09/11/2019 – South Bay Marina, Brown: Monitoring is not currently taking place, .
Wisconsin Beach Health - Brown County
Wisconsin Beach Health - Brown County
http://www.wibeaches.us/apex/f?p=181:27
Wisconsin Beach Health - Brown County
Wisconsin Beach Health - Brown County
http://www.wibeaches.us/apex/f?p=181:27
Wisconsin Beach Health - Brown County
Wisconsin Beach Health - Brown County
http://www.wibeaches.us/apex/f?p=181:27
Wisconsin Beach Health - Brown County
Wisconsin Beach Health - Brown County
http://www.wibeaches.us/apex/f?p=181:27
Wisconsin Beach Health - Brown County
Wisconsin Beach Health - Brown County
http://www.wibeaches.us/apex/f?p=181:27
Wisconsin Beach Health - Brown County
Wisconsin Beach Health - Brown County
http://www.wibeaches.us/apex/f?p=181:27
Cook County, Illinois – CCO Meeting Presentation [.pdf]
Press Release [.pdf]
Thursday, September 26, 2019
CCO Meeting 2-4 pm | Open House 5-7 pm
Winnetka Village Hall | Council Chambers
510 Green Bay Road
Winnetka, Illinois 60093
Great Lakes Coastal Flood Study
Great Lakes Coastal Flood Study
https://www.greatlakescoast.org/2019/09/04/lake-michigan-community-consultation-officers-meeting-and-open-house-for-cook-county-illinois/
Mason County, Michigan – CCO Meeting Presentation [.pdf]
Press Release [.pdf]
Wednesday, September 18, 2019
CCO Meeting 2-4 pm | Open House 5-7 pm
Ludington City Hall
400 South Harrison Street
Ludington, Michigan 49431
Oceana County, Michigan – CCO Meeting Presentation [.pdf]
Press Release [.pdf]
Thursday, September 19, 2019
CCO Meeting 2-4 pm | Open House 5-7 pm
Oceana County Services Building
844 South Griswold Street
Hart, Michigan 49420
Great Lakes Coastal Flood Study
Great Lakes Coastal Flood Study
https://www.greatlakescoast.org/2019/09/04/lake-michigan-community-consultation-officers-meeting-and-open-house-for-mason-county-and-oceana-county-michigan/
NOAA Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory
NOAA Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory
https://noaaglerl.blog/2019/09/04/exploring-the-diversity-of-native-species-with-great-lakes-water-life/
In 2018, Michigan significantly revised the State’s Lead and Copper Rule, the primary regulation controlling lead in drinking water. The Rule, which is regarded as the strongest in the nation, was widely lauded by drinking water advocates as a necessary response to address the shortcomings of the federal lead and copper rule, which were exposed during the course of the Flint Water Crisis.
One of the key requirements of Michigan’s revised Rule is that it requires every community water system to replace the entire portion of all lead service lines by 2041, or on another schedule approved by the Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy. While this is the only way to effectively eliminate the risk of lead in drinking water, it comes with costs. While estimates vary, the cost to replace lead service lines generally ranges from $3,000 to $5,000 per line. With an estimate of 460,000 lead service lines in the State, the costs can quickly become daunting. This is of particular concern in environmental justice communities, which generally have high numbers of lead service lines, and which are already struggling with unaffordable water bills. Access to affordable and safe drinking water in many of Michigan’s cities, including Detroit and Flint, is tenuous and, for many residents, already non-existent. As such, it’s important that creative financing solutions are developed to remedy the existing and continuously growing crisis of access to affordable and safe drinking water.
The primary source of federal funds for drinking water infrastructure is the Drinking Water State Revolving Fund program. Established under the Safe Drinking Water Act, this program provides states with federal capitalization grants to fund drinking water infrastructure projects, so long as the state matches 20% of the federal grant. The state fund is generally used to issue low-interest loans to local water suppliers to pay for infrastructure upgrades. Historically, only “disadvantaged communities” have been eligible to receive grants instead of loans.
Michigan has recently published a draft of its “Intended Use Plan” for fiscal year 2020, which describes how the State plans to utilize its Drinking Water State Revolving Fund to pay for drinking water infrastructure upgrades. Particularly for environmental justice communities, these funds are more important than ever. However, the State’s Intended Use Plan leaves a lot to be desired:
The Plan proposes to provide grants for drinking water infrastructure improvements to wealthy communities, such as Lake Orion. Historically, grants have only been provided to “disadvantaged communities” that are struggling with water affordability issues. Providing these grants to wealthy communities fails to direct funding to the communities with the greatest need.
The Plan only provides 15% of its funds to “disadvantaged communities” in the form of grants. Both Illinois and Ohio have proposed to provide 55% of its funds in the form of grants.
Historically, Michigan has provided a single, flat interest rate for all communities regardless of economic status. Every other Great Lakes states, provide some type of discounted interest rate for environmental justice communities, some offering interest rates as low as 0%.
Michigan determines which cities qualify as a “disadvantaged community” by primarily relying on median annual household income. The American Water Works Association has stated the use of median annual household income for this purpose is “seriously flawed” and fails to accurately measure affordability.
Link to 2020 Intended Use Plan: https://www.michigan.gov/documents/egle/egle-fd-mfs-DWRF-draft-DWiupppl2020_661272_7.pdf
News - Great Lakes Environmental Law Center
News - Great Lakes Environmental Law Center
https://www.glelc.org/our-blog/2019/8/27/michigans-drinking-water-state-revolving-fund-intended-use-plan-fails-to-address-the-current-water-affordability-crisis-in-environmental-justice-communities
In a win for safe drinking water advocates, the Michigan Court of Claims recently upheld the State’s Lead and Copper Rule, which was significantly revised in the wake of the Flint water crisis. In an effort to protect Michiganders from exposure to lead in drinking water, the revised rule is more stringent than the federal rule of the same name, for example mandating the replacement of all lead service lines in the state by 2041, requiring additional tap sampling, requiring water systems to conduct a comprehensive inventory of the materials in their drinking water distribution system in order to identify locations of lead service lines, banning partial lead service line replacements, and lowering the lead action level from 15 parts per billion to 12 parts per billion.
The Oakland County Water Resources Commissioner, Great Lakes Water Authority, the City of Detroit, and the City of Livonia challenged many of these revisions, bringing suit against the Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy (EGLE) in the Michigan Court of Claims in December 2018. In
The Great Lakes Environmental Law Center, in partnership with the Natural Resources Defense Council, filed an amicus curiae brief in support of EGLE. On July 26th, the court granted the MDEQ’s motion for summary disposition, rejecting the defendant waters systems’ challenge.
Below is a brief summary of the arguments put forth by the water suppliers and local governments, and the court’s response in dismissing their claims.
The plaintiffs first attempted to argue that the state did not follow proper procedures when revising the Lead and Copper rule, and therefore the rule was invalid. The plaintiffs claimed that the Regulatory Impact Statement (RIS) for the rulemaking did not include the estimated cost of compliance with the rules. The court held that, on the contrary, the RIS included the cost estimates and adequately addressed why the costs were necessary. Overall, the court found that the plaintiffs’ arguments concerned matters that could have been and were properly addressed during the public comment period, and simply because the plaintiffs disagreed with MDEQ’s conclusions did not mean that MDEQ failed to follow the requisite procedures.
In addition to rejecting the plaintiffs’ arguments that the rules were procedurally invalid, the court also disagreed with the plaintiff’s contentions that the rules were substantively invalid. The plaintiffs asserted that the MDEQ exceeded its authority when it created rules that require water systems to replace the entire lead service line on both sides of the “curb stop” – the dividing line between the public portion of the line and the portion running under homeowners’ property, which is considered privately owned in some municipalities. The court disagreed and found that the Michigan Safe Drinking Water Act (MCL 325.1003) expressly grants EGLE the authority to regulate the entire waterworks system of a public water supply, which includes mixed public and private lines. Notably, the Michigan Safe Drinking Water Act’s statutory grant of jurisdiction is broader than what exists in the federal Safe Drinking Water Act. While both the state and federal law empower their respective administrative agencies to regulate the public water system, Michigan’s Safe Drinking Water Act broadly defines “public water supply” to include the entirety of the system of pipes and appurtenances through which water is obtained and distributed (See, MCL 325.1002(p), (x)). Comparatively, the federal Safe Drinking Water Act defines “public water system” to only include those distribution facilities under the “control” of the operator.
Finally, the court rejected plaintiffs’ claims that by requiring water supplies to pay for the cost of replacing private portions of lead service lines, the rules violated a provision of the Michigan Constitution that prohibits the state from lending credit (Mich. Const. art. 9, § 18). The court found that the supplies would not actually be lending credit under the rule because they could spread the replacement costs throughout the systems and thus would not be giving the service lines away for free, and further the supplies would be receiving a benefit in return: the elimination of potential sources of lead contamination in the drinking water system.
Moreover, even if there were a lending of credit, the court noted that paying for private lead service line replacement would fall under an exception that allows for the lending of credit where “provided by law, for any public purpose” (Mich. Const. art. 7, § 26) in that the costs expended would be for the public purpose of removing lead service lines and promoting public health.
In addition to these claims, the plaintiffs also argued that the revised rule violates the Headlee Amendment of the Michigan Constitution, which prohibits the state from requiring municipalities to provide new or additional services without the state financing its mandate (Mich. Const. art. 9, §§25). In response, the state filed another motion for summary disposition, arguing that no such mandate exists in this case. The court has not yet issued its opinion on this “unfunded mandate” claim, but GLELC is optimistic that the court will once again find in favor of the EGLE and uphold the critical public drinking water protections set forth in the Michigan Lead and Copper Rule.
Pending appeal, the Court of Claim’s decision to uphold Michigan’s Lead and Copper Rule ensures that the strongest regulation regarding lead in drinking water will remain on the books. As local water systems begin the process of replacing all lead service lines throughout the state of Michigan, it will become increasingly necessary for both local water suppliers, EGLE, and the Michigan legislature to identify creative financing solutions to avoid the exacerbation of the rising issue of water affordability. This is particularly important considering that the greatest concentration of lead service lines are in Michigan tend to be in its communities of color and lower income, making this an important environmental justice issue. Simply put, all people should be able to afford clean drinking water. While the Michigan’s Lead and Copper Rule has survived its first legal hurdle, it likely has more to come. Additionally, the work to ensure that all people can afford lead-free drinking water remains.
