Posted inVoices

Friends of the Rouge ED Marie McCormick on how the nonprofit is coping with the pandemic

When the Friends of the Rouge formed back in 1986, the Rouge River was in desperate straits. But hundreds of millions of dollars of federal funding for water infrastructure projects during the 1990s and early 2000s helped improve the waterway into a place where people can now paddle and enjoy nature along the 126-mile river. FOTR has helped bring […]

Posted inAccountability

DTE, Consumers report on shutoffs, actions to protect vulnerable customers under MPSC order

DTE and Consumers Energy filed reports this week detailing the number of households currently without service and efforts to restore them. The reports are now required biweekly through June under an order issued April 15 issued by the Michigan Public Service Commission.  According to reports filed by DTE Energy and Consumers Energy on April 30, both utilities […]

Posted inAccountability

Detroit’s air quality has improved since the COVID-19 shutdown. This map shows how.

Last week, a study from the T.H. Chan School of Public Health at Harvard University released a preliminary study showing that COVID-19 mortality worsens with exposure to air pollution. That study looked at particulate matter (PM 2.5— particulate matter of a diameter less than 2.5 microns) and COVID-19 mortality. The study found that: someone who lives for decades in a […]

Posted inCommunity

Lost but not forgotten: The legendary Michigan grayling

By Brianne Turczynski Republished with permission from Michigan Out-of-Doors Magazine Courtesy of the Clarke Historical Library of Central Michigan University It would be difficult to find a person these days who had firsthand experience with the Michigan grayling. Old fishing tales passed down through generations eulogize a fish sought after for its magnificent beauty, delicious meat, […]

Posted inAccountability

Detroit to turn the water back on during coronavirus threat

Prompted by concern over coronavirus, City of Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan announced Monday that the city will end water shutoffs and restore service to customers. The decision comes just two weeks after the Governor Gretchen Whitmer’s attorney announced the state would not declare an emergency over the water shutoffs, citing “insufficient evidence” that the shutoffs […]

Posted inAccountability, Deep Dives, Lead poisoning

Is Michigan breaking its own lead rule?

Last week, Michigan’s Department of Great Lakes Environment and Energy (EGLE) was celebrating one of the heroes of the Flint Water Crisis, Dr. Mona Hanna-Attisha, who appeared on Capitol Hill before the House Energy and Commerce. Hanna-Attisha was endorsing Michigan’s revised Lead and Copper Rule, which has been called the most protective in the nation. At the same time, Governor […]