Bay Schools receives 2012 safe boating grant

The Ohio Department of Natural Resources (ODNR) Division of Watercraft recently announced that the Bay Village City School District has been awarded a grant of $ 2,239.71 as part of the Boating Safety Education Grant Program. The Division of Watercraft is awarding $366,528.02 to political subdivisions and non-profit organizations for boating education programs. The Bay Village Schools is one of 30 organizations across the state to receive funding.

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New York ballast rules battle may end soon, says U.S. Seaway head

The head of the St. Lawrence Seaway Development Corp. believes Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo will help the shipping industry fight New York state’s “scientifically unachievable” ballast standards.

“We met on Tuesday with the Cuomo folks,” said Collister W. Johnson Jr., U.S. Seaway administrator, on Thursday. “We had a very good conversation. Cuomo ran on ‘I’m going to change the culture of New York and we’re not going to be the most unfriendly business state in the country.’ And I think in respect to this issue, he gets it.”

Ships carry ballast water to maintain stability while under way.

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For some surfers, Lake Ontario and the Great Lakes are 'the last frontier'

Irondequoit, N.Y. —Scott Johns was born in Hawaii and grew up in Florida. He started learning to surf at the age of 4.
Then life brought him to Rochester several years ago.

“It really killed me, being away from the ocean,” Johns recalled.

Then, just last summer, he saw a guy on the beach in Irondequoit’s Sea Breeze area with what looked like a surfboard.

“I didn’t know it (surfing) was possible on the lake,” Johns said. He says now that it was fate.

Johns learned that surfing the lake was not only possible, but also that it can be done year-round and that there’s even a Rochester Surf Club.

One of the most popular spots, locally, for surfing is near the pier in the Sea Breeze area of Irondequoit.
“We’re safe about it and try not to trespass,” Johns said.

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Great Lakes: Where's the Ice?

Video: Winter Weather Update

It's been a very mild winter for the most part across the Great Lakes Region. 

Temperatures are up, snowfall is down and if you like winter sports, everyone from skiers to ice fishermen are not happy.  

Speaking of ice fishing, the pastime is somewhat tenuous this year since there is so little ice on the Great Lakes.
  
Figure 1a is a chart that shows the average ice concentration on the Great Lakes during the first week of February and Figure 1b shows the concentration for this year.  As you can see, there is very little ice on the Great Lakes so far this year. 

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Hatchery fish to be euthanized for testing positive for IPN

IPN poses no threat to human health, so catching, handling and eating a fish with the virus can't hurt you, according to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

But once the disease is in a fish hatchery, it's tough to get rid of. That's why, when the Service's Allegheny National Fish Hatchery in Warren tested positive for IPN, it was "depopulated." All of the fish there were euthanized, so the facility could be disinfected. It later returned to producing fish.

An outbreak of disease in a Pennsylvania Fish and Boat Commission hatchery is expected to lead to the euthanizing of some steelhead and brown trout.

IPN, or infectious pancreatic necrosis, a viral disease that can affect all kinds of fish but is particularly common among trout and salmon, was discovered three months ago in fish supplied to cooperative nurseries by the commission's Corry hatchery in Erie. Word of that discovery was made public last week.

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Progressive Insurance Sponsors Boat Shows

Progressive will have an interactive booth at each of the following NMMA Boat & Sportshows. Stop by to pick up a free gift, take part in boat-related activities and socialize with fellow boaters.

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Safe Boating Course, Holt, Michigan

   A “SAFE BOATING” course ( Michigan’s DNR “Boat Michigan” course ) will be offered by the United States Coast Guard Auxiliary, Lansing Flotilla (in conjunction with Michigan DNR) , on Saturday, February 11th, 2012, commencing @  8  am to 5 pm at  the American Legion Post 238, 1785 S. Cedar St., Holt, Michigan  48842 (south of Holt Road, west side of Cedar St.).

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Chicago Captains Classes

Ahoy Fellow Mariners! USMA Chicago, a locally owned and operated marine education academy, is once again offering it's USCG Masters and OUPV Captain's License course at Columbia Yacht Club this Spring. The up-coming class will start Thursday Feb 16 at 1800 hours and run through April 14, 2012. The 80 hour 8 week program has been approved by USCG/NMC and USMA Chicago is authorized to administer the examinations in lieu of travelling to a USCG Exam Center in Toledo or St. Louis.

An Informational Session is scheduled for Thursday Feb. 9 at 1900 hours at Columbia YC in which all are interested persons are invited to attend to learn more of the process of getting a Captain's License.

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In Muskegon, 'Go Blue!' has nothing to do with a university's sports team (video)

MUSKEGON — Some would argue that Muskegon County is behind other communities in embracing, promoting and exploiting the “green economy.”

But that shouldn't be the case with the emerging “blue economy,” a national think tank scholar and head of the Michigan State Board of Education said. Blue means water and that should be Muskegon's ace in the hole, community leaders say.

“I'm really bullish on this community and its opportunities,” John Austin told last week's Muskegon Lakeshore Chamber of Commerce's Business for Breakfast. Austin is a non-resident, senior fellow with the Brookings Institution and a senior fellow with the University of Michigan's School of Education.

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Restoring the Natural Divide

THE GRE AT L AK E S COMMI S S ION AND THE
Great Lakes and St. Lawrence Cities Initiative led a project
to develop and evaluate alternatives for physically separating
the Great Lakes and Mississippi River basins in the
Chicago Area Waterway System to prevent the movement
of Asian carp and other aquatic invasive species (AIS). This
report summarizes the results of the project and shows
that separation can be achieved while also maintaining or
enhancing water quality, flood management, and transportation.
The engineering and economic analyses suggest
that separation is feasible and provide a solid foundation on
which further dialogue to advance a long-term solution to
the AIS threat can proceed. Separation is defined as stopping
the flow of water by placing physical

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