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Add your name to these public comments to be submitted to MDEQ on June 29, 2017, by signing the petition to the right.

Enbridge is attempting once again to upgrade its dangerous Line 5 oil pipelines in the Mackinac Straits without any public hearing that would examine the condition of these outdated pipelines.

When they tried this eight months ago, Enbridge ran into a solid wall of public opposition. Recent revelations that their pipelines have unsupported spans that exceed the maximum length allowed means there is a heightened risk of metal fatigue and failure.

Submit Your Public Comment: Sign this Petition

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See Newly Uncovered Video

Join us in asking the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality (MDEQ) as part of its permit conditions to conduct a comprehensive review of Enbridge's Line 5 in the Straits before the company attempts to squeeze more life out of their aging pipelines.

Please note that submitting your public comment here has nothing to do with the Line 5 ballot proposal that is being circulated.

To the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality:

We are writing in reference to Enbridge’s joint application to the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality (“MDEQ”) and United States Army Corps of Engineers (“Corps”) (No. 2RD-DFDK-Y35G) to install 22 anchor supports on the Line 5 pipelines in the Mackinac Straits.

We urge the MDEQ to reject Enbridge’s application as incomplete and to hold a public hearing as provided in Section 32514 of the Great Lakes Submerged Lands Act (“GLSLA”) and R 322.1017 (Rule 17), along with proper notice and additional time for public comment. The magnitude of public interest in Line 5 and the Great Lakes warrants a public hearing on this important matter.

Enbridge’s application is deficient for the following reasons:

  1. it fails to demonstrate the potential adverse harm from a catastrophic oil spill in the Great Lakes;
  2. it fails to demonstrate feasible and prudent alternatives to Line 5, which include a range of alternatives related to Enbridge’s ongoing expansion of oil transport throughout the Great Lakes region;
  3. it fails to demonstrate compliance with the 1953 Easement with the State of Michigan and to evaluate Enbridge’s piecemeal expansion of Line 5; and
  4. additional information about the integrity of the entire submerged Line 5 infrastructure is critical to protecting the public’s paramount interests in the Great Lakes.

Under Michigan’s GLSLA, the MDEQ cannot grant approval of this permit unless the following standards are addressed: a) a determination that the environment will be minimally harmed and that those adverse impacts will be mitigated; and (b) there is no feasible and prudent alternative to the proposed activity that will protect the public health, safety and welfare. Enbridge’s application fails on both counts.

As an immediate emergency measure or condition of Enbridge’s application, MDEQ should suspend or reduce the transport of the rate of flow of crude oil through Line 5 in the Straits to immediately reduce the pressure and risk from the twin-pipelines in the Straits pending further proceedings; in the alternative, order the installation of anchors to reduce spans without supports below 140 feet pending further proceedings with the express condition that no assurance of any final permit under the application without a demonstration of compliance with state law.

Enbridge incorrectly claims its proposed patchwork response to Line 5’s major structural defects is “routine maintenance” when in reality the requested anchor supports will further the continued expansion of Line 5 and Line 6B in southern Michigan to largely transport Canadian oil to Canadian refineries and overseas markets.

Moreover, the recent disclosure of the Kiefner Report reveal that Enbridge has for years, perhaps decades, systematically violated the provision of the 1953 Easement with the State of Michigan that limits unsupported stretches of Line 5 to 75 feet for the pipeline’s structural integrity and longevity. This neglect coupled with the Straits powerful underwater currents likely has caused metal fatigue damage. This is particularly concerning since Line 5 currently transports 540,000 barrels per day (bbls) - 80 percent over its original design capacity.

With no reliable model to predict lakebed washouts due to the highly dynamic nature of currents in the Mackinac Straits, Enbridge cannot meet its legal duty under the state easement to prudently operate this pipeline.

The law is clear. The State of Michigan and MDEQ have “a perpetual duty . . . to secure to its people the prevention of pollution, impairment or destruction of its natural resources, and rights of navigation, fishing, hunting, and use of its lands and waters for other public purposes.” Therefore, the MDEQ must undertake a formal comprehensive review of impacts and alternatives associated with Enbridge’s entire Line 5 pipeline in the Straits and waters and bottomlands of the Great Lakes.

This duty is separate and independent from the Line 5 risk and alternative studies commissioned by the Michigan Pipeline Safety Advisory Board.

In sum, no final permit should be authorized until Enbridge has demonstrated the following: (1) Line 5 in the Straits is not likely to impair the protected public trust waters and uses in the Straits and beyond; (2) there exists no feasible and prudent alternative to Enbridge for Line 5 in the Straits within Enbridge’s overall capacity throughout its “Lakehead” or Great Lakes pipeline system; (3) it has provided additional information on the pipeline metal fatigue and heightened risk of failure; and (4) it is not violating the 1953 Easement with the State of Michigan.

 

 

This recently uncovered video from 2012 showing the condition of the Line 5 pipelines reveals long unsupported spans and other damage to the pipes. No amount of anchors will fix the shifting bottomlands of the Great Lakes, or repair the metal fatigue introduced by the decades-long unsupported spans. After you've seen the video, please SIGN THE PETITION.

