I think that's a pretty good summation. It wasn't one thing; there were many things.
The Cuyahoga River was on fire, if you can imagine that, in the late 1960s. There were lots of issues. That obviously was not phosphorous. At the same time, the fishing industry was dying, and the lake was deemed to be a dead lake. That was phosphorous. You're quite right that they solved many of the issues by removing the phosphorous as much as possible from the loadings that came from the waste water plants. The billions of dollars invested by the governments of the two countries, and the states, and the provinces, solved a lot of problems by cleaning that up, as did taking phosphorous out of the laundry products. Contrary to what was said by the manufacturers of Rinso and Tide and all those at the time, that we would all have grey shirts, well, some white shirts continued after that.
So it did work, but now it's a different kind of issue. It is mostly agricultural runoff. But there are problems. For instance, there's what the dog does on the front lawn of the home in Toledo, or in Fort Wayne, Indiana. It just washes down into the gutter, goes from there into a sewer, ultimately goes into the river, untreated, and then is in Lake Erie. Those are problems.
There's the concentrating that we now have of the feedlots, and perhaps even the ethanol production where corn requires a different form of fertilizer, a lot more fertilizer, and they run it right up to the edge of the river, with no buffering or anything of that sort. That's creating a great deal of problem.
Something has happened in the past 10 years on the rivers I've identified, rivers like the Maumee and the Sandusky. Something has happened. It was all right 10 or 12 years ago, but not now. What has happened? Something has come in.
Ethanol is probably a good thing to point at, and feedlots that are much more aggressive. As well, there's the continuing, of course, of putting fertilizer onto the frozen ground, where it doesn't sink in. It washes off into the creeks, into the drainage system, into the river, to the point where when you look at the end of the Maumee River, it has created that huge bloom of algae. The only way to stop it is to try to curb those efforts—not necessarily to stop putting the manure on the ground but to stop doing it when the ground is frozen. That's not an easy task. Farmers will give quite a story on that.