
Swinging the Arch into Position by Charles Bonham
Five years ago yesterday, the City of Midland was devastated by the collapse of the Edenville & Sanford dams. If you’re wondering whether or not the State of Michigan taken this tragedy to heart, the answer according to this mLive article appears to be “Nope”:
“Did we really use Midland to do deep learning and then change our regulations and invest in this infrastructure time bomb?” said Bryan Burroughs, executive director of Michigan Trout Unlimited and a member of a former task force that issued a suite of mostly unrealized recommendations on dam safety after Edenville.
“Not dramatically, not significantly.”
…Republicans and Democrats pledged action. Lansing politicians secured large sums to rebuild the mid-Michigan dams, channeled smaller pots of money to other dams and added state inspectors. But corresponding dam safety reforms were introduced and quickly faded away. “We’re still at the starting blocks waiting for the gun to go off with dam safety in Michigan,” said Bill Rustem, a former task force member and advisor to Michigan governors William Milliken and Rick Snyder.
Lots more in mLive & also check out the latest in the case of Midland residents & businesses vs the State of Michigan in the Detroit News.
Charles shared a ton of photos with us during the Midland Flood of May 2020, so I thought it would be a great time to check back and see how things are looking lately! See more lovely spring pics in Charles’s Dow Gardens gallery on Flickr!








I was surprised to hear on the radio it was five years ago … times flies by so quickly sometimes. The devastation was horrible.
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Yeah I went up to Sanford to visit someone during covid right after it. Sanford lake was almost totally empty!
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The wrong thing to do when people needed a little nature to get through the early part of the pandemic and so many changes. They closed the park where I walk most days for an entire month, even to the mowers and it looked pretty desolate by the time it opened back up.
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We definitely didn’t handle that once in a generation pandemic well. Doubt we’ll do any better with the next one :/
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