成人X站

NATIONAL NEWS

Trump administration promises Illinois it will pay to keep carp out of the Great Lakes

May 12, 2025, 10:41 AM

FILE - Asian carp are unloaded at Two Rivers Fisheries in Wickliffe, Ky, Feb. 11, 2020. (AP Photo/M...

FILE - Asian carp are unloaded at Two Rivers Fisheries in Wickliffe, Ky, Feb. 11, 2020. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey, file)
Credit: ASSOCIATED PRESS

(AP Photo/Mark Humphrey, file)

A stalemate between President Donald Trump and Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker that threatened a $1.2 billion plan to keep invasive carp from reaching the Great Lakes appears to have been settled after the Trump administration offered assurances it will cover its share of the costs.

After a delay that has stretched on since February, Illinois officials are set to resume closing on property they need to continue work on a project that will generate vast bubble curtains to deter the carp, stun them with electrical fields and play sound frequencies to disorient them.

Here’s what to know:

The project has been on the drawing board for years

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers along with state officials in Illinois and Michigan have been planning since 2020 to install a gantlet of technologies in the Des Plaines River near Joliet, Illinois, to deter invasive carp from entering Lake Michigan.

The Corps and the states signed a deal in 2024 to work together on the project using $226 million allocated through the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law. And elements of the Water Resources Development Act adopted last year call for the federal government to cover 90% of operating and maintenance costs.

Pritzker demands assurances from Trump

Construction on the project began in January. Pritzker’s administration was set to close in February on a parcel of property for the project and transfer it to the Corps.

Everything appeared on track until late January, when the Trump administration froze federal grants and loans as it reviewed whether spending aligned with Trump’s priorities on issues such as climate change and diversity. The administration rescinded the freeze less than two days later but questions persist about the federal government’s spending commitments.

Pritzker, a billionaire heir to the Hyatt hotel empire and a potential 2028 Democratic presidential contender, is one of Trump鈥檚 fiercest critics. He has described the early months of the Trump administration as 鈥渢rue villainous cruelty by a few idiots.鈥

Days before Illinois was to finalize a property deal for the carp project, Pritzker hit pause and demanded assurances that the federal government would honor its spending commitment. Site preparation has continued since then, but substantial work to install technology has been on hold.

Trump signals the project is a priority

The White House issued a memo late Friday saying the Trump administration recognized the threat invasive carp pose to Great Lakes recreation and fishing and that it’s committed to protecting the lakes.

The federal government is prepared to do its part so long as states cooperate, according to the memo, which calls on Illinois to complete the property deal by July 1 and promises the federal government will streamline permitting and environmental reviews.

鈥淢y Administration fully supports preventing the spread of invasive carp,鈥 the memo said. 鈥淭he State of Illinois, where the (project) is located, must cease further delay in cooperating with this effort, for the sake of its own citizens and economy and for the sake of all of the Great Lake States.鈥

Pritzker’s office issued a news release late Friday evening saying the governor was satisfied.

Work on the project isn’t slated to finish until 2032, but Joel Brammeier, president and CEO of the nonpartisan Alliance for the Great Lakes, said Monday that prospects suddenly look dramatically better than they did last week.

鈥淲e’re back to business as usual. That’s a good thing,鈥 he said.

Why the carp would be bad news for the Great Lakes

Four species of carp were imported to the U.S. from Asia in the 1960s and 1970s to clear algae from sewage ponds and fish farms in the Deep South. They escaped into the Mississippi River and have moved north into dozens of tributaries in the central U.S.

Government agencies, advocacy groups and others have long debated how to prevent the fish from reaching the Great Lakes, where scientists say they could out-compete native species for food and habitat in waterways where the fishing industry is valued at $7 billion.

A shipping canal that forms part of the link between the Mississippi and Lake Michigan has a network of fish-repelling barriers, which the Corps says is effective, but critics consider inadequate.

The new project at the Brandon Road Lock and Dam on the Des Plaines River near Joliet will provide another layer of protection at a downstream choke point between the Illinois River, which is infested with invasive carp, and Lake Michigan.

鈥淚鈥檓 hopeful everyone is taking this project seriously now and we鈥檙e not going to see any more delays,鈥 Brammeier said.

National News

FILE - Karen Ortiz, an administrative judge at the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, poses f...

Associated Press

Civil rights agency moves to fire judge fighting Trump directives

The federal agency tasked with protecting workers鈥 civil rights has moved to terminate a New York administrative judge who has resisted compliance with directives from the White House, including President Donald Trump’s executive order decreeing male and female as two 鈥渋mmutable鈥 sexes. The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in response to Trump’s order has moved […]

4 minutes ago

FILE - Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., speaks during the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pe...

Associated Press

Sen. Paul points to business-sector resistance to Trump’s tariffs in solidly red Kentucky

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) 鈥 In solidly Republican Kentucky, resistance to President Donald Trump’s trade wars has sprung up from a cross-section of key business sectors, GOP Sen. Rand Paul said Monday. Paul said he’s heard concerns from agriculture, the auto sector, bourbon production, home building and package shipping in response to Trump’s aggressive use of […]

12 minutes ago

FILE - Shipping containers are seen ready for transport at the Guangzhou Port in the Nansha distric...

Associated Press

US businesses that rely on Chinese imports express relief and anxiety over tariff pause

NEW YORK (AP) 鈥 American businesses that rely on Chinese goods reacted with muted relief Monday after the U.S. and China agreed to pause their exorbitant tariffs on each other’s products for 90 days. Importers still face relatively high tariffs, however, as well as uncertainty over what will happen in the coming weeks and months. […]

47 minutes ago

Associated Press

Former longtime New Jersey mayor who was convicted in corruption probe dies at 89

NEWARK, N.J. (AP) 鈥 Sharpe James, the charismatic longest-serving mayor of Newark whose political accomplishments were marred by a corruption conviction, has died. He was 89. James died Sunday evening, according to his son, John Sharpe James, a former Newark City Council member. After entering politics, James never lost an election. The Democrat was first […]

52 minutes ago

Associated Press

Four men arrested in West Africa for extortion scheme linked to California teen’s suicide

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) 鈥 Three years after a California teenager died by suicide, four men in West Africa have been arrested on suspicion of participating in 鈥渋nternational sextortion scheme,” according to federal investigators. The 2022 death of Ryan Last, a 17-year-old high school senior, prompted a lengthy international investigation, according to a statement Friday from […]

55 minutes ago

FILE - People walk between buildings, Dec. 17, 2024, on the campus of Harvard University in Cambrid...

Associated Press

Harvard says it won’t abandon 鈥榗ore鈥 principles to meet Department of Education demands

BOSTON (AP) 鈥 Harvard University responded Monday to recent threats from the Education Department to halt its grant funding, highlighting reforms it was undertaking but warning it won’t budge on 鈥渋ts core, legally-protected principles鈥 over fears of retaliation. A letter from Harvard President Alan Garber detailed how the institution had made significant changes to its […]

58 minutes ago

Trump administration promises Illinois it will pay to keep carp out of the Great Lakes