EGLE announces $9.7 million in MI Clean Water grants

EGLE announces $9.7 million in MI Clean Water grants

 
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July 26, 2024
EGLE Media Office, [email protected], 517-284-9278

EGLE announces $9.7 million in MI Clean Water grants to help Michigan communities upgrade water infrastructure, protect health, environment

Combined sewer separation in Dearborn, protection from PFAS near Cadillac, and work toward lead service line removals in 13 communities are among $9.7 million in state grants recently awarded to Michigan cities, villages, and townships to protect public health and Michigan’s water resources.

The MI Clean Water Plan grants through the Drinking Water State Revolving Fund (DWSRF), Clean Water State Revolving Fund (CWSRF), and support from the federal American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) aim to help communities upgrade aging infrastructure, ensure healthy drinking water, and protect Michigan’s environment.

Seventy percent of Michiganders are served by more than 1,000 community wastewater systems and a similar percentage get drinking water from community water systems. Those systems often struggle to find resources to address legacy issues like aging drinking water and storm water facilities and emerging challenges like new standards for per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) “forever chemicals.”

Governor Gretchen Whitmer, the Michigan Legislature, and federal agencies have ramped up funding for aging water infrastructure – a critical move to help ensure those water systems continue to protect public health and the environment, including Michigan’s unmatched freshwater resources.

More than half of EGLE’s budget has traditionally passed through to Michigan cities, towns, villages, and other local government agencies to finance critical improvements that help them better protect residents and our natural resources.

“Working with Michigan’s villages, towns, and cities to improve critical water systems is incredibly gratifying,” said Phil Roos, EGLE director. “We’re helping fill a critical need that will help protect people and ease the financial strain on communities.”

Grant roundup

Grants through the Clean Water State Revolving Fund:

  • City of Dearborn Heights for $2,487,500. The project is for separation of combined sewers associated with Combined Sewer Overflow Outfall L-41. This includes construction of approximately 6,125 linear feet of storm sewers ranging from 12 to 36 inches in diameter.

 

Grants through the Drinking Water State Revolving Fund:

  • City of Garden City for $445,495. This project will replace approximately 9,200 linear feet of water main along Marquette Street and install approximately 3,600 linear feet of water main for looping along Radcliff Street and Cherry Hill Road. The project will also replace an estimated 20 lead service lines (LSL) on Marquette Street, in addition to an estimated 180 LSLs throughout Garden City, focusing on areas west of Merriman Road and south of Marquette Street.

 

Technical, Managerial, and Financial grants:

Eight water systems received grants for work in identifying or verifying lead service lines in preparation for replacement. The process to accomplish this effort includes hydrovacing on either side of each curb stop and performing in-building investigation to document service line materials. These projects include restoration to original condition of hydrovaced locations. Hydrovacing involves a piece of equipment using high-pressure water to cut and liquefy the soil, while simultaneously using a high-volume vacuum to remove the soil from the excavation.

Recipients and their respective amounts:

  • Carrollton Township: $600,000
  • City of Cheboygan: $570,000
  • Village of Maple Rapids: $130,300
  • City of Pontiac (through Oakland County): $580,700
  • Bergland Township: $89,035
  • Village of Mayville: $479,349
  • City of Ecorse: $600,000
  • City of Utica: $512,500
  • Detroit Water and Sewerage Department: $600,000
  • Village of Paw Paw: $137,500
  • Village of St. Charles: $597,327
  • City of Ironwood: $598,000
  • Village of Chesaning: $507,000

 

Affordability and Planning grants (assisting communities in planning and affording water infrastructure improvements including lead service line replacements): 

  • Summit Township: $39,000
  • City of Hamtramck: $183,829
  • City of Highland Park: $500,000

***(Reminder: Register for EGLE’s Great Lakes Drinking Water Conference, September 25-26 in Novi.)

Descriptions of funding sources

 Drinking Water State Revolving FundLow-interest loan program to help public water systems finance the costs of replacement and repair of drinking water infrastructure to protect public health and achieve or maintain compliance with federal Safe Drinking Water Act requirements. The DWSRF provides loans to water systems for eligible infrastructure projects. As water systems repay their loans, the repayments and interest flow back into the DWSRF to support new loans. ARPA funding operates as a grant and may be used in combination with loan dollars to reduce the financial burden on communities to pay for capital improvement debt. ARPA funded grants awarded this fiscal year: $218,398,719.

