| |
Natural
Prosperity
(continued)
Roto-rooter
The Federal District Court Building on West Fort Street in downtown Detroit
is an odd place to find a plumber. Jurors, yes. Lawyers frantic with clients
and cases, yes. But a judge with an experts understanding of how
to transport water and keep it clean? Well, yes to that too. He is 83-year-old
U.S. District Court Judge John Feikens.
From his formidable chambers and stately courtroom on the eighth floor,
Judge Feikens has spent 31 years deciding grim federal cases of white
collar crimes, raucous civil disagreements, and complex bankruptcies and
fraud. But the litigation that has defined his distinguished career, and
for which southeast Michigan will long revere him, is case number 77-71100.
The Environmental Protection Agency filed the lawsuit initially in 1977
to stop pollution at the Detroit Water and Sewerage plant, the largest
in the world. Judge Feikens used his authority in the years since to respond
to persistent pollution and expand the cases boundaries, goals,
and importance well beyond what even he could have imagined.
Through formal orders and regular on-the-record hearings in his courtroom,
Judge Feikens did what nobody else in Michigan not governors, congressmen,
state legislators, or state environmental directors was willing
to do. He brought leaders from three counties and 48 southeast Michigan
communities together to cooperate on a plan to restore the entire 126-mile-long
Rouge River.
Under Judge Feikens stern and steady guidance the lawsuit has produced
a governing blueprint applicable in any other watershed in Michigan
or the nation for how to manage costly and complex environmental
restoration projects across a watershed and, more importantly, how to
prevent them in the first place.
Successful start
His singular achievement is not a legal precedent but a political one.
Rather than allow local governments to keep flushing their waste downstream,
he made them face the pollution costs together, with terrific results.
From Bloomfield Hills to Dearborn and from Plymouth to Garden City, the
results clearly show the benefits.
Phosphorous and nitrogen from fertilizers, sewage, and chemicals is declining.
Oxygen levels, even in the most industrialized reaches near the rivers
mouth, are now high enough to support a small sport fishery. Wayne County
now sponsors a triathalon that begins with a swim in Newburgh Lake, along
the rivers middle branch in western Wayne County. It is the first
time in 40 years that authorities have allowed swimming in the lake.
In early May, encouraged by a warm afternoon, Alvin Poole, a retired machinist,
talked about the improving conditions while walking along the shore of
Newburgh Lake. The water was surprisingly clear and the lakes distant
shore was fresh and green with spring. At least 50 other people joined
Mr. Poole, among them young lovers, families having picnics, and people
casting fishing lines. It was a scene of such civic beauty and peace that
Mr. Poole marveled. After all, he remarked, for much of his adult life
in the Detroit region, Newburgh Lake and the Rouge River were essentially
a vast urban sewage pipe.
It looked like a slop ditch, said Mr. Poole, a retired auto
parts plant worker, sweeping his arm across the mile-long lake. Now
its altogether different. It doesnt smell. It is a beautiful
place to come to. Its sure a big improvement from what it used to
be. Its so much better that people talk about it here all the time.
Such changes in the Rouge watershed are so remarkable that interest is
now building for the idea of replicating the successes elsewhere. Earlier
this year, Judge Feikens met with many of the areas influential civic
leaders, among them Bill Ford Jr., to form a consortium that will bring
to other major rivers in the Detroit region the same engineering and political
tools that have helped the Rouge.
Last February, when the consortiums participants first met, Judge
Feikens told the gathering that there really is no choice if Michigans
largest metropolitan area is to stand with New York, San Francisco, Chicago,
Boston, and Portland as a premier place to live and work.
This is an evolutionary concept, said Judge Feikens in an
interview. People are becoming more aware that you cant have
any quality of life if you dont have clean water. You cannot have
any world-class industries in southeast Michigan, like the Ford Motor
Company, unless the area itself has a very definite concept of quality
of life and a very definite idea of whats necessary to have quality
of life.
Source of the problem
The lawsuit in Judge Feikens court and the fresh thinking
it has spurred is a microcosm of state and national experience
with nonpoint pollution, the kind of water contamination that
comes not from one source, such as a factory, but from across the land,
where soil, wastes, debris, oils, and chemicals wash into rivers and lakes.
Judge Feikens said the incredible scope of metropolitan Detroits
nonpoint problem became clear to him in 1983 after the Detroit sewage
plant spent six years and more than $500 million, most of it federal money,
to fix its pollution problems.
As the Detroit treatment plant, which is point-source pollution,
began to get corrected through the use of a great deal of federal money,
monitoring studies also pointed up the fact that we still had a good deal
of pollution, said Judge Feikens in an interview. Nonpoint
source pollution was still out there and had to be corrected.
The International Joint Commission, a U.S.-Canada agency that oversees
the Great Lakes, identified the Rouge in the mid-1980s as one of the dirtiest
rivers in the upper Midwest. The commission suspected the major problem
was sewage overflows into the river from combined sewage and stormwater
drains inundated with new water from suburban surfaces. Scientists say
tidal waves of rain runoff are pushing sewage and other pollution into
waterways because development has actually altered the nature of the regions
river systems.
No swimming
In Detroit, for example, gauges that the U.S. Geological Survey and other
federal agencies maintain show more water is flowing into the upstream
reaches of the regions major rivers the Huron, Rouge, and
Clinton than they have ever measured. Scientists with the Geological
Survey say that is happening because people, work places, schools, post
offices, and stores are no longer close together but spread far apart
across the land.
This sprawling pattern of development in full swing since the end
of World War II produces acres and acres of concrete and blacktop
that replace absorbant wetlands and forests along the Rouges tributaries.
Rather than slowly soak into the ground, rain now rushes off asphalt at
high rates of speed into stormwater drains and sewage lines and straight
into tributaries and the Rouge itself. The vastly increased surge overwhelms
municipal storm drains and sewage treatment systems that were never designed
to handle all the liquid and solids that now flow into them.
Every time it rains millions of gallons of polluted stormwater and sewage
flow into the Rouge and nearly every one of the states other rivers,
for that matter, because cities and villages across the state have developed
in the same way. Even after a light rain, local and state health authorities
regularly find too much fecal bacteria in water to allow swimming. Although
the data is incomplete, the findings have led some water quality authorities
to reach the inescapable conclusion that there is virtually no place in
Michigan where it is safe to swim after it rains.
A 2000 report by the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality supported
that conclusion. The DEQ found that sewage plants overflowed in more than
200 communities over the last five years. Even Traverse Citys sewage
treatment plant spilled over last year, and again in June after heavy
rains, resulting in swimming advisories for Grand Traverse Bay. Beaches
along Lake St. Clair north of Detroit were closed 77 days last summer
because of high fecal bacteria counts.
Continued
>>
|
|