Appendix B
Interview Questions: Improving the Economy, Environment
and Quality of Life in the Calumet Region1. What are you trying to accomplish in the Calumet region? 2. For what you are trying to accomplish, how do you define the boundaries of the Calumet region? 3. What is your personal action plan for what you are trying to accomplish? (i.e., who do you want to engage on what issue with what end result?) 4. What are the key skills and assets you bring to this purpose? (So that I can map assets in the Calumet region) 5. Who else belongs in the map of people seriously committed to action to improve the economic, ecological, and social health of the Calumet region? Why? 6. What ideas or strategies are circulating for an alternative vision for a healthy Calumet region or parts of it? 7. What progress has been made in the past five years to improve the health of the Calumet region? 8. What are people doing in the region now which you feel is working and why? 9. What are they doing which you feel is not working and why? 10. What do you think are the best opportunities to improve the economic, environmental or social health of the region? 11. How well prepared are people who are working in the region to take advantage of these opportunities? 12. What do you think are the biggest barriers standing in the way of improving the health of the region? 13. What do you think are the best strategies for dealing with these barriers? 14. What big challenges are you facing in your work in the region? What would be of most help to you in dealing with these challenges? 15. Are there things you feel you could accomplish working with other people in the region which you have not been able to do so far? (Are there people with whom you have wanted to collaborate, but could not? Is there knowledge about the region you wou ld like to have, but can't find?) 16. What are the actual or perceived conflicting interests among community groups, developers, environmental groups, existing businesses, and local governments in the Calumet region? 17. Do you think there are terms under which it might be possible to align -- or at least link -- all of these interests? Is there any purpose to which they would all agree? 18. Is there leadership to bring these diverse interests together? 19. Has anyone tried to convene local actors in a productive way? What happened? 20. What advantages could an organized network of people trying to improve the health of the Calumet region offer you that would make it worthwhile to participate? 21. What roles could Governors State University productively play in the Calumet region?
1 How each of the 20 people interviewed for this project defines the region is described in Appendix A to this report. 2 Lee Botts, Bi-State Coordination and Competition on the Southern Shore of Lake Michigan, A Background Paper for the Illinois/Indian Sea Grant Workshop on Sustainable Coastal Development for Southern Lake Michigan, Chicago, Illinois, September 9, 1996. 3 Lake Calumet Study Committee, The Future of Southeast Chicago and Surrounding Area: The "One Plan" That Actually Exists., Revised 7/95. 4 Frank Cassell, Professor Emritus, Kellogg Graduate School of Management, Enviornmental Cleanup and Community Revitalization: Economic and Financial Strategies, Prepared for the Northeast-Midwest Congressional Coalition Field Hearing on Reusing Old Ind ustrial Property in Chicago, Illinois on January 29, 1993. 5 Lee Botts, Bi-State Coordination and Competition on the Southern Shore of Lake Michigan, A Background Paper for the Illinois/Indian Sea Grant Workshop on Sustainable Coastal Development for Southern Lake Michigan, Chicago, Illinois, September 9, 1996 . 6 Lee Botts, Bi-State Coordination and Competition on the Southern Shore of Lake Michigan, A Background Paper for the Illinois/Indian Sea Grant Workshop on Sustainable Coastal Development for Southern Lake Michigan, Chicago, Illinois, September 9, 1996 . 7 Indiana Department of Workforce Development. Labor Market Information Reports 1980-1990. 8 Bill Eyring, Center for Neighborhood Technology, Industry's Polluted Legacy: the Calumet Region, The Neighborhood Works, October/November 1993. 9 David Young, A Label of Growth: Made in Chicago, Chicago Tribune, front page, Thursday, October 24, 1996. 10 Southeast Chicago Development Commission With Support form the Calumet Area Industrial Commission, The Calumet Industrial Corridor Strategic Plan, 1996. 