Whitmer Releases Video Urging Safety Over the Holiday Weekend

Whitmer Releases Video Urging Safety Over the Holiday Weekend

Governor Gretchen Whitmer Banner - headshot with bridge graphic

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

November 24, 2020

Contact: Press@michigan.gov

 

Governor Whitmer Releases Video Urging Safety Over the Holiday WeekendProclaims Thanksgiving Day in Michigan 

 

LANSING, MICH. — Governor Gretchen Whitmer released a video today encouraging Michiganders to stay safe on Thanksgiving and over the holiday weekend by wearing a mask, practicing safe physical distancing, washing hand frequently, and following the new Michigan Department of Health and Human Services (MDHHS) epidemic order. She also proclaimed our beloved national holiday on Thursday, November 26, 2020 as Thanksgiving Day in Michigan.

 

 h

 

“Thanksgiving is about taking time to appreciate the things around us as well as give to others. This year in particular, I am thankful for our frontline workers in our hospitals, child care centers, grocery stores, and everyone else who put their lives on the line to protect our families from COVID-19. As the weather gets colder and as cases continue to skyrocket, we must do everything we can to protect these heroes on the front lines,” said Governor Whitmer. “We all have a role to play to keep our family, friends, neighbors, and frontline workers safe. I know this year will be different, but to protect our families, frontline workers, and small businesses, we must make short-term sacrifices for our long-term health.”

 

Last week, Governor Whitmer and MDHHS issued new orders limiting indoor gatherings where COVID-19 spreads rapidly. These steps are what the public health experts say we need to take to avoid overwhelmed hospitals and death counts like we saw in the spring. Doing this will also protect the medical workers, first responders, and other essential workers putting their lives on the line to protect us.

 

To view the proclamation, click the link below:

Showcasing the DNR

Open the door to the inviting world of nature

– Showcasing the DNR –

A hazy sunset is shown from a chilly evening.

Showcasing the DNR: The art and magic of being there

By JOHN PEPIN
Michigan Department of Natural Resources

When asked, hunters – like anglers, hikers, campers and others who enjoy the outdoors – often say the richness of their experiences in the woods is created merely by “just being out there.”

This notion, while seemingly simple, is in fact quite profound.

Ice encases pine boughs.It may be the best attempt to put into words the peacefulness of the forest when it snows or the sweet smells of the leaves and the trees, the talking songs of the birds and the river, the warm feeling of sunshine, cold winds drifting across your face or seeing your first black bear or moose up close.

Maybe what it’s like to just sit still and listen to the woods?

Ever really try to explain to someone what the clear, starry night sky looks like, or what it feels like to see it?

What about the experience of hiking a trail under hemlocks and pines, or looking down from a rocky ledge to see the shimmering lake below on a sunny afternoon?

Maybe the sights and sounds of watching a campfire into the morning hours or the startling experience of flushing a grouse?

Those who try to talk or write about these things they’ve experienced will often admit their descriptions fall short, no matter how accurate they may be.

A red fox is shown walking along a forest road.I am among them.

If a picture is worth a thousand words, it should also be said there are countless things a camera cannot capture, no matter how great the lenses, the lighting or the photo post-production tools are.

To truly capture certain outdoor experiences or some of the most important intrinsic beauty of plants, animals, places and many kinds of natural phenomena, it certainly takes more than a thousand words, or one picture.

I think the elusive, missing ingredient in all the efforts to duplicate or convey these encounters is the human experience.

Whatever aspect of nature we are trying to photograph, write about or tell others about can often connect us so personally to nature, the world and the universe.

In many cases, these experiences are truly singular, personal and real – written indelibly on our souls. They will no doubt come to mind for years and years to come.

A storyteller, whether a writer, photographer or hunter, angler, skier, trapper or hiker, will never be able to truly convey the totality of those beautiful moments – no matter the medium.

I’ve found the best bet is to try to have as many of those incredible, personal outdoor experiences as I can, conceding I will never fully capture them in words or pictures.

I am reminded of very creative and capable people I’ve heard try hard to tell others about something that happened to them but eventually, they throw up their hands in futility saying, “I guess you had to be there.”

An inscription is shown on a sign near the DNR field office in Crystal Falls.These days, even despite an uptick in participation attributed to the quarantined nature of the novel coronavirus pandemic, there are lots of people concerned about the increasing loss in the numbers of people having valuable outdoor experiences with nature.

There are consequences computers and digital technologies have created, especially when it comes to keeping many adults, and especially children, indoors or disengaged from personal and intimate experiences with the natural world.

On a recent trip to Crystal Falls in Iron County, I read a trailhead sign the Michigan Department of Natural Resources put up that I had never seen before. It’s located not more than a few steps outside the department’s field office there.

The author, whoever it was, understood this concern.

