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Research Articles

SOCIO-ECONOMIC IMPACTS OF THE GREAT LAKES RESTORATION INITIATIVE

Pages 268-284 | Published online: 17 Nov 2021
 

ABSTRACT

Interviews illuminate impacts of the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative (GLRI), a United States’ federal program designed to improve the Great Lakes by restoring the region’s most polluted harbors and coastal landscapes. To see how GLRI funds caused changes in the built environment and to attitudes toward place, semi-structured interviews were conducted with private- and public-sector leaders. Case studies are four EPA-designated Areas of Concern receiving substantial GLRI funds in Buffalo, New York; Duluth-Superior, Minnesota and Wisconsin; Muskegon, Michigan, and Sheboygan, Wisconsin. Results show that GLRI serves as a catalyst in three principal ways: The program leveraged local and state funds, both private and public. GLRI also leads to greater socio-spatial consciousness regarding rehabilitated places. Also, GLRI had led to stronger and deeper senses of place. This study reveals interviews help to calculate a more holistic return on investment for a prominent federal program. This study offers a way forward for ecosystem services research to take a more holistic view than has traditionally been done, in that semi-structured interviews illuminate impacts that traditional economic modeling alone cannot. Concurrently, this research is an example of how a prominent federal program affects community perceptions integral to holistic coastal planning processes.

Acknowledgments

The authors want to thank interviewees for their time and thoughts. David Kaplan and three anonymous reviewers provided constructive comments. The authors wish to thank Gabriel Ehrlich and Mike McWilliams at University of Michigan Research Seminar in Quantitative Economics for their collaboration on drafting interview questions to inform assumptions used in their economic modeling of the return on investment in the GLRI program. Great Lakes Commission staff, especially Matt Doss, provided collaboration, including review of this manuscript. This article is contribution number 158 of the Central Michigan University Institute for Great Lakes Research.

Disclosure Statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Additional information

Funding

The Charles Stewart Mott Foundation and the Great Lakes Commission provided financial support for this project, routed through University of Michigan subcontract 3004623083.

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