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Quinn, Blunt add voices to concerns about river

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Blunt, a Republican, said the reduction creates a "navigation issue" for the Mississippi River. He said in a statement to The Associated Press on Thursday that he has reached out to other senators from states along the rivers, "and ultimately I want to ensure the Army Corps has the ability to meet the needs of the whole system."

Throughout much of the Midwest, the soil is bone-dry because of the worst drought in decades, which climatologists expect to continue into 2013. The weekly U.S. Drought Monitor map released Thursday showed that roughly 59 percent of the land in the lower 48 states was experiencing some degree of drought, down only about a half of a percentage point from the previous week.

Barge industry trade groups also have urged the corps to keep the water flowing. Barges carry 20 percent of the country's coal and more than 60 percent of its grain exports. Other cargo — such as petroleum products, lumber, sand, industrial chemicals and fertilizer — also gets shipped along the Mississippi River.

Currently, the Mississippi's level is so low that barges are required to carry lighter loads, which costs more per ton to move cargo but reduces the chance of running aground.

One estimate put barge industry losses at $1 billion the last time the Mississippi was this low, roughly a quarter century ago.

Mike Petersen in the Army Corps' St. Louis office said efforts have been under way for months to avoid a Mississippi River shutdown. Dredging operations that normally begin in August started in July.

The corps also plans to use explosives to blast away treacherous rock formations at the bottom of the river near two southern Illinois towns, Thebes and Grand Tower, though that won't begin until February.

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