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Lake Michigan hits record low level

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Federal officials have long acknowledged that dredging and riverbed mining in the St. Clair dropped the long-term average of the lakes by about 16 inches. But a Great Lakes water-level study recently completed by the U.S. and Canadian governments revealed that unexpected erosion since the last major St. Clair dredging project in the early 1960s dropped the lakes’ long-term average by an additional 3 to 5 inches.

That means the lakes today are nearly 2 feet lower than they would be if humans hadn’t meddled with the St. Clair’s riverbed.

Conservation groups, some property owners and a group representing the region’s mayors want the U.S. and Canadian governments to begin exploring some type of remediation project in the St. Clair River to slow the flows and gradually restore the lakes to more closely match their historical averages.

Not everyone supports the idea. They worry such a structure could exacerbate erosion problems if high water ever returns.

On Tuesday, Sierra Club of Canada issued a news release urging the governments to act, noting that a riverbed restoration had been planned before the 1960s dredging project, though it was never built.

“At these numbers, it would take years of consistent rain to naturally improve the situation,” Roger Gauthier, a retired Army Corps hydrologist, said in the Sierra Club of Canada release. “Water levels can be restored responsibly by gradually installing sills at the head of the St. Clair River. . . . It’s time for governments to work to finish the job, before we have further disasters.”

Members of the International Joint Commission, a binational body that oversees U.S.- Canadian boundary water issues, are now digesting the thousands of public comments they received after the release of the study on Great Lakes water levels.

John Nevin, spokesman for the Joint Commission, said Tuesday that the members have not made a decision about whether to recommend to the U.S. and Canadian governments some type of restoration project for the St. Clair River.

“The key point is, the commission has not taken a position with respect to the St. Clair River and remediation,” Nevin said.

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