Water levels remain high along the Lake Ontario shoreline, and so do the concerns of people in Olcott.

Neighbors, business and land owners from multiple lakeshore communities are trying to get ahead of those concerns by forming the Lake Ontario-St. Lawrence River Alliance. Their main goal is to repeal Plan 2014.

Homeowners on both the American and Canadian side blame the water management plan for the loss of homes, land and millions of dollars of damage because it allows the lake to have greater highs.

Organizers say with more intense storms this spring, it allowed for flooding.

Alliance leaders hope to gain membership and sue the International Joint Commission (IJC) for instituting the plan. They also want a seat at the table for homeowners.

"Twenty-five thousand homeowners around Lake Ontario and you actually hold their stability, their safety, their future in your hands,” said Sarah Delicate, the President of United Shoreline Ontario. “These are seniors, these are people with disabilities, these are young families... These are people that have everything they own invested in these homes, and they are watching it wash away because they wanted this plan that wanted higher highs."

The group plans to sue the IJC, Army Corp of Engineers and anyone else who voted for the plan. They are traveling to other lake shore communities to rally more people, including Oswego next week.

Spectrum News has reached out to the IJC for comment.