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Michigan Pulls the Plug on Dams

22 April 2013

There are more than 2,600 dams in Michigan, many of which are not maintained and no longer serve a purpose.

Many are considered unsafe due to risk of collapse.  Unmaintained dams deteriorate, threatening homes and property or people who may be downstream, said Chris Freiburger, a supervisor with the fisheries division of the Michigan Department of Natural Resources.

“When we look at the number of dams we have and the age that we know of, it becomes a concern,” Freiburger said. “It’s a real infrastructure issue here that needs to be dealt with.”

The state recently targeted six dams to remove or repair. The money required for the work is from general fund dollars, which is tax money that the Michigan legislature allocates.

 

Read more: Michigan Pulls the Plug on Dams

USCG Station getting $11.3 million upgrade

16 April 2013

The U.S. Coast Guard will soon say goodbye to its 100-year-old building in Painesville Township and hello to a new state-of-the-art complex.

In the coming months, the U.S. Coast Guard plans to demolish the existing station and boathouse sitting along Coast Guard Road in Painesville Township and build a new $11.3 million complex in its place by September 2014.

The current facility is 100 years old and is due for more than a makeover, said Commander Lt. Edward Wieland, project manager for the US Coast Guard's Facilities Design and Construction Center.

 

Read more: USCG Station getting $11.3 million upgrade

A Surprising Comeback for Lake Huron's Native Fish

11 April 2013

For years now, we’ve heard bad news about the Great Lakes. Most of it has to do with invasive species getting into the lakes and wrecking the food web. One writer called it a slow-moving underwater wildfire.

So it might surprise you to hear that native fish are doing very well in one of the lakes. The changes are so dramatic scientists are a bit puzzled and can’t explain what’s happening.

 

Read more: A Surprising Comeback for Lake Huron's Native Fish

New Canada/U.S. Council Will Tackle Problems of Great Lakes

11 April 2013

Water levels in the Great Lakes were at a record low in January. Like many issues affecting the Great Lakes Region, Canadians and Americans are affected equally. As a region, we have common interests but no common voice.

That is why dozens of organizations from across the region are this week launching a new binational council to address our environmental and economic challenges. The new Council of the Great Lakes Region will bring together leaders from diverse sectors across the eight Great Lakes states, Ontario and Quebec.

 

Read more: New Canada/U.S. Council Will Tackle Problems of Great Lakes

Toxic Chemicals Turn Up in Great Lakes Plastic Pollution

10 April 2013

Toxic chemicals clinging to plastics could cause health problems for fish and other organisms in the Great Lakes.

They were discovered in samples from the first-ever Great Lakes plastic survey in Lake Erie, Lake Huron and Lake Superior last summer, Lorena Rios Mendoza, an assistant chemistry professor at the University of Wisconsin – Superior, announced Monday.

And instead of just sitting in sediments as some scientists previously thought, those pollutants might be traveling with plastics to other parts of the Great Lakes.

 

Read more: Toxic Chemicals Turn Up in Great Lakes Plastic Pollution

New Dredging Bills Signed by Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder

04 April 2013

Governor Rick Snyder signed a bill pouring $20.9 million into an emergency dredging program.

The money will allow 58 public bays and harbors, used mostly for recreational boating, to be cleared of the sands and sediment that are clogging them and leaving many boats stranded. The dredging is needed to deal with the consequences of record low lake levels in the Great Lakes, especially Lakes Michigan and Huron.

 

Read more: New Dredging Bills Signed by Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder

Salmon Plan Will Stock Lakes and Rivers

03 April 2013

The Michigan Department of Natural Resources will release about 100,000 Atlantic salmon into Lake Huron and two of its tributary streams this spring.

Yearling salmon will be stocked in the St. Marys River, the Au Sable River, Thunder Bay River and Lexington Harbor in southern Lake Huron.

They are raised in a laboratory at Lake Superior State University in Sault Ste. Marie and the Platte River State Fish Hatchery near Beulah.

Todd Grischke is the DNR's Lake Huron Basin coordinator. He says the fisheries division's managers have consulted with interested groups about where to release the salmon.

 

Read more: Salmon Plan Will Stock Lakes and Rivers

Alcoa, Reynolds to Pay $20M to Clean Up St. Lawrence

28 March 2013

Alcoa and Reynolds Metals will pay almost $20 million to restore habitat and wildlife on the St. Lawrence River near Massena. The settlement ends a more than 20-year-old lawsuit spearheaded by the St. Regis Mohawk Tribe. 

For decades until the 1970s, Alcoa, Reynolds, and a third industrial giant, General Motors, released toxic chemicals, including PCBs, into the St. Lawrence River – just upriver from the Akwesasne Mohawk reservation.

 

Read more: Alcoa, Reynolds to Pay $20M to Clean Up St. Lawrence

DNA for Tracking Down & Controling Invasive Species

27 March 2013

Great Lakes researchers are using new DNA techniques to track down and control the spread of invasive species. Christopher Jerde, a professor at the Notre Dame is creating a basin-wide surveillance program. 

The researchers search for the DNA of an invader in the environment, or eDNA, with techniques that may be a boon for understanding how they enter the Great Lakes basin.

 

Read more: DNA for Tracking Down & Controling Invasive Species

Michigan State House Approves Funds for Emergency Great Lakes Dredging

22 March 2013

The state House of Representatives voted 107-3 to provide $20.9 million for emergency dredging in 49 harbors and bays in the Great Lakes. 

The bill also appropriated $23 million for 76 projects paid for by the Natural Resources Trust Fund.

 

Read more: Michigan State House Approves Funds for Emergency Great Lakes Dredging
  1. Bill Introduced to Prohibit Sewage Dumping in Great Lakes
  2. Conservation Plan National Wildlife Refuges in Great Lakes
  3. Cuyahoga Falls Dams to be Demolished in Summer
  4. Legislation to Help Dredging
  5. Expert: Fish Kill a Nuisance But Not Dangerous
  6. Dredging Money Pouring into New Buffalo
  7. Availability of Seats for the Thunder Bay National Marine Sanctuary Advisory Council
  8. Lake Erie Wind-Turbine Project in High Gear for Next Year
  9. Presque Isle Bay Removed from Areas of Concern
  10. Funds for Great Lakes Dredging May Get Boost From Michigan Senate
  11. Corp of Engineers May Look at Reducing River Flow from Lake Huron after Levels Dip to Lowest Since 1918
  12. 2 Great Lakes Hit Lowest Water Level on Record
  13. Great Lakes Governors Applaud Harbour Dredging Proposal
  14. Asian Carp Barrier
  15. Drought Could Reverse Flow of Chicago River
  16. Coast Guard Crews Are Culling the Great Lakes of Buoys in an Annual Fall Ritual
  17. Process of Limiting Chinook Salmon Stocking Next Year Begins
  18. State Moves to Stock Lake Huron with Atlantic Salmon
  19. Trout Could Restore Piece of Erie History
  20. Atlantic Salmon Slated for Stocking in Northern Michigan Rivers

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  • Join/Renew/Upgrade
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