 Clean Water State Revolving FundUsed by local municipalities to finance construction of water pollution control projects. These projects include wastewater treatment plant upgrades and expansions, combined or sanitary sewer overflow abatement, new sewers designed to reduce existing sources of pollution, and other publicly owned wastewater treatment efforts that improve water quality. The CWSRF can also finance storm water infrastructure projects to reduce nonpoint sources of water pollution caused by things like agricultural runoff to lakes, streams, and wetlands. As with the DWSRF, ARPA funds can be used in conjunction with CWSRF loan dollars, thereby reducing the debt communities pay for infrastructure improvements. ARPA-funded grants awarded this fiscal year: $137,982,009.

 Drinking Water Asset Management Program: Provides grant funding to assist drinking water suppliers with asset management plan development and updates, and/or distribution system materials inventories as defined in Michigan’s revised Lead and Copper Rule. Awarded this fiscal year: $19,695,817.

 Consolidation and Contamination Risk Reduction Program: Established to aid drinking water systems to help remove or reduce PFAS or other contaminants. Awarded this fiscal year: $20,336,215.

 Substantial Public Health Risk Project Program: Protects public and environmental health by removing direct and continuous discharges of wastewater from surface water or groundwater. Awarded this fiscal year: $8,000,000.

 Emerging Contaminants in Small or Disadvantaged Communities Grant Program: Provides states and territories with grants to public water systems in small or disadvantaged communities to address emerging contaminants, including PFAS.

 Technical, Managerial, and Financial GrantsFunds for work related to the physical verification of service lines at properties where lead is suspected but not confirmed or where service line material is unknown but likely contains lead.

 Affordability and Planning Grants: These grants are designed to assist communities in planning and affording water infrastructure improvements including lead service line replacements.

 

Additional Background 

  • Since January 2019 the State of Michigan has invested over $4 billion to upgrade drinking water, storm water, and wastewater facilities across the state, supporting over 57,000 jobs.
  • In 2022, Governor Whitmer signed a package of bills to help communities access funding for water infrastructure.
Seven Michigan water systems receive national fluoridation awards

Seven Michigan water systems receive national fluoridation awards

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Press Release


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: July 29, 2024

CONTACT: Chelsea Wuth, 517-241-2112, [email protected]

Seven Michigan water systems receive national fluoridation awards

LANSING, Mich. — The Michigan Department of Health and Human Services (MDHHS) announces seven Michigan water systems have been awarded the 2023 Community Water Fluoridation 50 Year Award from the American Dental Association, Association of State and Territorial Dental Directors and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The seven systems are Allegan, Bangor, Blissfield, Boyne City, Manchester, New Buffalo and Portage.

Recipients are recognized for continuously adjusting and maintaining the amount of fluoride in drinking water for the prevention of tooth decay in adults and children. The award is given to those communities that achieved excellence in community water fluoridation by maintaining a consistent level of fluoride in drinking water for 50 consecutive years, starting in 1973.

“MDHHS celebrates the Michigan communities exceeding CDC recommendations by having 90 percent of our population on community water systems accessing fluoridated water,” said Elizabeth Hertel, MDHHS director. “These awards demonstrate the commitment to high quality water determined by CDC. Water fluoridation has proven its effectiveness in preventing tooth decay throughout one’s lifetime and keeping Michigan residents healthy.”

Fluoridation is the adjustment of fluoride in the water to a level that is optimal for preventing tooth decay. It has been recognized by the CDC as one of the 10 great public health achievements of the 20th century. The CDC recommends water fluoridation as a safe, effective and inexpensive method of preventing decay.

In 2023, a total of 86 public water systems in 26 states received these awards, including seven communities in Michigan. Nationally, nearly 75% (more than 211 million people) served by community water systems have access to optimally fluoridated tap water.

For more information about community water fluoridation, visit the CDC website.

