LELAND, Mich. (AP) — As the drought contributes to a continued drop in the
level of Lake Michigan, residents, fishing operators and others who use the
harbors and docks in the northwestern Lower Peninsula are facing hazards and
hassles.
The lake’s water levels are down 11 inches from 2011, and record low levels
could be ahead if the drought persists.
Those affected by the dropping water levels include lakefront property
owners on Grand Traverse Bay, as well as commercial fishing operators such
as Joel Peterson, who fishes out of Leland and Muskegon. Leland Harbor’s
south breakwall is deteriorating, and boaters must avoid hitting bottom on
the Leland River, said Peterson.
“It means we can’t carry as much on the boat anymore,” Petersen told the
Traverse City Record-Eagle. “We often carry four nets, and when they are
wet, they are heavy. Now we can only carry two, so it takes us twice as long
and costs more money.”
The drought has caused problems for farmers as well, leading to a federal
disaster declaration for the entire state. The same weather patterns are
affecting the Great Lakes’ levels, officials say.
“Typically water levels drop in the fall and winter and go up in the spring,
but we didn’t see much of a rise this spring,” said Craig Stow, a researcher
at the National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration’s Great Lakes
Environmental Research Lab in Ann Arbor. “It’s always a balance between
evaporation and precipitation, and when the water is warm, you get a lot of
evaporation.”
Lake Michigan now is 23 inches below the long-term average, said Mark
Breederland, an extension educator for the Michigan Sea Grant. And lakes
Michigan and Huron are in the midst of a decade-long stretch of
below-average water levels, said hydrologist Keith Kompoltowicz at the U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers’ Detroit District.
The corps has forecasted water-level ranges for Lake Michigan that may
possibly break the record low, set in 1964.
“The Great Lakes are dynamic, living ecosystems that change from one day to
the next,” said Jennifer McKay, a policy specialist at the Tip of the Mitt
Watershed Council in Petoskey. She said that low water levels in Lake
Michigan “have been a concern for many years to many different entities.”