MARIE —
SAULT STE.Brian Ramler longs for the days when his marina on Lake Huron's Georgian Bay could handle 50 boats — before water levels began dropping steadily a decade ago. He can accommodate fewer than half as many now and wants the government to help bring the water back.
Forget it, says Philip Lunsford, who lives on the southern shore of Lake Michigan. He recalls beach homes being washed away by high water during the mid-1980s and fears it could happen again if authorities boost the level of Lake Huron, which is connected to Lake Michigan by a 5-mile-wide straits area.
In a scenario that might baffle onlookers from arid regions, people around the Great Lakes are fighting over water. Complaints that levels are too high or too low are longstanding, but the debate is growing louder as a warming climate raises the specter of more dramatic changes.
U.S. and Canadian officials are considering an audacious and costly effort to control the freshwater seas' ups and downs in a way they never have before. A panel of scientists and engineers will release today a five-year study of options ranging from minor tinkering to a massive, $8 billion engineering project that would invite comparisons to the Panama Canal.
The latter alternative would involve using structures to regulate flows between all five Great Lakes. It's a long shot with few supporters but by including it in their report, the experts acknowledge it could gain traction.
"In modern times, there's not been an attempt to regulate all the lakes," said John Nevin, spokesman for the study group. "This would be unprecedented." Even a halfway measure such as slowing the flow from Lake Huron as demanded by Ramler and others on Georgian Bay would involve a swirl of technical and political challenges. The stakes are high because variations of mere inches can have big implications for the environment, tourism and shipping.
Regardless of what the governments do, rainfall, runoff from winter snowpacks and evaporation will remain the biggest influences over water levels.
"There's always expectations that artificial structures can protect you from everything," said Ted Yuzyk, Canadian chairman of the International Upper Great Lakes Study. "It's a huge lake system and ... regulation can only take you so far. It's not like turning the tap on and off whenever you want." Still, the system isn't entirely natural. Lake Ontario's levels have been regulated for more than 50 years by the Moses-Saunders Power Dam on the St. Lawrence River.
Hydropower turbines and gates at the border town of Sault Ste. Marie control outflows from Lake Superior, which feeds Lake Huron and eventually the other Great Lakes. Adjusting the flow makes only a slight difference, but "I get calls all the time from people wanting us to do something about water levels," said Steve Rose, operations chief for the local Army Corps of Engineers office.
People clamoring for relief from low water in sprawling Georgian Bay contend the shortage results largely from dredging by the Army corps to enlarge the shipping channel in the St. Clair River, the outlet at the south end of Lake Huron. So a man-made solution is justified, they say.
"If somebody has the ability to keep the water at a decent level by putting a dam in the river or doing something else to restrict the flow, I think they should do it," said Ramler, 53, who inherited Twin Bridges Marina from his dad and has worked there from childhood.
Lake Huron presently is about a foot below its March average, said Keith Kompoltowicz, an Army corps meteorologist in Detroit. But the situation has long been worse on Georgian Bay, said Bob Duncanson, executive director of a waterfront homeowners group.
The bay, largest in the Great Lakes, has shorelines dotted with cottages and marinas, many accessible only by water. One-time bottomlands have turned into mud flats and boats have sustained propeller damage from striking barely submerged boulders. Fish have lost spawning areas.
"Many people have had to relocate docks and boathouses," Duncanson said. "Some of the channels haven't been usable for 10 years." The study team says putting "sills" resembling underwater speed bumps in the river could help raise lake levels, but could cost up to $200 million. Environmental groups say there are cheaper options, such as removing seawalls.
But a property owners group on southern Lake Michigan sponsored a letter-writing campaign saying higher Lake Huron water levels would bring erosion and flooding in their area. An attorney threatened legal action.
"I feel some sympathy for the people in Georgian Bay, but not enough to want to raise water levels," said Marcia Wineberg, who says mid-1980s high water washed away 100 feet of shoreline between Lake Michigan and her house near St. Joseph.
Activists briefed on the new report say it makes no significant recommendations about the St. Clair River, likely meaning nothing will be decided soon.
Yuzyk, the study co-leader, said property owners and user groups should accept that fluctuating levels are nature's way and learn to deal with them.
"Anything we do to help one side will hurt somebody else," he said.
Michigan
Great Lakes residents clash over water
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Case against medical pot-using driver overturned
The Michigan Supreme Court ruled Tuesday that medical marijuana users aren’t automatically breaking the law if they’re caught driving after using the drug.
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Michigan in Brief: 05/22/2013
Chopper patrols will end due to noise; Swastika found in high school locker; Scientists want wolves protected.
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Authorities: Possible human skull fragment found
Authorities say a bone found last week in West Michigan appears to be part of an adult human skull.
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Some inmates may get higher education
The Michigan Department of Corrections is working on several efforts to teach community college courses and vocational training in-house to a small number of inmates near parole.
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Dems lay out auto insurance legislation
Detroit’s Democratic state House Caucus is laying out an effort to change Michigan’s auto insurance policies.
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Project aims to keep kids out of foster care
The Michigan Department of Human Services plans a pilot project in three counties designed to keep children out of foster care and cut costs.
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Free hunting, fishing licenses for military
Active-duty military members living in Michigan can now get annual hunting and fishing licenses for free.
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Disabled vets could see some property tax relief
Some disabled veterans living in Michigan could get some relief next tax season under legislation being debated in the state Senate.
Continued ... - May 19, 2013
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Work done at ex-brownfield site on Detroit River
Major environmental restoration work has been completed on a former industrial site along the Detroit River, officials announced Saturday.
Continued ... - May 18, 2013
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Audit questions use of state petroleum tax
Millions of dollars from a petroleum tax have been diverted to plug holes in the state budget and pay interest on debt, Michigan’s auditor general said Friday.
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Lawmaker wants to change fireworks law
A lawmaker has proposed changes following a slew of complaints, safety concerns and confusion about a law that made powerful fireworks legal in Michigan.
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Hope College plans new art museum
Hope College in western Michigan announced Friday that it’s planning a new art museum to provide exhibition space and house the college’s permanent collection.
Continued ... - May 17, 2013
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Michigan in Brief: 05/17/2013
Michigan may get $2.3M in drug claims; Albion is closing its public high school; Long line already for one tough mayorship.
Continued ... - May 16, 2013
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Sole survivor of plane crash breaks silence
Cecelia Crocker’s body provides her with a constant reminder of the most traumatic event of her life — one that she doesn’t otherwise remember.
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Michigan in Brief: 05/16/2013
Bricks from MSU building to be sold; Cruise ship will stay in Marquette.
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Case against medical pot-using driver overturned