Our Michigan Olympians

Our Michigan Olympians

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As the 2024 Olympics get underway this weekend, we wanted to highlight the athletes you’ll see competing who have a connection to our district. This means they either grew up here or attended Michigan State University (Go Green!). We can’t wait to see these talented athletes compete in Paris.

Representing Team USA

Tori Franklin

Tori Franklin, competing in the women’s triple jump, graduated from Michigan State University in 2015 and is headed to her second Olympic games. At MSU, she set school records and Big Ten records in the triple jump, was a three-time Big Ten champion, and was First-Team All-Big Ten. After graduating, she continued to compete professionally at the USA and World Championships and the 2021 Tokyo Olympics. Additionally, in 2022, she became the first African American woman to ever win an Olympic medal in the triple jump, placing third.

Heath Baldwin

After winning the U.S. Olympic Trials decathlon, MSU graduate student Heath Baldwin is heading to his first Olympics. He has an impressive record at MSU, breaking school records in the decathlon, heptathlon, and javelin throw. He was a Big Ten Champion in the heptathlon in 2023 and was runner up at the 2024 NCAA Indoor Championships in the heptathlon. Additionally, Baldwin received the MSU Athletics George Alderton Male Athlete of the Year award for 2023, made NCAA First Team All-American for indoor and outdoor track and field, is a Big Ten Distinguished Scholar, and won Academic All-Big Ten honors.

Adam Coon

Wrestler Adam Coon has accomplished a lot since graduating from Fowlerville High School in 2013. He is a four-time state champion, was an Olympic alternate in 2016, won the Olympic trials in 2021, and is now headed to Paris. While his specialty is the 130-kilogram Greco-Roman event, Coon also played professional football in the NFL. However, it was his goal of going to the Olympics that brought him back to wrestling and he has his eyes set on gold.

Representing a different country in Paris

Myles Amine

Competing for Team San Marino, Myles Amine is headed to Paris after winning a bronze medal at the Tokyo Olympics in wrestling. He has lived in Livingston County his entire life, but his great-grandfather came to the United States from San Marino in the early 1900s. Amine has represented San Marino since 2019 and visits the country twice a year. Along with his Olympic medal, he won gold at the 2022 European Wrestling Championships, silver at the 2023 World Wrestling Championships, and is the first person from Livingston county to qualify for two Olympic games.

Shay Colley

MSU alumna Shay Colley is headed to her second Olympics as a member of Canada’s women’s basketball team. Colley was a key member of the Spartan team, averaging 12.3 points a game across three seasons. Notably, she represented Canada at the 2022 FIBA World Cup, bringing the team to a fourth place finish–the best in the team’s history since 1986. Paris 2024 will be the first time in 24 years that Canada’s women’s and men’s basketball teams will compete at the same Olympic Games, and Colley will be part of this historic moment.

Every couple of years the Olympics give the world an opportunity to pause and celebrate patriotism and athleticism – we hope you’ll join us in watching these incredible Olympians compete in Paris.

– Office of Rep. Elissa Slotkin

DNR: News Digest – Week of July 29, 2024

DNR: News Digest – Week of July 29, 2024

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News Digest – Week of July 29, 2024

two little kids in blue and pink jackets and helmets ride their bikes down a leaf-covered trail in a lush, green forest

The 2024 Michigan Trails Experience Survey closes Aug. 1; add your voice!

Here are a few of this week’s stories from the Michigan Department of Natural Resources:

See other news releases, Showcasing the DNR stories, photos and other resources at Michigan.gov/DNRPressRoom.

PHOTO FOLDER: Larger, higher-res versions of some of the images used below, and others, are available in this folder.


Explorer guides give good nature at dozens of state parks

a woman in T-shirt and waders holds electrofishing gear while talking to kids and adults sitting at picnic tables outdoorsMore than 100 people gathered along the banks of Ionia State Recreation Area’s Session Lake earlier this summer to enjoy an “Underwater Zoo” program from first-year explorer guide Cathy Lawrence.

The Explorer Program is the DNR’s way of providing engaging seasonal environmental education in over two dozen state parks that don’t have full-time visitor centers, and Ionia’s “Underwater Zoo” is just one option offered to campers and day-use visitors.

