Wis.

Baldwin said she plans to have discussions with senators from across the aisle whose states border the river, and she believes bipartisan support is possible.

"It's gone from a bill just in the House to now being bicameral, and I think the obvious next step is to make it bipartisan," she said.

Supporters feel its reintroduction will help remind people of the threats the river faces.

More: The Mississippi River's floodplain forests are dying. The race is on to bring them back.

More: Hundreds of invasive carp were caught in the Mississippi River near Trempealeau

In Minnesota, for example, Clark, with Friends of the Mississippi River, is worried about invasive carp swimming upriver into his state's waters. He believes the program could help states work together to control them.

"The river has been facing a range of big challenges that frankly, we're not measuring up against," he said. "We're concerned that unless we begin to change these trends, the river will not be healthy in our lifetime."

Madeline Heim is a Report for America corps reporter who writes about environmental issues in the Mississippi River watershed and across Wisconsin. Contact her at (920) 996-7266 or mheim@gannett.com.

This story is a product of the Mississippi River Basin Ag & Water Desk, an independent reporting network based at the University of Missouri in partnership with Report for America, funded by the Walton Family Foundation.

This article originally appeared on Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: Tammy Baldwin introduces bill to protect the Mississippi River