Lake Superior Binational Program
- Lake Superior LaMP 2008
- Strategic Outcomes and Ecosystem Goals [PDF 83 Kb 9 pages]
- Lake Superior Lakewide Management Plan: 1990-2005 Critical Chemical Reduction Milestones [PDF 175Mb 217 pages]
- Lake Superior Lakewide Management Plan (LaMP) 2006
- Highlights 2005 (PDF, 270Kb 4 pages)
- July 17, 2005: Lake Superior Day 2005 (PDF 341Kb 2 pages)
- The Lake Superior Binational Forum's four-page color newspaper insert [PDF 378Kb 4 pages]about Lake Superior Binational Program accomplishments and activities in three cities around Lake Superior.
- Highlights 2004 [PDF 284Kb 8 pages]
- Lakewide Management Plan 2004
- 2002 Progress report:
- Ecosystem Principles and Objectives, Indicators and Targets for Lake Superior [PDF 324Kb 118 pages]
- Lake Superior Binational Monitoring Workshop Proceedings: Directions for Measuring Progress [PDF 277Kb 95 pages]
- Lake Superior LaMP 2000 - Summary Version [PDF 752Kb 64 pages]
- Lake Superior Lakewide Management Plan (LaMP) 2000
- Publications
Lake Superior is unique, a vast resource of fresh water that has not experienced the same levels of development, urbanization and pollution as the other Great Lakes. Because of this uniqueness, the International Joint Commission recommended that Lake Superior be designated as a demonstration area where discharges and emissions of toxic substances that are long-lived in the environment and build up in the bodies of humans and wildlife, would not be permitted.
In response, Canada and the United States developed A Binational
Program to Restore and Protect the Lake Superior Basin. This program has focused on
the entire ecosystem of Lake Superior, its air, land, water and human and wildlife.
Government and tribal agencies and interested groups from Michigan, Minnesota, Ontario and
Wisconsin, along with both federal governments, have taken steps that will restore
degraded areas and protect this unique headwater lake through activities such as pollution
prevention, enhanced regulatory measures and cleanup programs. With citizen and
stakeholder partners, most notably the Lake Superior Binational Forum, objectives have
been identified and a vision established for the cleanup and protection of the lake. The
governments have funded pollution prevention activities, research to characterize the lake
ecosystem and identify the sources of pollutants and their effect on life, and projects to
clean up, restore and protect habitat.