dam safety program continues to assist recovery

dam safety program continues to assist recovery

 

 
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
May 17, 2021
EGLE Media Office, [email protected], 517-284-9278

Michigan dam safety program continues to assist recovery one year after Mid-Michigan dam failures

One year after the failures of the Edenville and Sanford dams, the Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy (EGLE) continues to assist the community in recovery efforts and planning for the future of the affected communities.

Wednesday marks a year since the dams failed during a torrential rain event, displacing thousands of residents, damaging businesses and livelihoods, destroying property and natural resources, and illuminating the chronic problem of deferred maintenance of Michigan’s infrastructure.

“A year has passed, but for the families and businesses affected by the dam failures it surely feels like only yesterday,” said Liesl Clark, EGLE director. “We had personnel literally on the dam just prior to its failure, and since then we’ve engaged continually with community leaders to provide scientific, logistical and technical support to help them recover from this disaster.”

Gov. Gretchen Whitmer affirmed the state’s long-term commitment to affected communities.

“It has been one year since the Midland area was faced with a historic flood. When I first toured the damage a year ago, I promised the affected families that we would be with them every step of the way, and that continues today,” said Governor Whitmer. “I want to thank everyone who has come together and stepped up to help rebuild this community. Together, even in the face of challenging circumstances, we’re showing how strong Michiganders can be when we come together. Lt. Governor Gilchrist and I will always have your back as we continue to recover and rebuild.”

Most recently, EGLE oversaw emergency work to draw down water levels in the Tobacco River upstream of the remaining portion of the Edenville Dam to help protect downstream residents and properties from further damage during spring flooding. That work builds on EGLE’s continuing efforts to assist, which have included water quality monitoring, helping local officials expedite debris removal, assisting with restoration of drinking water infrastructure, assessing and mitigating continued natural resource damages, and assisting communities in disaster relief applications among many other activities.

Clark said that with the help of the State Legislature and Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, the agency is also moving forward on the recommendations from external reviews of its program, including additional staffers that allowed the creation of a separate Dam Safety Unit within EGLE’s Water Resources Division.

Completed and ongoing reviews of EGLE’s dam safety program include:

With support from the Michigan Legislature, the reorganized Dam Safety Unit within EGLE’s Water Resources Division will soon have five full-time-equivalent staffers, doubling the resources available at the time of the dam failures last year. At that time, the state had two inspectors to oversee more than 1,000 state-regulated dams. Ideal staffing for the state of Michigan, according to the ASDSO’s recommendations and supported by the Task Force’s report, would be 11 full-time personnel devoted solely to dam safety.

“With the help of the additional staffing provided by the Legislature, we’ve strengthened our efforts to ensure state-regulated dams meet or exceed all safety requirements,” said Clark. “The recovery and restoration efforts at Edenville are still top of mind for us every day, while at the same time we are working hard to help ensure there is never a repeat of this disaster.”

Clark said she looks forward to working with legislators on additional recommendations from the program review. Those include additional funding, staffing, and legislative changes that provide regulators with better resources to hold dam owners accountable for safe maintenance practices and upkeep.

For more information about dams go to the Dam Safety Unit webpage and for updates on EGLE’s work after the Mid-Michigan dam failures go to the Edenville Dam Recovery webpage.

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May 16-22 is Michigan EMS Recognition Week

May 16-22 is Michigan EMS Recognition Week

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Press Release


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: May 17, 2021

MDHHS CONTACT: Lynn Sutfin, 517-241-2112,SutfinL1@michigan.gov

MAAS CONTACT: Laura Biehl, 248-921-5008, [email protected]

Governor Whitmer proclaims May 16-22 as
Michigan EMS Recognition Week

Week honors first responders on the front lines of the pandemic 

LANSING, Mich. – As a thank you to the emergency medical service personnel on the front lines of the COVID-19 pandemic, Gov. Gretchen Whitmer has proclaimed May 16-22 as Michigan EMS Recognition Week.

“As an emergency medicine physician I know how important our EMS heroes are in the community and the critical role they plan when Michiganders are in need,” said Dr. Joneigh Khaldun, chief medical executive and chief deputy for health at the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services. “Michigan EMS professionals have gone above and beyond the call of duty during this pandemic and deserve our recognition for their tireless dedication.”

Michigan EMS providers stand ready to help residents in any type of emergency, completely focused on saving the lives of others. Their efforts help improve the survival and recovery rates of people who experience sudden illness or injury.