11 Center for Urban Economic Development, The University of Illinois at Chicago, Economic Audit of Chicago: An Identification of Target Industries, July 1989. 12 Crescent Corridor: City Innovation Reports on Resources for Region Building, Spring 1996, p. 4. 13 Corridors of Industrial Opportunity: A Plan for Industry in Chicago's South Side, Department of Planning and Development, March 1995 14 City Innovation, Summer Quarter Report on Crscent Corridor's Community-Business-Environment Assets, August 30, 1995. 15 Olive Harvey College in Partnership with a Consortium of Community Based Organizations, Chicago Far South Side Economic Environment Scan, 1993. 16 Olive Harvey College in Partnership with a Consortium of Community Based Organizations, Chicago Far South Side Economic Environment Scan, 1993. 17 Olive Harvey College in Partnership with a Consortium of Community Based Organizations, Chicago Far South Side Economic Environment Scan, 1993. 18 Southeast Chicago Development Commission With Support form the Calumet Area Industrial Commission, The Calumet Industrial Corridor Strategic Plan, 1996. 19 Crescent Corridor: City Innovation Reports on Resources for Region Building, Spring 1996, p. 4. 20 Corridors of Industrial Opportunity: A Plan for Industry in Chicago's South Side, Department of Planning and Development, March 1995 21 Corridors of Industrial Opportunity: A Plan for Industry in Chicago's South Side, Department of Planning and Development, March 1995 22 Corridors of Industrial Opportunity: A Plan for Industry in Chicago's South Side, Department of Planning and Development, March 1995 23 Corridors of Industrial Opportunity: A Plan for Industry in Chicago's South Side, Department of Planning and Development, March 1995 24 Corridors of Industrial Opportunity: A Plan for Industry in Chicago's South Side, Department of Planning and Development, March 1995 25 Corridors of Industrial Opportunity: A Plan for Industry in Chicago's South Side, Department of Planning and Development, March 1995 26 Corridors of Industrial Opportunity: A Plan for Industry in Chicago's South Side, Department of Planning and Development, March 1995 27 Center for Urban Economic Development, The University of Illinois at Chicago, Economic Audit of Chicago: An Identification of Target Industries, July 1989. 28 Center for Neighborhood Technology, Beyond Recycling: Materials Reprocessing in Chicago's Economy, 1993. 29 Frank Cassell, Professor Emeritus, Kellogg Graduate School of Management, Environmental Cleanup and Community Revitalization: Economic and Financial Strategies, Prepared for the Northeast-Midwest Congressional Coalition Field Hearing on Reusing Old I ndustrial Property in Chicago, Illinois on January 29, 1993. 30 Conversation with Scott Bernstein, CNT. 31 Crescent Corridor: City Innovation Reports on Resources for Region Building, Spring 1996, p. 4. 32 City Innovation, Summer Quarter Report on Crscent Corridor's Community-Busienss-Environment Assets, August 30, 1995. 33 Comments of Juanita Charlton, Chicago Department of Planning and Development, January 24, 1997. 34 TAMS, Report on the Proposed Lake Calumet Airport III. Comparative Asseessment of Existing Infrastructure Systems and Networks. 35 Metropolitan Planning Council, Market-Based Transportation Solution Project, Fact Sheet #2, February 1995. 36 Bill Eyring, Center for Neighborhood Technology, Industry's Polluted Legacy: the Calumet Region, The Neighborhood Works, October/November 1993. 37 Southeast Chicago Development Commission With Support form the Calumet Area Industrial Commission, The Calumet Industrial Corridor Strategic Plan, 1996. 38 Frank Cassell, Professor Emritus, Kellogg Graduate School of Management, Enviornmental Cleanup and Community Revitalization: Economic and Financial Strategies, Prepared for the Northeast-Midwest Congressional Coalition Field Hearing on Reusing Old Indu strial Property in Chicago, Illinois on January 29, 1993. 39 Southeast Chicago Development Commission With Support form the Calumet Area Industrial Commission, The Calumet Industrial Corridor Strategic Plan, 1996. 40 Lee Botts, Bi-State Coordination and Competition on the Southern Shore of Lake Michigan, A Background Paper for the Illinois/Indian Sea Grant Workshop on Sustainable Coastal Development for Southern Lake Michigan, Chicago, Illinois, September 9, 199 6. 