Detroit River Story Lab

Detroit River News

Cross-border partnership seeks to formally connect Great Lakes trails

The Community Foundation for Southeast Michigan is working on an agreement with groups in Canada to connect the developing “Great Lakes Way” tract of trails and waterways between Port Huron and Toledo to trails on the other side of the border through joint marketing — and potentially programming. The memorandum of understanding the Community Foundation is forging […]

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Biden funding infusion launches decades overdue clean up of toxic Detroit River

Has the time finally come to clean up the toxic sediment in the Detroit River that remains as legacy pollutants from the peak industrial era? That’s approximately 3.5 million cubic yards of sediment, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. A successful cleanup could lead to the river’s removal from a 1987 list of toxic

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The Detroit River Project: Seeking International Recognition for the Path to Freedom

A dedicated group of American and Canadian activists, educators, and community members are advocating for the designation of the Detroit River between Detroit, Michigan and Windsor, Ontario as an UNESCO World Heritage Site for its significance in the Underground Railroad. While the Detroit River was the lifeblood …

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Meeting Provides Information on Sediment Clean Up in Trent Channel

For more than a decade, environmental watchdog agencies have been studying a number of contaminated sediment areas along the Detroit River. Contaminated sediments reflect a century of municipal and industrial activities and discharges along the river’s shoreline. Such activities have affected some of the river’s beneficial uses, such as swimming and fishing. Because of these

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Resilient Neighborhoods: Delray earth upheaval incident raises concerns for SW Detroit neighborhood

Authorities were baffled by a geological incident that caused the ground itself to buckle in Detroit’s Delray neighborhood last fall. On the night of Sept. 11,  the intersection of Dearborn and West Fort streets experienced a shifting of the ground that lasted approximately  35-minutes and left a roughly eight-foot-high mound of earth at one location.

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Call on City to Ban Company Operating Along Detroit River

City officials are calling for Detroit to permanently ban Detroit Bulk Storage Inc. from operating anywhere along the Detroit River. Officials said the company’s continuous violations have led to at least three docks collapsing along the Detroit River in the last decade, including the latest incident on Nov. 26, the second riverfront collapse since 2019. The collapsed was blamed on improper

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Photo of David Brooks, Watershed Activist

Watershed Activist Shares Views on Long-Term Work of Environmental Stewardship

“I like biologists. They do cool things. They go to cool places, and I’ll hang around them. I’ll fix their stuff. I’ll carry their stuff. I’m a good pack animal.”  This is how David Brooks, a longtime electrical engineer who was born and raised in Detroit and professes to having disliked his high school biology

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Decarbonizing the Detroit River: Navigating the Links between Transit and Water with David Gifford

As the U.N. published a climate report that warned against irreversible changes humans have made to global temperatures and weather patterns, I felt an increased sense of urgency about decarbonization and access to the Detroit River.  So I spoke with public transit activist David Gifford, who does work and activism in Detroit’s public transit realm.

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Restoration of South Hennepin to enhance fish, wildlife habitat

One of the most important remaining habitats for fish and wildlife in Michigan waters of the Detroit River is the target of a habitat restoration project that is expected to bring about a considerable improvement in the surrounding area. Work will begin soon at South Hennepin Marsh to reconstruct its protective island shoals, with the

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Hunting for Stories with the RiverWolf: Downriver stories and memories with Dick Whitwam

Fellow longtime duck hunters and fishers on the Detroit River know Dick Whitwam as “RiverWolf.”  The affectionate nickname feels spot-on as he and his wife, Pat, show me around their yard and home, which they have graciously invited me to for our interview. Even though we are inside for much of our conversation, it feels

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Can Detroit return its brownfields to indigenous sacred sites they once were?

Ask a current Detroiter what stands at the junction of the Detroit and Rouge Rivers in the Delray neighborhood, and they may tell you about Zug Island: blast furnaces, mounds of coal, and gated-off trestle bridges guarded by signs warning “No Trespassing” and “Cameras Prohibited.” There is no sign at the site, however, of what

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Custer and other Michigan historical markers may get a history update

The bronze sculpture of George Armstrong Custer — a towering figure in Monroe’s central park — gazes regally from astride a horse, celebrating the town’s most famous former resident as a Civil War hero. Beneath it, a historical marker lauds Custer’s valor at the Battle of Gettysburg, with only a brief, vague reference to his

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Designation puts U-M Biological Station ‘at the halfway place’

“Obtawaing” is the Anishinaabemowin word for “at the halfway place.” It was the name for the center of the Odawa village that used to stretch 16 miles along northern Lake Michigan, near what is now the town of Harbor Springs and the hamlets Good Hart and Cross Village, says Frank Ettawageshik, executive director of the

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RESTORYING AGENCY SITE #1- ‘Reunioning’ on Wahnabezee

“Reunioning” is an interactive, place-based experience, uplifting the rich legacy of Wahnabezee as a site of ecological significance and celebration. Integrating mixed-media photo collage within the natural landscape, Halima Afi Cassells and Shanna Merola guide participants through a visual exploration of the island’s delicate eco-system while paying homage to indigenous plants and wildlife. 

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Detroit’s Toxic River: After decades some progress- but a long clean journey remains

In 1987 the U.S. and Canada entered into a Great Lakes agreement to start the process of cleaning up the most polluted sites, 43 of them, that dot the waterways in and between the two countries.  The sites, officially known as Areas of Concern, contain legacy toxic sediment from the industrial era when dumping pollutants into rivers and

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Friends of Detroit River to begin habitat restoration on Sugar Island

A habitat restoration project is set to begin soon on a small island in the lower Detroit River, between Grosse Ile and the Livingstone Channel. The work is designed to stabilize Sugar Island’s southerly end and enhance fish and wildlife habitat in the surrounding area. The 29-acre island is part of the U.S. Fish and

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Environmental injustice and racism in Michigan: A new MLive documentary

Smokestacks and semi-trucks are the persistent backdrop to life in the 48217 zip code. The predominately minority community in Southwest Detroit is often called the most polluted zip code in Michigan. A heavily-trafficked interstate, I-75, brings trucks heading to and from the Canadian border right through its heart. The neighborhood is home to Michigan’s only

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Detroit River marks 20-year anniversary of U.S.-Canadian heritage designation

It was 20 years ago this week that the Detroit River became the first river to hold a dual heritage designation from the U.S. and Canada. “I think we’re so fortunate to live here and experience all the great things the river has to offer,” said Danielle Stuebing, the director of communications for the Essex

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DNR to form Master Plan to replace Belle Isle Zoo, Golf Course

Detroit — Within the next year, state officials hope to begin drafting a “mini-master plan” to replace two gems of Belle Isle’s past: its zoo and nine-hole golf course. The options range from a planned return-to-nature — which is different than the uncontrolled vegetation now sprouting up in and around buildings at the long-vacant zoo — to adventure areas

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Wetland losses in region have been ‘extraordinary’

Should we worry about the disappearance of swampland and those mucky, reedy, mosquito-y marshes that sometimes rim rivers and lakes? The answer is an unqualified yes. According to the U.S. Environmental Protection agency, the benefits of wetlands are numerous, including providing food and habitat for fish and wildlife, many of them endangered; improving water quality

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