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Natural
Prosperity
(continued)
New upstream approach
Fixing the problem is not a matter of simply building bigger stormwater
pipes or more treatment plants, though engineers say that will help Detroit
in the short term. Judge Feikens recognized that the solution to the pollution
was to restore rain-absorbing capacity to land across the region and to
save the valuable wetlands and streambanks still remaining.
Evidence in the 1977 federal case yielded expert testimony over the years
about the theory of preventing nonpoint pollution not only through treatment
plants but primarily with watershed management developing
land with respect for the fact that all water ends up in a downstream
river. Cleaning up the Rouge, therefore, depends on cleaning up its watershed,
where four main branches originate and flow into the Rouge. These four
branches have tributaries across Oakland, Washtenaw, and Wayne counties.
In practice, state and national experience with watershed management is
thin. In most places watershed management translates into politically
safe monitoring programs to track water quality and popular civic events
like annual streambank stabilization and debris cleanup days. These projects
are important for clearing debris from streams, repairing eroded banks,
and giving thousands of people a way to feel directly connected to a river.
But they do not approach the tough engineering and intergovernmental work
required to significantly clean water or prevent pollution.
In a few rare cases, such as the 25-year Chesapeake Bay cleanup on the
East Coast, states and local governments made major investments to upgrade
treatment plants, enact new laws to protect natural areas, and undertake
broad public education programs. Brochures informed people that doing
such things as throwing used motor oil down the sewers would eventually
end up killing fish.
Watershed pioneer
Judge Feikens is one of those rare leaders who early on embraced the concept
of watershed management. Born and raised in Clifton, New Jersey, Mr. Feikens
studied at Calvin College in Grand Rapids, received his law degree from
the University of Michigan, raised five children, and gained statewide
attention in the 1950s during a high-profile career as one of Detroits
rising attorneys.
Government and politics, however, proved to be passions as strong as the
law for the young Mr. Feikens. A moderate Republican, he climbed the ranks
of the state party and managed Dwight Eisenhowers Michigan campaign
for the presidency. His work as a party activist eventually earned Mr.
Feikens a permanent seat in 1970 on the federal bench a seat that
Judge Feikens and his colleagues note would likely not be available to
a Republican of his moderate convictions under President George Bushs
conservative requirements for judicial nominees.
A strong, broad-chested, stocky man with clear blue eyes and a shock of
white hair, Judge Feikens looks every bit the senior judicial statesman.
Around the Detroit federal courthouse, hes known as a man who shields
an innate certainty of purpose, even toughness, behind an appealing good
sense. Indeed, in talking with Judge Feikens, visitors come away impressed
by his whole air of confiding and simple dignity.
In the Rouge River case, Judge Feikens masterstroke came in the
early 1990s when he made all 48 communities in the watershed parties to
the original 1977 lawsuit. In this way, the communities were responsible
for obeying the law, sharing the costs of basins and other engineering
repairs, and developing legal solutions, such as new ordinances, to protect
wetlands and natural areas.
The 48 communities, daunted by the spectre of trying to reach consensus
with so many participants, soon came up with a means to simplify the projects
management. They divided themselves into seven subwatershed groups that
meet monthly to brief each other and talk about new programs.
Judge Feikens also holds regular meetings in his courtroom to keep local
officials on the same page and to convince them of his resolve to bring
the Rouge into compliance with the federal Clean Water Act, the 1972 law
that aims to make all of Americas waters fishable and swimmable.
Behind the scenes he quietly lobbied prominent elected officials and business
leaders to support the watershed management approach. And when Wayne County
officials applied for hundreds of millions of dollars in federal aid to
support the project, he kept in touch with U.S. Representative John Dingell
and other members of Michigans Congressional delegation to insure
that the money would be available.
Hes the giant on whose shoulders we all stand, said
Kelly Cave, who manages the Rouge River project for the Wayne County Department
of Environment.
Out of Mr. Feikens work and that of dozens of local leaders came
a national watershed demonstration project that is setting new trends
and reshaping how the nation will manage river restorations. The Rouge
River cleanup is the most significant and innovative watershed restoration
project in the nation, says Paul Sturm, a water quality specialist at
the Center for Watershed Protection in Washington, D.C. There is
nothing like it in the United States in terms of the cost, the scale of
whats happening, and how many communities are involved.
Detroit leads the way
Almost every major facet of the Rouge cleanup is unique, including the
projects design. The big idea is to restore the watersheds
ability to absorb water both through engineering such as building
enormous concrete basins to store stormwater and by restoring and
protecting whats left of the regions water-absorbing wild
places.