41 Lee Botts, Bi-State Coordination and Competition on the Southern Shore of Lake Michigan, A Background Paper for the Illinois/Indian Sea Grant Workshop on Sustainable Coastal Development for Southern Lake Michigan, Chicago, Illinois, September 9, 199 6. 42 Employment Research & Development Institute, A Position of Strength: A Briefing on Chicago's Calumet Economic Corridor, November 7, 1995. 43 Employment Research & Development Institute, A Position of Strength: A Briefing on Chicago's Calumet Economic Corridor, November 7, 1995. 44 Calumet Airport Feasibility Study, Chapter II, page II-7. 45 Southeast Chicago Development Commission With Support form the Calumet Area Industrial Commission, The Calumet Industrial Corridor Strategic Plan, 1996. 46 City of Chicago, Building on the Basics: The Final report of the Mayor's Task Force on Steel and Southeast Chicago, p.15. 47 Southeast Chicago Development Commission With Support form the Calumet Area Industrial Commission, The Calumet Industrial Corridor Strategic Plan, 1996. 48 Cara Jepsen, Retooling South Works, The Neighborhood Works, February/March 1995, p. 17. 49 Calumet Airport Feasibility Study, Chapter II, page II-18. 50 Calumet Airport Feasibility Study, Chapter IX, page IX-2. 51 Illinois Department of Energy and Natural Resources, Pollutant Transport to Lake Calumet and Adjacent Wetlands and Surrounding Overview of Regional Hydrology, Harzardous Waste Research and Inspection Commission, RR-50, Sept. 1990. 52 Calumet Airport Feasibility Study, Chapter IX, Environmental Mitigation, page, IX-1. 53 Bill Eyring, Center for Neighborhood Technology, Industry's Polluted Legacy: the Calumet Region, The Neighborhood Works, October/November 1993. 54 According to Craig Colten, Illinois State Museum in David Moberg, Environmental Liability: WHo Bears the Cost of Contaminated Sites? The Neighborhood Works, June/July 1993, p. 17. 55 Employment Research & Development Institute, A Position of Strength: A Briefing on Chicago's Calumet Economic Corridor, November 7, 1995. 56PAHLS Inc., The Environment of Northwest Indiana: Contrasts and Dilemmas, Valparaiso, Indiana, 1993. 57 Employment Research & Development Institute, A Position of Strength: A Briefing on Chicago's Calumet Economic Corridor, November 7, 1995. 58 The Energy Resources Center, University of Illinois at Chicago, Energy in the Urban Environment: Proceedings of the Twenty-Second Annual Illinois Energy Conference, November 16-17, 1994, p.58. 59 Charles Bartsch and Richard Munson, Restoring Contaminated Industrial Sites, Issues in Science and Technology, Spring 1994. 60 Strategic Plan for Land Resource Management, Northeastern Illinois Planning Commission, June 18, 1982. 61 Donald Haider, The Chicago Region: 2010, An Agenda for Growth of the Chicago Region, The Urban land Institute Chicago District Council, February 1994. 62 Daniel McGrath, Great Cities Institute, Summary of Findings: An Investigation into the Impact of Hazardous Waste Contamination Liability on Urban Industrial Land Development in the City of Chicago, October 1996. 63 Federation for Industrial Retention & Renewal News, Brownfields, Southeast Chicago: Community Groups Tackle Brownfield Redevelopment, Winter 1996, Vol 8/No. 2. 64 Federation for Industrial Retention & Renewal News, Brownfields, Southeast Chicago: Community Groups Tackle Brownfield Redevelopment, Winter 1996, Vol 8/No. 2. 65 Federation for Industrial Retention & Renewal News, Brownfields, Southeast Chicago: Community Groups Tackle Brownfield Redevelopment, Winter 1996, Vol 8/No. 2. 66 City of Chicago, Brownfields Forum: Recycling Land For Chicago's Future, Final Report and Action Plan, November 1995. 67 City of Chicago, Brownfields Forum: Recycling Land For Chicago's Future, Final Report and Action Plan, November 1995. 68 City of Chicago, Brownfields Forum: Recycling Land For Chicago's Future, Final Report and Action Plan, November 1995. 69 City of Chicago, Brownfields Forum: Recycling Land For Chicago's Future, Final Report and Action Plan, November 1995. 70 Grand Calumet Task Force, Grand Cal Currents: Newsletter of the Grand Calumet task Force, Summer/Fall 1996. 71 Crescent Corridor: City Innovation Reports on Resources for Region Building, Spring 1996, p. 4. 72 Federation for Industrial Retention & Renewal News, Brownfields,Brownfields Redevelopment Project Chooses Pilot Sites in NW Indiana, Winter 1996, Vol 8/No. 2. 