News - Great Lakes Environmental Law Center
News - Great Lakes Environmental Law Center
https://www.glelc.org/our-blog/2019/8/12/michigan-court-of-claims-upholds-michigans-revised-lead-and-copper-rule
Porter County, Indiana – CCO Meeting Presentation [.pdf]
Press Release [.pdf]
Thursday, August 29, 2019
CCO meeting 2-4 pm | Open House 5-7 pm
Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore | Training Room
1100 N. Mineral Springs Road
Porter, Indiana 46304
LaPorte County, Indiana – CCO Meeting Presentation [.pdf]
Press Release [.pdf]
Thursday, August 29, 2019
CCO meeting 2-4 pm | Open House 5-7 pm
Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore | Training Room
1100 N. Mineral Springs Road
Porter, Indiana 46304
Great Lakes Coastal Flood Study
Great Lakes Coastal Flood Study
https://www.greatlakescoast.org/2019/08/01/lake-michigan-community-consultation-officers-meeting-and-open-house-in-indiana/
Green Bay, WI
https://www.weather.gov/grb/severethreat_092419
Manistee County, Michigan – CCO Meeting Presentation [.pdf]
Press Release [.pdf]
Tuesday, August 13, 2019
CCO meeting 2-4 pm | Open House 5-7 pm
Manistee County Emergency Management
1525 E. Parkdale Ave.
Manistee, MI 49660
Benzie County, Michigan – CCO Meeting Presentation [.pdf]
Press Release [.pdf]
Wednesday, August 14, 2019
CCO meeting 2-4 pm | Open House 5-7 pm
Benzie County Office of Emergency Management
448 Court Place
Beulah, MI 49617
Emmet County, Michigan – CCO Meeting Presentation [.pdf]
Press Release [.pdf]
Thursday, August 15, 2019
CCO meeting 2-4 pm | Open House 5-7 pm
Harbor Springs City Hall
160 Zoll Street
Harbor Springs, MI 49740
Great Lakes Coastal Flood Study
Great Lakes Coastal Flood Study
https://www.greatlakescoast.org/2019/07/15/lake-michigan-community-consultation-officers-meeting-and-open-house/
The report, titled Protecting Drinking Water in the Great Lakes: A Primer on Existing State Policies and Using the Safe Drinking Water Act, was published by American Rivers. It was developed in partnership by American Rivers and the Great Lakes Environmental Law Center.
The report surveys how the 8 Great Lakes states are using state laws, regulations, and policies to address 10 key drinking issues impacting the region. The drinking water issues addressed are:
Maximum Contaminant Levels, Treatment Techniques, and Monitoring Standards
Lead as a Drinking Water Contaminant
Consumer Confidence Reporting
Loans and Grants
Public Participation in Standards, Permits, and Enforcement
Operator Certification
Management of Drinking Water Emergencies
Management of Algal Blooms and Their Consequences
Private Water Supplies: Well Construction and Protection from Pollution
Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl (PFAS) and Drinking Water
The report will be a valuable tool for community activists, environmental organizations, and policymakers working on drinking water issues throughout the Great Lakes region. It will enable these stakeholders to quickly reference how each state is addressing important drinking water issues, and to brainstorm effective solutions for their own state.
News - Great Lakes Environmental Law Center
News - Great Lakes Environmental Law Center
https://www.glelc.org/our-blog/2019/6/14/american-rivers-and-great-lakes-environmental-law-center-release-report-surveying-how-great-lakes-states-are-addressing-key-drinking-water-issues
Wisconsin Water Library
https://waterlibrary.aqua.wisc.edu/water-research-guide/
The following guest post is by Great Lakes Environmental Law Center student fellow Shannon Nelson. Shannon is a University of Michigan Law School student and graduate of Wesleyan University. Prior to law school, she was the operations manager for Floating Doctors in Bocas del Toro, Panama. Shannon has led our project in Ecuador, working with local advocates and attorneys to protect the Dulcepamba River and support the people most affected by its destruction.
In 2008, Ecuador became the first nation to recognize rights of nature in its Constitution. And in the coming months, Ecuador’s Constitutional Court will for the first time decide how rights of nature should be applied to protect the Dulcepamba River from state-sanctioned damming and destruction.
As Ecuador is a civil law country, judicial decisions affect only the parties at bar and, even at the appellate level, do not carry the precedential weight of cases in common law systems. The Constitutional Court is the one exception to this rule. The Court, which sits in Quito, is the singular body tasked with Constitutional interpretation in Ecuador. The Court may hear as a court of appeal cases that present novel questions of Constitutional law or where Constitutional mechanisms have been denied.
Although the Court has heard cases involving the rights of Nature before now, the Dulcepamba River case represents the first time the Court will interpret the rights of Nature recognized in the Constitution and begin to define the substance of those rights for the country.
For over a decade, the community of San Pablo de Amalí in the Bolívar province of Ecuador has been engaged in seemingly endless litigation with Hidrotambo, S.A. over their hydroelectric project on the Dulcepamba River. In 2003, the company applied for a license to utilize the river to generate power to serve the Ecuadorian grid. The national water authority (“SENAGUA”), in turn, granted them a water right for 6.5 cubic meters of water year-round.
In 2005, Hidrotambo began construction on the 8MW run-of-river style dam despite persistent objections from community. To build the intake works for the dam, the company determined that they would need to reroute the river channel about 200 meters closer to the town. Community members warned that rerouting the river so close to the town would pose a significant risk of flooding; however, their concerns were dismissed, and construction continued. The fears of the community played out in March 2015, when a totally normal weather event resulted in a devastating flood that killed three people and washed away several homes. In the years since, the community has been fighting for the enforcement of human and nature’s rights in the face of corporate power with close ties to the central government.
For a more in-depth account, see San Pablo de Amalí: un pueblo sin agua (Spanish) and Run of the River by Kat Kerlin (English).
Ecuador has led the world by recognizing Nature as a rights-bearing entity in its Constitution. This acknowledgment of legal personhood grants Nature standing to bring cases—or, more accurately, for others to bring cases on its behalf—against violations of its rights in court. Among the rights enumerated in Ecuador’s Constitution are the right to integral respect for [Nature’s] existence and for the maintenance and regeneration of its life cycles, structure, functions and evolutionary processes and the right to be restored.
The Constitution also imposes obligations on the State to apply preventive and restrictive measures on activities that might lead to the extinction of species, the destruction of ecosystems, or the permanent alteration of natural cycles. These rights and obligations are distinct from, yet intrinsically connected with, several anthropocentric environmental rights recognized in the constitution, including the right to live in a healthy environment, the right to water, and the right to food sovereignty. The constitution also provides that, while the State will encourage sustainable development, when development conflicts with the rights of others to water and food sovereignty, those basic needs must come first. Taken in tandem, these rights and obligations create an expansive framework of environmental and social protections, consistent with the foundational principle that humans are part of the natural world and should strive to live in harmony with nature. Ecuador’s Constitution refers to this as the sumak kawsay, or good living, an indigenous principle, similar counterparts of which exist in other Indigenous nations throughout the region.
I began working on the Dulcepamba River case in October 2018, just over a month into my first semester of law school. I could not have imagined at that time the profound impact the case would have on me and my nascent legal career. Apart from a love of the outdoors and a penchant for rock walls, my only environmental training was an AP Environmental Science class in high school (which was longer ago than one might think looking at me). Having worked as Operations Manager for a global health NGO that provides primary care services for indigenous communities in Panama before coming to law school, I initially got involved with the project because of the indigenous rights issue it presented. Many of the communities in the Dulcepamba Watershed identify as indigenous and the hydroelectric company failed to consult the communities prior to beginning the project as required by both international and Ecuadorian law.
Our work, however, focused on four other provisions in Ecuador’s Constitution: the human rights to water, food sovereignty, and a healthy environment and, most centrally to this case, the rights of nature (“RoN”). When I began working on the case in October, I was as perplexed by the idea of Nature having rights as anyone. I struggled envisioning what such a legal system would look like. The more I immersed myself in the subject, however, the more evident the need for RoN became.
In December, Professor Hall and I traveled to Ecuador to visit the team in San Pablo de Amalí and to see the actual site of the dam. I learned just as much swimming in the Dulcepamba River and sitting in community members’ homes listening to their stories as I did pouring over law review articles, UNGA resolutions, and constitutional provisions. The interdependence between the community and the river illustrated just how important RoN is as an ideology and legal theory—it is impossible to truly protect one without the other.
The Dulcepamba River Litigation-
We have written amicus briefs for two cases being brought by members of the community of San Pablo de Amalí, on their own behalf and on behalf of Nature. The first case addresses the exorbitant water use authorization granted to Hidrotambo. Simply put, the current authorization amounts to a total wipeout of the Dulcepamba River. In 2018, over 291 applications for water use (some representing dozens of individuals) by the upstream community have been denied or held pending by SENAGUA due to the current concession to Hidrotambo. Community members have requested an exhaustive revision of Hidrotambo's water right, citing irregularities in the authorization process, including the failure to complete empirical studies before granting the concession. A study conducted by researchers at UC Davis Center for Watershed Sciences and presented by the plaintiffs demonstrates that the water right allocated to Hidrotambo exceeded the actual flow of the river 83% of the time over the last ten years. That is before factoring in any of the water needs of community members in the watershed. This case is still pending despite prior assurances from SENAGUA that it would be resolved by the end of 2018. We expect to file our amicus brief in the administrative case in the coming month.
The second case, a protective action brought the Public Ombudsman and the Ecumenical Human Rights Commission (CEDHU) against several Ecuadorian government agencies for failing to protect the constitutional rights of the community of San Pablo de Amalí and Nature, has progressed much more rapidly through the courts.
The protective action, which was filed in January 2019, addresses the negligent manner in which the hydroelectric project has been executed, from the initial planning to regulation of operations. Most notably, when the company rerouted the river channel closer to the town during construction, they failed to complete any hydrological or hydraulic studies and restricted the floodplain in such a way that the river was unable to evacuate sediment and debris. This resulted in the devastating flood in March 2015 that killed three people and completely washed away several houses. Beyond the incalculable harm suffered by the community, in constructing the dam, Hidrotambo completely altered the ecosystem of the river in violation of Article 71 of Ecuador’s Constitution. (See full text of Brief of Amicus Curiae in Support of the Protective Action, available at - https://www.greatlakeslaw.org/files/Dulcepamba_protective_action_amicus.pdf)
Hidrotambo has maintained that the flood was a natural event that their management of the dam played no role in; however, the UC Davis study revealed that the return interval for a weather event like the one that resulted in the March 2015 flood is only six years. This supports the community's assertion that the flood was not a freak natural disaster and would not have been nearly as destructive but for the rerouting of the river and the negligent maintenance of the dam. It also means that the community remains in danger as long as Hidrotambo refuses to take the necessary steps to mitigate the risks.
