News & Events

News & Events

Upcoming Events

 

New Understanding, Thinking, and Action to Support Community Mental Health

April 6, 2022, Noon

Sponsored by Early Childhood Needs and Services Committee

Click HERE to Register in advance for this webinar

LWVLC Annual Book Read Discussion

April 7, 2022, 2pm

"Masters of Empire: Great Lakes Indians and the Making of America". Virtual and in-person options, Contact Membership Chair, Barbara Young at youngbg [at] charter.net for more information on how to participate.

LWVLC Blood Drive

April 13, 2022, 1-6pm

Leelanau County Government Center, Community Room on Lower Level

Immigration Challenges Today
Special* Farm Labor and Immigration Task Force Forum

April 20, 2022, NOON

Four area residents share about the challenges they have faced in working with the U.S. immigration system.  Our speakers are:
Jerry Schatz, lawyer, public policy analyst and ethicist;
Ann Gregory, retired Leelanau County grower, Afghan family host;
Marcelo Betti, Legal Co-Director for Justice for Our Neighbors;
Sandy Mascari-Devitt, CSW, Remote Refugee Resettlement Specialist for Bethany Christian Services.
The public is welcome.


Click HERE to register in advance for this webinar:
After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the webinar.

Women's Equality Day 

Please click the link to read this series written by our own Patty O'Donnel, CoChair of the Equal Rights Advocacy Committee, as published in the Leelanau Enterprise in 2020, in recognition of 100 years since the passing of the 19th Amendment. 

PDF icon womens_equality_day_articles_2020.pdfPDF icon womens_equality_day_articles_2020.pdf

Our Recent Work

April 11 - Community of Interest Project Town Halls
 
March 17, 2021 Event - The Effect of Covid on our Farm Labor
 
February 5, 2020 Event , Michigan's 2020 Citizen Redistricting Commission  1.  Why is it needed? 2.  Who can be on the Commission? 3.  What is the timeline for its existence and work? 4.  How will it work after the 2020 Census?
Come to the LWV Leelanau County February 5 Forum to learn about Michigan's brand new Citizen Redistricting Commission.  This will take place Wednesday, February 5. 2020 at 12 noon at the Leelanau County Government Center in the lower level public meeting room. The public is invited.  Many bring a sack lunch. For more information call 231-313-0359, follow LWVLC on Facebook at League of Women Voters Leelanau County or to visit our website, click here:
 
The Traverse City Human Rights Commission is sponsoring the movie “Just Mercy” at 6:30 p.m. February 5. at the State Theater. In addition, there will be special presentations by Families Against Narcotics, ACLU Smart Justice Campaign, and Before, During and After Incarceration

The League Presents: Early Childhood Forum

Oct. 2, 2019: Attendees heard from LWVLC Early Childhood Needs and Services Committee Chair Sue Miller about the need to approve the upcoming millage request.  Experts Maggie Sprattmoran, Sarah Jane Johnson and Board of Commissioners Member Patricia Soutas Little spoke of Leelanau County's leading role in providing early childhood services to young families and the need to continue to support the healthy development of the youngest among us.  Click here for a link to the video of this Forum

The League Presents: What is Leo Creek Preserve?

Sept. 4, 2019: Attendees heard from founder and caretaker Kate Thornhill, where she talk about the amazing Leo Creek Preserve in Suttons Bay. Kate presented a slide show to introduce you to this little piece of land where she hopes you will want to wander through. After that visual, she talked about Leo Creek's educational programs that are in process. Her focus was on climate change and the many changes in our lifestyles we all need to make to take care of this planet, the only planet we will ever have.

Time for a reasoned Response to Septic System Risks

September 28, 2017: The Leelanau/Benzie Co Board of Health recommended that the Leelanau Co Board of Commissioners draft and adopt a countywide septic system ordinance. The time is now to remain vigilant to see that this occurs. Attend board of commission meetings and contact your commissioner on this issue.

Leelanau Co is not alone in Michigan with its lack of inspection requirements once a system has been installed, Michigan is the only state without a uniform code. Why should we care? Several concerns have been documented from respected sources.
In 2015 a Michigan State University study was published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. MSU scientists using microbial source -tracking tools cautioned that pollution arising from septic system discharges maybe much more severe than previously realized. Its results showed 100% of the 64 major rivers in the lower peninsula tested contained human fecal contamination.

The Tip of the Mit Watershed Council undertook an extensive investigation and in 2016 published, "The Septic Question". Its research found the "reported septic system failures represent only a fraction of the total number of failures statewide and many go undetected or remain unreported for years. Because this important follow up is nonexistent in most places, it creates a threat to public health and water resources."

As of 2013 eleven Michigan counties had "Point of Sale" programs requiring septic systems to be inspected at the time that property is sold. Bridge Magazine reported that in those programs, hundreds of failed septic systems were discovered. Shockingly, 300 homes in Barry and Eaton counties, were found to have no septic systems at all! What would comparable research show for Leelanau County show.

Failing septic systems produce disease outbreaks, algae blooms, and ecosystem damage. The initial design of a septic system, as well as regular maintenance, is essential. The current lack of oversight, after installation, is worthy of further conversation not only in Leelanau but throughout Michigan.