“Michigan EMS is proud to be serving on the front lines of the pandemic, providing lifesaving health care and public safety services to Michigan residents,” said Jack Fisher, president of the Michigan Association of Ambulance Services and executive director of Medic 1 Ambulance in Berrien County. “We stand ready to help Michiganders in need of medical assistance 24 hours a day, 7 days a week and appreciate the recognition during EMS Week.”

EMS fills critical health care gaps by providing important out-of-hospital care, including preventative medicine, follow-up care and access to telemedicine. EMS agencies have played an essential role during the pandemic, reducing hospital stays by treating COVID-19 patients at home when possible.

Michigan is home to 28,820 EMS providers, 812 life support agencies and more than 3,867 licensed life support vehicles, according to the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services Bureau of EMS, Trauma and Preparedness. For more information, visit Michigan.gov/ems.

Whitmer Honors Peace Officer Memorial Day 

Whitmer Honors Peace Officer Memorial Day 

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 

May 14, 2021

Contact: [email protected]   

 

In accordance with a proclamation issued by President Biden, flags will remain raised on Peace Officer Memorial Day because it coincides with Armed Forces Day.  

 

Gov. Whitmer Honors Peace Officer Memorial Day

 

LANSING, Mich. – Governor Gretchen Whitmer, in accordance with a proclamation issued by President Biden, has ordered U.S. and Michigan flags within the State Capitol Complex and upon all public buildings and grounds across the state of Michigan to remain full-staff on Saturday, May 15 in recognition of Peace Officer Memorial Day during Police Week.

 

“Today, we honor the memories of dedicated public safety officials who we have lost in the line of duty,” said Governor Gretchen Whitmer. “We owe these fallen men and women a debt that we cannot pay back, and we are grateful for their service to our communities.”

 

Peace Officers Memorial Day falls within National Police Week, which was established by Congress in 1962 to recognize law enforcement officers who lost their lives in the line of duty and is observed from Sunday, May 10 through Saturday, May 16 of this year.

DNR: Remembering fallen conservation officers

DNR: Remembering fallen conservation officers

 
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– Showcasing the DNR –

A wide view shows a police officers memorial ceremony at Northern Michigan University in Marquette in 2016.

Remembering our fallen conservation officers

Editor’s note: In celebration of the department’s centennial anniversary, the Showcasing the DNR feature series will highlight one story each month during 2021 that recalls or pays tribute to various accomplishments of the department over the past century.

By KATIE GERVASI
Michigan Department of Natural Resources

The Gospel of Matthew, chapter 5, verse 9 reads, “Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God.”

The Michigan Conservation Officers Association uses this Bible verse to represent the state’s 16 conservation officers killed in the line of duty. They swore an oath to “preserve, protect and defend the honor and tradition of the (Michigan Department of Natural Resources) Law Enforcement Division.”

Two Michigan conservation officers salute at the grave of a fellow officer.Taken too soon, these loyal and dedicated officers made the ultimate sacrifice, which continues to be remembered through their family generations.

“Unfortunately, line-of-duty deaths in law enforcement have become an increasingly frequent occurrence,” said MCOA president Kyle Bucholtz, who patrols Huron County. “It is critically important we do not become accustomed to the idea of losing officers or forget the fallen officers of our past.”

Each year, during National Police Week, active Michigan conservation officers salute and place a state of Michigan flag at each gravesite to honor the fallen.

Link image for fallen officer video.In 1962, President John F. Kennedy signed a bill into law that states May 15 be recognized nationally as Peace Officers Memorial Day, and the calendar week be observed as National Police Week.

Eleven of Michigan’s fallen conservation officers are honored at the National Law Enforcement Memorial in Washington D.C. – where (prior to COVID-19) up to 40,000 people would attend the May services to honor fallen heroes.

This year, the DNR Law Enforcement Division was informed by the Officer Down Memorial Page of two recently discovered fallen Michigan conservation officers now undergoing the process of being recognized at the memorial.

Investigators Elgin McDonough, 38, from Algonac, and Karl Zimmerman, 35, of Marine City were killed immediately in a 1932 automobile accident near Webberville, while traveling from Lansing to Macomb County.

The two men died when their vehicle struck an unlit farm wagon that was hauling wood. Zimmerman had only been on the job for three days.

A Michigan DNR photo shows Conservation Officer Green in his uniform.Of Michigan’s 16 conservation officers killed in the line of duty, Lt. Arthur Green III, a U.S. Air Force and Michigan Air National Guard veteran, is the most recently deceased.

Green died Aug. 9, 2015, when the aircraft he was piloting crashed while he was on his way to a mandatory training in northwest Michigan.

