MEDIA RELEASE
Release date: April 4, 2000
IJC Seeks Better Reporting to Assess Progress Under the
Great Lakes
Water Quality Agreement
The International Joint Commission (IJC) recommends that the governments of the
United States
and Canada immediately begin using indicators for three desired outcomes to
report on progress
under the
Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement
-- fish that are safe for eating and water that is
safe for swimming and drinking.
The desired outcomes and their indicators were developed by the
IJC's Indicators Implementation Task Force
(IITF), whose final report was released by the IJC today
.
The IJC
also urges the governments to continue work on implementing the remaining six
desired
outcomes and to address and correct data accessibility problems enabling
subsequent reports to
address the full slate of desired outcomes.
The Commission considers the indicators approach to be central to its ability
to carry out its
responsibilities under Article VII of the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement.
It is therefore
essential that, in accordance with Article IX, the necessary data and
information pertinent to
these indicators and measurements be made available to the Commission, on
request, by the
governments.
In 1996, the IJC adopted a framework for assessing progress under the
Canada-United States
Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement
based on the work of its Indicators for Evaluation Task
Force. The framework, consisting of nine desired outcomes with specific
indicators and
measurements for each of these outcomes, was presented in the Commission's
report,
Indicators
to Evaluate Progress under the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement,
and forwarded to
governments in January 1997.
In 1997 the Commission established the IITF to examine and consider how these
nine desired
outcomes and their related ecosystem indicators could be implemented. Since
good quality data
is essential for this activity, an important part of the IITF's work was to
assess the adequacy of
existing data bases and information related to these indicators. The Task Force
found that while
more effort is needed to improve data collection and the quality of data,
sufficient data exists to
support the use of indicators, at least those associated with the three desired
outcomes noted
above.
For more information, including the IJC's
The Indicators Implementation Task Force Final Report, visit www.ijc.org
on the Internet. Hard copies of the final report are available upon request from
any IJC office.
The International Joint Commission is a binational Canada-U.S. organization
established by the
Boundary Waters Treaty of 1909. It assists the governments in managing waters
along the border
for the benefit of both countries in a variety of ways including evaluating
government's
performances under the
Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement
.
Contacts:
Windsor/Detroit Jennifer Day 519.257.6733 or 313.226.2170 ext. 6733
Washington, D.C. Frank Bevacqua 202.736.9024
Ottawa, ON Fabien Lengellé 613.995.0088