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The Great Lakes region is blessed with an abundance of water. But water quality, affordability, and aging water infrastructure are vulnerabilities that have been ignored for far too long. In this series, members of the Great Lakes News Collaborative, Michigan Public, Bridge Michigan, Great Lakes Now, The Narwhal, and Circle of Blue, explore what it might take to preserve and protect this precious resource. This independent journalism is supported by the Charles Stewart Mott Foundation.

Some Republicans, Democrats, environmentalists, hunters, anglers, and birders all want the same thing: more wetlands

Pointe Mouillee State Game Area is an example of the kind of wetlands the various groups want to see created. They're urging Michigan to use American Rescue Plan money to create them.
Lester Graham
/
Michigan Radio
Pointe Mouillee State Game Area is an example of the kind of wetlands the various groups want to see created. They're urging Michigan to use American Rescue Plan money to create them.

Hunting, fishing, and birding groups want Michigan to invest $30 million to create wetlands. The idea is to reduce harmful algal blooms getting into the Great Lakes, reduce flooding, and provide habitat for fish and wildlife.

You kind of have to pay attention when politicians of different parties, hunters, conservationists and environmentalists all get together on the same issue.

Republican and Democratic state legislators, the Michigan United Conservation Clubs, Ducks Unlimited, and Audubon-Great Lakes all gathered at the Pointe Mouillee State Game Area last Thursday to talk about the importance of wetlands.

They want to use $30 million in American Rescue Plan Act money for wetlands in areas that drain into Lake Erie and the Saginaw Bay of Lake Huron. Wetlands can filter out nutrients from manure spread on farm fields as well as other fertilizers that can lead to toxic cyanobacterial blooms, commonly called harmful algal blooms.

Executive Director of Michigan United Conservation Clubs Amy Trotter holds up a hunting permit to illustrate that hunters are willing to pay for habitat improvements. Now MUCC wants the state to pitch in additional money.
Lester Graham
/
Michigan Radio
Executive Director of Michigan United Conservation Clubs Amy Trotter holds up a hunting permit to illustrate that hunters are willing to pay for habitat improvements. Now MUCC wants the state to pitch in additional money.

Amy Trotter is the Executive Director of the Michigan United Conservation Clubs (MUCC), representing hunting and fishing clubs around the state. Her group commissioned a study by Michigan State University to calculate how much economic damage to fishing and tourism has been caused by cyanobacterial blooms.

“When there is a presence of harmful algal bloom in Lake Erie, up to 29-percent of those angling trips are canceled,” she said about the study which looked at 2019.

That translates to as much as $5.9 million in lost economic revenue for the Michigan Lake Erie region in a year.

Paul Doute is a charter boat captain based in Michigan. His company, Angler’s Quest, takes people out to fish for walleye and perch in Lake Erie. He says he has travel several miles farther out into the lake, crossing the state border into Ohio waters to avoid the toxic cyanobacterial blooms.

There’s a price. First, it costs each customer an additional $11 for a one-day license to fish in Ohio.

“The bigger thing is gas, right? When you look at my engine that I have on my boat, I get about three miles to a gallon. Rec fuel being almost $6 a gallon, right? It adds up, (it) adds up," Doute said.

Paul Daute is a charter boat captain based in Michigan. Harmful algal blooms in Lake Erie require burning more fuel to get to clear water in Ohio. His customers then have to pay for one-day fishing permits from the State of Ohio.
Lester Graham
/
Michigan Radio
Paul Daute is a charter boat captain based in Michigan. Harmful algal blooms in Lake Erie require burning more fuel to get to clear water in Ohio. His customers then have to pay for one-day fishing permits from the State of Ohio.

The MSU study estimated between 9,000 and 21,000 fishing trips were canceled in 2019.

Wetlands are seen as a way to mitigate some of the nutrient pollution that causes toxic cyanobacterial blooms.

“Here in southeast Michigan and up along Saginaw Bay, another area that’s been plagued by harmful algal blooms, you know, we’re looking at upwards of 90 percent wetland loss,” said Kyle Rorah, Ducks Unlmited’s Director of Public Policy for the Great Lakes/Atlantic region.

In the Saginaw Bay watershed, Ducks Unlimited worked with the Shiawassee National Wildlife Refuge to expand wetlands, replacing what was once corn and soybean fields.

Climate change is causing more frequent heavy rainstorms. When two dams failed and flooded Midland and other cities in 2020, about 15 percent of the flood waters were diverted into the Shiawassee wetlands, preventing additional damage.

“So you have the ability to withstand weather events. You have making sure that we have clean water for wildlife and for human consumption. And, you know, the other things people don’t realize is there’s a carbon sequestration benefit to wetlands as well,” said Representative John Cherry, D-Flint, explaining some of the benefits of creating wetlands.

Cherry says appropriating $30 million for additional wetlands is critical for the Saginaw Bay watershed.

Representative Joe Bellino, R-Monroe, agrees the money should be spent on establishing more wetlands to help reduce harmful algal blooms.

"The water intake for my city is four and a half miles south of here. We know what happened in Toledo about ten years ago when they cut the water off to thousands and thousands of people because the algal bloom."

Bellino said it’s going to cost a lot more than $30 million to fix the problem, but with the money available now, it’s a place to start.

"We have to have a three prong attack. We've got to restore the wetlands. We've got to make sure that we do something for the municipalities that have run off and open the spigots when it rains hard. And we've got to have a statewide septic code."

While state game areas and national wildlife refuges attract the waterfowl that hunters want, wetland areas also attract many non-game species such as these great white egrets at Pointe Mouillee State Game Area near Monroe.
Lester Graham
/
Michigan Radio
While state game areas and national wildlife refuges attract the waterfowl that hunters want, wetland areas also attract many non-game species such as these great white egrets at Pointe Mouillee State Game Area near Monroe.

Thirty million dollars sounds like a lot of money, but it will take a lot more than that to solve the problems the Great Lakes and some inland lakes are facing from the different sources of poop-related pollution.

“But the $30 million itself will help fund, I think, 15 wetland restoration and creation projects. So it's a really great start, but we are going to need more and more sustained funding,” said Erin Ford, Conservation Manager for Audubon-Great Lakes.

Amy Trotter with Michigan United Conservation Clubs agrees, but said sometimes you simply have to look at what’s politically possible.

"Certainly there's probably a lot more we can do. But the opportunity is now and we have sort of this critical bipartisan support and hunters and non consumptive users and anglers all aligning on an issue which isn't always the case."

Now it’s a matter of getting support from other legislators and the governor’s signature to spend $30 million of Michigan’s current $6 billion dollar surplus.

Lester Graham reports for The Environment Report. He has reported on public policy, politics, and issues regarding race and gender inequity. He was previously with The Environment Report at Michigan Public from 1998-2010.
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