10/6/2008   MLUI Home | Growth Management | Land & Water | Transportation | Partner With Us


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Natural Prosperity
Detroit teaches Michigan a lesson in natural economics
Kids get the nonpoint picture
Cheaper by the wetlands
State fuels growth pressures
Homeowners scrub up after sprawl
Empty hooks on top rivers
Water watchers sound alarm up north
Fresh thinking spares a growing township and its creek
Here’s how
Take Action
NEWS AND ACTION
CHEERS AND JEERS
ELM STREET WRITERS GROUP
AT THE INSTITUTE
Guess what! Fake wetlands don’t work
  State Orders Big Fake Wetland
Out front on South Fox Island
Great Lakes drilling shifts political winds
Townships stand firm on growth
Detroit takes big transit step

 

 

     

 
 


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The future of the Rouge River depends on some high-cost solutions to pollution, but mostly on low-cost efforts to prevent contamination in the first place.

1.
LOW COST:
LAND USE STANDARDS
More than a dozen Rouge watershed communities enacted new ordinances to control lawn fertilizers and other nutrients that ruin water quality by encouraging algae and weed growth. Wayne and Washtenaw counties have addressed contamination from septic systems by requiring inspections and repairs as homes are sold.


2. LOW COST:
CRITICAL REPAIRS
Restoring urbanized streambanks so that they function as nature intended is a must for holding back pollution and preventing erosion, which dumps tons of soil into rivers.

3. LOW COST:
WATER WATCH
Across the watershed, technicians regularly take samples to monitor the water’s condition and the project’s progress. Citizen groups, such as Friends of the Rouge, hold regular cleanup days and keep watch over the river.

4.
HIGH COST:
DIRTY DELUGE
Out of 157 “combined sewer overflow” outfalls in the Rouge watershed, the cleanup project has fixed 76. Phase II will target the remaining 81 outfalls, which regularly pour millions of gallons of sewage-filled stormwater into the river. High-price fixes include new stormwater detention basins and separation of sewer and stormwater pipes.

5. HIGH COST:
HEAVY-DUTY PLUMBING
The Detroit Water and Sewerage plant, which serves 4.3 million customers in 126 communities, has invested $1.74 billion since 1977 on facility improvements. Further modernization of
piping and sewage treatment capacity in the seven-county Detroit region over the next 25 years could reach an
estimated $52 billion.

6. LOW COST:
TEACHABLE MOMENT
Local governments across the Rouge watershed have signed voluntary permits with the state to develop stormwater management plans, educate the public about pollution prevention, and eliminate illegal sewage hookups to stormwater pipes.

7. HIGH COST:
Back to Life
Newburgh Lake in Livonia is again a popular recreation spot after a $12.6 million cleanup that involved removing PCB-contaminated sediments and restoring fish habitat.

8. LOW COST:
GETTING ON THE MAP
Taking stock of local natural resources is the first step toward guiding development around such valuable assets as wetlands, which act like kidneys to store and clean water.

9. LOW COST:
WATER-SMART DESIGN
Northville Hills in Northville Township is a working model of how to build nature into development projects to slow and clean stormwater. Canton Township requires water-smart innovations and collects $300 per lot for storm sewer maintenance.


More details about the Rouge River restoration are on the Web at <www.wcdoe.org/rougeriver/>.

     
 

Cheaper by the Wetlands

The least expensive way to keep water clean is to let Mother Nature do the work.

That is the resounding lesson from the Rouge River cleanup, where the most pavement-covered communities are paying the highest price to prevent flooding and contamination while those with wetlands and streambanks intact are spending less for greater pollution-fighting effect.

The city of Dearborn, for instance, is now building a giant underground storage pipe at a cost of $350 million to hold and slow stormwater because it no longer has any open land areas large enough to do it above ground.

In contrast, Salem Township, upstream in Washtenaw County at the headwaters of the Rouge, spent only a few thousand dollars evaluating and approving safeguards for wetlands and streams that hydrologists say will do more to clean and slow stormwater.









State fuels growth pressures >>