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Urban Aquaculture Center offers cutting-edge fish production
Jon Bales (left) and Leon Todd "man" a booth for their proposed Urban Aquaculture Center.  
By Molly Snyder Edler RSS Feed
OnMilwaukee.com Staff Writer

E-mail author | Author bio
More articles by Molly Snyder Edler

Published April 2, 2008 at 12:16 a.m.
Tags: urban aquaculture center, leon todd, jon bales, urban fishing, fishing


If things look a little greener around here this April, there's a good reason. Our editorial staff is busy expanding the ideals of Earth Day into a month-long celebration of energy conservation, alternative transportation, recycling tips and about a million ways you can be a better friend to the planet. Welcome to Green Month, Milwaukee.

Within 10 years, the fishing industry will find it necessary to modify practices because long term mass capture of fish resulted in a shortage of schools and many that are plagued with toxic pollutants like mercury and PCBs. The outlook sounds grim – especially for a city filled with fish fry lovers – but Jon Bales and Leon Todd have a solution for Milwaukee.

They proposed an Urban Aquaculture Center (UAC), a large-scale production and educational facility, to serve as an "urban fish farm." The center would provide a solution to many of the environmental problems associated with unsustainable current fishing practices.

The proposed UAC includes a 150,000-sq. ft. indoor aquaculture / agriculture facility with an attached greenhouse located on five acres of redeveloped land, ideally along the Hank Aaron Trail and Menomonee River or a large, unused factory site.

Also, the center would feature classrooms for school groups, free demonstration to the public, a "lazy river" boat ride that floats through sustainable urban farming exhibits, restaurant, gift shop and fish market.

"My vision for the Urban Aquaculture Center is to develop a fish production-oriented center in a pleasant setting in Milwaukee to demonstrate that aquaculture is a viable and sustainable farming enterprise in a green urban environment," says Bales.

The production facility will utilize a recirculating aquaculture system treats the water with clarifiers, filters or trays of edible plants, and then the fish reuse it. According to Todd and Bayles, this system produces many more fish that those grown in rural ponds.

"It's all about growing good protein, free of environmental contaminants, in a recirculating system which doesn't pollute," says Todd.

Bales was raised in Milwaukee, attended Bay View High School and graduated from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee (UWM) with a degree in botany. He served with the U.S. Navy as a flight instructor and carrier pilot in the Mediterranean Sea. During the '90s, he was appointed Commissioner for the Housing Authority in Milwaukee. He recently sold his coffee plantation and trout farm in Costa Rica, and now wants to promote fish farming to the people of Milwaukee.

Todd received an MBA from UWM School of Business Administration and a BA in Latin & Greek Classic Studies at Northwestern Lutheran College. In 1975, Leon was elected to the MPS Board of School Directors, held a city-wide seat and served until 1981. He was a candidate for state superintendent in 1977 and was re-elected to a MPS district seat in 1994 and again in 1995.

The Urban Aquaculture Center is Todd's next venue for expressing his vision for education and employment development. "This is a new paradigm in thinking 'outside of the bun' to replace the manufacturing jobs lost over the last three decades in Milwaukee," he says.

The UAC concept is a national prototype and, if created, would give Milwaukee the opportunity to be on the cutting edge of urban aquaculture. The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations recently stated: "Aquaculture, probably the fastest growing food producing sector, now accounts for almost 50 percent of the world's food fish and is perceived as having the greatest potential to meet the growing demand for aquatic food."

"Many local organizations are working tirelessly to bring the local food movement into the city with new urban ideas, encouraging future generations to get back to the land and grow and eat close to home, rather than importing from places far off," says Bales. "The Urban Aquaculture Center is hoping to bring Milwaukee into the 21st century in terms of fish production and to provide an innovative solution to several environmental problems involved with fish."

The UAC partners with Growing Power, the Great Lakes WATER Institute and other public and private organizations. For more information about the UAC, please visit their Web site.



More Information ...
Jon Bales and Leon Todd will attend the Green Living Festival at the Mitchell Park Conservatory ("The Domes") on Saturday, April 5, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. They will have a UAC booth inside the Show Dome.

Related links:

6 comments about this article.
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Recent Talkbacks ...
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digsisle This is a great addition to Milwaukee and I believe it will become more popular. ...
wfbdoglover Thanks for posting about this - I've never heard about it. Sounds fun and interesting. ...
micahr2001 Are they actually promoting this idea (which I think is wonderful) with a poster ...
Observer The really cool thing about a Menomonee River fish farm is that you could corner ...
megster37 So what needs to be done to make this happen? I'm excited about "Green Month," ...


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