At the Alliance for the Great Lakes Board of Directors meeting held on November 7, the board welcomed two new directors, re-elected a current director for a second term, and said farewell to two long-time directors. Additionally, the board elected several new officers and board chair Sue Conatser appointed a new Executive Committee member.

“Thank you to our current and past board members for their enthusiasm for our work and strong commitment to protect safe and clean water across the Great Lakes region,” said Joel Brammeier, President and CEO. “Without their leadership and guidance, our achievements would not be possible. I thank our Board of Directors for their time, counsel, and dedication to the Alliance and to the Great Lakes.”

Director Transitions, New Members Elected and Two Long-time Members Depart

The Alliance for the Great Lakes Board of Directors elected Laura Payne and Bill Henry to the board for a three-year term.

Laura Payne (Chicago, IL) is a Director in the Client and Partner Group at Citadel and has spent her entireLaura Payne career working in alternative investments in Chicago. Previously, Laura served as Vice President at Goldman Sachs, where she was responsible for managing the capital introductions and prime brokerage efforts in the central region. She began her professional career as an institutional investor at The University of Chicago Investment Office, followed by Glenwood Capital and The Pritzker Group. Ms. Payne received a master’s degree from The University of Chicago Booth School of Business and both a master’s and bachelor’s degree from Marquette University. Laura and her family have lived in Hyde Park for the past seventeen years and she has volunteered for a number of local groups, including serving on the Museum of Science and Industry’s President’s Council and Hyde Park School of Dance Advisory Committee. A passionate conservationist, Laura is hoping to raise awareness of core Alliance for the Great Lakes issues like water equity in Chicago.

Bill Henry (Lisle, IL) is principal at Amensal Systems, a provider of engineering and technical services to the food industry. Previously, Bill was COO and CFO of Affy Tapple for over 15 years where he successfully introduced many improvements in financial systems, factory automation and food safety, including a breakthrough probiotic treatment to enhance food safety without refrigeration. Before that, Bill was VP Finance for the US operations of CKD Corporation and the Colorado unit of PG&E. Bill has also served on the boards of directors for Signa Group, CKD Createc, and Bear Creek Water in Colorado. Bill is an avid if unaccomplished golfer and loves to zone out on long rides on his hybrid bike. He is a member of the International Association of Food Safety and the American Association for the Advancement of Science. He received a bachelor of science degree in systems engineering from the University of Illinois at Chicago and a master’s in finance and economics from the University of Chicago. Bill grew up in Chicago and spent his summers in Lake Michigan at a family getaway. His children, and their children, have become part of a multigenerational bond to this magnificent body of water. Bill hopes his participation in and support of the Alliance will help protect the lakes from the many threats they face.

The board also re-elected current director Quentin James (Cleveland, OH) to a second three-year term and appreciates Quentin’s ongoing commitment to the Alliance’s work.

The Alliance’s Board of Directors said farewell to two directors, Buzz Patterson and Frank Washelesky, who have reached their term limits. Frank served as board Treasurer for five years, helping the Alliance increase the sophistication of its financial operations in keeping with the growth of the Alliance’s budget and program demands. Buzz Patterson previously served two three-year terms and was term-limited before returning to the board in 2014 after a break. Now term-limited again, we recognize Buzz’s commitment as a member of the Nominating Committee and leadership as Treasurer during his first two terms on the board. The Alliance’s Board of Directors expresses deep gratitude to Frank and Buzz for their service.

New Officers and Executive Committee Members Selected

The Board elected current board members Vanessa Tey Iosue as Vice Chair for Policy and Susan McDermott as Treasurer. Sue Conatser was re-elected as Board Chair. Additionally, Jo-Elle Mogerman was appointed to the Board’s Executive Committee. The Board thanks each of them for their willingness to assume critical leadership roles.

Visit the Alliance for the Great Lakes Board of Directors page for a full list of members.

The post Alliance for the Great Lakes Board of Directors Welcomes Two New Members appeared first on Alliance for the Great Lakes.

