S-2878-119
Became Public Law No: 119-67.
Sponsored by Gary Peters (D-MI)
What it does
This law reauthorizes, through fiscal year 2030, research and monitoring activities conducted by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) in support of fisheries shared between the United States and Canada within the Great Lakes Basin. The work is carried out through the Great Lakes Science Center and may include invasive species science, studies of fishery resources, and the use of biological assessment tools to inform fishery management decisions.
Who benefits
Commercial and recreational fishing industries operating in the Great Lakes region, who rely on science-based fishery management to sustain fish populations. Tribal nations with treaty-protected fishing rights in the Great Lakes Basin. State and federal fishery managers who use USGS data to set catch limits and conservation policies. Canadian fishery authorities and binational management bodies. Coastal communities in the eight Great Lakes states whose local economies depend on fishing and tourism. Researchers and scientists at the Great Lakes Science Center whose programs are funded.
Who is hurt
Taxpayers bear the cost of continued federal appropriations, though the specific dollar amount is not specified in the bill text. Competing federal science programs that may face budget trade-offs if appropriations are constrained. Invasive species already established in the basin — such as sea lamprey and Asian carp — are the target of management actions enabled by this research, though this is an ecological rather than human impact.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the Great Lakes represent the largest freshwater system in the world, supporting a $7 billion annual fishing industry and providing drinking water to roughly 30 million people in the U.S. and Canada. They contend that continuous, long-term USGS monitoring is essential for detecting invasive species early and managing shared fish stocks sustainably, and that allowing the authorization to lapse would disrupt ongoing data collection that fishery managers depend on for annual decisions.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that routine reauthorizations like this one should be subject to rigorous cost-benefit review rather than automatic renewal, and that the bill does not include performance benchmarks or accountability measures to ensure the research produces actionable management outcomes. They contend that some of these functions could be consolidated with existing state, tribal, or Canadian monitoring programs to reduce duplication and federal expenditure without sacrificing scientific quality.