In February, a lower court in Chillanes, Ecuador held that there was not a demonstrable causal relationship between the actions of Hidrotambo and the various government agencies and the devastating flood, and as such there was no violation of constitutional rights. (See full text of decision from the Court of First Instance in Chillanes, available at - https://www.greatlakeslaw.org/files/Dulcepamba_Chillanes_decision.pdf)
On appeal, the Provincial Court of Bolívar also denied relief, affirming the lower court’s holding that there was no violation of constitutional rights and also advancing an administrative exhaustion argument. According to the court, the record demonstrates that the agencies named as defendants have requested that Hidrotambo implement protective measures. While recognizing that none of these demands have been complied with, the court nevertheless held that a protective action is not the right method to compel the agencies to enforce compliance. (See full text of appellate decision from the Provincial Court of Bolívar, available at - https://www.greatlakeslaw.org/files/Dulcepamba_Bolivar_decision.pdf)
The Constitutional Court’s acceptance of the case indicates that the Provincial Court’s administrative exhaustion argument may not be sound. Even at this procedural stage, it represents an important step in RoN jurisprudence. The Court was not compelled to accept the case—it has broad discretionary authority over its docket. The decision to review the case suggests that the Court is prepared to begin developing a substantive RoN as a matter of Constitutional law. In the decision announcing its acceptance of the case, the Court said that it would address the standards and limits regarding the exploitation of renewable and nonrenewable resources managed by the State, the conduct of licensed companies, and the impact on the rights of the community and of Nature. The Constitutional Court’s decision in Dulcepamba River case could then frame the issues and standards for future RoN cases from the Galapagos to the Amazon.
An alliance of environmental organizations (including the Earth Law Center, International Rivers, CEDENMA, and the Great Lakes Environmental Law Center) along with several leading international experts in environmental law (including Professors Oliver Houck, Zygmunt Plater, Patrícia Galvão Ferreira, and Noah Hall) filed an amicus brief in the Constitutional Court on the Dulcepamba River case. An English translation of the Constitutional Court amicus brief is also available.
Why we need Rights of Nature (and why simply recognizing a human right to a healthy environment won’t cut it)-
When I began my studies in September, I did not plan on becoming an environmental lawyer. After spending the last several months supporting those fighting on behalf of the Dulcepamba River, I cannot imagine not being one. I have to believe that it is possible to solve the environmental problems we have created. However, it is clear that our current system will not provide the answer. The Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund has keenly observed that one should not expect more from a permitting system; by its very name, it is clear that such a system is designed to permit harm, not prohibit it.
Over the years, many have pressed to formally recognize a human right a healthy environment. While I am certainly supportive of such an action, I do not believe it goes nearly far enough. More than 100 countries already recognize a human right to a healthy environment and yet we are still faced with mounting environmental crises of epic proportions. According to the latest IPCC report released in October 2018, we are poised to exceed 1.5 degrees above preindustrial levels by 2040. While we cannot yet fully appreciate the effects this increase will have on the planet, the prognosis is certainly bleak. Earlier this month, the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services released a global assessment on Biodiversity finding that nearly 1 million species are at risk of extinction, many within mere decades. Radical situations call for radical solutions.
Of course, in order to solve the problem, we need to know what is causing it. David Boyd, the UN Special Rapporteur on Human Rights and the Environment, has identified three damaging ideas that have led to our current environmental crisis:
The first is anthropocentrism—the widespread human belief that we are separate from, and superior to, the rest of the natural world… The second is that everything in nature, animate and inanimate, constitutes our property, which we have the right to use as we see fit. The third idea is that we can and should pursue limitless economic growth as the paramount objective of modern society.
If we are to address the environmental harms we have caused and make meaningful change, we first need a change of perspective. The defining characteristic of RoN, of course, is the shift from the anthropocentric ideology that has enabled us to treat the natural world as property to be extracted and exploited, toward a recognition that as humans we are very much a part of the natural world.
For further discussion of the need for RoN check out this podcast from CELDF or Fighting for Our Shared Future by Earth Law Center.
While RoN is still on the outskirts of the mainstream environmental movement, it is gaining momentum internationally and at the grassroots level. Bolivia, New Zealand, India, and Colombia have all recognized RoN in national laws and court decisions. We have seen pockets of RoN spring up throughout the United States with varying degrees of success. Over three dozen communities across the United States have already passed local laws and ordinances recognizing RoN. There also are campaigns underway to amend state constitutions in Colorado, Ohio, Oregon, New Hampshire and Vermont. To that effect, perhaps most promising in all of this, are the individuals and communities coming together to demand and defend Nature’s rights. It is worth remembering that RoN did not always exist in Ecuador. In fact, Ecuador faced many of the same obstacles in recognizing RoN that we might anticipate here in the United States. Ecuador’s economy was largely dependent on the extraction and exploitation of natural resources and property law in the country was quite similar to ours. It took a massive social movement, led by Indigenous groups and environmental advocates, to include RoN in the 2008 Constitution. Over the past 9 months, I have also gotten to work alongside and learn from skillful and fierce advocates both in Ecuador and across the United States and Canada, from the community members of San Pablo de Amalí and their attorneys at CEDHU, to the growing network of professors and students across the United States and Canada committed to advancing the rights of Nature and communities. Although there is still a long way to go and the stakes have never been higher, I am hopeful that RoN may actually save the world.
Photos: 1) Don Manuel Truijillo, president of the farming community of San Pablo de Amalí, sits with his daughter by the Dulcepamba River; 2) SENAGUA offices in Quito; 3) the Hidrotambo dam; 4) Don Manuel, accompanied by a project team member, standing on the dam spillway with his threatened home in the background.
Great Lakes Law
https://www.greatlakeslaw.org/blog/2019/06/the-dulcepamba-river-gets-its-day-in-court-rights-of-nature-and-constitutional-law-in-ecuador.html
Scientists Learn to Categorize Sea Lamprey Wounds
Wisconsin
http://www.usgs.gov/news/jean-adams-speaks-sea-lamprey-wound-assessment-workshop
Wisconsin Water Library
https://waterlibrary.aqua.wisc.edu/fifty-one-students-and-five-brave-educators-go-on-a-field-trip/
Phragmites Adaptive Management Framework (PAMF)
Wisconsin
http://www.usgs.gov/news/engel-presets-adaptive-management-phragmites-wisconsin-state-wide-invasive-species-meeting
Delivering Information to Fishery Managers in the Great Lakes Basin.
Wisconsin
http://www.usgs.gov/news/glsc-deepwater-science-program-delivers-annual-reports-presentations-great-lakes-fishery
NOAA Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory
NOAA Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory
https://noaaglerl.blog/2019/03/18/two-day-session-highlighting-the-importance-of-science-translation-at-iaglr-2019/
Green Bay, WI
https://www.weather.gov/grb/RiverFlooding2023
The MDEQ has agreed to host an additional public meeting regarding a proposal from U.S. Ecology that would allow the company to increase the hazardous waste storage and treatment capacity at its facility at 6520 Georgia Street on Detroit’s eastside. The public meeting will be held on March 28th from 6:00-9:30pm at Bridge Academy East (9600 Buffalo Street, Hamtramck). Starting at 7:30pm, the public will have an opportunity to provide comments to the MDEQ regarding the proposal. A full agenda of the public meeting in Arabic, Bengali, and English is provided below.
U.S. Ecology owns and operates a hazardous waste facility located at 6520 Georgia Street in Detroit. It is currently permitted by the MDEQ to store 76,118 gallons of hazardous waste, and to treat 114,000 gallons of hazardous waste per day. The company accepts a wide variety of hazardous wastes from industrial processes.
The treatment process creates three main byproducts: wastewater, nonhazardous solid waste, and hazardous solid waste. Hazardous and non-hazardous solid wastes are disposed off-site. Wastewater is discharged into the Detroit sewer system in accordance with a permit issued to the company by the Great Lakes Water Authority. Discharges from the facility into the storm sewer system have exceeded the permitted levels on numerous occasions.
U.S. Ecology is seeking a license from the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality that will allow it to increase the amount of hazardous waste that it stores and treats at its facility on Georgia Street. The proposed increases are provided below:
Proposing to increase hazardous waste storage capacity from 76,118 gallons to 676,939 gallons (9x increase)
Proposing to increase treatment hazardous waste treatment capacity from 114,000 gallons per day to 432,115 gallons per day (3x increase )
The MDEQ did hold a public hearing regarding U.S. Ecology’s proposal in 2015. However, it did not provide any translation services to Arabic or Bengali speakers despite the presence of Bengali and Yemeni communities nearby the facility. Many residents in these communities speak and understand limited English, and without translation services they were unable to learn about U.S. Ecology’s proposal or provide meaningful input to the MDEQ.
As a result of the advocacy of local Yemeni and Bengali residents, in partnership with the Great Lakes Environmental Law Center and the Coalition to Oppose the Expansion of U.S. Ecology, the MDEQ has agreed to provide translation services for both Arabic and Bengali speakers to enable such residents to provide meaningful input to the MDEQ regarding the proposed expansion of U.S. Ecology’s hazardous waste facility.
A notice and agenda regarding the public meeting in English, Arabic, and Bengali is provided below. The MDEQ will also translate all documents regarding this issue into Arabic and Bengali, will translate its presentation at the public meeting into Arabic and Bengali, and will have Arabic and Bengali translators available on-site at the public meeting.
The proposed expansion continues the legacy of disproportionately locating hazardous waste facilities in low-income communities of color.
Studies by Paul Mohai of the University of Michigan’s School of Natural Resources and Robin Saha of the University of Montana have found a consistent pattern over a 30-year period of placing hazardous waste facilities in neighborhoods where poor people and people of color live. These communities are often seen as the path of least resistance, because residents in these communities have fewer resources and political clout to oppose the siting of unwanted facilities.
Michigan is no exception to this general trend:
There are 10 commercial hazardous waste facilities in Michigan that accept hazardous waste that is generated off-site.
8 out 10 of commercial hazardous waste facilities in Michigan are located in Wayne county.
Collectively, 60,405 people live within 1-mile of the 10 commercial hazardous waste facilities in Michigan. 59% are low-income; 70% are people of color.
In short, commercial hazardous waste facilities in Michigan are concentrated in Wayne county and are disproportionately located in low-income communities and communities of color.
The proposal to expand U.S. Ecology would continue this disturbing trend. 10,021 people live within 1-mile of U.S. Ecology’s facility on Georgia Street. 81% are low-income; 65% are people of color.
MDEQ Public Meeting Flyer (Arabic)
MDEQ Public Meeting Flyer (Bengali)
MDEQ Public Meeting Flyer (English)
MDEQ Public Meeting Agenda (Arabic)
MDEQ Public Meeting Agenda (Bengali)
MDEQ Public Meeting Agenda (English)
Additional MDEQ Documents (Arabic, Bengali, and English)
News - Great Lakes Environmental Law Center
News - Great Lakes Environmental Law Center
https://www.glelc.org/our-blog/2019/3/12/mdeq-to-hold-an-additional-public-meeting-and-provide-translation-services-for-bengali-and-arabic-speakers-regarding-proposed-expansion-of-us-ecologys-hazardous-waste-facility
These young fish are the first grass carp collected in their larval stage from within the Great Lakes watershed. Other life stages, including fertilized eggs, juveniles and adults, have been previously documented in tributaries and shoreline areas of Lake Erie. Identifying locations with larval grass carp in the Maumee River will help inform management decisions and allow natural resource agencies to better focus limited resources on grass carp removal efforts.