73 City of Chicago, Brownfields Forum: Recycling Land For Chicago's Future, Final Report and Action Plan, November 1995. 74 PAHLS Inc., The Environment of Northwest Indiana: Contrasts and Dilemmas, Valparaiso, Indiana, 1993. 75 Uniform Statistical Report -- Year Ended December 31, 1994 for NIPSCO Industries, Inc. 76 Uniform Statistical Report -- Year Ended December 31, 1994 for Commonwealth Edison Company Consolidated. 77 Uniform Statistical Report -- Year Ended December 31, 1994 for Commonwealth Edison Company Consolidated. 78 Walter R. Stahel, Chapter 4, The Product-Life Factor, p. 72. 79 Center for Policy Alternatives, Energywise Options, Chapter II, p. 88. 80 Walter R. Stahel, Chapter 4, The Product-Life Factor, p. 72. 81 Athanasios Bournakis and James Harnett, Energy Issues for theGreat Lakes Economy, The Great Lakes Economy Looking North and South, Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago and the Great Lakes Commission, April 1991. 82 William Testa and Donald Hanson, Urban Ozone Regulations, Chicago Fed Letter, July 1993, Number 71. 83PAHLS Inc., The Environment of Northwest Indiana: Contrasts and Dilemmas, Valparaiso, Indiana, 1993. 84 National Consumer Law Center, "Energy and the Poor: The Crisis Continues," 1995. 85 U.S. EPA, GLNPO, A Report to Congress on the Great Lakes Ecosystem, February 1994, 905-R-94-004. 86 DRI/McGraw Hill, The Great Lakes Water Quality Initiative: Cost Effective Measures for Ehnanced Environmental Quality and Regional Competitiveness, September 1993, Prepared for Council of Great Lakes Governors, Chicago, p. ES7. 87 DRI/McGraw Hill, The Great Lakes Water Quality Initiative: Cost Effective Measures for Ehnanced Environmental Quality and Regional Competitiveness, September 1993, Prepared for Council of Great Lakes Governors, Chicago, p. ES7. 88 DRI/McGraw Hill, The Great Lakes Water Quality Initiative: Cost Effective Measures for Ehnanced Environmental Quality and Regional Competitiveness, September 1993, Prepared for Council of Great Lakes Governors, Chicago, p. ES7. 89 Environment Canada, U.S. Enivronmental Protection Agency,, State of the Lakes Ecosystem Conference, Human Health Effects, October 1994, pp 21-22. 90 Grand Calumet Task Force, Grand Cal Currents: Newsletter of the Grand Calumet task Force, Summer/Fall 1996. 91 The Changing Illinois Environment: Critical Trends, A Joint Publication of the Illinois Departiment of energy and Natural Resources and the Nature of Illinois Foundation, 1994, p. 15. 92 Areas of Concern are defined in the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement as geographic areas that fail to meet the objectives of the agreement because they are impaired. There are ten Areas of Concern on the Lake Michigan shoreline and two in our regi on, Waukegan Harbor and Grand Calumet. 93 U.S. EPA Revised Draft Lake Michigan Lakewide Management Plan for Toxic Pollutants, September 30, 1993. 94 U.S. EPA, GLNPO, A Report to Congress on The Great Lakes Ecosystem, Feburary 1994, 905-R-94-004. 95 Navigational dredging has been delayed for years because of issues surrounding disposal of dredged sediments. Confined disposal facilities at Chicago (in-lake, 42 hectares, 99,850M3) and Michigan City (upland, 3.3 hectares, 19,113m3), large diked are as at water level to contain dredged sediments) are full. 96 Grand Calumet Task Force, Grand Cal Currents: Newsletter of the Grand Calumet task Force, Summer/Fall 1996. 97 U.S. EPA Revised Draft Lake Michigan Lakewide Management Plan for Toxic Pollutants, September 30, 1993. 98 DRI/McGraw Hill, The Great Lakes Water Quality Initiative: Cost Effective Measures for Ehnanced Environmental Quality and Regional Competitiveness, September 1993, Prepared for Council of Great Lakes Governors, Chicago, p. Appendix B, B-9. 99 U.S. EPA Revised Draft Lake Michigan Lakewide Management Plan for Toxic Pollutants, September 30, 1993. 100 Gary Fowler, Final Report, Hazardous Substances Database for the Southeast Chicago Petitioned Public Health Assessment- Prepared for Community Health Branch, Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease registry Public Health Service, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Department of Geography and Chicago Geographic Information Study: University of Illinois at Chicago, p.2. 1993. 