Original Article

News – Alliance for the Great Lakes

News – Alliance for the Great Lakes

https://greatlakes.org/2020/11/alliance-for-the-great-lakes-board-of-directors-welcomes-two-new-members/

Jennifer Caddick

Michigan’s Blackman Charter Township officials announced on November 17, 2020 that the water system is not in compliance with the Lead and Copper Rule.  This means homes can experience high lead levels in their water.  Because lead is a highly toxic metal, it is important to take steps to reduce lead if you live in the Blackman Charter Township Water Service Area.
 
Here are important steps to reducing lead at your tap: 1) flush water for 5 minutes before you first use water each day because water that sits in pipes for over 6 hours can leach lead from pipes and fixtures, 2) consider using a NSF 53 certified filter to remove lead, 3) only use cold water for drinking and cooking.  For more information on lead and water click here.
 
Although public officials recommend filters for people in areas that are out of compliance only for homes with children and pregnant women, there is no safe level of lead, so we encourage everyone to use a filter and follow maintenance schedules.

Original Article

Blog – Freshwater Future

Blog – Freshwater Future

https://freshwaterfuture.org/drinking-water/alert-blackman-charter-township-michigan-water-does-not-meet-drinking-water-standards/

Leslie Burk

Drinking Water News Roundup: Wisconsin sets caps for 22 contaminants, lead pipes more likely in POC communities

From lead pipes to PFAS, drinking water contamination is a major issue plaguing cities and towns all around the Great Lakes. Cleaning up contaminants and providing safe water to everyone is an ongoing public health struggle.

Keep up with drinking water-related developments in the Great Lakes area.

Click on the headline to read the full story:

Illinois:

  • People of Color in Illinois More Likely to Live in Communities with Lead Pipes – WBEZ.org Chicago NPR

Research has long shown that pollution often disproportionately affects low income — especially Black and brown — communities.

Read Now at Great Lakes Now.

Original Article

Great Lakes Now

Great Lakes Now

https://www.greatlakesnow.org/2020/11/drinking-water-wisconsin-contaminants-lead-pipes/

Grace Dempsey

What We Know

Since the 1940’s a number of products made to repel oil and water, as well as fire retardants, contain the man-made chemicals, perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS). Today, PFAS are found in nonstick cookware,  flame- and water-resistant clothing, food wrappers, plumber’s tape, stain prevention products, and even coatings on wires. Unfortunately, now we know PFAS are toxic, harmful to human health, and extremely persistent in the environment.

According to the US EPA, a “certain number of PFAS chemicals are no longer manufactured in the US.”  However, since they are still produced internationally many imported products such as textiles like carpet and leather, may contain PFAS. Dispersal into the environment is not limited to industrial applications: these compounds are also frequently used in heavy equipment fluids (e.g., agricultural and logging machinery) and are even employed in so-called “silent” sports like skiing (fluorocarbon-type waxes) and biking (chain and gear lubricants). Well water in these rural areas can be prone to PFAS contamination due to their use. 

What is Freshwater Future is doing?

Coronavirus and PFAS Testing UPDATE

Freshwater Future’s PFAS testing program operates out of the University of Michigan Biological Station. The University of Michigan has temporarily closed the Biological Station due to the coronavirus, and we are currently unable to analyze PFAS tests until the lab reopens. Any samples that have been collected and that cannot be processed in the required time frame will need to be replaced with a new sample. Freshwater Future will send a replacement kit to you once the lab reopens. Thank you for your patience during these unprecedented times.

Please contact ann@freshwaterfuture.org with any questions.

Freshwater Future, partnering with the University of Michigan Biological Station, wants to ensure that residents using private wells are able to have their water tested, and make decisions for their families. We are offering reliable and affordable PFAS testing.

We are not currently accepting new orders for test kits due to COVID-19 concerns. Future test kits will be available – TBA.