 

2,677 SIGNATURES
Help Reach the Next Goal: 3,000 signatures

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Showing 2741 reactions

  • J Kasper
    signed 2017-06-23 09:44:11 -0400
  • Deborah Schroeder
    signed 2017-06-23 09:42:39 -0400
    This needs to be discontinued. I live near Lake Huron and love the beauty of what the water has to offer. Have been going to U.P. since 1957, going across Mackinac Bridge has always been breath taking. Need to stop using this pipe line. Viewed video, this is an accident waiting to happen.
  • Marsha Boettger
    signed 2017-06-23 09:41:40 -0400
    The Great Lakes are the largest body of fresh water in the United States and we must protect them from any form of pollution especially from oil. Line 5 is old and was not designed to last this long or to transport tar sands oil and the pressure required to do so. Oil should not be moving through this line able to pollute the Great Lakes.
  • Leslie Newman
    signed 2017-06-23 09:40:16 -0400
    A spill would be a catastrophe. The healthy life of the current line 5 has expired, and is 14 years on borrowed time.
  • Richard Shifferd
    posted about this on Facebook 2017-06-23 09:39:17 -0400
    SIGN THE PETITION: Enbridge cannot be allowed to squeeze more life out of this dangerous pipeline. Speak up now!
  • Paul Myers
    signed 2017-06-23 09:38:39 -0400
  • K. Medford Moreland
    signed 2017-06-23 09:38:31 -0400
  • Joanne Guertin
    signed 2017-06-23 09:38:29 -0400
    Water is life. Uncontaminated, drinkable water is a human right. It is the moral and ethical duty of our elected officials to protect this precious and life-giving resource for the benefit of the public. The profits of the fossil fuel or any other industry at the expense of our water supply and environment should not be the priority of our state government. The fossil fuel industry has shown again and again that it is incapable and/or unwilling to protect the environment. British Petroleum’s Deep Water Horizon catastrophe and Enbridge’s Kalamazoo River disaster are obvious examples. Enbridge is especially careless and I believe dishonest. Enbridge has a well-documented record of environmental contamination throughout the country, most spectacularly in Kalamazoo. It is mindboggling that Enbridge could claim that a this corroded, unsupported and poorly monitored 64–year-old pipeline is as good as the day it was installed! Our current state government has a shockingly poor record when it comes to protecting our water supply and environment, as well. For example, while the Swiss Nestle company pumps and bottles trillions of gallons of fresh water at little cost, the people of Flint drank very expensive poisoned water. Apparently, the protection of corporate profits is a priority over the health, safety and needs of Michigan citizens. Please reverse course. Please choose the health, safety and lives of the people of Michigan. Please protect our greatest natural resource. Please shut down this shoddy, precarious and dangerous pipeline.
  • Richard Shifferd
    signed 2017-06-23 09:38:12 -0400
    It’s time for this very old relic of a pipeline to go, before we have a disaster in our great lakes that would be unbearable to us as citizens of this great state of Michigan. Please STOP them from continuing to use our public waterway for their foreign private use, making money at the expense of Michiganders. Say NO
  • Mario DeCarolis
    posted about this on Facebook 2017-06-23 09:37:59 -0400
    SIGN THE PETITION: Enbridge cannot be allowed to squeeze more life out of this dangerous pipeline. Speak up now!
  • Mario DeCarolis
    signed 2017-06-23 09:37:10 -0400
    I am in favor of shutting down Enbridge’s “Line 5” The company has a poor track record with respect to protecting the environment. I will vote for candidates in elections that agree with me on this. It’s one of the issues that is most important to me and many that I know.
  • Adeline Emmons
    signed 2017-06-23 09:36:57 -0400
  • Joanne Cromley
    signed 2017-06-23 09:36:30 -0400
    Shut it down now – prevent a catastrophic oil spill in our Great Lakes.
  • Roland Vandersys
    signed 2017-06-23 09:35:54 -0400
    Hello

    Leave Our Water alone protect all our water & Lakes What will they want NEXT !!!
  • Ronald Martineau
    posted about this on Facebook 2017-06-23 09:35:14 -0400
    SIGN THE PETITION: Enbridge cannot be allowed to squeeze more life out of this dangerous pipeline. Speak up now!
  • John Bercini
    signed 2017-06-23 09:32:52 -0400
    Does anyone know how to clean up an oil spill in February under 3 feet of ice?

    Nope : shut it down.
  • Sue Albert
    posted about this on Facebook 2017-06-23 09:32:22 -0400
    SIGN THE PETITION: Enbridge cannot be allowed to squeeze more life out of this dangerous pipeline. Speak up now!
  • Sandra Barth
    signed 2017-06-23 09:32:12 -0400
  • Sue Albert
    signed 2017-06-23 09:31:56 -0400
    We need to protect our greatest resource, our Great Lakes
  • Jennifer Sommerfield
    signed via 2017-06-23 09:31:49 -0400
  • Jodi Wine
    signed 2017-06-23 09:31:40 -0400
  • Paul Spata
    signed 2017-06-23 09:31:13 -0400
  • Margo Burian
    posted about this on Facebook 2017-06-23 09:30:51 -0400
    SIGN THE PETITION: Enbridge cannot be allowed to squeeze more life out of this dangerous pipeline. Speak up now!
  • Jason Babcock
    signed 2017-06-23 09:30:38 -0400
  • Margo Burian
    signed 2017-06-23 09:30:37 -0400
  • Ann Ormandy
    signed 2017-06-23 09:30:20 -0400
    I am writing to tell the MI DEQ that they must not continue to put our Great Lakes in literal dire straits by standing up to Enbridge and denying their request to continue to patch and pump oil through Line 5.

    Ann Ormandy
  • Michelle Hinze
    signed 2017-06-23 09:28:18 -0400
  • Mort Smythe
    signed 2017-06-23 09:28:07 -0400
  • Fredrick Robinson
    signed 2017-06-23 09:25:58 -0400
    Why would we take the risk of polluting the great lakes with this old pipeline. Their past record speaks for itself.
  • Abbey Stolle
    posted about this on Facebook 2017-06-23 09:25:18 -0400
    SIGN THE PETITION: Enbridge cannot be allowed to squeeze more life out of this dangerous pipeline. Speak up now!

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Join those working to protect the Great Lakes & climate from the Enbridge Line 5 crude oil pipeline.

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