Gov. Pat Quinn announced today that Illinois will contribute $10 million to help make stretches of the Chicago River system safer for recreation, the latest step in a decades-long effort to improve waterways that were turned into sewage canals more than a century ago.
The taxpayer-funded contribution from the state’s capital fund will cover about half the design costs for equipment that would kill disease-causing bacteria in treated sewage pumped into the North Shore Channel and Little Calumet River. Depending on the time of year, between 60 percent and 100 percent of the water in the channels comes from massive plants that treat human and industrial waste water for Chicago and the Cook County suburbs.
Quinn announced the state’s contribution to the project at a Goose Island news conference today with Mayor Rahm Emanuel and Lisa Jackson, administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
The entire project is expected to cost $139 million, about seven times less than the $1 billion that officials at the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District once said it would require. Officials now say they can pay for the project without a tax increase.