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Posts with the tag water

There’s a lot of talk about water this week. And it’s not all coming from Slip ‘N Slide enthusiasts, either.

 

The good news is that on Monday, June 23, a deal was brokered between the Michigan House and Senate to protect the Great Lakes and our inland rivers and streams from withdrawal by dry states in the southwest. This deal makes Michigan the seventh state to ratify the Great Lakes Basin Compact – a package deal that would provide protection for the Great Lakes and its eight surrounding states. We’re looking at you, Pennsylvania.

 

The bad news, however, is that this fight is far from finished.

 

The protectors of the Great Lakes still have 20,000 leagues to go before victory is totally and finally accomplished. As water-protection advocates like Cyndi Roper and the rest of Clean Water Action’s Michigan team have warned, the struggle for public control over our state’s water supply still lies ahead. So does the effort to thwart bottled water industries who wish to swoop in and drain the falsely-deceptive “endless” water supply of the Great Lakes. (There’s a reason why “naïve” is “Evian” spelled backwards).

 

If ensuring public control over our water supply is ever to be a reality, legislators need to stop treating water as industrial commodity, and give it the respect it deserves: as a publicly-owned, highly valuable natural resource. Protection from the bottled water and corporations that would like to sell our water for profit to other H20-hungry states and nations must be established, and firmly at that. If Michigan legislators ever hope to push our state forward and cast us as a major protector of water, emphasis on the public’s right to control our own water is absolutely essential. The Great Lakes belong to the people, not to gigantic corporations or sprawling subdivisions in Arizona.

 

Get ready for the fight ahead over public trust or corporate control. It’s up to Michigan’s residents to stand up for the Great Lakes and our precious inland water sources. Together, we can prevent greedy corporations and other states and nations from pulling the plug and sending Michigan’s water down the drain.

The majority of Michigan citizens have been to at least one of the Great Lakes, if only once. In fact, a large number of Midwesterners have come to Lake Michigan, Huron, Superior, Erie, or Ontario to swim, boat, fish, or any number of other reasons.

Besides supporting Michigan's tourism industry, which is the second largest contributor to our state's economy after manufacturing, the Great Lakes are an important environmental resource, housing any number of freshwater fish and plants. Their freshwater reserves, the largest surface reserves in the entire planet, supply thirsty Michigan and mid-western agriculture (the third largest economic contributor), in addition to many thirsty Michigan citizens, the water necessary to live and grow.

However, what would happen if those lakes weren't there anymore? What would happen if one or more of the lakes were put off limit to tourists and residents, citing high pollution levels? What if the water was unable to be pumped to the cherry producers in Traverse City or the soybean growers in Monroe, let alone to the pipes that wet-the-whistle of Michigan residents daily?

Some would tell you that this will never happen. They have the same false logic as many outside of the state: that Michigan is 'awash' in water. The water cycle, they say, ensures that the thousands of thousands of gallons wasted to water lawns and from table-water at restaurants will somehow comeback to the Great Lakes to be consumed again.

Why then are the Lakes at the lowest levels they have ever been? Why do certain areas of Michigan have to enact water moratoriums every summer to control dwindling water supplies amid drought conditions? The answer is: we do not have unlimited water to do with as we please. The wasteful practices that we have been indulging in for decades are combining with the effects of climate change to come back to haunt us. Unless we change our outlook on the Great Lakes and the environment, we will rapidly destroy the state many of us have come to treasure.

Hope is not lost though. Change is slowly beginning to happen. In 2005, Gov. Jennifer Granholm pushed the Great Lakes, Great Michigan! initiative through the Michigan Legislature. Constraints were placed on Dasani and other water-bottling companies, preventing them from sucking our lakes completely dry. In 2006 and 2007, the Legislature began to make progress on regulating aquifer tapping (the process of draining the ground-water that supplies the lakes, streams, rivers, tributaries, and us), another step in fighting low lake levels. Also, the public outcry was amazing when BP wanted to dump vast amounts of ammonia and sludge into Lake Michigan, with Facebook groups, websites, and the whole nine yards of grassroots activism coming into play to protect our most treasured resource.

Despite this progress, there is more that needs to be done. Michigan, while the only state to border 4 of the 5 Great Lakes, is only one of the seven American states that has territorial claims to them. Efforts need to be taken so that, when Michigan prevents a company from draining the lakes, they don't just relocate to Illinois or Wisconsin to continue their destructive practices. The strongest attempt to do just this is the Great Lakes Compact, an eight-state legislative package that, when fully ratified, will put the power to control water withdrawals into the hands of the people, rather than a few legislators.

This compact, though, is falling victim to the water-politics it is seeking to abolish. Two states (Illinois and Minnesota) have already passed it, while the other states and Michigan are considering it. Wisconsin and Ohio are presenting a challenge to this bill, wanting to amend it to allow more areas than just Great Lakes-basin areas to withdraw water. This is problematic as the compact only goes into effect if every state passes the same language. If one state refuses to agree, it acts as a veto, sinking the entire project.

There is no excuse for this. Politicians from both parties need to have the leadership necessary to fight politics-as-usual and make a decision with the interests of the people in mind, rather than their careers. It is at this point we, the people, need to stand up and show our elected officials that we will not support continuing the policies of the past that risk destroying the Great Lakes, the environmental jewel that sustains us and provides us great enjoyment.

-Tom Choske
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