“I just had a bad feeling that morning that something wasn’t going to be right,” Karla Cole, Green’s widow, said. “I had been at work for about an hour when the trooper arrived. My heart sank.”

Green is remembered for his commitment to Belle Isle and his hometown, Detroit. He worked as Detroit police officer before becoming a conservation officer in 1996.

“He was very familiar with Detroit and downtown and worked hard to bring Belle Isle back to what it should be – a family place,” Cole said. “We would pack the kids in the car when they were little and drive them around the island just to ride around and see the deer.”

Green is survived by his two sons, Antonio and Brice, and five grandchildren, two of whom were born after his death. Cole said Green instilled his love for fishing into his children, which has been passed on, particularly to one of her grandsons.

A family photo of Conservation Officer Averill and his young son is shown.“We started going back to our family cottage last year. My 8-year-old grandson especially enjoys fishing,” Cole said. “He pulled a fish out of the lake, and he ran around, he was so scared to touch it. But he’s quite the fisherman now.

“My husband would have liked that, he really taught my boys about fishing, he took them on the lake a lot at the cottage. He would get a big kick out of seeing my grandson with a pole in his hand.”

Conservation officers stay connected with family members of the fallen.

Preceding Green’s death, Vernon Scott Averill died in 1986 from brain tumors sustained after two poachers beat Averill in the head after he issued them tickets for spearing fish along the Acme Creek, near Traverse City, in 1980.

“It makes my son (Randy Averill) and I proud to see that people remember him (Averill) and that we’re still treated as family by the DNR,” said Susan Ewing, Averill’s widow. “It’s important to honor the job that conservation officers and law enforcement officers do in society. He (Vernon) realized a lifelong dream when he became a conservation officer and loved all aspects. He worked hard, a lot of hours and always treated everyone with respect.”

Ewing and Randy still reside in northwest Michigan.

A conservation officer hands a rose to the widow of Gerald Welland in 2012.Family roots of fallen Conservation Officer Gerald Welling remain within the DNR.

Welling was killed at the age of 54 on Sept. 10, 1972, the night before celebrating his 24th wedding anniversary, and before his granddaughter, Stacy (Welling) Haughey, Michigan DNR Upper Peninsula field deputy, was born.

“In many ways my grandpa has been a part of my life,” Haughey said. “I feel his courage and spirit in my heart, and I am lucky because all my life I have had a hero watching me from heaven and guiding my journey.”

Haughey oversees DNR operations in the Upper Peninsula. Her grandfather was killed while patrolling for illegal bear hunters near Hermansville, located in the Upper Peninsula’s Menominee County. He was intentionally struck and dragged by a vehicle while conducting a shining check with his partner.

“I’m sure these words and thoughts about my grandfather echo the memories and emotions that are experienced by those who have known a fallen officer,” Haughey said. “The impact of loss is a powerful thing that cannot be fully realized until it happens to you.

“The loss of our friends and protectors proves the dangers that exist in our society and proves the need to have peace officers at our doorstep – we need them whether it is in the middle of night, Christmas day, or a perfect Sunday afternoon – they are there to protect us in times we are most vulnerable.”

Welling was laid to rest at a cemetery in the Upper Peninsula. He was later relocated downstate when his wife moved back to her hometown of Coe.

A photo of Conservation Officer Mellon shows him with his patrol vehicle.Tom Mellon Jr., of Belmont, was 6 years old when his father, Tom Mellon, died while responding to a forest fire in the Upper Peninsula’s Schoolcraft County. Mellon drowned while ferrying fire equipment across the Manistique River in 1947.

Conservation officers often provide on-the-ground assistance during wildfires.

“He took me on a few missions,” Mellon Jr. said of his father. “He particularly liked the woods, trees and plants. He knew all the various tree species, which he taught me. He was an influence for why I became an outdoorsman. I liked small game: rabbits, grouse, peasant hunting.”

Mellon Jr. has six children and passed down his love of hunting to his one son and encourages others to enjoy the great outdoors.

“By all means get out there,” he said.

Bucholtz offered a suggestion on remembering Michigan’s 16 brave, dedicated and fallen conservation officers.

“Please take a moment to genuinely reflect on what each of these fallen conservation officers gave in service to the people of the state of Michigan,” he said. “In the truest sense of the word, each of these fallen officers and the loved ones they leave behind are heroes.”

Read more about each of Michigan’s fallen Conservation Officers at Michigan.gov/ConservationOfficers.

Check out previous Showcasing the DNR stories in our archive at Michigan.gov/DNRStories. To subscribe to upcoming Showcasing articles, sign up for free email delivery at Michigan.gov/DNR.