The program involved an electroshocking demonstration by DNR fisheries biologist Addie Myers. Electroshocking is a humane technique widely practiced in fish sampling, where a small electrical current is used to temporarily stun fish. This doesn’t harm the fish but does cause them to float to the surface of the water, where they are scooped into a net and studied to monitor the overall health of the water system and the biodiversity within it.

Visitors at this event had the opportunity see a wide range of fish up close and to learn more about the bluegill, bass and trout that inhabit the local streams and lakes within the park, which is located about halfway between Grand Rapids and Lansing.

“I enjoy being an explorer guide and putting on programs like this because I have a passion for connecting people to the natural world around them,” Lawrence said. “All of my programs focus on the birds, insects, native plants and fish at my park, and it’s rewarding to be there, alongside our visitors, learning more about these natural marvels.”

Visitors to Ionia State Recreation Area can enjoy this program when it is offered again Friday, Aug. 9, at 4 p.m. and 6 p.m. Get programming information and weekly schedules for this park and the other 25 explorer guide parks, with topics ranging from orienteering, wildlife identification and survival skills to astronomy, basic fishing lessons and scavenger hunts, at Michigan.gov/NaturePrograms.

Questions about the DNR’s Explorer Program? Contact Shaun McKeon at 989-370-0789.


Volunteer at state parks, game areas, UP State Fair

Each month, there are a variety of opportunities to get involved with the DNR’s work – here are a few coming up next month!

Help natural areas in state parks

A man in a navy blue T-shirt and jeans pulls sections of plants out while standing among tall, thing, flowering green plants outdoorsSeveral state parks in southern Michigan will host stewardship workdays, where volunteers are needed to help high-quality ecosystems thrive.

Workdays will take place at:

  • Island Lake Recreation Area (Livingston County), 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 3, and 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 11.
  • Waterloo Recreation Area (Washtenaw County), 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 4.
  • Bald Mountain Recreation Area (Oakland County), 9 to 11:30 a.m. Saturday, Aug. 10.
  • Yankee Springs Recreation Area (Barry County), 10 a.m. to noon Saturday, Aug. 10.
  • Highland Recreation Area (Oakland County), 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 17.
  • Grand Mere State Park (Berrien County), 10 a.m. to noon Saturday, Aug. 17.
  • Muskegon State Park (Muskegon County), 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 18.
  • Fort Custer Recreation Area (Kalamazoo County), 9:30 a.m. to noon Saturday, Aug. 24.
  • Saugatuck Dunes State Park (Allegan County), 9:30 a.m. to noon Sunday, Aug. 25.
  • Pinckney Recreation Area (Washtenaw County), 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 25.
  • Warren Dunes State Park (Berrien County), 10 a.m. to noon Saturday, Aug. 31.

More details about each workday and how to register can be found on the DNR volunteer events calendar.

Improve habitat at state game areas

On the Ground, Michigan United Conservation Clubs’ volunteer program in partnership with the DNR, will host two habitat improvement events in August. Lunch, gear and volunteer gifts will be provided for both events.

Invasive species removal stewardship day at Gourdneck State Game Area (Kalamazoo County), 9 a.m. to noon Saturday, Aug. 3. Help remove woody invasives like glossy buckthorn to make room for native plants to grow.

Cleanup at Pointe Mouillee State Game Area (Monroe/Wayne counties), 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 10. Volunteers will remove trash from the state game area to help enhance the quality of fish and wildlife habitat on public land.

Share the outdoors at U.P. State Fair

An older, white-haired man in glasses helps a young red-haired girl load an arrow into a bowMentors are needed to help staff the DNR’s Pocket Park during the Aug. 12-18 Upper Peninsula State Fair in Escanaba. Activities volunteers assist with include helping kids catch and release bluegills in the U.P.-shaped pond and shoot pellet guns or bow and arrow, staffing the fire tower and greeting visitors.

Volunteer training for all activities is provided. A variety of three- to four-hour shifts are available. Volunteers must be at least 16 years old (unless under preapproved circumstances) and pass a background check. A meal and T-shirt will be provided.

Anyone interested in volunteering should contact Jo Ann Alexander at 906-786-2351, ext. 0, or Kristi Dahlstrom at 906-226-1331.