We apologize for the inconvenience. Questions? Contact info@freshwaterfuture.org

Need help collecting your sample? Watch this video for a step-by-step guide on how to properly use your test kit! For more information on Freshwater Futures new PFAS test kits click here.

Resources On PFAS

Keep up to date on PFAS policy with Freshwater Future’s PFAS Policy Tracker.

Fish Advisories for the State of Michigan:  “Do Not Eat” advisories on fish

Michigan Public Water Supply PFAS Testing Data: Testing locations and data.  State of Michigan is currently testing more than 1,400 sources of public water supplies across the state. This list is updated as additional water supplies tested.

Center for Disease Control report on health impacts from PFAS exposure: Center for Disease Control (CDC): A Broad Overview of PFAS and its Health Implications

Is your tap water above the EPA reporting level? Check: EWG’s Tap Water Database

Comparison Data – PFAS Regulations in Great Lakes States and Canada

In the News

Michigan warns of PFAS levels in deer near Air Force Base

PFAS Found in Plating Plant Plume near Grand Rapids

CDC Finds Health Standard for PFAS To Low 

News Report:  Lower PFAS Action Level Needed

Locating PFAS: An Interactive Map on Pollution Across America

Lawmakers Create PFAS Task Force in House 

Original Article

Blog – Freshwater Future

Blog – Freshwater Future

https://freshwaterfuture.org/uncategorized/pfas/

Alexis Smith

In a concise and informative new video released today, Wisconsin Sea Grant illuminates the varied coregonines, commonly known as cisco, which have pulsed through Great Lakes waters for 12,000 years. Now, due to human influences, the fork-tailed fish are diminished in number and range, and display less diverse forms. They are the subject of a research project by a team at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

“The ciscoes were some of the most numerous and populous fish in the Great Lakes,” said Ben Martin, Ph.D. student working with lead researcher Jake Vander Zanden who is the chair and director of the Center for Limnology. Martin noted ciscos’ importance as a food source for apex predators, both in the past and present-day.

To learn the future of the species, Vander Zanden is looking toward the past—exploring the fish found in dozens and dozens of jars that the video shows on rolling storage shelves housed at a zoology museum on the Madison campus.

“We go to these museum specimens. We take a tiny tissue sample. We take these chemical measurements, and we make these inferences about the diet and feeding of these species,” Vander Zanden said.

Jake Vander Zanden samples a museum specimen of a cisco to unlock details of the past Great Lakes food web. Photo by Bonnie Willison.

These fish that have been lifeless for 100 years will now breathe new life into an understanding of that past food web. Beyond analysis based on archived fish, samples from across the Great Lakes Basin, many from a collection at the University of Michigan in addition to the UW-Madison ones, Martin is assessing modern-day cisco morphometrics, that is, their physical diversity.  

Pairing both types of knowledge contributes to ecological restoration. Vander Zanden said there is interest in bringing back ciscoes that feed higher predators. “We want to maximize our understanding of the past and hopefully use that as a guide (for restoration) moving forward.”

Sea Grant Videographer Bonnie Willison said, “As Jake, Ben and collaborators altered their research agenda during the pandemic, I had to alter the way I shoot video. We did virtual interviews and distanced filming to pull this off.”

She continued, “I was very intrigued by the problem of studying fish that don’t exist in the lakes anymore. I’m happy to profile this important study that will shed light on how to make positive changes in the lakes as they exist now.”

Martin and Vander Zanden stressed the value of collaboration on this project and expressed appreciation for colleagues at the U.S. Geological Survey, Great Lakes Fisheries Commission, University of Wyoming and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

The post New video illuminates how ancestral and present-day ciscoes provide understanding of the Great Lakes food web first appeared on Wisconsin Sea Grant.

