August 2024

Summer is starting to transition here in northeast Ohio. The day of this post, August 21st, my girls go back to school, soccer practices have started, and the fall calendar is starting to fill up. Seasonally, there is still more of summer to come. I still have three summer intentions to tackle by the end of September! However, it already seems like a chance to share some moments and discoveries from my smaller adventures this summer. 

The Great Lakes Water Table in the Children’s Garden at the Meijer Gardens, Grand Rapids, MI. In late June my older daughter and I stopped in Grand Rapids for a night on our way up to her sleepaway camp in Northern Michigan. We spent an afternoon at the Fredrick Meijer Gardens and Sculpture Park. This is a world class place – large scale sculpture, indoor gardens, outdoor gardens including one of the most extensive Japanese gardens I’ve visited. We also found an incredible way to splash around in all five lakes at one time! In the children’s garden there was an expansive water table for splash and play in the shape of the full Great Lakes system. 

Beach Clean-up at Huntington Beach, Bay Village, OH. In early August I registered to do an early morning beach clean-up with the Cleveland Metroparks at this beach several miles west of Cleveland. As I usually find to be true, once up and going, I loved being out early for a 7 AM start. The weather was a bit unsettled that morning and when I arrived at Huntington, I could hear thunder in the far distance, with dark clouds hovering and shifting to the north, over the lake. Over the next hour while I walked the beach, I was able to see the sky in movement with sun and light playing hide and seek with the clouds. Eventually the clouds took over and there was local thunder, lightning and rain so I wrapped up my clean-up and headed for a cup of coffee.  

Edgewater Beach, Cleveland. This is a prominent beach and park just west of downtown Cleveland. It has a long history with some ups and downs. However, few can criticize the work to revitalize the beach that the Cleveland Metroparks have done since taking it over in 2013. I met a wonderful friend for a walk on a summer Friday. Before leaving I visited the main hub near the beach and found that there is a BookBox branch of the Cleveland Public Library right on the beach. Love this so much!  

Cleveland Lakefront Nature Preserve. This is a smaller property on the lake to the east of downtown. Overseen by the Port of Cleveland, it’s notable for its bird activity; it’s clearly a rest stop along the lake for our feathered friends. It’s a favorite family outing for us and we had a walk and picnic with cousins there in July.

Walking the perimeter trail of the small peninsula, on one side you are gazing eastward. On the other side you are gazing westward right at the Cleveland skyline. It’s also an angle that leaves me with some frustration. You see Interstate 90 running right along the lake and then after that Burke Lakefront Airport, a small, municipal airport used mostly for private and charter flights. Both seem like an unfortunate use of lakefront land. The city of Cleveland has long committed to reinventing the lakefront, but initiatives and projects have often seemed to stall.

I will have more small adventures before the leaves turn. But then it will be fall, which is really a miracle of a season, no?

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I have a planning tool (a Trello board) where I keep track of blog post topics. There is one that I have had on my board for months, listed with an unknown date. It’s titled “Could Great Lakes water be piped?” and the entry includes notes from conversations I’ve had on the topic as a volunteer ambassador with the Alliance for the Great Lakes.

Well, this topic just got bumped up to the top of the list. On my Monday morning news scan, I picked up an Opinion piece in the New York Times by Dr. Jay Famiglietti titled “Will We Have to Pump the Great Lakes to California to Feed the Nation?”. Thanks to those of you who emailed or texted me the article as well!

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When I first read it at 8 AM, there were 32 reader comments on the article. I was somewhat stunned when I revisited it at 2 PM that same day to see over 1,800 reader comments. This is a good deal of traction for an Opinion piece in that amount of time. I generally never read article comments but this was an incredibly lively thread.

Reading them gave me a dizzying array of reactions, thoughts and emotions. But the overwhelming one was a form of pride and general excitement about the energy in the conversation. There were tons of readers from the Great Lakes region saying in many different frames, “Not on my watch”.

Dr. Famiglietti’s main points in the article:

Key food producing regions of the US (far west Great Plains, California and the southwest) rely on groundwater for irrigation and groundwater is disappearing. 

In order to continue producing food in these areas, water “must” be piped from other parts of the country, including the Great Lakes.

Some places (e.g. California) are trying to manage their groundwater, but it’s not clear whether that management is effective. There are other places (e.g. Arizona) that are engaging in minimal groundwater management.

The US does not have plans for the food scarcity that would result. This food scarcity would impact us all – not just those living in the west.

There would be massive challenges to considering a pipeline for water in regards to complexity, cost, politics and environmental disruption. 

There needs to be a national water policy that would support systematic exploration and management of groundwater.

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Dr. Famiglietti actually makes some important points regarding food systems and national water policy that I think he buries with the headline about pumping the Great Lakes. I was left wondering if he was seriously focused on the idea of piping Great Lakes water, or was using it to attract attention to the magnitude of the issue. If he is serious, there were two key facts missing from the article from my point of view:

The first was repeatedly jumped on by many commenters. There was NO mention in the article of the fact that the Great Lakes sit squarely across the US-Canadian border. This felt like sort of a stunning oversight. The waters are governed by international treaties. I don’t see Canada being down for this idea.

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The second key fact missing was clarity that, at this time, the Great Lakes waters are protected by The Great Lakes Compact. The Compact was signed into federal law in 2008 and it bans the diversion of water outside of the geographical basin of the lakes other than in very limited scenarios. The geographical region that can pull water from the Great Lakes is quite limited in some places. We have friends living 10 miles further out from Cleveland who are outside of the basin.   

Now, federal law can change. And with the growth of the US population in the south and southwest, it would not be a shock (does anything shock us anymore??) to see elected officials from these areas push for policy revision, but it would be a long, drawn-out political fight. Beyond that, the price tag for the infrastructure required to transport water, a very heavy substance, would also be unfathomable.

So what should we do? There seem to be a number of avenues that need further collective examination, attention, and action:

National water policy that includes groundwater management;

Changes in farming practices; 

Changes in what we eat; 

Continued efforts to identify technological innovations in desalinization as well as pulling atmospheric water to a usable state.

What are the first steps for any of us individually? Learn more about the issue and intentionally decide what we spend our money on, where we invest it, who to vote for, and how to spend time that we can on civic or political issues and activism. 

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