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Of just over $11 million in recently announced grants, the small city within Detroit's borders is getting a little more than $10 million from the Drinking Water State Revolving Fund. It will go toward replacing water mains and lead service lines.
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The Michigan Department of Natural Resources is pairing conservation groups with drinking water treatment plant operators to see how source water can be protected by planting trees.
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Outdated federal water laws and chemicals that were approved for industry without assessing for risk leave Ann Arbor and other communities struggling to ward off water contaminants before they foul drinking water supplies.
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Billions in clean energy incentives rely on raw materials from polluting corn and livestock.
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Law and policy treat farms as special class of polluter.
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Macomb County Public Works Commissioner Candice Miller is feuding with state environmental regulators over water protection.
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Realtors and interest groups opposed to regulation are shaping septic system policies in Michigan's state and local politics. Realtors don't like the...
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The Environmental Protection Agency is currently seeking public comment on an application for the Keweenaw Bay Indian Community (KBIC) to set their own…
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Today on Stateside, why the disparity in road funding between rural and urban roads will persist, even under Governor Whitmer’s proposed increase in tax…
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The latest testing shows the level of lead in Flint’s tap water has declined again.Flint’s drinking water has been closely tested since the height of the…