Original Article

News Releases – Wisconsin Sea Grant

News Releases – Wisconsin Sea Grant

https://www.seagrant.wisc.edu/news/new-video-illuminates-how-ancestral-and-present-day-ciscoes-provide-understanding-of-the-great-lakes-food-web/

Moira Harrington

According to Ontario’s Lake Simcoe Region Conservation Authority, proposed changes to the Conservation Authorities Act have the potential to put people and the environment at risk, removing conservation authorities’ ability to independently appeal decisions made around permits and municipal planning applications. Read the full story by Orillia Matters.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/2020120-province

Ken Gibbons

Three Chatham-Kent, Ontario, residents are among the 20 people whose stories are told in an online documentary photography exhibition that showcases deep personal connections with Lake Erie. Read the full story by The Chatham Daily News.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/2020120-erie-documentary

Ken Gibbons

The Port of Duluth-Superior is on course to set another record for wind cargo shipments as about 525,000 tons of blades and tower parts are expected to move through the port by the end of the year. That blows past last year’s single-season record of 306,000 tons. Read the full story by the Duluth Star-Tribune.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/2020120-wind-turbine

Ken Gibbons

The controversial owner of four dams in Michigan’s Midland and Gladwin counties — including two that failed in May, causing catastrophic flooding — has agreed to give up ownership of the dams to a two-county group of lakefront owners. Read the full story by the Detroit Free Press.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/2020120-dams

Ken Gibbons

In a step to improve accessibility and further enhance a crown jewel of Michigan State Parks, Friends of Ludington State Park is raising funds to purchase and install a universal access kayak launch at the Hamlin Lake beach. Read the full story by Ludington Daily News.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/2020120-kayak-access

Ken Gibbons

Lake Michigan is emblematic of the myriad issues facing all of the Great Lakes as the climate continues to change. Surging water levels have collapsed bluffs, swamped coastal dune lands, erased beaches and damaged homes, businesses, docks, trails, campgrounds and sewer systems. Read the full story by the Chicago Tribune.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/2020120-erosion

Ken Gibbons

Legal Translation: Environmental attorney explains the latest on Enbridge Line 5 news

With so many twists and turns in the Line 5 story, it’s hard to keep up with the legal filings and positions from Enbridge Energy Corp., various Michigan governmental agencies and groups trying to stop or keep the pipeline.

But in the following conversation, attorney Nick Schroeck, who is the director of the environmental law clinic at University of Detroit Mercy, and Great Lakes Now Program Director Sandra Svoboda have this update about the latest legal actions and a refresher about what the pipeline is all about.

Read Now at Great Lakes Now.

Original Article

Great Lakes Now

Great Lakes Now

https://www.greatlakesnow.org/2020/11/legal-translation-environmental-attorney-explains-latest-enbridge-line-5/

GLN Editor

Winter is nearly here — and those who live and work in the Great Lakes region are already wondering what the winter of 2021 has in store. Early indications suggest a La Niña winter pattern, which shifts the odds towards cooler, … Continue reading

Original Article

NOAA Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory

NOAA Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory

https://noaaglerl.blog/2020/11/20/lake-effect-snow-what-why-and-how/

Margaret Lansing

News

Great Lakes Commission meets online for 2020 Annual Meeting; passes resolution on invasive Asian carp and re-elects officers  

Ann Arbor, MI – The Great Lakes Commission held its 2020 Annual Meeting this week in a virtual format for the first time ever. During the three-day meeting, the Commission passed a resolution updating its position on invasive Asian carp, heard from partners on regional collaboration to protect the Great Lakes and national experts on work to build climate resilience, and re-elected its chair and vice chair.

“We are grateful that more than 175 of our Commissioners, Observers and partners could join us online this week to discuss critical regional priorities, including climate resilience,” said Erika Jensen, interim executive director of the Commission. “As is true for all issues facing the Great Lakes, collaboration will be essential to protecting communities in the Great Lakes basin from increasingly severe weather and storm events. A standing committee of Commissioners is continuing work on a draft action plan that will leverage existing programs and expertise in this space and help coordinate and plan on a basinwide scale, and we look forward to sharing that work at our Semiannual Meeting in May 2021.”

