Rouge River (Michigan)From Great Lakes WikiThis article is about the river that flows through Michigan. For other rivers with the same name, see Rouge River.
[edit] Rouge River History Taken at the Rouge River Clean Up (www.ci.novi.mi.us) The Rouge River has four main branches and covers 125 miles of waterway. Within the Rouge Watershed there are 400 lakes and ponds with 50 miles of parklands. Over 1.5 million people live along the Rouge in 48 different communities. The river has long been a dumping ground for just about everything from washing machines, old cars, dead bodies, and toxic outflows from factories and sewage plants. It is the pathetic story of a long history of total disregard of planning, complete lack of environmental awareness, and poor leadership. In the 1960's, the Rouge River was one of three rivers in the U.S. to actually catch on fire due to the large amount of oil on its surface. In the 1980s The International Joint Commission declared the Rouge one of the dirtiest rivers in the Midwest. As the point-source pollution sites were being cleaned up, the continued pollution was pointing to non-point source pollution. But, in a hopeful turn around, a happy ending is in sight. The Rouge River cleanup has become an intense and focused effort at all levels: government, business and citizen. [edit] Rouge's RAPThe Ford Motor Company Rouge River Plant in 1927. (from www.nga.gov) With the Ford Motor Company Rouge River Plant and other factories located on the banks of the Rouge, previous pollution problems had been attributed to industry. However, with 50% of the nearby land being residential, the RAP revealed that non-point source pollution was now becoming a larger threat to the river. This includes combined sewer output, storm water discharge, illicit and illegal discharges, flooding and bank erosion. With people continuing to spread to previously rural land, more and more concrete covers the ground. This concrete, instead of soaking up the rain water, drains fetilizers, pesticides, oil and excess water into sewers which overflow into the nearby rivers. Also, many people dump chemicals, lawn treatments, and car washing soaps down storm drains, thinking they lead to treatments plants. Unfortunately, anything that goes down a storm drain is actually fed directly into the river. Picture from www.nsw.gov Since the RAP implementation in 1989, the Rouge River had drastically changed for the better. To date, 314,000 cubic meters of contaminated sediment has been remediated and over 11 million dollars spent. The Rouge River RAP was updated in 2004 and showed improved water quality and over all ecosystem health. A table of delisting targets from the International Joint Commission summarizes the Rouge River's progress. [edit] Problems RemainA duck covered in oil from the 2002 Rouge/Detroit River oil spill. (from www.epa.gov) Problems still remain however. On April 9th, 2002, 250,000 gallons of oil were spilled into a 13-mile stretch of the Detroit River near the mouth of the Rouge River. Only 70,000 of these gallons were recovered. Although oil is generally lighter than water, changes in temperature and water current can cause the oil to sink and settle on the bottom. This leftover oil can cause harm to numerous animals that come in contact with the water. In a June article after the spill, a statement by Comprehensive Environmental Solutions "denied any wrongdoing and said it was cooperating fully with the FBI and EPA."
The Rouge River is also still having problems with sewage control and combined sewer output. [edit] Timeline
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