Water
Great Lakes Year in Review: algae blooms, pipelines, and federal funding
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Current State looks back at the biggest Great Lakes environmental stories of 2014.
Great Lakes Echo (https://greatlakesecho.org/author/garywilson/page/4/)
Current State looks back at the biggest Great Lakes environmental stories of 2014.
Morning coffee in hand you click on the Echo homepage. What prompts you to read the lead story? Or exit and move on to the national news in your favorite paper? The divide between what a commentator writes about and what readers want to read can be wide. What I think is important for you to know may not be of interest.
A scientist and a lawyer are unafraid to rock the boat with Great Lakes candor. We need more of that.
Great Lakes commentator Gary Wilson talks about what the results of the midterm elections could mean for the environment.
Commentator Gary Wilson suggests some leadership priorities for the governor of the Great Lakes state.
For today’s Great Lakes Month in Review, we talk about the dramatic rise in lake levels this fall, the latest legal updates on Asian carp, and the U-N’s stance on the Detroit water shut-offs.
In an era where collaboration and consensus are rewarded before results, there’s pent up demand for candor and action.
An old management cliché is that no one was ever fired for hiring IBM. But the tried and true route that once served corporate America also doesn’t serve Great Lakes advocates.
For today’s Great Lakes Month in Review we’re focusing on the Toledo water crisis, which was in the news for several weeks this month, and could be again
Let’s focus on critical thinking of the Toledo water crisis and challenge a few assumptions.