Covid-19 animal care: curbside service, pet supply delivery, video adoptions

Animal-related organizations face new challenges in caring for their critters in the midst of a pandemic.Humane societies and rescue shelters have had to rely on foster owners. Pet store owners have had to adapt to the 6-foot spacing guideline with curbside service. All are more conscious of employee health. We talk to a Lansing pet store, the Michigan Humane Society and a Grand Rapids rescue organization. By Taylor Haelterman.

Greening Detroit’s Riverfront

The EPA has signed a $2.5 million agreement to clean the Detroit River and create new habitat for wildlife. The money will help clean contaminated sediments and create homes for fish and wildlife in a cove area at the Ralph C. Wilson Centennial Parkbeing built along the waterfront. We hear from the Detroit River Conservancy and the former manager of the Detroit River International Wildlife Refuge. By Ri’An Jackson.

Commercial fishing is critical infrastructure — will it survive COVID-19?

Michigan’s commercial fishing is critical infrastructure for the state’s food supply during the pandemic, yet some of its practitioners may not survive COVID-19. Reasons: closure of restaurants, legal limitations on the species they’re allowed to fish and competition from Canadian fishing operations. We hear from commercial fishers in Lake Michigan and Lake Huron, Trout Unlimited and DNR. By Kurt Williams.

CNS budget, Bonus Week 2, May 8, 2020

To: CNS Editors

From: Eric Freedman 

http://news.jrn.msu.edu/capitalnewsservice/

For technical problems, contact CNS technical manager Tony Cepak at (517) 803-6841; cepak@msu.edu. For other matters, contact Eric Freedman at (517) 355-4729 or (517) 256-3873; freedma5@msu.edu. EDITORS: This the second of two Bonus Week files with still-timely stories you may not have had space for earlier in the semester. During the summer, we plan to file packages of Michigan-focused environmental stories in collaboration with our partner, Great Lakes Echo. HERE’S YOUR FILE:

PREGNANT INMATES: Some lawmakers want to expand the legal rights of pregnant inmates at Michigan’s only women’s prison, Huron Valley.

Abandoned mines aplenty, but cash to clean, close them, scarcer

Despite spending billions of dollars, federal agencies don’t know how many potentially dangerous or environmentally hazardous abandoned mining features there are on government land nationally, including Michigan, a new General Accountability Office study of spending from 2008-2017 shows. The Forest Service spent $954,000 for gates and related work in the U.P.’s Ottawa National Forest. Isle Royale National Park and Keweenaw National Historical Park recently received funding to deal with abandoned mine features. By Eric Freedman.

Study finds fewer minority nurses come from Michigan nursing programs

None of Michigan’s nursing programs rank in the nation’s top 50 for the number of minority nurses they graduate with bachelor’s and master’s degrees, a new study from the Women’s Institute for Science, Equity and Race shows. That’s despite the state’s large proportion of minority residents. Nursing program administrators at Northern Michigan University and Michigan State discuss the challenges. Other programs include CMU, Grand Valley State, Davenport, Ferris State and Saginaw Valley State. By Maddy O’Callaghan.

Leelanau County airport seeks historic designation

The push to secure state historic site designation for the Clinton F. Woolsey Memorial Airport in Northport is advancing. The former dairy farm is named for a famed local aviator who died in a plane crash and who numbered Charles Lindbergh among his students. The airport manager, Michigan History Center director and head of the Historical Society of Michigan explain. By Joe Dandron.

Rising waters threaten wells, drinking water systems

Rising water levels, including the Great Lakes, inland waters and groundwater, could threaten the safety of drinking water from wells and damage septic and sanitary sewage systems. We talk to a well driller in Traverse City, a Grand Traverse County environmental health expert and the Department of Environment, Great Lakes and Energy. By Katrianna Ray.

Study finds health risk from Pine River fish

A recent study finds a risk that anglers in the Pine RIver may become sickened by the bacteria E. coli from agricultural runoff. Researchers are from Alma College and the University of Toronto. We hear from the Mid-Michigan District Health Department, a member of the Montcalm County Board of Commissioners and the Department of Environment, Great Lakes and Energy. By Kyle Davidson.