The Commission passed one resolution at the meeting, which updated its policy on invasive Asian carp. The resolution, introduced jointly by members of its Illinois and Michigan delegations, calls on the U.S. federal government to fund and advance prevention and control measures for Asian carp, including the design, engineering, and construction of a control point at the Brandon Road Lock and Dam. The Commission also voted to establish an ad-hoc committee to update its policy on mercury contamination.

Finally, the Commission re-elected Sharon M. Jackson of Indiana as chair and Todd Ambs of Wisconsin as vice chair. Chair Jackson serves as Deputy General Counsel to Indiana Governor Eric J. Holcomb. Vice Chair Ambs serves as Assistant Deputy Secretary at the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources.

The Commission will next convene the week of May 10, 2021 for its semiannual meeting and will host the annual Great Lakes Day in early March 2021. The formats of these events will be announced in the future. 


The Great Lakes Commission, led by chair Sharon M. Jackson, Deputy General Counsel for Governor Eric J. Holcomb of Indiana, is an interstate compact agency established under the Great Lakes Basin Compact of 1955. The Commission is authorized by state and U.S. federal law and dedicated to promoting a strong economy, healthy environment and high quality of life for the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence Basin and its residents. The Commission consists of governors’ appointees, state legislators, industry and nonprofit leaders and agency officials from eight states and two provinces. Associate membership for Ontario and Québec was established through the signing of a “Declaration of Partnership.” The Commission maintains a formal Observer program involving U.S. and Canadian federal agencies, tribal authorities, binational agencies and other regional interests. The Commission office is in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Learn more at www.glc.org.

Contact

For media inquiries, please contact Beth Wanamaker, beth@glc.org.

Recent GLC News

Upcoming GLC Events

View GLC Calendar >

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/news/am-111920

Beth Wanamaker

The pandemic slowed but couldn’t stop Great Lakers from volunteering this year.

While taking precautions, volunteers throughout the Great Lakes region cleaned beaches and neighborhoods and helped spread the word about threats facing the lakes. One even circled Lake Michigan by bike.

“We moved online and opened new ways for folks to get involved,” Senior Volunteer Engagement Manager Tyrone Dobson said. “In a time that feels isolating, we found a way to connect people with our topics and issues and with each other.”

Clean where you are

The extraordinary circumstances of COVID-19 put a damper on this year’s Adopt-a-Beach cleanups. The total – 417 cleanups across all 5 lakes – was somewhat lower than in other years. But the volunteers who turned out came to clean! They cleared 10,000 pounds worth of trash.

For the first time, we held inland neighborhood cleanups, stopping trash that might have flown via sewer drains or other paths to the lakes.

Two boys clean up trash in their neighborhood

Liuan Huska, mom to two young children and a baby, organized one of the first of these neighborhood cleanups.

She lives 40 miles west of Chicago’s North Avenue Beach. Focusing on a cleanup close to home made a big difference for her and her neighbors, Huska says.

“I have a book coming out in December, my three kids are partially e-learning and partially home schooling — so I have my hands full,” Huska says.

Her family cleaned alongside railroad tracks near their home. Meanwhile 8 or 9 neighbors did the same, sharing photos and recording their trash haul via a Facebook event page.

It all made for a low-effort, high-impact cleanup, Huska says. “Because we are all social distanced and missing human contact, it was a small way to connect with others in the community.”

Cleanups became places to connect

Adopt-a-Beach cleanups became some of the only times people got to see each other in (socially-distant) person this year.

Adopt-a-Beach volunteers pose with trash they removed“This was really our comeback event,” says Matt Belcher, a Chicago chapter leader for the national service group Gay For Good. “We were — I won’t use the word desperate, but I will say anxious to do something when it was OK to do so.”

About 300 Chicagoans on the group’s membership list normally turn out to volunteer events. But they’d been on hiatus since March.

For Adopt-a-Beach, the group of 18 found less trash on the sand at Osterman Beach on the city’s far North Side, and more where the beach meets the grass. They also found a wallet that Belcher was able to return to its grateful owner the day after the cleanup.