“If grass carp become abundant in Lake Erie they could consume large amounts of aquatic vegetation, ultimately reducing habitat for native fish and other aquatic animals and diminishing food resources for waterbirds,” said USGS scientist Patrick Kočovský. “The Lake Erie ecosystem is a major contributor to the Great Lakes’ multi-billion dollar per year fishery.”
On June 13 and 26, 2018, a sampling crew from The University of Toledo collaborating with the USGS sampled the Maumee River in Toledo, Ohio, for early life stages of grass carp. The larval grass carp were collected near the I-280 bridge in the city of Toledo and near the river mouth adjacent to Brenner’s Marina during high water flow events typical of spawning conditions for grass carp. While the samples were being processed in January 2019, six larval fish resembling grass carp were identified.
These larval fish were sent to the USGS for genetic confirmation. Scientists analyzed DNA extracted from each larva in early February and confirmed with high confidence that the species of every hatchling was grass carp. Subsequent genetic sequencing of the larval fish DNA in late February confirmed that the larvae were grass carp.
“Collecting larval fish in a Great Lake is like finding a needle in a haystack,” said Christine Mayer of The University of Toledo Department of Environmental Sciences and Lake Erie Center. “Our finding helps make the haystack smaller when looking for spawning grass carp.”
The capture of these larval grass carp confirms previous evidence that they spawn in the Maumee River, and the capture of larvae during separate high flow events confirms the possibility of more than one successful spawning event within a year. This new discovery does not indicate the population size in the Maumee River, but underscores the continued need for early detection.
The USGS and The University of Toledo have previously documented grass carp spawning in the Sandusky River.
For more information about the threat of Asian carp in the Great Lakes, please visit the USGS Great Lakes Restoration Initiative website.
The larval grass carp capture locations were just downstream of the I-280 bridge in the city of Toledo and adjacent to Brenner’s Marina. The I-280 bridge is 5.4 kilometers (about 3.4 miles) from the first small embayment to the west of the river channel and 7.5 kilometers (about 4.7 miles) from the downstream-most point of the dredge spoil island to the northwest of the channel. Brenner’s Marina is just under a mile from the first small embayment to the west of the river channel and 3.5 kilometers (about 2.2 miles) from the downstream-most point of the dredge-spoil island.
(Credit: Patrick Kočovský, USGS. Public domain.)
These images show grass carp larvae from the Maumee River. Characteristics of larval grass carp include overall length (left), skeletal muscle development (center) and presence of an eye spot that lacks pigmentation (right; pigment starting to develop on lower eye).
(Credit: Nicole King, The University of Toledo)
USGS.gov
https://www.usgs.gov/news/newly-hatched-invasive-grass-carp-found-maumee-river-ohio
A genetic analysis conducted by the U.S. Geological Survey recently confirmed that larval, or newly hatched, fish collected from the Maumee River during the summer of 2018 are grass carp, one species of invasive Asian carps that threaten the Great Lakes. The Maumee River is a tributary to Lake Erie.
Region 3: Great Lakes
http://www.usgs.gov/news/state-news-release/newly-hatched-invasive-grass-carp-found-maumee-river-ohio
NOAA Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory
NOAA Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory
https://noaaglerl.blog/2019/03/04/noaa-and-partners-team-up-to-prevent-future-great-lakes-drinking-water-crisis/
Wisconsin Water Library
https://waterlibrary.aqua.wisc.edu/open-access-in-the-aquatic-sciences-biodiversity-heritage-library/
On February 26, 2019, voters in Toledo, Ohio overwhelmingly passed the Lake Erie Bill of Rights, fully stated-
ESTABLISHING A BILL OF RIGHTS FOR LAKE ERIE, WHICH PROHIBITS ACTIVITIES AND PROJECTS THAT WOULD VIOLATE THE BILL OF RIGHTS
We the people of the City of Toledo declare that Lake Erie and the Lake Erie watershed comprise an ecosystem upon which millions of people and countless species depend for health, drinking water and survival. We further declare that this ecosystem, which has suffered for more than a century under continuous assault and ruin due to industrialization, is in imminent danger of irreversible devastation due to continued abuse by people and corporations enabled by reckless government policies, permitting and licensing of activities that unremittingly create cumulative harm, and lack of protective intervention. Continued abuse consisting of direct dumping of industrial wastes, runoff of noxious substances from large scale agricultural practices, including factory hog and chicken farms, combined with the effects of global climate change, constitute an immediate emergency.
We the people of the City of Toledo find that this emergency requires shifting public governance from policies that urge voluntary action, or that merely regulate the amount of harm allowed by law over a given period of time, to adopting laws which prohibit activities that violate fundamental rights which, to date, have gone unprotected by government and suffered the indifference of state-chartered for-profit corporations.
We the people of the City of Toledo find that laws ostensibly enacted to protect us, and to foster our health, prosperity, and fundamental rights do neither; and that the very air, land, and water – on which our lives and happiness depend – are threatened. Thus it has become necessary that we reclaim, reaffirm, and assert our inherent and inalienable rights, and to extend legal rights to our natural environment in order to ensure that the natural world, along with our values, our interests, and our rights, are no longer subordinated to the accumulation of surplus wealth and unaccountable political power.
We the people of the City of Toledo affirm Article 1, Section 1, of the Ohio State Constitution, which states: “All men are, by nature, free and independent, and have certain inalienable rights, among which are those of enjoying and defending life and liberty, acquiring, possessing, and protecting property, and seeking and obtaining happiness and safety.”
We the people of the City of Toledo affirm Article 1, Section 2, of the Ohio State Constitution, which states: “All political power is inherent in the people. Government is instituted for their equal protection and benefit, and they have the right to alter, reform, or abolish the same, whenever they may deem it necessary; and no special privileges or immunities shall ever be granted, that may not be altered, revoked, or repealed by the general assembly.”
And since all power of governance is inherent in the people, we, the people of the City of Toledo, declare and enact this Lake Erie Bill of Rights, which establishes irrevocable rights for the Lake Erie Ecosystem to exist, flourish and naturally evolve, a right to a healthy environment for the residents of Toledo, and which elevates the rights of the community and its natural environment over powers claimed by certain corporations.
Section 1 – Statements of Law – A Community Bill of Rights
(a) Rights of Lake Erie Ecosystem. Lake Erie, and the Lake Erie watershed, possess the right to exist, flourish, and naturally evolve. The Lake Erie Ecosystem shall include all natural water features, communities of organisms, soil as well as terrestrial and aquatic sub ecosystems that are part of Lake Erie and its watershed.
(b) Right to a Clean and Healthy Environment. The people of the City of Toledo possess the right to a clean and healthy environment, which shall include the right to a clean and healthy Lake Erie and Lake Erie ecosystem.
(c) Right of Local Community Self-Government. The people of the City of Toledo possess both a collective and individual right to self-government in their local community, a right to a system of government that embodies that right, and the right to a system of government that protects and secures their human, civil, and collective rights.
(d) Rights as Self -Executing. All rights secured by this law are inherent, fundamental, and unalienable, and shall be self-executing and enforceable against both private and public actors. Further implementing legislation shall not be required for the City of Toledo, the residents of the City, or the ecosystems and natural communities protected by this law, to enforce all of the provisions of this law.
Section 2 – Statements of Law – Prohibitions Necessary to Secure the Bill of Rights
(a) It shall be unlawful for any corporation or government to violate the rights recognized and secured by this law. “Corporation” shall include any business entity.
(b) No permit, license, privilege, charter, or other authorization issued to a corporation, by any state or federal entity, that would violate the prohibitions of this law or any rights secured by this law, shall be deemed valid within the City of Toledo.
Section 3 – Enforcement
(a) Any corporation or government that violates any provision of this law shall be guilty of an offense and, upon conviction thereof, shall be sentenced to pay the maximum fine allowable under State law for that violation. Each day or portion thereof, and violation of each section of this law, shall count as a separate violation.
(b) The City of Toledo, or any resident of the City, may enforce the rights and prohibitions of this law through an action brought in the Lucas County Court of Common Pleas, General Division. In such an action, the City of Toledo or the resident shall be entitled to recover all costs of litigation, including, without limitation, witness and attorney fees.
(c) Governments and corporations engaged in activities that violate the rights of the Lake Erie Ecosystem, in or from any jurisdiction, shall be strictly liable for all harms and rights violations resulting from those activities.
(d) The Lake Erie Ecosystem may enforce its rights, and this law’s prohibitions, through an action prosecuted either by the City of Toledo or a resident or residents of the City in the Lucas County Court of Common Pleas, General Division. Such court action shall be brought in the name of the Lake Erie Ecosystem as the real party in interest. Damages shall be measured by the cost of restoring the Lake Erie Ecosystem and its constituent parts at least to their status immediately before the commencement of the acts resulting in injury, and shall be paid to the City of Toledo to be used exclusively for the full and complete restoration of the Lake Erie Ecosystem and its constituent parts to that status.
Section 4 – Enforcement – Corporate Powers
(a) Corporations that violate this law, or that seek to violate this law, shall not be deemed to be “persons” to the extent that such treatment would interfere with the rights or prohibitions enumerated by this law, nor shall they possess any other legal rights, powers, privileges, immunities, or duties that would interfere with the rights or prohibitions enumerated by this law, including the power to assert state or federal preemptive laws in an attempt to overturn this law, or the power to assert that the people of the City of Toledo lack the authority to adopt this law.
(b) All laws adopted by the legislature of the State of Ohio, and rules adopted by any State agency, shall be the law of the City of Toledo only to the extent that they do not violate the rights or prohibitions of this law.
Section 5 – Effective Date and Existing Permit Holders
This law shall be effective immediately on the date of its enactment, at which point the law shall apply to any and all actions that would violate this law regardless of the date of any applicable local, state, or federal permit.
Section 6 – Severability
The provisions of this law are severable. If any court decides that any section, clause, sentence, part, or provision of this law is illegal, invalid, or unconstitutional, such decision shall not affect, impair, or invalidate any of the remaining sections, clauses, sentences, parts, or provisions of the law. This law would have been enacted without the invalid sections.
Section 7 – Repealer
All inconsistent provisions of prior laws adopted by the City of Toledo are hereby repealed, but only to the extent necessary to remedy the inconsistency.
