
After
World War II, A Pollution Deluge
The post-World
War II economic boom created jobs but also sharply accelerated
pollution. At the same time, a Michigan conservation community
growing in numbers and volume was clamoring for cleanup of
the states fouled waters. In a 1947 edition of its magazine
Michigan Out-of-Doors, the Michigan United Conservation Clubs
(MUCC) called water pollution an inexcusable waste of
a most important resource. Noting that 235 out of 755
municipalities, industries and institutions covered by the
1929 water pollution law were not complying with it, and that
131 rivers and 43 lakes were seriously polluted, the MUCC
derided industry claims that tougher state laws and policies
would drive business from the state.
But
memories of the Great Depression lingered in the minds of
many, and the post-World War II industrial boom was reaping
huge economic benefits for Michigan. Between 1939 and 1947,
the number of manufacturing establishments in the state rose
from 5,961 to 9,889, and the number of production workers
jumped from 520,000 to 822,000. Wages and salaries paid the
workers shot up 189 per cent from $1.8 to $5.2 billion. The
manufacturing lobby exercised considerable influence in state
politics.
Agitation
by the sportsmen led to the appointment of a special study
committee on water pollution by Governor Kim Sigler in 1947.
Industry spokespersons turned up at the committees meetings
to argue that some streams should not be reclaimed. Howard
Cowles of the Detroit Creamery Company said, We are
of the opinion that in any proposed legislation distinction
should be made between the streams in the thickly settled,
essentially industrial areas, and those in less settled regions
where more opportunity exists for maintaining conditions favorable
to native fish and game. In other words, where industry employing
considerable numbers of persons exists, and where it would
appear difficult to again produce native conditions, we doubt
if established industries should be compelled to spend huge
sums.
Another
witness was John L. Lovett, General Manager of the Michigan
Manufacturers Association. He suggested that the threat
of tougher water pollution laws had caused General Motors
Corporation to decentralize its operations, moving jobs out
of state. Lovett added that the issue of public health was
not related to water pollution, saying it is simply
an argument that is dragged into it.
The
MUCC sharply opposed the business associations view,
calling it obstructionist and pathetic,
and noting that swimming had been forbidden at its childrens
summer camp on Lake Allegan the previous summer because of
pollution.
An
angry witness before the study panel was K. J. Dahlka, chairman
of the pollution committee of the Trenton Sportsmen Club in
downriver Detroit. I have lived in Trenton, Mich., located
sixteen miles down the Detroit River at the head of Lake Erie
for thirty six years. I have watched the Detroit River change
from one of the most beautiful rivers in the State of Mich.
to the filthiest river in these United States, with the exception
of the River Rouge, Dahlka said in prepared testimony.
[P]ollution has increased to the extant [sic]
that no longer fish are eatable, paint on bottoms of boats
that use these waters is eaten off, aquatic vegetation has
diminished to the extant that it has practically stoped [sic]
the income from muskrat trappers, of which hundreds of citizens
participate annually. Also swimming in these waters is a thing
of the past.
Public
outrage mounted when, in the winter of 1948, pollution killed
off large numbers of waterfowl in a widely-publicized incident
on the Detroit River. In its report on the matter, the Department
of Conservation called the incident a catastrophe
caused by a combination of harsh winter conditions that left
little open water for the ducks and terrible water
pollution. Miles of busy factories representing one
of the worlds most concentrated industrial areas, making
automobiles, steel, chemicals, etc., line the west bank of
the river and its tributaries. Industrial wastes find their
way into the river. One of the worst of these wastes is oil
of various types.
In
mid-January 1948 a thick flow of oil coiled along the west
side of the river, coating several thousand ducks. Some of
them died quickly, the insulation of their feathers broken
down by the oil. Others were easy prey for crows,
gulls and eagles, and dozens of freshly picked skeletons
were mute evidence of the magnitude of the tragedy.
The department pointedly observed, The control of pollution
evidently offers the best possibility of avoiding future occurrences
So,
we should not regard the loss of several thousand ducks in
recent weeks as having been without some gain. The loss has
forcibly driven home in the minds of many persons the evil
effects of water pollution; called attention to those effects
in a way that perhaps nothing else could have done outside
of the actual loss of human life.
Hoping
to call the Legislatures attention to the problem in
the most forceful way, MUCC activists dumped over a thousand
of the dead ducks on the front walkway of the Capitol in March,
1948 in a graphic protest that long predated the demonstrations
of the 1960s.
Spurred
by these incidents and by an anti-water pollution crusade
by the conservation writer Jack Van Coevering of the Detroit
Free Press in 1947 and 1948, the Legislature abolished the
states old stream control commission and replaced it
with the Water Resources Commission, whose membership included
representatives of the public for the first time. In addition
to directors of four state agencies, the commission included
one member of a conservation group, one member from a municipality,
and one from industry. But the commission had less than 30
employees to cover the pollution problems of the entire state.
And, said one commission staff member, Lots of these
companies thought they had a right to put their waste in a
river. Pollution would continue to worsen for the next
two decades before even stronger laws were enacted.