Adopt-a-Beach was a chance to connect for students from Arrupe College of Loyola University of Chicago, too.

“Students talk to me about how hard it is to make friends and connect online, so we’re trying to be creative in how can we meet and also give back to the community” says David Keys, assistant dean for student success at the school.

Many who had not gotten to know each other before made connections at the cleanup. “They came in groups of 1 or 2 and left in socially distant but larger groups as they realized they were heading for the same train or bus,” he says.

Keys also notes the Alliance made it easy to organize the event, including a registration form students used to RSVP on the new Adopt-A-Beach website.

He says it was “eye opening” for students at the cleanup to hear from Dobson at their event about the smaller items of trash that make their way into the lakes so often. Students have already requested the chance to do a beach cleanup again, he adds.

Adopt-a-Beach volunteers from AmericorpsIn Cleveland, Americorps volunteers Sara Morgan and Grace Vishnick had a similar experience. They organized about 50 people to clean Cleveland’s Euclid and Edgewater beaches for Make A Difference Day October 27.

COVID-19 meant extra planning for the event, the two recent college grads say, but was worth it. It was their first beach cleanup, and the biggest surprise for them and their volunteer group was the amount of plastic – the most common item they cleaned was plastic tampon applicators.

“I knew the conditions of Lake Erie and that it needs a lot of work,” Morgan says. “I know the lakes are a big part of our ecosystem… there’s definitely a lot to do in terms of trash along the lakes.”

Ambassadors spread the message

Cleanups are not the only way volunteers have been connecting despite the pandemic to help protect the Great Lakes.

Alliance Ambassadors – volunteers who speak about the Great Lakes and the issues facing them with various groups – have continued to be active, as well.

Map of Tristyn Von Berg's ride around Lake MichiganThe most unusual outreach by an Ambassador during the pandemic is likely Tristyn Von Berg’s bike ride around Lake Michigan. Von Berg nicknamed his Trek commuter bike “Richard Gears” after his father. A South Africa native, he had recently moved to Chicago when he decided to make the 950-mile journey.

Von Berg took along a shoebox to hold a change of clothes and not too much else. He shares the details in an interview with journalist Allison Devereaux on her Great Lakes Unsalted podcast. He also documents his journey in an epic series of Instagram posts.

The interview makes clear the trip was solitary most of the time. Von Berg shares how the beauty of the region and connections with people who helped him along the way inspired him.

“Maybe you take for granted how great your Great Lakes are, but they are an incredible natural landscape,” he says. “The beauty of the landscapes and change as I went north and then back down south was quite breathtaking. I also got to meet strangers along the way who showed such amazing hospitality and kindness.”

Zoom presentation screenshotBlair Tatrault became an ambassador after retiring a few years ago.

“In a normal year, I do a few events a year,” Tatrault says. He has spoken at elementary schools, environmental science classes at UW-Madison, and a public lecture at Lourdes University in Ohio, to name a few.

Now, he’s working on speaking at virtual gatherings – connecting via Zoom can bring troubles all its own, he laughs. But in person or via the Internet, the connections are essential to bring home the challenges facing the Great Lakes, Tatrault says:

“There’s no replacement for face-to-face discussion. We’re just kind of facilitators – we’re educators in a way, but we have to acknowledge that not everybody views the world through the same lens as we do and we need [all of us] to help solve the problem.”

The post Pandemic Can’t Stop Volunteers from Connecting, Cleaning Up appeared first on Alliance for the Great Lakes.

Original Article

News – Alliance for the Great Lakes

News – Alliance for the Great Lakes

https://greatlakes.org/2020/11/pandemic-cant-stop-volunteers-from-connecting-cleaning-up/

Judy Freed

PFAS News Roundup: Michigan health study, Wisconsin deer and fish, possible impact on COVID-19 vaccine

PFAS, short for per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, are a group of widespread man-made chemicals that don’t break down in the environment or the human body and have been flagged as a major contaminant in sources of water across the country.