101 Information compiled in 1993 by Diavid Bridgers, research, from U.S. EPA CERCLIS records, for the National Commission on Superfund, Hazardous Ranking System Working Group, sited in Restoration: Reclaiming Former Industrial and Waste Disposal Sites in Southeast Chicago- A Status Report, December 1995, Chicago Legal Clinic, Inc. 102 Craig Colton, Industrial Wastes in the Calumet Area, 1869-1970: An Historical Geography, Illinois Department of Energy and Natural Resources: Champaign, IL 103 Frank Sennett, An Urban Refusal, The Neighborhood Works, October/November 1993, p9-13 104 Chicago Legal Clinic, Just Beneath the Surface: Groundwater and the Future of Southeast Chicago's Neighborhoods: A Status Report, November 1995. 108 Illinois Natural Areas Inventory Technical Report, 1978, and Illinois Natural Heritage Division, Illinois Department of Conservation, Known Occurances of Endangered/Threatened Species by County as of January 1993. 109PAHLS Inc., The Environment of Northwest Indiana: Contrasts and Dilemmas, Valparaiso, Indiana, 1993. 110PAHLS Inc., The Environment of Northwest Indiana: Contrasts and Dilemmas, Valparaiso, Indiana, 1993. 111 Environment Canada, U.S. Enivronmental Protection Agency,, State of the Lakes Ecosystem Conference, Aquatic Habitat and Wetlands of the Great Lakes, October 1994, p. 23. 112 The Nature Conservancy, The Conservation of Biological Diversity in the Great Lakes Ecosystem: Issues and Opportunities, January 1994. 113 Indiana University, NW, Restoration and Preservation of Great Lakes Coastal Ecosystems: A Conference, Gary, Indiana, May 19020, 1989. 114 The Nature Conservancy, The Conservation of Biological Diversity in the Great Lakes Ecosystem: Issues and Opportunities, January 1994. 115 The Nature Conservancy, The Conservation of Biological Diversity in the Great Lakes Ecosystem: Issues and Opportunities, January 1994. 116 Strategic Plan for Land Resource Management, Northeastern Illinois Planning Commission, June 18, 1982. 117PAHLS Inc., The Environment of Northwest Indiana: Contrasts and Dilemmas, Valparaiso, Indiana, 1993. 118 William Fitzpartrick, Potential Effects of the Lake Calumet Airport on Regional Water Resources, Proceedings of a Workshop, Building a Sustainable Future for the Southeast Side: Is an Airport the Answer?, May 15, 1991. 119 The Changing Illinois Environment: Critical Trends, A Joint Publication of the Illinois Department of Energy and Natural Resources and the Nature of Illinois Foundation, 1994, p. 15. 120 The Lake Calumet Airport Study, chapter II. Existing Conditions. 121 The Lake Calumet Airport Study, Chapter II, page II-29. 122 The Lake Calumet Airport Study, chapter II. Existing Conditions. 123 The Lake Calumet Airport Study, chapterIX. Environmental Mitigation. 124 Chicago Regional Biodiversity Council, Information Packet. 125 Nature Conservancy, Executive summary, 126 Sierra Club Great Lakes Program, Great lakes Critical Lands: Lake Michigan Basin Briefing Book. 127 The City Space plan, has passed the Cook County Board and Park District board, but not the City Council. 128 Southeast Chicago Development Commission With Support form the Calumet Area Industrial Commission, The Calumet Industrial Corridor Strategic Plan, 1996. 129 People are not counting on a positive report from the National Park Service on the ecological park. If the Park Service brings back a negative assessment, then proponents are likely to seek a strategic planning effort to identify practical moves to p rotect wetlands in Calumet region. 130 Crescent Corridor: City Innovation Reports on Resources for Region Building, Spring 1996, p. 4. 131 Bill Eyring, Center for Neighborhood Technology, Industry's Polluted Legacy: the Calumet Region, The Neighborhood Works, October/November 1993. 132 Olive Harvey College in Partnership with a Consortium of Community Based Organizations, Chicago Far South Side Economic Environment Scan, 1993. 133 Olive Harvey College in Partnership with a Consortium of Community Based Organizations, Chicago Far South Side Economic Environment Scan, 1993. 134 Olive Harvey College in Partnership with a Consortium of Community Based Organizations, Chicago Far South Side Economic Environment Scan, 1993. 135 Olive Harvey College in Partnership with a Consortium of Community Based Organizations, Chicago Far South Side Economic Environment Scan, 1993. 136PAHLS Inc., The Environment of Northwest Indiana: Contrasts and Dilemmas, Valparaiso, Indiana, 1993. 