Alliance for the Great Lakes
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| Abbreviation | AGL |
|---|---|
| Formation | 1970 |
| Type | Non-governmental organization |
| Headquarters | Chicago, Illinois |
Region served | United States |
| Website | www.greatlakes.org |
Alliance for the Great Lakes is a nonprofit environmental organization formed to conserve and restore the freshwater resources of the Great Lakes through public engagement and policy promotion.[1]
Motivated by nuclear power plants around Lake Michigan and threats to Indiana's sand dunes, an editor of Hyde Park Herald and Openlands Project staff member Lee Botts gathered activists from the four-state region at a conference on April 12, 1969. This was where the participants recommended forming an organization to propose policy solutions for Lake Michigan. During their second conference on May 2, 1970, the organizers announced the formation of the "Lake Michigan Federation," with its formal establishment announced that September. With support from the Chicago Community Trust, Wieboldt Foundation, and others, the group formed a board of directors from Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, and Wisconsin, with Lee Botts serving as the first executive director.[2]
The Federation provided citizens with the capacity to monitor compliance with pollution discharge permits, challenged new and existing shoreline power plants, and lobbied for new pollution regulation.[3] In 1971, the Lake Michigan Federation lobbied Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley to ban phosphates in detergents to mitigate excessive algae growth.