Update: The day after this historic vote, a lawsuit challenging the Lake Erie Bill of Rights was filed in federal court by a polluting farm (Drewes Farm v. City of Toledo). The federal district court struck down the entire Lake Erie Bill of Rights as the void for vagueness under the due process clause. Drewes Farms v. City of Toledo, 441 F.Supp.3d 551 (N.D. Ohio 2020). The City of Toledo subsequently dropped its appeal.
Great Lakes Law
https://www.greatlakeslaw.org/blog/2019/02/lake-erie-bill-of-rights.html
This map shows the water sample locations within the Menomonee River watershed, WIsconsin. LMF is the Little Menomonee River near Freistadt; MMF is the Menomonee River at Menomonee Falls; HCW is the Honey Creek at Wauwatosa; UCW is the Underwood Creek at Wauwatosa; MRW is the Menomonee River at Wauwatosa; and MRM is the Menomonee River at 16th Street at Milwaukee.
(Credit: USGS. Public domain.)
“Leaky infrastructure and overflows from sanitary sewers can contaminate urban waterways, and the detection of human-associated bacteria and viruses indicates the presence of sewage, a potential health hazard,” said Peter Lenaker, a USGS scientist and the lead author of the study. “Results from our study can help Milwaukee-area water managers develop strategies to efficiently remediate or minimize sewage contamination.”
From 2009-2011, scientists with the USGS, U.S. Department of Agriculture and University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee sampled surface water from six Menomonee River stream locations in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, to measure human sewage contamination in the watershed. The scientists collected samples during periods of high water flow from rain, snowmelt or both, and periods of low water flow. They tested 228 samples for eight types of human viruses and for two types of bacteria that are associated with human waste.
The study found that human viruses were present in up to 38 percent of the samples and human bacteria were present much more frequently in the samples.
The three viruses detected in the study were adenovirus C, D, F, which was the most common and can cause minor respiratory illnesses; adenovirus A; and enterovirus, which can cause symptoms similar to the common cold. The scientists found at least one of these viruses in 20-73 percent of samples during low water flows and in 24-61 percent of samples during high-flow events, depending on sampling location.
The sites with the highest total virus concentration and/or occurrence were the Little Menomonee River near Freistadt in Mequon, Wisconsin, the Menomonee River at Wauwatosa and the Menomonee River at 16th Street in Milwaukee, depending on either low water or high water flows.
The two types of bacteria associated with human waste that were tested were human Bacteroides and Lachnospiraceae. Depending on sample location and bacteria type, bacteria were found in 43-94 percent of samples during low-flow periods and in 67-100 percent of samples during high flows. The sites with the highest concentration of bacteria were Honey Creek and the Menomonee River in Wauwatosa, and the Menomonee River at 16th Street in Milwaukee, depending on bacteria type and water flow level.
The bacteria themselves do not pose a health hazard and are common in the human body, but they enter waterways through sewage. The presence of these bacteria in water indicates that sewage is also present, and sewage carries material such as viruses that can cause illness. These indicators of sewage can be influenced by environmental factors, which likely caused bacteria levels to increase while virus levels decreased as they were transported to the lower portion of the watershed.
“These findings showed that human viruses and human bacteria were both present albeit at different occurrence levels, highlighting the strength of analyzing multiple indicators of human sewage for a more complete assessment of contamination in urban streams,” Lenaker said. “The findings also suggest that viruses and bacteria move differently through the watershed.”
The new study is published in the journal Environmental Science and Technology.
For more information about urban water quality in Wisconsin, please visit the USGS Upper Midwest Water Science Center website.
USGS.gov
https://www.usgs.gov/news/human-bacteria-viruses-sewage-found-some-milwaukee-streams
Two types of human-associated bacteria and three types of human viruses were detected in Milwaukee streams within the Menomonee River watershed, according to a recent study led by the U.S. Geological Survey.
Region 3: Great Lakes
http://www.usgs.gov/news/state-news-release/human-bacteria-viruses-sewage-found-some-milwaukee-streams
Wisconsin Water Library
https://waterlibrary.aqua.wisc.edu/women-in-the-aquatic-sciences/
In a win for Flint residents and environmental justice, the federal Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit has ruled that the actions of government – notably MDEQ officials and state-appointed emergency managers – “shocked the conscience” and may violate citizens’ right to bodily integrity as guaranteed by the Due Process Clause of the Constitution’s Fourteenth Amendment. The court’s decision - Guertin v. Michigan, 912 F. 3d 907 (6th Cir. 2019) - reasons that water is not only a necessity for life but a public good, and citizens rely on their government to provide water in good faith. Government officials knowingly delivered unsafe water to residents in Flint for over a year, denying mounting evidence of the danger, and misleading the public and federal officials. While the court cautioned that it was not creating a new constitutional right to water service or a completely pollution-free environment, it establishes a precedent to hold government officials accountable for subjecting citizens to unwarranted dangerous pollution based on violating their right to bodily integrity. The court concluded:
In providing a tainted life-necessity and falsely assuring the public about its potability, government officials stripped the very essence of personhood from those who consumed the water. They also caused parents to strip their children of their own personhood. If ever there was an egregious violation of the right to bodily integrity, this is the case; the affront to human dignity in this case is compelling, and defendants’ conduct is so contrary to fundamental notions of liberty and so lacking of any redeeming social value, that no rational individual could believe their conduct is constitutionally permissible under the Due Process Clause. We therefore agree with the district court that plaintiffs have properly pled a violation of the right to bodily integrity against Howard Croft, Darnell Earley, Gerald Ambrose, Liane Shekter-Smith, Stephen Busch, Michael Prysby, and Bradley Wurfel, and that the right was clearly established at the time of their conduct.
Below is an edited excerpt, with most citations and quotations omitted for ease of reading (and the full opinion with dissent here).
Guertin v. Michigan, 912 F. 3d 907 (6th Cir. 2019)
Griffin, Circuit Judge
This case arises out of the infamous government-created environmental disaster commonly known as the Flint Water Crisis. As a cost-saving measure until a new water authority was to become operational, public officials switched the City of Flint municipal water supply from the Detroit Water and Sewerage Department (DWSD) to the Flint River to be processed by an outdated and previously mothballed water treatment plant. With the approval of State of Michigan regulators and a professional engineering firm, on April 25, 2014, the City began dispensing drinking water to its customers without adding chemicals to counter the river water’s known corrosivity.
The harmful effects were as swift as they were severe. Within days, residents complained of foul smelling and tasting water. Within weeks, some residents’ hair began to fall out and their skin developed rashes. And within a year, there were positive tests for E. coli, a spike in deaths from Legionnaires’ disease, and reports of dangerously high blood-lead levels in Flint children. All of this resulted because the river water was 19 times more corrosive than the water pumped from Lake Huron by the DWSD, and because, without corrosion-control treatment, lead leached out of the lead-based service lines at alarming rates and found its way to the homes of Flint’s residents. The crisis was predictable, and preventable. See generally Mason v. Lockwood, Andrews & Newnam, P.C., 842 F.3d 383, 387 (6th Cir. 2016).
I.
Plaintiffs Shari Guertin, her minor child E.B., and Diogenes Muse-Cleveland claim personal injuries and damages from drinking and bathing in the lead-contaminated water. *** The plaintiffs’ remaining claim is that defendants violated their right to bodily integrity as guaranteed by the Substantive Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. They bring this claim pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, under which an individual may bring a private cause of action against anyone who, under color of state law, deprives a person of rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution or conferred by federal statute.
II.
On this appeal, we decide [a] substantial issue of public importance: did plaintiffs plead a plausible Fourteenth Amendment Due Process violation of their right to bodily integrity and was such a constitutional right clearly established when the defendants acted? We join the Michigan Court of Appeals, Mays v. Snyder, 916 N.W.2d 227 (Mich. Ct. App. 2018) [and citing numerous other lower federal and state courts] in holding that plaintiffs have pled a plausible Due Process violation of bodily integrity regarding some of the defendants.
***
IV.
[The government defendants sought to dismiss the plaintiffs’ claims based on the doctrine of qualified immunity.] Qualified immunity shields public officials from undue interference with their duties and from potentially disabling threats of liability. This immunity gives government officials breathing room to make reasonable but mistaken judgments about open legal questions, protecting all but the plainly incompetent or those who knowingly violate the law. A plaintiff bears the burden of showing that a defendant is not entitled to qualified immunity. To do so, a plaintiff must show (1) that the official violated a statutory or constitutional right, and (2) that the right was clearly established at the time of the challenged conduct. See Ashcroft v. al-Kidd, 563 U.S. 731 (2011).
V.
The Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution provides that “[n]o State shall . . . deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.” Flowing directly from the protections enshrined in the Magna Carta, the Due Process Clause significantly restricts government action—its core is “preventing government from abusing its power, or employing it as an instrument of oppression.” Collins v. City of Harker Heights, 503 U.S. 115, 126 (1992). Although the Due Process Clause provides no guarantee of certain minimal levels of safety and security, it expressly prohibits deprivations by the State itself. That is, “its purpose is to protect the people from the State, not to ensure that the State protects them from each other.” DeShaney v. Winnebago Cty. Dep’t of Soc. Servs., 489 U.S. 189, 195-96 (1989).
There are procedural and substantive due process components. Only the latter component is at issue here. Substantive due process bars certain government actions regardless of the fairness of the procedures used to implement them. It “specifically protects those fundamental rights and liberties which are, objectively, deeply rooted in this Nation’s history and tradition, and implicit in the concept of ordered liberty, such that neither liberty nor justice would exist if they were sacrificed.” Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 U.S. 702, 720–21 (1997). The liberty interests secured by the Due Process Clause include the right generally to enjoy those privileges long recognized at common law as essential to the orderly pursuit of happiness by free men. These common-law privileges, the Supreme Court has held, specifically embrace the right to bodily integrity (see id), and the right not to be subjected to arbitrary and capricious government action that shocks the conscience and violates the decencies of civilized conduct.
***
A.
Plaintiffs’ complaint deals with the scope of the right to bodily integrity, an indispensable right recognized at common law as the “right to be free from ... unjustified intrusions on personal security” and “encompassing” freedom from bodily restraint and punishment.” Ingraham v. Wright, 430 U.S. 651, 673–74 (1977); see also Davis v. Hubbard, 506 F.Supp. 915, 930 (N.D. Ohio 1980) (“In the history of the common law, there is perhaps no right which is older than a person’s right to be free from unwarranted personal contact.”)
This common law right is first among equals. As the Supreme Court has said: “No right is held more sacred, or is more carefully guarded by the common law, than the right of every individual to the possession and control of his own person, free from all restraint or interference of others, unless by clear and unquestionable authority of law.” Union Pac. Ry. Co. v. Botsford, 141 U.S. 250 (1891). Absent lawful authority, invasion of one’s body “is an indignity, an assault, and a trespass” prohibited at common law. Id. On this basis, we have concluded the right to personal security and to bodily integrity bears an impressive constitutional pedigree.