The sign titled “Planet Earth, Our Home” read:

Our earth is a very forgiving planet – to a point. Many of us know more about ‘surfing the net’ than we do of the natural resources that sustain our lives, yet we go on pretending that technology will always quench our thirst, fill our bellies and run our cars, while retaining our quality of life.

As you walk this trail use all your senses to see, hear, smell, taste and feel life, and think about in which direction you would like to see mankind travel. What can you do to make this happen?

A winding road beckons travelers.I once had a paddler friend who likened himself to the character in Michael Martin Murphy’s song “Boy from the Country,” from his 1972 album, “Geronimo’s Cadillac.”

This friend of mine looked like a mountain man. His blond hair was worn shaggy and dirty, and his flannel shirts and blue jeans were slept in.

He talked about the animals of the forest speaking to him, his isolation from much of society and his love for paddling his canoe over the rivers and lakes of this rugged region.

Murphy – who also wrote and sang the 1975 hit “Wildfire” – wrote:

Because he called the forest brother

Because he called the earth his mother

They drove him out into the rain

Some people even said the boy from the country was insane

A group of gulls lifts off the ground all at once.I think about my old friend every now and then, especially when I hear that song. I hope he’s still out there somewhere paddling his canoe silently past a beaver lodge, over a school of spawning trout and under the skies cast red by the setting sun.

I hope he’s found many more friends along his journey, people able to look beyond his gritty, disheveled exterior to glimpse the soul of nature and life in his heart.

When I picture him, I see him always paddling his canoe, heading somewhere around the river bend up ahead, looking for that next experience that will draw him even closer to nature.

In my own way, I’m traveling with him, looking for the purest experiences the natural world can offer, teaching me the truths concealed in the hearts of birds and animals, knowing all the while my greatest fulfillment will always come from “just being out there.”

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 Showcasing – Being There

Clouds: A morning sky on a cold, autumn day is shown.

Fox: A red fox walks along the edge of a graveled forest road.

Gulls: A group of gulls lifts off the sand along the Lake Superior shoreline.

Ice: Ice encases the needles of a pine tree.

Road: A winding road beckons travelers to come to explore.

Rocks: Water-smoothed stones litter a Michigan shoreline.

Sign: A sign outside the Michigan Department of Natural Resources filed office in Crystal Falls urges visitors to immerse themselves in nature.

Sky: A striking sunset is pictured from an evening in the Upper Peninsula./

DNR COVID-19 RESPONSE: For details on affected DNR facilities and services, visit this webpage. Follow state actions and guidelines at Michigan.gov/Coronavirus.
Inside the OAA: Mental Health Aspect-Opinion Piece

Inside the OAA: Mental Health Aspect-Opinion Piece

Inside the OAA   

Covering all 22 OAA teams with insight and thoughts on each team from Northern Oakland County to Southern Oakland County.

Wednesday, November 18, 2020

 

Mental Health Aspect-Opinion Piece.

Written Wednesday November 18th at 9:10 PM

What I’ve been hearing with coronavirus cases rising in the State. The State decided that a three week pause could help things however something else is brewing underneath everything that the media, state officials, or medical experts should look at.

The mental health and emotional component.

The mental health of student athletes is seriously at risk and that is a serious problem.

Michigan Department of Health and Human Services Director Robert Gordon, Michigan Department of Health and Human Services medical executive Joneigh Khaldun, and Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer put a pause in school sports among other things for three weeks on Sunday night.

I thought about what more mental anguish and sadness that these student athletes have to suffer thanks to these three.

Gordon said in the press conference that the reason why school sports were paused was because of contact risks. “We are suspending organized sports for three weeks because they bring together people in setting that often involve high levels of contact and exhalation and where individuals move from outdoors to indoors.”

I’m not buying what Gordon is saying at all. All schools do temperature checks and have “clear to go apps” even before they enter the building. Schools have done a great job keeping students and staff safe, I’ve seen it. This was all done behind MHSAA executive director Mark Uyl’s back. He wasn’t even consulted when the new restrictions came out.

Most health experts say that school sports can create “super-spreader events” because of the mixing but there is evidence out there that that is not the case. According to the MHSAA there was no evidence that the virus was spread at their events. Also there was no evidence that the virus spread through AAU events or any community wide outbreaks in those settings. Now there have been student athletes that have gone into quarantine don’t get me wrong because they were exposed or came close to someone who was exposed but there hasn’t been really any evidence of a community wide outbreak surrounding school sports.

It makes you think that Gordon was behind all of this all along.

In Ohio with their winter sports, they are going with everything as planned.

Whitmer forced the MHSAA’s hand in the spring as she shut spring sports down through executive orders which caused mental anguish for kids.