Keep up with PFAS-related developments in the Great Lakes area.

Read Now at Great Lakes Now.

Original Article

Great Lakes Now

Great Lakes Now

https://www.greatlakesnow.org/2020/11/pfas-news-roundup-michigan-wisconsin-study-vaccine/

Natasha Blakely

Milwaukee’s three-masted, wooden schooner Denis Sullivan may never sail again. The vessel’s operator, Discovery World, posted on Instagram that the last of its crew have been let go and the popular floating classroom is heading into winter with an uncertain future due to losses caused by the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. Read the full story by WDJT-TV Milwaukee.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/2020119-sailing

Jill Estrada

The Minnesota Supreme Court denied a request from the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources to add several documents into the record that would have supported a clay liner for the tailings basin of PolyMet’s proposed copper-nickel mine. Read the full story by the Duluth News Tribune.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/2020119-polymet-dam

Jill Estrada

On Sept. 23, Northwestern University students in Evanston, Illinois received an email from Facilities Management that the University would begin an emergency coastal stabilization project along the perimeter of the campus bordering Lake Michigan. Read the full story by The Daily Northwestern.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/2020119-illinois-stabilization

Jill Estrada

The U.S. House of Representatives Wednesday passed the Preliminary Damage Assessment Improvement Act of 2020 which would strengthen the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s (FEMA) ability to help communities impacted by disasters. Read and view the full story by WHEC-TV- Rochester, NY.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/2020119-fema-response

Jill Estrada

The Michigan Department of Transportation (MDOT) is continuing to monitor state highway M-116 on the Lake Michigan coast of the northwest Lower Peninsula, and with recent erosion and fluctuating water levels on Lake Michigan, it’s keeping a closer eye on the highway. Read the full story by the Ludington Daily News.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/2020119-michigan-erosion

Jill Estrada

Flint water lawsuit settlement now totals about $641 million

LANSING, Mich. (AP) — The proposed settlement of a lawsuit filed on behalf of residents of Flint, Michigan, who were harmed by lead-tainted water now totals about $641 million, officials revealed Tuesday.

The lawsuit was the result of workers following state environmental officials’ advice not to use anti-corrosive additives.

Read Now at Great Lakes Now.

Original Article

Great Lakes Now

Great Lakes Now

https://www.greatlakesnow.org/2020/11/ap-flint-water-lawsuit-settlement/

The Associated Press

As high water levels persist in the Great Lakes, Michigan communities are revisiting their coastal land use policies that allowed residents to build homes precariously close to the shoreline, with devastating consequences when Great Lakes water levels inevitably rise. Read the full story by Bridge Magazine.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/2020118-land-use-planning

Ned Willig

Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer’s move to shut down the section of the Line 5 oil pipeline that runs through the Mackinaw Straits relies on the state’s public trust doctrine that compels state authorities to protect the Great Lakes. Read the full story by The New York Times.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/2020118-public-trust

Ned Willig

The Great Lakes Lighthouse Keepers Association has published an online interactive map of lighthouses in the Great Lakes region. The map lets users learn more about the history of the lighthouses and information for visiting. Read the full story by WKFR – Kalamazoo, MI.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/2020118-lighthouse-map

Ned Willig

The Marine Museum of the Great Lakes in Kingston, Ontario, launched a major fundraising campaign to renovate their new waterfront home and announced plans to acquire a Titanic-era steamship that will serve as a centerpiece for the new museum. Read the full story by Global News Canada.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/2020118-museum

Ned Willig

The city of Flint and two other defendants joined the $600-million Flint water crisis settlement the state of Michigan announced in August, bringing the total value of the settlement in the lead poisoning case to $641.2 million. Read the full story by the Detroit Free Press.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/2020118-flint-settlement