This right is fundamental where the magnitude of the liberty deprivation that the abuse inflicts upon the victim strips the very essence of personhood. “We have never retreated from our recognition that any compelled intrusion into the human body implicates significant, constitutionally protected interests.” Missouri v. McNeely, 569 U.S. 141 (2013). And more broadly, it is beyond debate that an individual’s interest in preserving her life is one of constitutional dimension.
Bodily integrity cases usually arise in the context of government-imposed punishment or physical restraint, but that is far from a categorical rule. Instead, the central tenet of the Supreme Court’s vast bodily integrity jurisprudence is balancing an individual’s common law right to informed consent with tenable state interests, regardless of the manner in which the government intrudes upon an individual’s body. Thus, to show that the government has violated one’s right to bodily integrity, a plaintiff need not establish any constitutional significance to the means by which the harm occurs. That is because individuals possess a constitutional right to be free from forcible intrusions on their bodies against their will, absent a compelling state interest.
***
This nonconsensual intrusion vis-à-vis government interest line of cases has played out time and time again in the lower courts. The numerous cases involving government experiments on unknowing and unwilling patients provide a strong analogy to the Flint Water Crisis. Involuntarily subjecting nonconsenting individuals to foreign substances with no known therapeutic value—often under false pretenses and with deceptive practices hiding the nature of the interference—is a classic example of invading the core of the bodily integrity protection.
In re Cincinnati Radiation Litigation, 874 F.Supp. 796 (S.D. Ohio 1995), is a good example. Funded by the Department of Defense, government officials at the University of Cincinnati subjected cancer patients to radiation doses consistent with those expected to be inflicted upon military personnel during a nuclear war. The patients were in “reasonably good clinical condition,” and were “primarily indigent, poorly educated, and of lower than average intelligence.” At no time did the government actors disclose the risks associated with the massive radiation doses or obtain consent to irradiate the patients at those levels for those purposes—they instead told the patients that the radiation was treatment for their cancer. Summarizing the caselaw, the Cincinnati Radiation court easily concluded that “the right to be free of state-sponsored invasion of a person’s bodily integrity is protected by the Fourteenth Amendment guarantee of due process.” The involuntary and misleading nature of the intrusions was key. The patients could not “be said to exercise that degree of free will that is essential to the notion of voluntariness” because-
“the choice Plaintiffs would have been forced to make was one of life or death. If the Constitution protects personal autonomy in making certain types of important decisions, the decision whether to participate in the Human Radiation Experiments was one that each individual Plaintiff was entitled to make freely and with full knowledge of the purpose and attendant circumstances involved. Without actually seizing the Plaintiffs and forcing them to submit to these experiments, the agents of the state accomplished the same feat through canard and deception.”
We find the Cincinnati Radiation matter especially analogous. In both instances, individuals engaged in voluntary actions that they believed would sustain life, and instead received substances detrimental to their health. In both instances, government officials engaged in conduct designed to deceive the scope of the bodily invasion. And in both instances, grievous harm occurred. Based on the facts and principles set forth in the above cases, we therefore agree with the district court that a government actor violates individuals’ right to bodily integrity by knowingly and intentionally introducing life-threatening substances into individuals without their consent, especially when such substances have zero therapeutic benefit.
Finally, we note what plaintiffs’ claim does not entail. There is, of course, “‘no fundamental right to water service.’” In re City of Detroit, 841 F.3d 684 (6th Cir. 2016). Moreover, the Constitution does not guarantee a right to live in a contaminant-free, healthy environment. To this end, several defendants and the dissent cite a California state case involving residents complaining about a city fluoridating its drinking water supply. See Coshow v. City of Escondido, 132 Cal. App. 4th 687 (2005). However, Coshow is particularly inapposite because it shows the push-and-pulls of competing policy decisions that generally fall outside the scope of a violation of the right to bodily integrity—there, the government publicly introduced fluoride into the water system, a chemical frequently added to public water systems to prevent tooth decay. Here, defendants make no contention that causing lead to enter Flint’s drinking water was for the public good or that they provided notice to Flint residents about the lead-laced water. Therefore, “Coshow did not address whether substantive due-process protections might be implicated in the case of intentional introduction of known contaminants by governmental officials, and its reasoning is inapplicable here.” Mays v. Snyder, 916 N.W.2d at 262 n.16.
B.
Upon a showing of a deprivation of a constitutionally protected liberty interest, a plaintiff must show how the government’s discretionary conduct that deprived that interest was constitutionally repugnant. We use the “shocks the conscience” rubric to evaluate intrusions into a person’s right to bodily integrity. Thus, a plaintiff must show as a predicate the deprivation of a liberty or property interest and conscience-shocking conduct.
“[T]he measure of what is conscience shocking is no calibrated yard stick,” nor is it “subject to mechanical application.” County of Sacramento v. Lewis, 523 U.S. 833 (1998). Several tropes help explain its meaning, with the focus again being on “executive abuse of power.” Due-process-violative conduct shocks the conscience, infringes upon the decencies of civilized conduct, is so brutal and so offensive to human dignity, and interferes with rights implicit in the concept of ordered liberty. These are subjective standards, to be sure, but they make clear that the ‘shocks the conscience’ standard is not a font of tort law, but is instead a way to conceptualize the sort of egregious behavior that rises to the level of a substantive due process violation. Stated differently, the shocks-the-conscience test is the way in which courts prevent transforming run-of-the-mill tort claims into violations of constitutional guarantees.
[The Supreme Court’s holding in County of Sacramento v. Lewis] highlighted how the time to deliberate in one circumstance may dictate liability in one situation but not another because as the very term ‘deliberate indifference’ implies, the standard is sensibly employed only when actual deliberation is practical. Take a classic deliberate indifference situation—when, for example, a prison official has time to make unhurried judgments, with the chance for repeated reflection, largely uncomplicated by the pulls of competing obligations. It is in these kinds of situations where we would expect plaintiffs asserting substantive due process claims based on deliberate indifference to be most successful.
The critical question in determining the appropriate standard of culpability is whether the circumstances allowed the state actors time to fully consider the potential consequences of their conduct. Time is … one element [in considering] the entirety of the situation— the type of harm, the level of risk of the harm occurring, and the time available to consider the risk of harm are all necessary factors in determining whether an official was deliberately indifferent. The key variable is whether actual deliberation is practical, not whether the claimant was in state custody. This is because custodial settings are not the only situations in which officials may have a reasonable opportunity to deliberate.
We have identified a multitude of considerations when evaluating an official’s alleged arbitrariness in the constitutional sense, including the time for deliberation, the nature of the relationship between the government and the plaintiff, and whether a legitimate government purpose motivated the official’s act. *** Simply making bad choices does not rise to the level of deliberate indifference. Rather, for or us to find deliberate indifference, . . . we must find not only that the governmental actor chose to act (or failed to act) despite a subjective awareness of substantial risk of serious injury, but we also must make some assessment that he did not act in furtherance of a countervailing governmental purpose that justified taking that risk. “Many, if not most, governmental policy choices come with risks attached to both of the competing options, and yet it is not a tort for government to govern by picking one option over another.” Schroeder v. City of Fort Thomas, 412 F.3d 724 (2005). Essentially, the more voluntary the plaintiff-government relationship, or the less time the state actor has to deliberate, or the greater the extent to which the state actor is pursuing a legitimate end, the less arbitrary we should deem a bodily injury or death caused by the state actor.We agree with the district court that these considerations weigh in favor of finding that the generally alleged conduct was so egregious that it can be said to be “arbitrary in the constitutional sense.”
Extensive time to deliberate. There is no doubt that the lead-contamination inflicted upon the people of Flint was a predictable harm striking at the core of plaintiffs’ bodily integrity, and this known risk cannot be excused on the basis of split-second decision making. All of the alleged decisions by defendants leading up to and during the crisis took place over a series of days, weeks, months, and years, and did not arise out of time-is-of-the-essence necessity. Their unhurried judgments were replete with opportunities for repeated reflection, largely uncomplicated by the pulls of competing obligations, and thus militate in plaintiffs’ favor. In the Court’s words, because “[w]hen such extended opportunities to do better are teamed with protracted failure even to care, indifference is truly shocking.” Lewis, 523 U.S. at 853.
Involuntary relationship. In addition to the time to deliberate, the relationship between the City of Flint and its residents matters. At the outset, we acknowledge we deal here not with the typical line of voluntary/involuntary relationships that normally occur in our caselaw. Instead, two factors weigh toward an involuntary relationship. First, Flint’s transmission of drinking water to its residents is mandatory on both ends—Flint’s Charter and Code of Ordinances mandate that the city supply water to its residents, see, e.g., Flint City Charter § 4203(A), Flint Code of Ord. § 46-7, and as the City expressly argued below, “residents are legally required to take and pay for the water, unless they use an approved spring or well.” See Flint Code of Ord. §§ 46-50(b), 46-51, 46-52. Second, various defendants’ assurances of the water’s potability hid the risks, turning residents’ voluntary consumption of a substance vital to subsistence into an involuntary and unknowing act of self-contamination. As the district court aptly reasoned, “misleading Flint’s residents as to the water’s safety—so that they would continue to drink the water and Flint could continue to draw water from the Flint River—is no different than the forced, involuntary invasions of bodily integrity that the Supreme Court has deemed unconstitutional.”
No legitimate government purpose. The decision to temporarily switch Flint’s water source was an economic one and there is no doubt that reducing cost is a legitimate government purpose. When a government acts for the benefit of the public, normally its deliberate choice does not shock the conscience. There is a caveat to this general rule—acting merely upon a government interest does not remove an actor’s decision from the realm of unconstitutional arbitrariness. Here, jealously guarding the public’s purse cannot, under any circumstances, justify the yearlong contamination of an entire community. In the words of the Michigan Court of Appeals, “we can conceive of no legitimate governmental objective for this violation of plaintiffs’ bodily integrity.” Mays, 916 N.W.2d at 262.
There is no allegation defendants intended to harm Flint residents. Accordingly, the question is whether defendants acted with deliberate indifference in the constitutional sense, which we have equated with subjective recklessness. This is a particularly high hurdle, for plaintiffs must show the government officials knew of facts from which they could infer a ‘substantial risk of serious harm,’ that they did infer it, and that they acted with indifference ‘toward the individual’s rights. The deliberate-indifference standard requires an assessment of each defendant’s alleged actions individually. Our focus is on each individual defendant’s conduct, their “subjective awareness of substantial risk of serious injury,” and whether their actions were made “in furtherance of a countervailing governmental purpose that justified taking that risk.”
C.
