I really don’t want to do this. I enjoy having a quiet little blog about doings in Torch Lake Township. I like to tell you about people – the families they raise, the businesses they run, the leadership they provide. I like to make little jokes about my dogs, and The Rock, and the weather. I spent a good part of my life in the rough and tumble of politics, and at some point I decided I’d had enough. I wanted a peaceful life. Ah well, perhaps peace and quiet are overrated.
I believe that the proposed Alba Injection Well is simply wrong, and I cannot stay out of it. It is, after all, about our water. Our rivers, our lakes, our groundwater, our irrigation wells, the water our children and grandchildren drink. You can’t get more basic than that.
Anyone who lives in Torch Lake Township understands the importance of clean water at a visceral level. We test our wells, we monitor water quality on Torch Lake, we patrol the beaches of Grand Traverse Bay for dead birds and fish – because we know that both water and contaminants can travel a long way underground. We live on a chain of lakes, in a network of creeks and rivers, in a vast watershed. Alba is not the moon. Alba is us.
The dispute is, of course, about money – and whose money will pay for a solution. I believe that “saving” money by trucking contaminated water to Alba and dumping it into a deep injection well is simply shifting the costs from the developers of Bay Harbor to the people of Antrim County. I believe a better solution is to contain the contamination at the Bay Harbor site while the developers build a treatment plant there. My second choice would be to continue to process the contaminated water at the Grand Traverse County wastewater treatment facility.
The advantage of both these solutions is that the problem and the solution remain visible, rather than being swept under the rug of willful ignorance. Moving poison from one place to another does not get rid of the poison. It simply takes the problem away from one place and hides it in another place. The people of Alba, Star Township, and the rest of Antrim County should not be the recipients of Bay Harbor’s problem. Our water is no less precious – our children no less dear to us.
I thought you might like to read a couple of items and think about them. Then feel free to comment.
- I hold a high opinion of Rebecca Norris’s analytic ability and integrity. The former Township Trustee and longtime owner of Becky’s Beach Resort issued a plea to the business community this week. You can follow the link to read her piece, Protecting Our Environment.
- I hold a high opinion, as well, of the work done by the Friends of the Jordan River Watershed, led by Dr. John Richter. Their website has a long list of documents and links to articles. I’ve chosen to post a summary by Anne Zukowski, The Alba Injection Well: How Did We Get Here?
What do you think we should do? How do you think we should do it? I think a conversation is in order.
uphilldowndale
May 9, 2008
It’s not my water, but yay, I’d be cross about that wee scam!!
John Richter
May 9, 2008
Dear Gerry, Thanks for your thoughtful article. Thanks also to Becky and Jack Norris. You folks are champions in a world of indifference. I am happy to see that the absurdity of the Alba well is not lost by those who see things clearly. Our water resources are sacred. I hope we don’t get bogged down on the minutia of technical details to forget the simple fact. The Alba well is wrong. Fix the problems at Bay Harbor.
Gerry Sell
May 9, 2008
Mrs. Uhdd – thank you for that! I am cross about the wee scam. Not a crank, simply cross.
Hello, John. Lord knows we’ve had our differences, but in this case we agree on fundamentals.
EUGENE & JOANNE DAWSON
May 9, 2008
Gerry Sell you have said it all! This is exactly how we feel! Just for your info There will be a picnic for Star Twp defense at Richardi Park in Bellare Sat. June 14 1-6 PM. Food served from 2-5. Also Native American Drumming Ceremony at 3 pm. We must stop this from happening. Bay Harbor and Developers made the mess, they shoud keep it there! This makes no sense at all.
Gerry Sell
May 9, 2008
Not everyone agrees, and some of them have written to me via email. Their concern is that if left at the site, the leachate could contaminate Lake Michigan. What do you think is the best way to protect all our water?
Heidi Lang
May 15, 2008
1) No Well
2) develop alternatives
a) remove kiln dust or
b) cap the kiln dust/install a slurry wall to block the ground water and reroute it around the CKD piles, then improve the collection mechanism, build a treatment facility on site or upgrade Petoskey’s waste water treatment facility to properly handle and treat the leachate.
3) keep it in Emmett County!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
4) keep it out of Lake Michigan!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Remove, Isolate or contain!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Heidi
Becky Norris
October 13, 2008
An informational meeting, free and open to the public, is scheduled for 2-5 PM on Sunday, October 26,2008 at the library of North Central Michigan College in Petoskey. The speakers currently expected to participate are Dr. Ed Timm (chemical engineer), Dr. Jim McClurg (geologist), Dr. John Richter (president, Friends of the Jordan River), Randy Stewart (professional diver with personal exposure to the Bay Harbor contamination), and State Senator Basham from Romulus where a similar well failed and produced contamination.