Ned Willig

Following public opposition to the planned construction of a nuclear waste storage facility near Lake Huron, the Canadian federal government has launched a new initiative aimed at finding long-term solutions for the growing quantity of radioactive waste produced by Canada’s nuclear reactors. Read the full story by the Times Colonist.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/2020118-nuclear-waste

Ned Willig

A new mapping tool from The Nature Conservancy shows areas with habitat and ecosystems in Michigan that can adapt to allow native species to thrive. The map also highlights connecting corridors that would allow species to move safely within and between these climate-resilient areas. Read the full story by the Metro Times.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/2020118-resilience-maps

Ned Willig

Volunteer search and rescue teams on Lake Ontario have responded to a record-breaking number of rescue missions this year as more Ontario residents flocked to the lake this year for “staycations” during the pandemic. Read the full story by Y108 – Hamilton, ON.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/2020118-marine-rescues

Ned Willig

Three drownings in Lake Michigan this past summer and more than a dozen water rescues has prompted City Council members in South Haven, Michigan, to form a committee to examine whether changes need to be made to the current beach and water safety plan, including adding lifeguards to the beach. Read the full story by The Herald-Palladium.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/2020118-south-haven

Ned Willig

As Great Lakes pummel Michigan, beach towns rush to set development rules

By Kelly House, Bridge Michigan

The Great Lakes News Collaborative includes Bridge Michigan; Circle of Blue; Great Lakes Now at Detroit Public Television; and Michigan Radio, Michigan’s NPR News Leader; who work together to bring audiences news and information about the impact of climate change, pollution, and aging infrastructure on the Great Lakes and drinking water.

Read Now at Great Lakes Now.

Original Article

Great Lakes Now

Great Lakes Now

https://www.greatlakesnow.org/2020/11/great-lakes-pummel-michigan-beach-towns-development-rules/

Bridge Michigan

ANN ARBOR, MICH. (November 18, 2020) – In letters sent to the U.S. House and Senate today, the Healing Our Waters-Great Lakes Coalition is urging Congress, as it wraps up business for the year, to support Great Lakes and clean water priorities that protect the drinking water of more than 30 million people, safeguard children from toxic lead contamination, prevent the shut-off of water to families, and confront the chronic problem of sewage fouling local waters.

“Congress has the opportunity to protect the drinking water, public health, and jobs of millions of people in the Great Lakes region, and we urge our elected officials to push these critical legislative priorities across the finish line,” said Laura Rubin, director of the Healing Our Waters-Great Lakes Coalition. “There’s important work left to do, and it’s time to get it done. The water problems will only get worse and more costly to solve.”

The Healing Our Waters-Great Lakes Coalition is asking Congress to support five legislative priorities, as elected officials work to complete a federal budget by Dec. 11 and wrap up end-of-year business.

  1. Prioritize COVID-19 relief that includes a moratorium of water shut-offs to vulnerable communities and assistance to people and water utilities.
  2. Support Great Lakes and clean water priorities, including $335 million for the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative, as well as more than $11 billion in House-backed supplemental funding that will put people to work and create local jobs for drinking water and sewage treatment infrastructure, toxic lead abatement, and assistance for vulnerable and tribal communities.
  3. Reauthorize the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative (as proposed by H.R. 4031 and S. 2295) with annual incremental increases to its original funding level of $475 million per year.
  4. Support Great Lakes priorities in the Water Resources Development Act, including investments in water infrastructure, research, and community assistance.
  5. Invest in drinking water and sewage treatment infrastructure to help get at the more than $188 billion in need for projects in Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin. The Coalition urges Congress to prioritize climate resiliency and supporting communities facing economic hardship by providing additional investments for disadvantaged communities and promoting investment in nature-based infrastructure projects.

The post Coalition to Congress: Support Great Lakes, Clean Water in Final Bills appeared first on Healing Our Waters Coalition.

Original Article

Healing Our Waters Coalition

Healing Our Waters Coalition

https://healthylakes.org/coalition-to-congress-support-great-lakes-clean-water-in-final-bills/

Pavan Vangipuram