Blog Posts

Blog posts by FLOW team and guest writers

The Filthy Five: Michigan’s most notorious contamination sites

Out of Michigan’s 24,000 Contaminated Sites, These Are Among the Most Notorious Once upon a time, Michigan scientifically ranked our thousands of contamination sites by the hazard they represented to public health and the environment. Released annually, the list generated extensive publicity and legislative attention, resulting in significant appropriations for the cleanup of the worst… Read more »

A conversation with the Mad Angler, Michael Delp

To find a cranky, resolute, dry-witted champion for Michigan’s water, you need look no farther than Michael Delp. In his prose and poetry – especially as his alter ego, the Mad Angler, he has written lyrically of trout and forcefully condemned polluters. Mike is just out with a collection, The Mad Angler: Poems, that deepens… Read more »

Citizens fight proposal to bottle and sell Lake Superior water

A proposal to turn artesian groundwater that feeds Lake Superior in northern Wisconsin into a product for sale continues to run head-on into the law, the community, a tribe, and a citizens group, Lake Superior Not for Sale (LSNFS). The most recent defeat for Kristle KLR came in June, when the Wisconsin Court of Appeals… Read more »

New Report Explores the Long-Term Costs of Relying on Institutional Controls in Responding to Groundwater Contamination

Download the report: Institutional Controls for Groundwater Management: Long-Term Costs and Policy Impacts The true economic, ecological, and social costs of relying on land use restrictions to address groundwater and soil contamination instead of active clean up are likely significantly higher than generally estimated. That is a conclusion of a new report submitted to the… Read more »

“The Lives of Lake Ontario,” a new book by Daniel Macfarlane

Lake Ontario is the only one of the Great Lakes that Michigan does not border. Receiving the waste of the other four Great Lakes and the impact of industrial development in its own watershed, Lake Ontario faces special challenges. In his new book, The Lives of Lake Ontario, Daniel Macfarlane explores the checkered environmental history… Read more »

Climate Change and Michigan’s Cherry Crop Disaster

A disastrous growing season for northwestern Lower Michigan’s cherry crop is resulting in calls for federal aid and a growing sense that climate change is warping the health of this iconic fruit. The sweet cherry crop has been deemed a failure, and similar conditions have affected tart cherries. It’s estimated that cherry growers lost 30%… Read more »

Meet FLOW supporter & wildlife photographer, Lynn Fraze

Support the Great Lakes! By: Lynn FrazeFLOW supporter Growing up I never thought of water as a controversial issue.  My grandparents (born in the 1890s) built a log cabin on Pickerel Lake in Northern Michigan a few years before I was born. My fondest memories were summers spent Up North swimming, fishing and exploring the… Read more »

Where do Vance and Walz stand on environmental policies?

Now that major party candidates for Vice President are designated, it’s an appropriate time to check their records on two environmental concerns vital to Michigan and the Great Lakes region. Climate Change Democratic Vice Presidential candidate Tim Walz, as Governor of Minnesota, has called for strong federal action to abate and prepare for the effects… Read more »

FLOW Coalition submits Fremont digester comments

“I am used to farm smells. I am a farmer myself. Manure spread, and even the turkey CAFO a mile away, were unpleasant but familiar smells that our community has lived with. The digestate was nothing like these. I could only liken it to having my head in a full port-a-potty. I am over a… Read more »

When is air pollution air pollution? When industry moves the goalposts

In her job caring for hogs in a Missouri livestock confinement holding thousands of animals, Angela Smith spent her days walking grates above huge cesspits full of pig urine and feces. Her eyes watered. Her throat burned. There were no regulations to protect her, no agency to complain to. Within a year, she had a permanent cough that followed her home. “I was coughing so hard, I would throw up,” she told food and farm safety publication Civil Eats, which didn’t use her real name, to protect her from retaliation. After two years, Angela’s health gave out and she had to quit. Her former employer refused to comment.