The second big idea is to prevent pollution in the first place by limiting
how much waste ends up washing into the water. In the Rouge that means
restoring eroded streambanks, enacting ordinances to limit the use of
lawn fertilizer, or setting out new township rules to protect wetlands
and vegetation along streambanks.
Since 1994 the 48 communities in the Rouge watershed have invested more
than $500 million of federal, state, and local funds in new sewage pipes,
nine immense concrete basins to slow the tide of raw wastes flowing into
the river, monitoring, research, erosion control, and public education.
Thats more money than any other urban watershed restoration project
in the country has spent.
It takes a region
Township and county officials involved in the project are cautious, however,
in describing the programs early achievements. They note that for
every successful restoration of a Newburgh Lake which involved
$12.6 million worth of dredging, digging out contaminated sediments, and
controlling runoff there are still dozens of sewage pipes and combined
sewage and stormwater basins that overflow every time it rains, pouring
tens of millions of gallons of the regions accumulated wastes into
the river.
And as they look out at the development that continues to spread, community
leaders in the Rouge watershed realize it will take even broader cooperation
to improve the regions water quality future. For example, Dearborn
Heights has had no success convincing the upstream communities of Romulus
and Wayne to slow the tide of floodwater in Ecorse Creek with limits on
pavement and protections for wetlands.
Last September sewage flooded the basements of 500 homes along the creek
in Dearborn Heights, which is part of two watersheds. Ecorse Creek is
not in the Rouge River watershed and thus not subject to Judge Feikens
authority. Ruth Canfield, the Mayor of Dearborn Heights, said without
the authority of a federal judge, there is nothing she has been able to
do to convince her upstream neighbors to help. Every time it rains,
I get down on my knees and pray the creek doesnt flood, she
said.
But the success of the Rouge River project is gaining notice across the
state and nation as nonpoint water quality problems escalate and voters
demand cost-effective solutions and livable cities. Steven K. Hamp, president
of the Henry Ford Museum and Greenfield Village, which is restoring the
lower reaches of the river, says that the Rouge restoration is helping
the Detroit metropolitan region market a new and more hopeful story about
its future.
I love the idea of Detroit creating a positive example of change
that we can go out and show the rest of the world, said Mr. Hamp.
And thats what were doing right now with this project.
James Murray, Wayne Countys environmental director, asserts that
the projects achievements have already answered one question: Whether
southeast Michigan communities of the 21st century will treat the river
with more respect.
The Rouge is the connective tissue not only for the 1.5 million
people who live in the basin but the tissue that connects one generation
to the next, said Mr. Murray, who helped design the watershed cleanup.
What is the story we are going to tell in the 21st century? We must
learn how to sustain what nature offers. We must find ways to get out
of the river what we need without sacrificing the needs of future generations.
The Rouge River project is starting to tell that story.
Disposing of civilizations wastes has been a problem ever since
the first nomadic tribes decided to store their spears and settle in villages.
The basic approach has hardly changed. Weve moved from simply throwing
it into a pit, to draining it to a ditch, to running the ditch into the
nearest body of water. The 20th-century innovation was to kill bacteria
and remove debris by treating wastes before draining them to the river.
The question for the 21st century is: Whats next? A study by the
Southeast Michigan Council of Governments found that the cost of just
modernizing sewage treatment plants and pipes in the seven-county Detroit
region alone could be as high as $52 billion over the next 25 years. Water
bills, which average around $45 to $50 a month in the Detroit region,
are rising twice as fast as inflation and could double within 15 years.
And even if Rouge watershed communities manage to complete the sewer modernization,
engineers concede it wont solve the problem alone. Thats because
the old way of doing business developing at a breakneck pace, draining
land, laying sewers, building and enlarging water treatment plants
has led to new patterns of pollution that require different approaches,
not only to cleaning up the contamination but also to preventing it in
the first place.
It requires a different approach and, as Judge Feikens has shown, a master
plumber prepared to think hard about the problem and then get his hands
dirty.
CONTACT(S): Jonathan
Bulkley, federal case monitor, University of Michigan, 734-764-3198 and
734-763-5068, <jbulkley@umich.edu>;
Thomas Casari, Canton Township, 734-394-5150, <Tom.Casari@canton-mi.org>;
Kelly Cave, Wayne County Department of Environment, 313-224-8282, <kcave@co.wayne.mi.us>;
James Murray, Wayne County Department of Environment, 313-224-3631, <jmurray@co.wayne.mi.us>;
Ted Starbuck, Southeast Michigan Council of Governments, 313-324-3347,
<starbuck@semcog.org>.
More details about the Rouge River restoration are on the Web at <http://www.wcdoe.org/rougeriver/>.
BACKWASH
In 2000, releases of sewage and industrial wastes to Michigan waters totaled
nine
billion gallons.
Clean Water Action
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