Flint defendants (Earley, Ambrose, and Croft). We begin with one of the two sets of defendants who were instrumental in creating the crisis—defendants Croft [Flint Department of Public Works director], Emergency Manager Earley, and Emergency Manager Ambrose [Emergency Managers appointed by the state to administer the city of Flint]. These individuals were among the chief architects of Flint’s decision to switch water sources and then use a plant they knew was not ready to safely process the water, especially in light of the Flint River’s known environmental issues and the problems associated with lead exposure. Earley, for example, “forced the transition through” despite knowing how important it was that “the treatment plant be ready to treat Flint River water” and that “the treatment plant was not ready.” Similarly, Croft permitted the water’s flow despite knowing “that the City’s water treatment plant was unprepared to adequately provide safe drinking water to Flint’s residents.” The Flint defendants also made numerous statements to the public proclaiming that the water was safe to drink. Defendant Ambrose’s decisions to twice turn down opportunities to reconnect to the DWSD after he knew of the significant problems with the water were especially egregious. These and other asserted actions plausibly allege deliberate indifference and plain incompetence not warranting qualified immunity. To the extent these defendants claim “mistakes in judgment” because they reasonably relied upon the opinions of Michigan Department of Environmental Quality (MDEQ) employees and professional engineering firms, those are facts to be fleshed out during discovery and are not appropriate to resolve at the motion-to-dismiss posture. *** One can place a benign construction on the factual allegations and draw inferences so that the facts amount to a negligent mismanagement of priorities and risks; but the allegations also support a reasonable inference that Earley prioritized a drive to cut costs with deliberate and reckless indifference to the likely results, and Ambrose refused to reconnect to Detroit water despite knowing the substantial risk to Flint residents’ health.
For now, we conclude that plaintiffs’ complaint plausibly alleges a constitutional violation as to these defendants.
DEQ Defendants (Busch, Shekter-Smith, Prysby, Wurfel, and Wyant). The MDEQ defendants were the other set of individuals front and center during the crisis. The allegations against defendants Busch, Shekter-Smith, Prysby, and Wurfel are numerous and substantial. These MDEQ defendants played a pivotal role in authorizing Flint to use its ill-prepared water treatment plant to distribute drinking water from a river they knew was rife with public-health-compromising complications. Furthermore, when faced with the consequences of their actions, they falsely assured the public that the water was safe and attempted to refute assertions to the contrary. A few poignant examples further illustrate their culpability:
To the extent these defendants made “honest mistakes in judgment”—in law or fact—in interpreting and applying the Lead and Copper Rule, that defense is again best reserved for after discovery. This Rule generally requires public water systems to monitor lead and copper levels and to treat certain elevated levels in accordance with the regulation. 40 C.F.R. § 141.80 et. seq. More specifically, it requires a “large system,” like Flint, to optimize corrosion control treatment before distribution of water to the public. § 141.81(a)(1). However, MDEQ employees did not follow this dictate; instead, under a “flawed interpretation” of the Rule, they drew up a yearlong sampling program post-switch (broken up into two, six-month monitoring periods) to determine whether corrosion controls were required. In their view, this after-the-fact-wait-and-see approach to corrosion controls allegedly fell within minimum compliance levels of the Rule. Plaintiffs’ view is bleaker. They assert MDEQ viewed Flint residents as “guinea pigs” for a year to test lead-compliance theories that were unsupported and unauthorized by the EPA just to pass time until water began flowing from a new water authority. To be sure, plaintiffs’ view must be based on reasonable inferences from factual allegations. The district court correctly found that it is.
By the same token, we reject Wurfel’s reliance upon two Second Circuit cases involving statements by public officials about the air-quality in lower Manhattan in the days following the September 11 terrorist attacks, chiefly for the reason that those matters involved the balancing of competing governmental interests—restoring public services and protecting public health—during a time-sensitive environmental emergency. We have no such similar facts here on the face of plaintiffs’ complaint.
***
VI.
***
Given the unique circumstances of this case, defendants argue we should defer to the “breathing room” qualified immunity provides and hold that the invasion of plaintiffs’ right to bodily integrity via life-threatening substances with no therapeutic benefit introduced into individuals without their consent was not clearly established before the officials engaged in their respective conduct. The dissent likewise suggests that “plaintiffs must be able to ‘identify a case with a similar fact pattern’ to this one ‘that would have given ‘fair and clear warning to officers’ about what the law requires.’” But the Supreme Court has made clear that officials can still be on notice that their conduct violates established law even in novel factual circumstances. For the reasons that follow, we decline to erect the suggested “absolute barrier to recovering damages against an individual government actor.”
The lack of a comparable government-created public health disaster precedent does not grant defendants a qualified immunity shield. Rather, it showcases the grievousness of their alleged conduct: “The easiest cases don’t even arise,” United States v. Lanier, 520 U.S. 259 (1997); there is no need that the very action in question have previously been held unlawful because the unconstitutionality of outrageous conduct obviously will be unconstitutional and some personal liberties are so fundamental to human dignity as to need no specific explication in our Constitution in order to ensure their protection against government invasion.
Knowing the Flint River water was unsafe for public use, distributing it without taking steps to counter its problems, and assuring the public in the meantime that it was safe is conduct that would alert a reasonable person to the likelihood of personal liability. As set forth above, taking affirmative steps to systematically contaminate a community through its public water supply with deliberate indifference is a government invasion of the highest magnitude. Any reasonable official should have known that doing so constitutes conscience-shocking conduct prohibited by the substantive due process clause. These actions violate the heartland of the constitutional guarantee to the right of bodily integrity, and the obvious cruelty inherent in defendants’ conduct should have been enough to forewarn defendants.
Furthermore, the long line of Supreme Court cases discussed above all build on each other from one foundation: an individual’s right to bodily integrity is sacred, founded upon informed consent, and may be invaded only upon a showing of a government interest. The Court could not have been clearer in Washington v. Harper, 494 U.S. 210 (1990) when it stated that “[t]he forcible injection of medication into a nonconsenting person’s body represents a substantial interference with that person’s liberty.” Here we have an even more dramatic invasion, for at least in Harper the state forced medication—something needed to improve or sustain life—into its citizens; here, government officials caused Flint residents to consume a toxin with no known benefit, did so without telling them, and made affirmative representations that the water was safe to drink.
***
In providing a tainted life-necessity and falsely assuring the public about its potability, government officials stripped the very essence of personhood from those who consumed the water. They also caused parents to strip their children of their own personhood. If ever there was an egregious violation of the right to bodily integrity, this is the case; the affront to human dignity in this case is compelling, and defendants’ conduct is so contrary to fundamental notions of liberty and so lacking of any redeeming social value, that no rational individual could believe their conduct is constitutionally permissible under the Due Process Clause. We therefore agree with the district court that plaintiffs have properly pled a violation of the right to bodily integrity against Howard Croft, Darnell Earley, Gerald Ambrose, Liane Shekter-Smith, Stephen Busch, Michael Prysby, and Bradley Wurfel, and that the right was clearly established at the time of their conduct.
Should discovery shed further light on the reasons behind their actions (as but one example, a governmental interest that trumps plaintiffs’ right to bodily integrity), they are free to raise the qualified immunity defense again at the summary judgment stage.
[Discussion of Flint’s status as an arm of the state while under emergency management and partial dissent by Judge McKeague omitted.]
Great Lakes Law
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/GreatLakesLaw/~3/PpV88gXOJko/federal-appeals-court-allows-flint-residents-claims-against-state-officials.html
The Detroit Building, Safety Engineering and Environmental Department (BSEED) has extended the deadline for public comment regarding Marathon’s request for a variance from the Detroit dust ordinance. Most importantly, Marathon has requested an exception from the Ordinance’s requirement that all petroleum coke be stored, processed, and handled in a fully enclosed structure. The public may submit comments until March 18, 2019. Comments may be submitted either online or by mail. Information regarding how to submit comments as well as Marathon’s request for a can be found here.
However, BSEED has not committed to hold another public hearing on Marathon’s request for a variance. While BSEED held a public hearing on January 23rd, it did so before it provided proper notice as required by section 22-5-64 of the ordinance. Contact BSEED to insist that they comply with the Detroit dust ordinance, and hold another public hearing so that residents can provide their input regarding Marathon’s request for several exemptions from the Detroit dust ordinance. Contact BSEED at 313-224-2733.
Petroleum coke is an extremely dusty byproduct of oil refining. When stored in large quantities, it can create large amounts of fine dust, commonly referred to as particulate matter, which can blow into nearby neighborhoods and impact people’s health. A study commissioned by the City of Chicago found that the maximum predicted concentration of fine particulate matter from a petroleum coke pile placed outdoors was approximately 4,900 micrograms per cubic meter of air, which is 32 times the health-based ambient air quality standard set by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
In 2017, the city of Detroit passed an air quality ordinance to strictly regulate the storage of petroleum coke. This Ordinance requires all facilities in Detroit to store, handle, and process petroleum coke in a completely enclosed structure to limit human exposure to particulate matter pollution. However, a facility may request a “variance” from a requirement if they believe that compliance with the Ordinance will impose an unreasonable hardship. A variance is an exemption from specific requirements of the Ordinance that is granted on a case-by-case basis by BSEED.
Marathon has requested a variance from numerous requirements in the Detroit Ordinance, including the following:
Requirement that Marathon store, handle, and process petroleum coke in a fully enclosed structure
Requirement that Marathon conduct a street sweeping program in compliance with the Ordinance
Requirement that Marathon install a rumble strip for outgoing trucks to limit the track out of dust onto roadways
Requirement to conduct visual emissions observations
If Marathon is issued a variance, it does not have to comply with the specific requirements described above. Before being issued a variance, Marathon must demonstrate that being exempt from these requirements will not create a pubic nuisance, or adversely impact the surrounding area, environment, or property uses.
Additional Information
Great Lakes Environmental Law Center Fact Sheet + Talking Points
Great Lakes Environmental Law Center Comments Regarding Marathon Variance Request
Marathon’s Variance Application
Marathon’s Fugitive and Coke Handling Dust Control Guide
Information About How to Submit Comments
News - Great Lakes Environmental Law Center
News - Great Lakes Environmental Law Center
https://www.glelc.org/our-blog/2019/1/29/detroit-building-safety-engineering-and-environmental-department-extends-public-comment-period-regarding-marathons-request-for-a-variance-from-the-detroit-dust-ordinance
The Great Lakes Environmental Law Center is happy to announce the release of its latest report detailing how trees may be used to create vegetative buffers to improve local ambient air quality to improve pubic health in Detroit.
The report, titled “Vegetative Buffers and Tree Canopy: Promoting the Use of Trees to Improve Local Air Quality with Local Policy,” analyzes how trees and shrubs may be utilized to form vegetative buffers between common sources of air pollution, such as industrial facilities and roadways, and places where people live, work, and play. People that live near high-traffic roadways and industrial facilities are commonly exposed to high levels of several air pollutants, including particulate matter and a variety of gaseous pollutants.When properly designed and implemented, vegetative buffers can limit human exposure to these pollutants and improve the public health for people that are often the most overburdened by air pollution.
