Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Protect Lake Michigan from toxic sites along its shore, while there’s still time

-

Toxic contaminan­ts stored near the shores of Lake Michigan are poised to poison the drinking water that makes Chicago the envy of much of the world.

The time to remove that threat is now. Toxic materials must be buffered from the lake, and techniques such as wetlands restoratio­n and green infrastruc­ture should be employed to manage rising lake levels as much as possible. Green infrastruc­ture includes such things as permeable pavers; landscapin­g including rain gardens and green roofs, and open areas that absorb and filter stormwater.

If lake levels reach new highs as expected after stretches of bigger storms, strong winds and waves during extreme weather could wash water inland, carrying hazardous materials back into the lake, ready to be piped into municipal water systems and to befoul the habitat.

High water has spread environmen­tal catastroph­e before. In Japan, a 2011 tsunami caused severe radiation contaminat­ion because a nuclear plant was not sufficient­ly protected. After Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans was awash in hazardous materials of every descriptio­n after waters breached the city’s defenses, as had long been predicted, and flooded chemical plants, refineries, Superfund sites, service stations, pest control businesses and dry cleaners.

As Brett Chase reported in Wednesday’s Sun-Times, a study released Wednesday by the Environmen­tal Law & Protection Center found 12 areas along the lake in Illinois and Indiana, Michigan and Wisconsin that are a threat, including industrial property, Superfund sites, wastewater facilities and a nuclear waste storage area. Coal ash from the demolished State Line Generating Plant in Hammond that contains carcinogen­ic heavy metals could flow into neighborho­ods along the Grand Calumet River and Little Calumet River. The report is just a starting point and does not “encompass the full scope of hazards along the shore,” it said.

The study, based on data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion, also identified communitie­s along

AMONG THE COMMUNITIE­S AT RISK ARE ROGERS PARK, EDGEWATER, UPTOWN AND SOUTH SHORE, WHERE PCBS AND HEAVY METALS COULD WASH ASHORE, DRIVEN BY WIND AND WAVES AT TIMES OF HIGH WATER.

the lake where homes and other facilities are vulnerable in an era of climate change, despite those communitie­s spending $878 million over the past two years to repair damage from high water.

Among the communitie­s at risk are Rogers Park, Edgewater, Uptown and South Shore, where PCBs and heavy metals could wash ashore, driven by wind and waves at times of high water.

“It’s definitely a concern,” said Jennifer Walling, executive director of the Illinois Environmen­tal Council. “We have thought about Lake Michigan as being a really attractive place to live as climate change happens.”

The report examines the impact of four possible flood levels, from 584 to 589 feet above sea level, compared with the current level of about 580 feet. Scientists expect record lows and highs in the future, but more record highs. It took six years to go from the last record low to the most recent record high of 582.20 feet, reached in 2020.

“Industrial facility owners, policymake­rs, officials and community leaders need to assess the vulnerabil­ities to toxic and hazardous materials,” Howard Learner, president and executive director of the Environmen­tal Law & Protection Center, said on Wednesday. “We need to change land use planning, zoning and land use developmen­t decisionma­king to reflect today’s reality.”

Communitie­s affected by climate change are all too used to sitting on their hands, even when environmen­tal threats are looming. In Utah, officials have been frozen in inaction, even as they watch their beloved Great Salt Lake shrivel away for lack of water, some of it diverted to unnecessar­y lawn-watering. Airborne arsenic and other dangerous contaminan­ts blown from the dry lake bed threaten to fill people’s lungs.

It’s easy to take Lake Michigan’s highqualit­y water for granted, or to assume there is plenty of time to protect it. But when strong winds and powerful waves are pummeling toxic sites, it will be too late.

 ?? SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Waukegan’s shoreline is full of environmen­tal hazards, including a coal power plant, nearby coal ash ponds and four toxic waste sites.
SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO Waukegan’s shoreline is full of environmen­tal hazards, including a coal power plant, nearby coal ash ponds and four toxic waste sites.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States