The MHSAA Executive Council and Uyl put together a plan that once the order was lifted they would resume all practices starting December 9th. Volleyball would have quarterfinals play on December 15th and would have the semifinals and finals on December 17th thru 19th at the Kellogg Center in Battle Creek. Girls Swimming and Diving would be conducted on December 22nd and 23rd with three high schools hosting one meet. Football regionals would be played December 15th and 16th followed by the State semifinals on December 21st and 22nd and the State Finals at Ford Field on December 28th and 29th.

Girls Basketball has already been in practice while the rest of winter sports haven’t started tryouts yet.

All of this could change if coronavirus case numbers don’t go down which would make this decision by Whitmer, Gordon, and Khaldun that much more heartbreaking and if they were to extend the epidemic order past December 8th.

I read an article about high school sports and mental health and it was a very interesting read. Mental health is not a one size fits all approach. As I read this article in the Indianapolis Star, there was a study out that said that 65 percent reported symptoms of depression and 36 percent showed that student athletes having moderate or severe anxiety.

Indiana assistant director for school mental health Kristy Eaton said in the article that “We need to be aware that depression and anxiety and feelings of isolation our kids and student-athletes are very much at risk right now. Research tells us that about one out of every five kids sitting in a classroom has a diagnosed or a diagonosable mental health condition. Add the stressors of the unknowns about COVID and you have a recipe for kids that may really start struggling with their own mental health.”

Mental health is not a one size fits all approach. Some kids respond to it differently than others but it can be very dangerous if something is taken away. “It can manifest in moodiness and irritability or an angry outburst often underlying that is fear. I don’t know what is going to happen next with this COVID thing. Sleep and hygiene issues can crop up. Same thing with eating issues, overeating-refusing to eat. You might see substance abuse. You might see or hear talk of suicide. Those are some of the warning signs that kids have gotten into a situation where it’s likely that they’re going to need some professional help” Eaton concluded.

Playing school sports helps the mental mind and has given student athletes a sense of normalcy but if sports were taken away it could lead to more bad than good. Playing sports also helps develop time management skills and team bonding.

I noticed that in Uyl and the MHSAA Executive Council. They looked at the mental health aspect of student athletes which is why they went ahead and kept things as normal as possible in August with no changes along with mask wearing and social distancing. Most student athletes are doing the right thing. I have a lot more questions for Whitmer, Gordon, and Khaldun. If they (Whitmer, Gordon, or Khaldun) want on my podcast, I’ll let them on or if they want to have a conversation, I have an email if they want to explain why school sports were paused and the mental health aspects that student athletes face, I’m at samsdragons@yahoo.com

It is no doubt that student athletes belong in a school setting building relationships and bonds. Detroit University-Detroit Jesuit boys basketball coach Pat Donnelly wrote on Twitter a very interesting tweet that I really hope Gordon, Khaldun, and Whitmer read. “OPEN, Gyms for individual exercise. CLOSED, Organized sports, and fitness centers so why is it that we can’t host individual workouts for HS (high school) athletes??? Physical health, mental health, future opportunities (college.) And yes they can wear a mask and be socially distant.”

That’s a very good question. The MHSAA and State put the mask and social distancing guidelines in the fall. Schools and student-athletes have followed them to the bone to keep their seasons intact.

Maybe Whitmer, Gordon, and Khaldun didn’t think it through before deciding to shut sports down for three weeks or maybe they don’t care about the student athlete or their mental and emotional well being.

Maybe it’s time for Whitmer, Gordon, and Khaldun to explain the emotional and mental aspect that this is taking its toll on our student athletes. I would like to see more of that in the future.

 

The Indy Star article.

https://www.indystar.com/story/sports/high-school/2020/09/01/how-covid-can-affect-high-school-athletes-mental-health-and-how-they-can-get-help/3405045001/

MHSAA Restart article.

https://www.mhsaa.com/News/Press-Releases/articleType/ArticleView/articleId/9444/MHSAA-Representative-Council-Announces-Schedule-to-Complete-Fall-Sports-Resume-Winter

Posted by Saginaw Bay at 6:07 PM

11/20-11/23/20 WEEKEND WORK for MDOT

MDOT E-mail

MDOT on facebook MDOT on Twitter MDOT on YouTube Mi Drive - Know before you go. MDOT on Instagram Sign up for E-mails form MDOT
 

11/20-11/23/20 WEEKEND WORK for MDOT (I, M, US roads)

Always check Michigan.gov/drive for this info and for ALL projects and follow @MDOT_MetroDet.

WEATHER AFFECTS ALL WORK AND MAY CAUSE DELAYS OR CANCELLATIONS.

 

I-75:

Oakland – NB/SB I-75 at South Blvd, 1 LANE OPEN, Sat 9am-2pm.