The League of Women Voters Leelanau County and Leelanau Clean Water held a forum on September 13, 2017, at the Leelanau Government Center. Over 100 people attended and heard Tom Fountain, director of Environmental Health at Benzie/Leelanau Co Health Dept; Dr. Nick Fleezanis, President of Lake Leelanau Lake Association; and Joe Williams of Williams and Bay Pumping Service discussed this important issue. The video can be viewed under Video Links.

Protect the Great Lakes from a Catastrophic Oil Spill

Michigan's year-long study of Line 5 alternatives has been released. Now is the time to submit your comment calling for the only way to truly protect the Great Lakes from an oil spill: decommission the Enbridge Line 5 pipelines through the Straits of Mackinac. Deadline for comments is August 4. An on-line form in support of protecting the Great Lakes from a catastrophic oil spill can be found at the Oil & Water Don't Mix Coalition website.

The League of Women Voters of Michigan is one of 21 members of the Oil and Water Don't Mix Coalition that sent a letter to the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality ("MDEQ") and the US Army Corps of Engineers ("Corps") on June 29, 2017 regarding Enbridge Oil Company's joint application to the MDEQ and the Corps (No. 2RD-DFDK-Y35G) to install 22 anchor supports on the Line 5 pipelines in the Mackinac Straits. The Coalition members are Michigan organizations dedicated to the protection of Michigan's water, natural resources, public trust in those resources, the environment, communities, and the health, safety and general welfare of citizens.

The Coalition organizations are requesting that MDEQ and the Corps take the following actions with regard to Enbridge's joint application:

  1. Reject as incomplete due to its overly narrow scope of review;
  2. Require a comprehensive review of Line 5 in the Straits that includes an assessment of adverse environmental impacts, risks, and feasible and prudent alternatives;
  3. Temporarily terminate the transport of crude oil in the Line 5 pipelines during this comprehensive review; and
  4. Hold a formal public hearing given that Enbridge Line 5 occupies publicly owned waters and bottomlands and the threat of a catastrophic oil pipeline rupture to the Great Lakes are of tremendous controversy and have generated an extraordinary level of public engagement. Read the entire letter here.

Other Resources

  • Under-the-Straits tour of Pipeline 5 (3 min. video on YouTube)
  • Area businesses expressing concern about Pipeline 5 (3 min video on Facebook)

Pipeline 5 Efforts by Leelanau County

In February of 2016 the League of Women Voters Leelanau County voted to create a resolution asking local townships and villages to support the closing of the 63-year-old Pipeline that carries natural gas and light crude oil deep under the Straits of Mackinac--23 million gallons of oil each day. This pipeline is known as Pipeline 5.

Leelanau County is a peninsula in northwestern Michigan with 100 miles of shoreline jutting into Lake Michigan. It is about 70 nautical miles from the Straits of Mackinac where the waters of Lakes Michigan and Huron merge in a strong four-to-five-mile-per-hour current. Some days the current races east into Lake Huron; other days it races west into Lake Michigan. During winter it's often under thick ice and snow.

Enbridge, an Alberta-based Canadian oil and gas company, operates a pipeline known as Pipeline 5 across the Upper Peninsula, under the Straits, then across the Lower Peninsula and into Sarnia, Ontario. The pipeline sometimes cracks and spills crude oil on land. At the Straits, Enbridge operates under a bottomland easement, granted by the State of Michigan in 1953. The company acknowledges violating requirements of that easement. At the water's edge, the pipeline is `twinned'--two 20-inch pipes follow the bottomland mounted on trestles just west of the five-mile span of the Mackinac Bridge. Clean up of an underwater spill would be slowed, if not impossible, due to frequent four-five foot waves, ice during winter, and nightfall when response teams cannot work. The company monitors the condition of the underwater pipelines every few years. The latest reports and photos indicate a substantial accumulation of zebra mussels enveloping the pipelines, weakening their surface walls. A University of Michigan study indicates a pipeline rupture could send an oil spill east and/or west covering 700 miles of Michigan's coastline. Forty million people drink water from the Great Lakes. One of every five jobs in Michigan depends on the quality and quantity of the Lakes' fresh water, including billions of tourism dollars.

By the end of August 2016, we had completed our outreach to local government bodies and the results were in. They were mixed. Of 14 jurisdictions we had success in eight. The trustees in the village of Northport and those in the townships of Centerville, Cleveland, and Leelanau passed our resolution. The trustees in the village of Suttons Bay and the townships of Empire and Suttons Bay passed a modified version. The trustees of Elmwood and Solon townships defeated the LWVLC resolution. The trustees of Bingham, Glen Arbor, Kasson and Leland townships refused to take any action.

The LWVMI adopted our request that the state League join the coalition Oil and Water Don't Mix. A member of the LWVLC board will represent the LWVMI at this coalition. The struggle to protect the Great Lakes continues.

Attachments: 
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PDF icon Winter 2019 Voter1.87 MB
PDF icon November 2019 Voter1.76 MB