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Delay Nestlé’s Latest Request to Divert Michigan Water

Nov 15, 2016 | 0 comments

Until now, I have had little good to say about the press over the last year. But on October 31st, an MLive reporter named Garret Ellison published a story, notifying people in the region of a plan by Nestlé to significantly increase the amount of water pumped from one of its production wells north of Evart, MI. 

Ellison happened to notice Nestlé’s request for a permit on the obscure Michigan Department of Environmental Quality Environmental Calendar, a little-known listing of permits, administrative rules, and other official notices. With only three days remaining for public comment—and not a single comment logged on to the DEQ site–MLive published Nestlé’s plan to significantly increase groundwater pumping from 150 to 400 gallons-per-minute at their well in Osceola Township. 

Ellison and MLive have renewed my faith in journalism and the critical role the press can and must play in a democracy.

As a result of Ellison’s story, over 1,700 comments were posted, swamping the DEQ and resulting in an extension of the public comment period from November 3rd until December 3rd. As reported on Michigan Public Radio (MPR), Michigan’s chief of the environmental health section for the DEQ’s drinking water office promises to revamp the procedure for notifying the public to include things like public hearings and ample time for comment.

Thank you Ellison and MLive for nudging our government towards a more robust and open public review process!

However, 30 days is not enough time for meaningful discussion on Nestlé’s current application. The company claims that while water levels may be affected, they do not see any adverse ecological effects. They also claim that only minimal declines in water levels should be expected at the nearby Chippewa/Twin Creek tributary headwaters.

The scientific information behind the application has just been released. Let’s pause at least 90 days for further scrutiny. Let’s allow time for nonprofit organizations like Michigan Citizens for Water Conservation and For Love of Water (FLOW) to fully review the data, to make sure Nestlé’s conclusions are corroborated with independent hydrologists and scientists.

Water is Michigan’s greatest differentiating natural asset.  Let’s give it the due diligence it deserves.

But Nestlé’s application raises other strategic issues. Under Michigan law, bottlers do not pay for the water they pump from the ground. It’s free, with the exception of a nominal $200 annual fee. How do the people of Michigan benefit when our water, one of the world’s scarcest resources, is given away to a foreign-owned company like Nestle—that sells it for a profit and transports it outside the state and Great Lakes basin? It doesn’t make sense.

Readers in Pennsylvania and Chicago were the first to alert me to the Nestlé story. Their concern is a reminder. What one Great Lakes state does with its water, affects the others. And while the 2008 Great Lakes Compact was designed to limit diversions outside the basin, an exception was made to allow for diversions of water shipped in containers smaller than 5.7 gallons.

It’s time to close the loophole in the Compact. Whether water is channeled through pipelines, shipped in giant freighters, or bottled and transported in small containers outside the basin, all result in large volumes of water diversions. With the recent water crises in Flint and Toledo, and the draughts plaguing so much of our country, demand for bottled water is increasing significantly—as evidenced by Nestlé’s recent permit request in Evart, Michigan. While I no longer fear the dreaded pipeline from Lake Michigan to Arizona or Mississippi, I now worry about the slightly less visible but damaging precedent and effect of taking large quantities of water from our watersheds in small containers. 

I drink my water from a tap. I know the Flint crisis raised a legitimate concern about levels of lead in public drinking water. However, the answer is not to fill our landfills with plastic. Instead, let’s insist our elected officials make our water a priority. 
​​

What You Can Do To Help

  1. Please email Carrie Monosmith at the DEQ at deq-eh@michigan.gov prior to December 3rd. Ask for a 90-day extension to allow sufficient time for independent analysis and public involvement in Nestlé’s recent request to significantly increase its water withdrawal at its well in Osceola Township. If you live outside Michigan, note that what one state does in the Great Lakes Basin, affects all. To find out more information about the permit request, click on  DEQ site
  2. If you live in one of the eight Great Lakes states or the provinces of Quebec and Montreal, I urge you to write your governor/premier prior to the upcoming Compact Council meeting to be held in Columbus, OH on December 8th. Ask that diversions of Great Lakes water in containers less than 5.7 gallons be added to the 2008 Great Lakes Compact. Feel free to use or modify the following letter I am emailing to Governor Rick Snyder. 
  3. Please think twice about drinking bottled water. Instead, insist all elected officials make clean, safe drinking water a priority. 
  4. Help spread the word. Share a link to this blog with others or “LIKE” my blog on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/mary.mckschmidt. This is our water, held in public trust by the government, for the people of this basin. It is up to us to stay engaged—reminding those in office—that protecting our water is a top priority. 
  5. As year-end nears, if you are making tax-free contributions, consider writing a check to organizations focused on restoring and protecting the Great Lakes. They are making a difference.

Dear Governor:

I am writing to ask you to take a leadership role in modifying the 2008 Great Lakes Compact, eliminating the exception made for diversions of water shipped in containers smaller than 5.7 gallons. I realize the signing of the agreement was a major milestone in the history of protecting the Great Lakes. I also realize it took many years, lots of hard work, and a great deal of compromise.

However, it’s been almost eight years since it was signed. It’s time to revisit the bottled water exception. Whether water is channeled through pipelines, shipped in giant freighters, or bottled and transported in small containers outside the basin, all result in large volumes of water diversions. With the recent water crises in Flint and Toledo, and the draughts plaguing so much of our country, demand for bottled water is increasing significantly—as evidenced by Nestlé’s recent permit request in Evart, Michigan. While I no longer fear the dreaded pipeline from Lake Michigan to Arizona or Mississippi, I now worry about the slightly less visible but damaging precedent and effect of taking large quantities of water from our watersheds in small containers. 

I applaud the tools available for assessing the environmental impact of proposed water withdrawals in each state and province. With any large volume withdrawal, there will be drops in flows and water levels resulting in some degradation, change in streams, and reduction in the composition and number of fish in those streams. With bottled water excluded from the Compact, each governing entity has the right to make its own, independent assessment as to how much water withdrawn is too much, too damaging. It sets precedent that may be used by others to justify large diversions across the basin. And that’s troubling. That is why I am asking that all diversions be governed collectively under the Compact. What’s done in one state or province affects us all.

I appreciate your consideration to this important issue. Our water is a top priority for me. Please let me if you plan on raising this issue with your peers. 

Regards, 


Dear Carrie Monosmith of the Michigan DEQ, 

I am asking that you delay Nestle’s recent permit application to increase the volume pumped from its well in Osceola Township for at least 90 days. The 30-day extension (particularly given the Thanksgiving holiday) is not enough time to allow for independent analysis and public involvement in such a critical decision. Water is Michigan’s greatest differentiating asset. It also affects our health, provides an economic backbone to our communities, and helps define our quality of life. Decisions like this one—which allow our water to be diverted outside our watersheds and even the Great Lakes basin, is not something that should be taken lightly. While I appreciate your decision to extend the deadline, please extend it further and allow the public to be involved. 

Thank you.

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