Friends of the Chicago River

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Formation1979
HeadquartersChicago
Executive Director
Margaret Frisbie
Friends of the Chicago River
Formation1979
HeadquartersChicago
Executive Director
Margaret Frisbie
Websitehttps://www.chicagoriver.org/

Friends of the Chicago River is a non-profit organization that was founded in 1979 to improve and restore the 156-mile Chicago River and Calumet River system for all people, water, and animals. Friends of the Chicago River works through education and outreach, on the ground projects, and public policy and planning to achieve their vision that the Chicago-Calumet River system and its watershed are a healthy, climate resilient, biologically rich ecosystem with equitable, open access for all.


As the only organization solely dedicated to the Chicago-Calumet River system, Friends has spent over four decades reclaiming the river as a natural urban environment and its success can be measured in miles of trail; species of fish; and people in, on, and along the water. Friends has won over 50 awards in its 44 years and engaged millions of people in its work. People who become dedicated allies in the fight for urban natural resources and investing in nature as a way to battle the climate crisis and help preserve global biodiversity. Friends works across sectors and boundaries with elected officials, businesses, frontline organizations, government agencies, municipalities, nonprofits, and volunteers to repair past environmental harm and illuminate the river as a valuable natural resource instead of a sewage and shipping canal.

Friends of the Chicago River has 15 full time professional staff; 24 members on its board of directors; and 41,000 members, volunteers, and online activists. Margaret Frisbie has served as executive director of Friends of the Chicago River[1] since 2005. She is a Roman Nomitch Fellow, and was named a National River Hero by River Network[2] in 2017 and a Notable Leader in Sustainability by Crain's Chicago Business in 2022.

Big ideas

Canoes on the North Branch of the Chicago River

Friends of the Chicago River has a long history of innovative initiatives. Friends secured the first river protection access ordinance in the City of Chicago in 1983, leading to a regional commitment to a continuous Chicago-Calumet River trail system today. Friends' volunteer canoe program put the first organized cane trips on the water in 1992 before public access was considered acceptable leading to public events such as the Chicago River Flatwater Classic canoe and kayak race that started in 2000. The Flatwater Classic and a report entitled "Waterways for Our Future," published by Friends, Openlands, and the Chicago Civic Federation, led to the establishment of new recreational water quality standards approved in 2011 by the Illinois Pollution Control Board, which protects much of the river system for swimming. The new standards also required sewage effluent disinfection at the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago's O'Brien and Calumet water reclamation plants that discharge to the river. A third, Stickney, is the world's largest sewage treatment plant and still does not disinfect despite its common practice nationwide.

In 2002, Friends and Illinois Department of Natural Resources began the Chicago River Dam Removal Program which led to the removal of the North Branch Dam, the Winnetka Road Dam, and a statewide dam removal initiative[3] by Illinois governor Pat Quinn (2009–2015). The Tam O'Shanter Dam in Niles and Chick Evan Dam in Morton Grove are still slated for removal.

Furthering the need for fish habitat, Friends invented the Chicago River Fish Hotel, the first floating wetland in the Chicago-Calumet River System in 2004. Such structures can be a good solution for river reaches where natural banks are lacking. In 2013, Friends and Illinois Department of Natural Resources invented and installed 400 channel catfish nesting cavities. Friends also secured funding for fish habitat at the Jetty on the Chicago Riverwalk and launched an instream native planting project using highly adaptive water willow and lizard's tail to provide high-quality habitat for aquatic organisms, protect shoreline from bank erosion, create shelter for aquatic life during floods, and improve the aesthetics of the river for recreational users, adapted from a successful program on the Fox River. These native species are tolerant of changing water levels and spread via rhizome to form much larger colonies. In 2023, Friends received a National Fish & Wildlife Foundation Coastal Resilience Fund[4] grant of $630,000 to expand this project to the entire 156 mile system.

In 2013, Friends and Openlands released “Our Liquid Asset: The Economic Benefits of a Clean Chicago River,[5]” an economic analysis which found that for every $1 spent on clean water infrastructure and public open space there is a $1.70 return on investment from individual income, taxes, corporate revenue, and jobs.

In 2017, Friends and Cook County Commissioner Josina Morita (13th District), then a Metropolitan Water Reclamation District Commissioner, hosted the inaugural Big Jump to demonstrate the health and future for swimming in the Chicago-Calumet River system. First-year jumpers from all levels of government include U.S. congresswoman Jan Schakowsky (IL-9), U.S. congressman Mike Quigley (IL-5), Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle and Friends' Executive Director Margaret Frisbie.

In 2021, Friends received the Dr. George B. Rabb Force of Nature Award for successfully reconnecting the Mill Creek to the Cal-Sag Channel. This project resulted in the immediate colonization of the high quality creek by five new species and helped to restore the adjacent land through invasive plant removal and addition of new native shrubs and trees. The project partners were Friends, the Forest Preserves of Cook County (FPCC), the Illinois Department of Natural Resources (IDNR), and the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago.[6]

Friends of the Chicago River and the Forest Preserves of Cook County have worked together on countless restoration projects including at Beaubien Woods, Blue Star Woods, Chipilly Woods, Crooked Creek, Kickapoo Woods, McClaughrey Springs Woods, Skokie Lagoons, Somme Woods, Wampum Lake, Watersmeet Woods, and Whistler Woods among others and included the specific investment in the nesting success of turtle, osprey, and bat species. Rehabilitation activities for turtle habitats began in 2014 and resulted in an astonishing result of an increase from zero to 60% in nesting success.[7]

Friends of the Chicago River also documents the impact of its restoration work with annual Natural Areas Assessment Surveys[8] that have shown continued improvement of the native plant community in the places where Friends has worked.

In 2023 Friends of the Chicago River received a Chicago Innovation[9] award as a climate champion for the Natural Solutions Tool they developed through the Greater Chicago Watershed Alliance in partnership with the Trust for Public Land. The Tool also won a 2023 Dr. George B. Rabb Force of Nature Award from the Chicago Wilderness Alliance. Friends has received over 50 awards since its founding in 1979.

Public policy and planning

Other select programs

References

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