/Note to editors: Contact: John Pepin, Showcasing the DNR series editor, 906-226-1352. Accompanying photos and a text-only version of this story are available below for download. Caption information follows. Credit Michigan Department of Natural Resources, unless otherwise noted.

Text-only version – Fallen Officers

Averill: Fallen Conservation Officer Vernon Scott Averill stands proudly with his son, Randy, age 2, after graduating from his conservation officer training in 1976.

Ceremony: A peace officers memorial ceremony at Northern Michigan University in Marquette in May 2016 is one of numerous events across the country aimed at remembering the sacrifices of fallen law enforcement officers.

Green: Lt. Arthur Green III of Detroit is Michigan’s most recently fallen conservation officer. He served the DNR from 1996-2015.

Mellon: Michigan Conservation Officer Tom Mellon drowned while ferrying fire equipment across the Manistique River in 1947.

Rose: A Michigan conservation officer hands a rose to Vera Welling, the widow of Gerald Welling, at a fallen officer memorial ceremony in Roscommon County in 2012. Ms. Welling has since died. (Houghton Lake Resorter photo)

Salute: Two conservation officers salute fallen officer Gerald Welling during a gravesite ceremony.

Welling family: Members of the family of Michigan Conservation Officer Gerald Welling are pictured in 2011. From left, front row: Kaylee Bell Long (granddaughter), Elle Long (great-granddaughter), Vera Welling (wife-deceased). Middle row: Meredith Welling (daughter), Stacy Welling Haughey (granddaughter), Ally Bell Terrell (granddaughter), Marilyn Bell (daughter). Back row: Aaron Bell (granddaughter), Leonard Welling (son)./

DNR COVID-19 RESPONSE: For details on affected DNR facilities and services, visit this webpage. Follow state actions and guidelines at Michigan.gov/Coronavirus.
County Focuses On Developing Mobility Strategy

County Focuses On Developing Mobility Strategy

Coulter Focuses County On Developing Mobility Strategy Recruits Steudle To Lead Expansion

Pontiac, Michigan – Oakland County Executive Dave Coulter has tapped Kirk Steudle, a nationally recognized leader in the development of connected and automated vehicle technologies, to lead the development of the county’s strategic initiative for mobility. The plan will focus on expanding existing and new businesses in this emerging and vital sector of the automotive economy.

“Oakland County has a long history of innovation and leadership in emerging research and development,” Coulter said. “As the county responsible for one-fifth of Michigan’s economic output, it is vital that Oakland County is actively engaged in mobility to ensure our state remains a leader in the next generation of transportation technology. Kirk Steudle is the right leader at the right time to assist us in the development of a transformational strategy for mobility.”

Steudle, president and CEO of the American Center for Mobility, will work with Oakland County, industry leaders, and organizations to build a collaborative plan that will encourage innovation, expansion, and diversification.

“Oakland County has a tremendous private and public mobility ecosystem that is an integral part of the regions and statewide mobility efforts,” Steudle said. “I’m proud to work with Oakland County to develop a strategic approach to leveraging the county mobility strengths to leverage the best value for citizens.”

One of the partners Oakland County is looking forward to engaging in this conversation is Automation Alley. As the knowledge center for Industry 4.0, Automation Alley has ability to help existing local manufacturers diversify and engage in the mobility sector.

“As the smart and connected technologies of Industry 4.0 rapidly transform the way manufacturers do business, automakers are now operating as technology companies because they know innovation and data will drive the future of mobility,” said Tom Kelly, executive director and CEO of Automation Alley.

“Industry 4.0 is the backbone of mobility and Oakland County’s mobility initiative is a compliment to Automation Alley’s focus on Industry 4.0. We look forward to working with the County to help our manufacturers remain globally competitive.”

The focus on mobility strategy will give companies already located in Oakland County an opportunity to have a seat at the table and access to resources to enter the mobility market. One company that will help Oakland County lead the way in expansion of the mobility sector is DENSO.

“DENSO’s focus is creating a greener, safer and more seamless mobility future for all,” said Pat Bassett, senior vice president of Engineering at DENSO. “We recognize, however, that no one can get there alone, so we look forward to working with Oakland County and other partners to move us closer to this goal. Together, we can create solutions that reduce accidents, protect the environment and increase access to opportunity through freer movement.”

Strategic planning will take place over the spring and summer. During that time, Steudle, business leaders, community partners, state officials, and mobility experts will advise Coulter’s administration on how Oakland County can enlarge its leadership role in mobility.
This initiative will also be a key component of attracting national and international businesses to sustain Oakland County’s economic resiliency and growth.