Give us your input on state forests

Prescribed burns, timber harvests and other activities are carefully planned to keep Michigan’s nearly 4 million acres of state forest thriving. Plans for these activities are currently being made for 2026, but public input is welcome now. Find out what activities are planned and how to share your ideas at Michigan.gov/ForestInput. You can submit online comments during designated 30-day periods or attend an open house or compartment review meeting, where plans are finalized. See all scheduled comment periods, open houses and compartment review meetings for the 2024 season.

For more opportunities to volunteer, contribute and provide input, visit Michigan.gov/DNRVolunteers.


Get safety-certified during Hunter Safety Education Week

girl shooting firearm with instructorFall hunting is right around the corner, but you can get safety-certified now during the DNR’s Hunter Safety Education Week, Aug. 12-18. More than 60 in-person classes and/or field days are being offered in 40 counties throughout the state as additional opportunities to obtain your hunter safety education certificate.

To purchase a hunting license in Michigan, anyone born on or after Jan. 1, 1960, is required to successfully complete an approved hunter safety education course.

These classes are commonly offered in the spring, ahead of spring turkey season, or in the fall before the firearm deer season. Hunter Safety Education Week is being offered in addition to the already planned fall classes.

“Just like preparing for school and fall extracurriculars, hunting season needs to be considered in advance,” said Lt. Tom Wanless, DNR recreational safety, education and enforcement supervisor.

“We don’t want to see people wait until the week before they want to hunt to try locating a class, at which point classes are often full,” he said. “We hope that by offering an influx of in-person classes during a particular week each year, it will give people enough notice to prepare for hunting season.”

There are four options for completing hunter safety education in Michigan, all of which require at least four hours of in-person instruction:

  • Traditional classroom-based course.
  • Online course followed by an in-person field day.
  • Interactive online course (with animations and videos that put students in virtual real-life scenarios) followed by an in-person field day.
  • Take-home study course followed by an in-person field day.

Hunter safety education helps the next generation of hunters learn how to safely and responsibly enjoy hunting and understand the importance of wildlife management. The DNR-managed program teaches lifelong skills, such as firearm safety, basic first aid and how to use a map and compass, to an average of 15,000 students per year.

Learn more or register for a class at Michigan.gov/HunterEducation.

Questions? Contact Sgt. Cary Foster at 616-262-9532.


Summer fun: August is packed with things to do

Ready to discover Michigan’s great outdoors and stories? We’ve got you covered! Here’s just a sampling – see a full list at Michigan.gov/DNRCalendar.

Classes on bear, deer, mushrooms and more

Handfulls of morel mushrooms are shown.The DNR Outdoor Skills Academy offers several opportunities in August to get started with, or get better at, hunting, fishing and foraging. Classes include:

Birds, bats, kayaking with the OAC

The Outdoor Adventure Center in Detroit offers fun programs for all ages, with an August calendar featuring archery, education programs for kids and seniors, yoga, fishing and much more. OAC educators will also lead adventures at other area destinations including Kayaking Belle Isle Aug. 11; a bat hike at Maybury State Park in Northville and Nature at Night on Belle Isle, both Aug. 22; and Birding Belle Isle Aug. 24.

Pheasants, turkeys and shooting sports

a smiling, dark-haired boy in a gray sweatshirt holds a paper with an illustrated turkey and target. He is standing in front of a colorful bannerOn Pheasant Fridays, join representatives from Pheasants Forever and learn about firearm safety and the organization’s effort to restore habitat for these beautiful birds. Participants will get an opportunity to shoot a BB gun with expert instruction in a safe environment. There will also be hands-on activities to learn about grasslands and pollinators. Pheasant Friday will take place Aug. 2 at Sleeper State Park in Caseville and Aug. 9 at Seven Lakes State Park in Holly.

The National Wild Turkey Federation State Park Turkey Tour is coming to several state parks, with a BB gun range and NWTF members on hand to share information about wild turkey conservation and hunting heritage. State Park Turkey Tour locations include Silver Lake State Park in Mears (Aug. 8), Mears State Park in Pentwater (Aug. 9) and Clear Lake State Park in Atlanta (Aug. 16).