Oakland – NB/SB I-75 RAMPS CLOSED to Crooks/Corporate Dr, Fri 8am-5pm.

Oakland – NB I-75, 13 Mile to Maple, left lane closed, 2 open, daily Fri-Mon 9am-3pm.

Oakland – SB Rochester RAMP CLOSED to SB I-75, Fri 7am-5pm.

Oakland – NB I-75 at Grange Hall Rd, 1 lane closed, 2 open, daily, Sat-Sun 9am-3pm.

Oakland – EB I-75 Bus Loop RAMP CLOSED to NB I-75, Sat 9am-10am.

 

I-696:

Oakland – WB I-696, Franklin to Inkster Rd, right lane closed intermittently, 2 lanes open, Fri 9am-3pm.

Oakland – SB Franklin RAMP CLOSED to WB I-696, Fri 9am-3pm.

Oakland – EB I-696 at Farmington Rd, 1 lane closed, Mon 9am -1pm

Oakland – WB I-696 at Farmington Rd, 1 lane closed, Mon 1pm – 3pm

 

M-3: (Gratiot)

Macomb – NB/SB M-3 at 15 Mile, intermittent lane closures, 3 open, daily Mon-Fri 7am-3pm.

Macomb – NB M-3, M-59 to 21 Mile, 1 LANE OPEN, daily Mon-Wed 9am-3pm.

Macomb – EB/WB 15 Mile at M-3, 1 LANE OPEN, daily Mon-Fri 7am-4pm.

 

M-5:

Oakland – NB M-5, 13 Mile to Pontiac Trl, 1 LANE OPEN, Fri 9pm-Sun 9pm.

 

M-10:

Oakland – NB M-10 at US-24/Telegraph, right lane closed, Fri 11am – 3pm.

Oakland – SB M-10 RAMP CLOSED to 9 Mile, Fri 12pm-3pm.

 

 

M-53: (Van Dyke)

Macomb – NB/SB M-53, 34 Mile to Bordman, 1 LANE OPEN w flagging, Fri 9am-3pm.

 

M-59:

Macomb – WB M-59 at Mound, left lane closed intermittently, 2 open, Fri 10pm-Sat 3am.

 

M-97: (Groesbeck)

Macomb – NB M-97, Schoenherr to Frazho, right lane closed, 2 open, Fri 7am-Mon Noon.

 

US-12: (Michigan)

Wayne – EB US-12, Mercury Dr to Greenfield, 1 LANE OPEN, 2 closed, Wed 9am-Mon 5am

 

US-24:

Oakland – SB US-24 CLOSED INTERMITTENTLY at WB I-696, Sun 8am-Noon.

Oakland – NB US-24, Sashabaw Rd to Walton Blvd, right lane closed, Fri 8am-Mon 7am.

Oakland – SB US-24 at Dixie Hwy, right lane closed, Fri 12pm – 3pm.

 

County Gets $600,000 EPA Grant

County Gets $600,000 EPA Grant

County Gets $600,000 EPA Grant To Assess And Clean Up Contaminated Brownfield Sites For Future Development

Pontiac, Michigan – Oakland County was awarded a $600,000 grant from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency that will help local communities assess and clean up brownfield sites for future economic development.

The EPA Brownfield Assessment Coalition Grant are awarded to communities deemed underserved and economically disadvantaged, including neighborhoods where environmental cleanup and new jobs are most needed. The county partnered with Farmington Hills, Ferndale, Hazel Park, Madison Heights, Pontiac and Southfield in seeking the grant. Each of the six cities will receive $60,000, with the remaining $240,000 for use throughout the county.

“These grants provide our communities with an important infusion of capital that ultimately turns distressed property into useful businesses and jobs that benefit our residents, businesses and our economy,” County Executive David Coulter said. “I know first-hand from my time as mayor of Ferndale and the development of the Iron Ridge District the real impact these grants can provide.”

The Iron Ridge District, which borders Ferndale and Pleasant Ridge near Interstate 696, has turned a cluster of aging buildings into a brownfield redevelopment site that will become entertainment and retail destination.

It is the fourth time the county has received the grant since 2009. The previous three grants totaled $2.2 million and resulted in 341 projects with a proposed overall investment of $1.6 billion and employment estimated at more than 6,500 full-time jobs.

Local developments that have benefited from previous brownfield grants include:

  • The Flagstar Strand Theatre for the Performing Arts in Pontiac ($24 million investment)
  • Emagine Royal Oak Theatre ($14 million investment)
  • Motor City Harley-Davidson in Farmington Hills ($6 million investment)

The funds are expected to last for about three years.
Residential property values near brownfields sites that are cleaned up increased between 5 and 15 percent and overall property values increase within a one-mile radius, the federal government said. There are an estimated 450,000 abandoned and contaminated waste sites in the United States.