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Environment
2:29 pm
Mon July 11, 2011

Number of bald eagles in Michigan rising

Number of bald eagles in Michigan rising

Credit J Scot Page
A bald eagle spotted near Horseshoe Lake recently

The number of bald eagles in Michigan has risen to 700 eagle pairs, up 70 from last year, according to the Associated Press.

Here's more from the AP article (care of the Chicago Tribune):

Michigan's population of bald eagles has risen, leaving the birds once listed as an endangered species to search out good places to live, according to wildlife officials.

Environment
11:49 am
Fri July 8, 2011

Grand Rapids takes on lead poisoning

Grand Rapids takes on lead poisoning

Credit User: wayneandwax / flickr.com

Grand Rapids is celebrating the success of a program aimed at preventing lead-poisoning. Michigan Radio’s Lindsey Smith reports the number of cases of lead poisoning in Grand Rapids has fallen 75-percent since the program began.

Lead poisoning poses serious health risks for children under six-years-old. Lead-based paint is a hazard in homes built before 1978. Grand Rapids Mayor George Heartwell says more than 85-percent of houses in the city were built before then.

“It’s not cancer. It’s not AIDS. It’s an environmental health risk that we know how to solve,” said Heartwell.

Environment
3:16 pm
Thu July 7, 2011

Thieves are stealing material from abandoned Flint houses

Thieves are stealing material from abandoned Flint houses

Credit (Photo by Traci Currie/Michigan Radio)
Abandoned home in North Flint

Thieves in Flint are stealing copper pipes, aluminum sidings, indoor fixtures, and appliances from vacant houses. They are taking the material to scrap dealers for quick cash.

Doug Weiland is with the Genesee County Land Bank. He says Flint lost over 70,000 jobs due to the downsizing of the auto industry.

"So the city of Flint’s population is literally about half of what it was at its peak, and we have roughly half of the property that had been used in the past sitting vacant."

Weiland says with vacant homes and a high unemployment rate, criminals see an opportunity to break into abandoned houses and steal material. There are roughly 8,000 abandoned homes in the city of Flint. 

 

Environment
12:18 pm
Thu July 7, 2011

The sugar beet comeback

The sugar beet comeback

Sugar beets are large white beets that grow well in Michigan’s cooler climate. In fact, farmers have grown sugar beets in the Bay area for more than 100 years. The beets are planted at the end of April and harvested at the beginning of September. From then until March, the beets are processed into sugar.

Refineries run 24 hours a day and seven days a week with no breaks for holidays. If machines were to stop in the middle of the process, sticky molasses would harden inside the equipment. In the end, the sugar beets become white granular sugar, powdered sugar, or brown sugar. If you’ve bought a bag of sugar at a Michigan grocery store, chances are it’s sugar beet sugar from the Michigan Sugar Company.

Things are going pretty well for the Michigan sugar industry now. But twenty years ago, the industry nearly dissolved. Steve Poindexter is a sugar beet specialist with Michigan State University:

“The sugar industry, back in the ‘90s, was struggling, trying to get production up. The yields were down and not going up, and profitability was very low.”

That was the result of a push toward raising beets with higher sugar content. The experiment was a failure. The low yields caused many farmers to stop growing beets. Things got so bad, Michigan sugar beet farmers were granted almost 20 million dollars in disaster funds.

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