The Center, in partnership with the University of Michigan Dow Sustainability Fellows program and Detroit City Council Member Raquel Castañeda-López’s office, received feedback from local residents regarding the potential use of vegetative buffers in Detroit. This report details the feedback received from residents, scientific support for the use of vegetative buffers to improve local air quality, a review of existing Detroit laws and policies regarding vegetative buffers, and a survey of vegetative buffer ordinances from other cities.
Read the full report here:
https://drive.google.com/a/glelc.org/file/d/1FxidCMIgIG8XZ3b531NQvDtihLi6pOV-/view?usp=sharing
This report was made possible with funding from the Community Action to Promote Health Environments (CAPHE), a community-based participatory research partnership that includes community-based organizations, the health practice community, environmental organizations, and academic researches. Please read more about their work at: http://caphedetroit.sph.umich.edu/
News - Great Lakes Environmental Law Center
News - Great Lakes Environmental Law Center
https://www.glelc.org/our-blog/vegetativebufferreport
Wisconsin Water Library
https://waterlibrary.aqua.wisc.edu/open-access-in-the-aquatic-sciences-aquatic-commons/
St. Clair County, Michigan – CCO Meeting Presentation [.pdf]
Tuesday, February 26, 2019
CCO 1:00-3:00pm, Open House 4:00-6:00pm
Clay Township Hall
4710 Pointe Tremble Road (M29)
Clay Township, Michigan 48001
Wayne County, Michigan – CCO Meeting Presentation [.pdf]
Wednesday, February 27, 2019
CCO 2:00-4:00pm, Open House 5:00-7:00pm
Wayne County Community College, Frank Hayden Room
1001 W. Fort Street
Detroit, MI 48226
Macomb County, Michigan – CCO Meeting Presentation [.pdf]
Thursday, February 28, 2019
CCO 2:00-4:00pm, Open House 5:00-7:00pm
Macomb Community College
K Building, Macomb Room South (K301S)
14500 Twelve Mile Road
Warren, Michigan 48088
Great Lakes Coastal Flood Study
Great Lakes Coastal Flood Study
https://www.greatlakescoast.org/2019/01/21/lake-st-clair-consultation-coordination-officer-and-open-house-meetings/
Wisconsin Water Library
https://waterlibrary.aqua.wisc.edu/art-and-science-round-2-ancient-survivors/
Green Bay, WI
https://www.weather.gov/dnr.wisconsin.gov/Education/OutdoorSkills/IceSafety
Green Bay, WI
https://www.weather.gov/www.dnr.state.mn.us/safety/ice/index.html
Wisconsin Water Library
https://waterlibrary.aqua.wisc.edu/past-present-and-future/
Wave Hazards and VE Zones on the Great Lakes Fact Sheet:
The Letter of Map Revision Process Fact Sheet:
Using LiDAR for Map Amendments Fact Sheet:
Understanding Risks Along the Great Lakes: The Impact of Coastal Armoring Structures on Flood Hazards Fact Sheet:
Coastal Flood Risks and Floodplain Mapping in Lake St. Clair Fact Sheet:
The fact sheets above are posted on the Fact Sheets page.
Great Lakes Coastal Flood Study
Great Lakes Coastal Flood Study
https://www.greatlakescoast.org/2018/12/31/updated-fact-sheets/
The study highlights a new and important finding: Controllable well construction choices, not just location and depth, influence arsenic concentrations in drinking water.
“Chronic exposure to high levels of naturally occurring arsenic through drinking water can cause certain cancers, skin abnormalities and other adverse human health effects,” said Melinda Erickson, a USGS research hydrologist and the lead author of the study. “Results from this study can help improve arsenic concentration predictions and help identify safer groundwater supply options in similar aquifers throughout the U.S. and globally.”
The glacial aquifers of Minnesota used for domestic wells commonly have elevated arsenic concentrations. The new study found that short well screen lengths of four or five feet, which are typical, were associated with higher probabilities of elevated arsenic concentrations. At the time of well drilling, choosing to place a well screen farther beneath the overlying confining unit, also called an aquitard, and/or using a longer-length screen would lower, though not eliminate, the risk of having high arsenic concentrations in the well water.
USGS scientists created arsenic hazard maps for regions in northwestern and central Minnesota, and used a sophisticated statistical model to determine which environmental and man-made variables influence arsenic concentrations. They found that natural aquifer characteristics, such as position on the landscape and soil chemistry, were among the most influential for predicting elevated arsenic levels.
Public water supplies are regulated by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, but maintenance, testing and treatment of private water supplies are the responsibility of the homeowner. The EPA’s maximum arsenic level allowed for public water supplies is 10 micrograms of arsenic per liter of water. In Minnesota, arsenic concentrations exceed 10 micrograms of arsenic per liter in about 11 percent of newly constructed private wells, and arsenic is detectable in about 50 percent of wells. The Minnesota Department of Health recommends that well owners with detectable arsenic treat their drinking water.
Glacial and other sand and gravel aquifers similar to those in Minnesota exist across the northern U.S. and in places like southeastern Asia. Results from the study can help improve arsenic concentration prediction methods and groundwater infrastructure far beyond Minnesota.
This research was funded by the Minnesota Department of Health through the Minnesota Clean Water Fund and the USGS. The new study is published in the journal Water Resources Research. For more information about USGS water studies in Minnesota, visit the USGS Water Resources of Minnesota website.
This illustration compares the construction characteristics of two water wells. Note that the distance from the top of the well screen to the confining unit, or aquitard, is much shorter for the well on the right, as is the length of the screen in the underlying aquifer unit. Placing a well screen farther beneath the confining unit and/or using a longer-length screen, as shown for the well on the left, can decrease the likelihood of elevated arsenic concentrations in domestic well water.
Credit: Modified from Figure 1 in Erickson & Barnes, 2005, reprinted with permission.
USGS.gov
https://www.usgs.gov/news/design-private-wells-can-lead-safer-drinking-water-minnesota
Minnesota well drillers and landowners will now have new tools to help predict arsenic concentrations in drinking water when building domestic water wells, according to a recent U.S. Geological Survey study.
Region 3: Great Lakes
http://www.usgs.gov/news/technical-announcement/design-private-wells-can-lead-safer-drinking-water-minnesota
Simcoe County, Ontario has one of the longest histories of contact between settlers and Indigenous peoples within Canada. Yet, this area remains understudied by historians, with much of the literature glorifying Canada’s first settlers, while emphasizing the “uncivilized” and “savage” nature of Indigenous peoples. This article tells the remarkable story of the Coldwater-Narrows Reserve (1830-1836) in order to reveal Indigenous life, culture, and presence in the region, while countering problematic perceptions of Indigenous peoples and addressing fundamental gaps in historiography. A variety of primary sources are explored, including archival maps, correspondence, travelogues, journals, and illustrations. This story demonstrates how the peoples of the Coldwater-Narrows Reserve created an enduring legacy of self-determination, which in turn led their descendants to continue their fight against the terms of the 1836 sale of the reserve land up until 2011, when this claim was at last settled by the Canadian government. Thus, this article highlights past accomplishments of Indigenous peoples in Canada, as well as the legacies that these accomplishments have created.
The Great Lakes Journal of Undergraduate History
The Great Lakes Journal of Undergraduate History
https://scholar.uwindsor.ca/gljuh/vol6/iss1/5
In 1991 neuroscientist Simon LeVay published “A Difference in Hypothalamic Structure Between Heterosexual and Homosexual Men”, which reported the discovery of a ‘region’ in the anterior hypothalamus of the brain that determined sexual orientation in men. LeVay's study was an attempt to revolutionize the scientific study of sexual orientation, as previous decades of research had failed to isolate the biological determining factor of human sexual orientation. Blinded by his political motivation to aid the gay rights movement at the end of the twentieth century, LeVay's study - as well as the countless other scientific investigations of human sexuality - merely succeeded in naturalizing socially constructed categories through 'objective' scientific facts. A historical investigation of the socio-cultural influence that informed the scientific study of LeVay will help illuminate the gender ideals and binarized categories that influenced his attempt to prove there was a 'gay brain'.
The Great Lakes Journal of Undergraduate History
The Great Lakes Journal of Undergraduate History
https://scholar.uwindsor.ca/gljuh/vol6/iss1/4
Within this research, I sought to uncover the correlation between the cholera epidemic of 1848 and the establishment of the Cleveland Orphan Asylum in 1852. However, I ascertained that not only was this a practical venture to save waifs that had been orphaned due to epidemic, but it was a religious obligation rooted in antiquated Puritan beliefs of salvation. The founding couple, the Rouse family, came from Massachusetts during the Second Great Awakening and instituted sundry Sunday schools in their wake. Beginning in New York and slowly making their way to Cleveland, Ohio, they spread the gospel and created tracts and missions for the evolving city. My research outlines their direct influence in the Cleveland Protestant Orphan Asylum and its dynamic changes in the nineteenth century. Although there was a move toward scientific charity, the Rouse's original intention of reforming children in order to prevent degradation and immorality firmly rooted itself in the mission statement as the institution took a more secular name, Beech Brook. I discovered that the Cleveland Protestant Orphan Asylum of the nineteenth century was more progressive than most institutions surrounding the area, and rivaled the nuanced ideas of the Children's Aid Society in New York City. The Cleveland Protestant Orphan Asylum began placing children in the new western frontier and instituted home visiting before many contemporary institutions in the surrounding area, resulting in a fully functioning, ethical, and progressive yet deeply evangelical foster care institution.
The Great Lakes Journal of Undergraduate History
The Great Lakes Journal of Undergraduate History
https://scholar.uwindsor.ca/gljuh/vol6/iss1/3
This paper examines the works produced by: Erich Maria Remarque, Ernest Hemingway, C.S. Lewis, and J.R.R. Tolkien, specifically to show how their writings recorded and translated the experiences of soldiers during World War I, and their struggle to assimilate into civilian society afterward. By examining authors and novels from varying geographic and national background, common themes of bitterness, trauma, and disillusionment are found in men that fought on both sides of the conflict. Literature’s reflection of these scars appears in the lived experiences woven into the writings by the authors, and the reactions of the wider public that shared similar stories to those the authors from their own time in the war. Ultimately, the works of fiction also show that while veterans of World War I shared many similar experiences many of them either failed to fully cope with their demons or found methods of finding peace with them.
The Great Lakes Journal of Undergraduate History
The Great Lakes Journal of Undergraduate History
https://scholar.uwindsor.ca/gljuh/vol6/iss1/2
The Great Lakes Journal of Undergraduate History
The Great Lakes Journal of Undergraduate History
https://scholar.uwindsor.ca/gljuh/vol6/iss1/1