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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  State Orders Big Fake Wetland

By Patty Cantrell

As if to punctuate the point of a revealing internal audit, Department of Environmental Quality Director Russell Harding in June ordered the destruction of 17 acres of wetlands to allow construction of an airport in Huron County’s Caseville Township, near the tip of the Thumb. The top-down decision comes after the audit, by DEQ staff, disclosed that the agency’s administration has undercut wetland protection statewide with lax permitting and reliance on manmade replacement wetlands that don’t work.

Mr. Harding directed Saginaw Bay District staff to grant Bay Airport Land Corporation a permit despite:

• Objections of staff biologists, who report the massive wetland filling would also affect some of the 115 acres of additional regulated wetlands on the 220-acre parcel.

• Clear direction from DEQ administrative law judge Richard Patterson, who had ruled the airport was not in the public interest and would cause “unacceptable disruption” to aquatic resources.

The airport developers must create artificial wetlands to replace the naturally functioning wetlands as a condition of the permit. But that’s another problem, according to the DEQ audit and studies, such as a recent National Academy of Sciences investigation of artificial wetlands.

The Academy found that even the best manmade wetlands did not measure up to natural wetlands as flood buffers, pollution filters, or wildlife habitat. The Academy also found that construction of replacement wetlands is often delayed or never completed.

The internal audit found that the DEQ fails to follow up on its requirement that developers replace damaged wetlands with artificial wetlands.


Out front on South Fox Island >>