137 Donald Haider, The Chicago Region: 2010, An Agenda for Growth of the Chicago Region, The Urban land Institute Chicago District Council, February 1994. 138 Metropolitan Planning Council, Creating a Regional Community: The Case for Regional Cooperation, June 1995. 139 Federation for Industrial Retention & Renewal News, Brownfields,Brownfields Redevelopment Project Chooses Pilot Sites in NW Indiana, Winter 1996, Vol 8/No. 2. 140 Olive Harvey College in Partnership with a Consortium of Community Based Organizations, Chicago Far South Side Economic Environment Scan, 1993. 141 Olive Harvey College in Partnership with a Consortium of Community Based Organizations, Chicago Far South Side Economic Environment Scan, 1993. 142 Olive Harvey College in Partnership with a Consortium of Community Based Organizations, Chicago Far South Side Economic Environment Scan, 1993. 143 Olive Harvey College in Partnership with a Consortium of Community Based Organizations, Chicago Far South Side Economic Environment Scan, 1993. 144 Olive Harvey College in Partnership with a Consortium of Community Based Organizations, Chicago Far South Side Economic Environment Scan, 1993. 145 Olive Harvey College in Partnership with a Consortium of Community Based Organizations, Chicago Far South Side Economic Environment Scan, 1993. 146 Olive Harvey College in Partnership with a Consortium of Community Based Organizations, Chicago Far South Side Economic Environment Scan, 1993. 147 Olive Harvey College in Partnership with a Consortium of Community Based Organizations, Chicago Far South Side Economic Environment Scan, 1993. 148 Olive Harvey College in Partnership with a Consortium of Community Based Organizations, Chicago Far South Side Economic Environment Scan, 1993. 149 Olive Harvey College in Partnership with a Consortium of Community Based Organizations, Chicago Far South Side Economic Environment Scan, 1993. 150 MCIC 1990 Metro Survey Report 1 151 Southeast Chicago Development Commission With Support form the Calumet Area Industrial Commission, The Calumet Industrial Corridor Strategic Plan, 1996. 152 MCIC 1990 Metro Survey Report 1 153 Timothy H. Brown, Clean Sites, and Dr. Mark Reshkin, Indiana University Northwest, A Community View of the Northwest Indiana Environmental Initiative Action Plan: Report and Recommendations, June 1996. 154 Southeast Chicago Legal Clinic. 155 City of Chicago, Brownfields Forum: Recycling Land For Chicago's Future, Final Report and Action Plan, November 1995. 156 Southeast Chicago Development Commission With Support form the Calumet Area Industrial Commission, The Calumet Industrial Corridor Strategic Plan, 1996. 157 Olive Harvey College in Partnership with a Consortium of Community Based Organizations, Chicago Far South Side Economic Environment Scan, 1993. 158 Comments of Juanita Charlton, Chicago Department of Planning and Development, January 24, 1997. 159 City of Chicago, Brownfields Forum: Recycling Land For Chicago's Future, Final Report and Action Plan, November 1995. 160 Federation for Industrial Retention & Renewal News, Brownfields, Southeast Chicago: Community Groups Tackle Brownfield Redevelopment, Winter 1996, Vol 8/No. 2. 161 Olive Harvey College in Partnership with a Consortium of Community Based Organizations, Chicago Far South Side Economic Environment Scan, 1993. 162 Olive Harvey College in Partnership with a Consortium of Community Based Organizations, Chicago Far South Side Economic Environment Scan, 1993. 163 List of bi-state initiatives from Mark Reshkin, Indiana University Northwest. 164 Lee Botts, Bi-State Coordination and Competition on the Southern Shore of Lake Michigan, A Background Paper for the Illinois/Indian Sea Grant Workshop on Sustainable Coastal Development for Southern Lake Michigan, Chicago, Illinois, September 9, 19 96. 165 Timothy H. Brown, Clean Sites, and Dr. Mark Reshkin, Indiana University Northwest, A Community View of the Northwest Indiana Environmental Initiative Action Plan: Report and Recommendations, June 1996. 166 City of Chicago, Brownfields Forum: Recycling Land For Chicago's Future, Final Report and Action Plan, November 1995. 167 City of Chicago, Brownfields Forum: Recycling Land For Chicago's Future, Final Report and Action Plan, November 1995. 168 City of Chicago, Brownfields Forum: Recycling Land For Chicago's Future, Final Report and Action Plan, November 1995. Back to The Calumet Region - Table of Contents
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