History happenings: baseball, lumberjacks, Smokey Bear and more

A smiling woman holds a little girl in her arms, standing next to someone in a Smokey Bear costumeStep back in time and learn more about our state’s past at Michigan History Center sites, with events including:

At Hartwick Pines Logging Museum in Grayling, a musical tribute to Michigan Lumberjacks Aug. 2; Forest Fest, a chance to meet Smokey Bear and learn about Michigan’s forests with fun activities and crafts, Aug. 10; and Black Iron Days, Aug. 24-25, with demonstrations by blacksmiths and other artisans and a steam-powered sawmill in operation.

Tree Party at Higgins Lake Nursery and CCC Museum in Roscommon Aug. 3, where guests can celebrate Smokey Bear’s 80th birthday with cake, a bounce house, historical reenactors, “touch-a-truck” and more.

An Aug. 24 vintage baseball tournament and a farmers market Aug. 4, 11 and 25 at Cambridge Junction Historic State Park in Brooklyn.

A series of Tuesday afternoon presentations at the Michigan Iron Industry Museum in Negaunee – “Michigan Mining Scrip” Aug. 6, “Researching Misinformation and Disinformation in U.P. Lore” Aug. 13 and “Paternalism and Welfare Capitalism on the Marquette Iron Range” Aug. 20.

Free ORV Weekend, Aug. 17-18

a black off-road vehicle drives down a dirt road in a green, forested areaTaking place twice a year, Free ORV Weekend – coming up Aug. 17-18 – is a great time to see, experience and test out Michigan’s off-road vehicle trails. Residents and out-of-state visitors legally can ride Michigan’s 4,000 miles of off-road vehicle trails and routes and the state’s six scramble areas on two back-to-back days without an ORV license or trail permit. The entrance fee at Holly Oaks ORV Park in Oakland County also will be waived this year. All other ORV rules and laws still apply, and you must supply your own ORV.

Photo ambassador snapshot: Port Crescent perfection

Driftwood on the sandy shore, as the bright golden sun rises over a calm, deep-blue lake. Thin, puffy clouds frame the right side.See more pictures by Michigan state parks photo ambassadors at Instagram.com/MiStateParks. For more on the program, call Stephanie Yancer at 989-274-6182. (This photo is by Karen Allmond, for the Michigan DNR, at Port Crescent State Park in Huron County.)


THINGS TO DO

Kayak piers, track chairs, color-blind scenic viewers and more; accessible recreation options help more people connect with Michigan’s outdoors.

BUY & APPLY

Time to renew your license plate? Consider purchasing a wildlife habitat plate and support Michigan’s endangered, threatened and nongame species.

GET INVOLVED

If you love trails, we’d love to hear from you. Take our 2024 Trails Experience Survey by Aug. 1 and tell us what quality time on the trails looks like to YOU!

Orion Area Chamber Hosts 4th Annual Food Truck Festival

Orion Area Chamber Hosts 4th Annual Food Truck Festival

Orion Area Chamber Hosts 4th Annual Food Truck Festival

 Orion Township, MI. The Orion Area Chamber will host its 4th Annual Food Truck Festival at the Orion Township Parks & Recreation’s Big Rig Gig on Friday, August 2nd, 5 – 9 PM at Friendship Park.

The Chamber is excited to once again partner with Orion Township Parks & Recreation to bring a variety of delicious food choices and cool beverages to this highly acclaimed event.

The event is Free and open to the public to attend, both kids and big kids at heart.

The Big Rig Gig features 25-30 Law Enforcement & Fire Department vehicles, trucks, tractors, diggers, dozers, buckets, back-loaders and more.

Food Trucks Attending the 2024 Food Truck Festival include:

Cookies and Cream (Chamber Member)

Great Lakes Eatz & Treatz

Nothing Bundt Cakes (Chamber Member)

Pappas Noodz

Poppos Barbeque LLC

Sucree-Mobile Dessert Parlor

Sweet T’s Lemonade

Twisted Burger Food Truck

Wing Snob

Your Food Dude (Chamber Member)

Ziffels LLC

For more information, please contact Joyce Donaldson at the Orion Area Chamber of Commerce at [email protected] or 248.693.6300.