This Is
Our Water.
This Is Our Fight.
Twenty-one percent of the world's fresh surface water sits in the Great Lakes Basin. Forty million people drink from it. Hundreds of species depend on it. The legal system that was supposed to protect it was written to protect the corporations threatening it instead. We are building the movement to change that.
What Is Rights of Nature—and Why Does It Change Everything?
Rights of Nature is a legal framework that recognizes ecosystems—rivers, lakes, forests, wetlands—as living systems with the right to exist, flourish, and be restored. Not as property to be managed. Not as resources to be extracted. As rights-bearing entities that can be represented and defended in a court of law.
Here is what matters for the Great Lakes Basin: we humans are not separate from nature. We are part of it. Rights of Nature legislation does not just protect the lakes in the abstract—it establishes that the communities who live within these ecosystems, who depend on this water, who breathe this air, hold rights that no corporate permit can override. It is both ecosystem rights and community rights, inseparable from each other.
In the Great Lakes Basin, this means the lakes, their tributaries, watersheds, and connecting channels would hold legal standing. When a corporation draws millions of gallons of Basin water, pumps diesel exhaust into the air our children breathe, and floods a rural community with 24-hour noise and light—a community can say no. Not delay it. Not challenge a permit. Say no.
The anchor legislation for the Basin is New York Assembly Bill A5156A, the Great Lakes and State Waters Bill of Rights, introduced by Assemblyman Patrick Burke. Our goal is to bring companion legislation to every Great Lakes Basin state.
Eight States. Two Strategies.
Five Basin states have citizen ballot initiative petition rights. Three do not. The strategy is different in each—but there is a path in every state. Find yours in the State Action Center.
States with Citizen Initiative Rights
States Without Initiative Rights
In initiative states, citizens can bypass the legislature entirely—collecting signatures to place Rights of Nature protections directly on the ballot for voters to decide. This is the fastest path to binding law when the legislature is captured by the same corporate money you are trying to stop.
In non-initiative states, the path runs through the legislature and through municipal organizing. Local Rights of Nature ordinances, city charter amendments, and direct pressure campaigns on state legislators are all active tools. New York is already moving at the state level. The full strategy for each state is in the State Action Center.
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