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Clinton River

Friday, June 22, 2012

Waterfront Campgrounds, More Beaches, Recreation on Lake St. Clair Envisioned

Macomb County Executive Mark Hackel promotes Lake St. Clair while sharing possibilities for its 31-1/2 miles of coastline.

Macomb County Executive Mark Hackel dreams of making Lake St. Clair a popular recreation destination and tourist attraction. Waterfront campgrounds and more beach fronts were among the ideas Hackel proposed during the Anchor Bay Chamber of Commerce Business by the Bay luncheon Thursday in downtown New Baltimore. "How come we don't have a Navy Pier like we see in Chicago?" he asked the crowd of professionals and community leaders. After all, Hackel says, the county boasts 31-1/2 miles of coastline that is even drawing the likes of a nationally televised Bass tournament. He criticized the media for focusing on negative aspects of the lake known for having contaminants or beach closings due to E. coli. "This lake is, without a question, a …

LSCN.NET

12:42 pm on Tuesday, July 3, 2012

We love the lake, and we love the vision. We would love to use our website, the Lake St. Clair Network to help out in any way we can. We already network business and lake enthusiasts (15,000+ of them) together daily.   more ›

Friday, June 8, 2012

Macomb County Outlines Plan for Blue Economy

Macomb County officials outlined a plan Friday that would focus on environmental stewardship, economic development and quality of life while looking to develop economic opportunities and environmental quality for Lake St. Clair and the Clinton River.

Macomb County officials unveiled a Blue Economy Strategic Development Plan Friday for Lake St. Clair and the Clinton River. The plan, drafted by a committee that included local, county and regional representatives, included a wide range of proposals from increased access to the waterfront to increased ecosystem restoration. "The plan is a means of providing a clear understanding of the many different aspects of the blue economy here in this county," said Hackel, citing the miles of streams, rivers and lakefront in the county as location for business development, recreation opportunities and environmental preservation. "Macomb County is very well suited to build upon the extensive and the unique water assets that are familiar to the …

Dave

6:48 pm on Friday, June 8, 2012

Ok.. you'll have to explain your plan a little better. I have questions as to why we pay for a person to take people on boat rides when they are supposed to be checking and ensuring the water quality? We have too many problems with beaches being closed because of ecoli or feces contamination to be taking joy rides promoting the recreational water activites we have here. It'll do no good to …   more ›

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Local, State Politicians Push Tourism, End of Dumping in Lake St. Clair

State Rep. Anthony Forlini, R-Harrison Township, showed off Lake St. Clair Thursday afternoon to key members of the Michigan House of Representatives, as well as water and tourism groups, during an hour-long boat tour.

Impressed by stretches of inviting aqua waters, businesses and houses along the shore and scores of boats sailing the lake, state representatives are eager to push Lake St. Clair as a Pure Michigan attraction. At the invitation of State Rep. Anthony Forlini, R-Harrison Township, House Majority Floor Leader Jim Stamas of Midland took an hour-long boat tour Thursday afternoon of the lake, heading into the mouth of the Clinton River. Stamas and Forlini also were joined by representatives from the popular Belle Maer Harbor marina, Lake St. Clair Tourism Initiative, Clinton-River Watershed and Patch. House Speaker Pro Tem John Walsh of Livonia and Harrison Township Supervisor Kenneth Verkest also were on hand following the tour. Promoting the …

Mordor's Orc

4:05 pm on Saturday, July 30, 2011

I've see lake bottom condition using self-contained underwater breating appratus. It is usually layered with watershed silt. Bottom artifacts are often all but buried by drains. You need to know depth and extent of pollution. It won't all wash away. You might not see a ring in your basin. Where is nearest landfill assuming grossepointe had pockets deep enough to dredge lake dumps? Not dredging …   more ›

Thursday, June 30, 2011

County Water Council Meets

The newly formed Macomb County Water Resources Advisory Council held its first meeting Wednesday.

Members of the Macomb County Water Resources Advisory Council met Wednesday for the first time. The 22-member council was created in May by Macomb County Executive Mark Hackel. The council will concentrate on tourism, recreation and supporting clean water efforts and economic development along Lake St. Clair and the Clinton River. "I'm extremely excited about working with this new panel," Hackel said of the council in a release. "We all agreed that it's not enough to identify problems, but how to identify and find solutions."   The appointment of the council is part of Hackel's New Blue Economy initiative which focuses on water access, water attraction and water quality. Among the goals of the council are opening the Clinton River for …

Cleanthislake

10:15 pm on Thursday, June 30, 2011

O.K. Hackel and members of the County Water Council.....First step, Clean up the pollution. Prevent the overflow of raw sewage in this lake before your plan of Kayackers in the Clinton River come down with sickness, and help out with cleaning up Macombs beaches so they do not year after year appear on the Countrys worst top 10 beaches across the USA. Do that and you and your council will have a …   more ›

Friday, May 27, 2011

Hackel Names New Water Advisory Council

Macomb County Executive Mark Hackel announces on Friday the formation of the new council to support clean water, tourism, recreation and economic development along Lake St. Clair and the Clinton River.

Macomb County Executive Mark Hackel announced Friday he has formed a new Water Resources Advisory Council to support his New Blue Economy initiative for the county. The 22-member council comprised of members of the public and private sector will concentrate on water quality, water access and water attractions along Lake St. Clair and the Clinton River. "We are embracing the passion of these residents, business and policy leaders as we work toward keeping our waterways free of debris, pollution and our beaches open," Hackel said in a release. "Making Lake St. Clair and the Clinton River more accessible to people so that they become destination points for tourism and commerce will also be part of our comprehensive focus." This is the first …

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