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In a precedent-setting local challenge to the state Department of Environmental Quality, Macomb County
filed a lawsuit last November charging the agency's former deputy director with illegally issuing a permit to
fill a wetland.
The lawsuit, brought by special environmental prosecutor Mark A. Richardson, is the first ever brought by
a county in response to the Engler Administration's lax oversight of wetlands and overall pro-development
approach to managing natural resources. The suit names as the lead defendant W. Charles McIntosh, the
governor's former environmental advisor who recently resigned as DEQ deputy director to take a position at
Ford Motor Company.
The Macomb lawsuit came six weeks after Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER), a
national public interest organization, issued a devastating investigative report by whistle-blowing DEQ staff
members that documents political interference in the enforcement of Michigan's wetland protection program.
The report and the lawsuit have prompted a flurry of responses from the DEQ. Ken Silfven, the agency's
chief spokesman, said the report was the work of "disgruntled" employees. Mr. McIntosh, meanwhile, called
Mr. Richardson "incompetent," and said in an interview in the Macomb Daily that the lawsuit was a case of
"malpractice." Twelve days after the interview was published Mr. McIntosh resigned from the DEQ, a move
that Mr. Silfven said had been planned for some time and had nothing to do with the lawsuit.
Political Interference
Since the late 1700s more than 5.6 million acres of wetlands have disappeared in Michigan. Fifty percent
of the state's inland wetlands and 70% of the coastal wetlands are gone. This massive change to the natural
landscape has caused severe economic and environmental harm by increasing flooding and water pollution,
and by diminishing wildlife.
To stem the damage, the Legislature approved a wetland protection law in 1979 that still is among the
nation's best. Developers and industrialists, however, have lobbied against the law and have found support in
the Engler Administration, which regards such laws as encroachments on private property rights.
In a particularly telling example of this ideological bias, Russell Harding, the DEQ director, issued a
permit to a peat-mining company in 1997 to drain nearly 2,000 acres of Sanilac County's Minden Bog, the
Lower Peninsula's largest wetland. (See the map on page 17.) Mr. Harding said he feared that otherwise the
company would be successful in a lawsuit accusing the state of "taking" their property without just
compensation. The Michigan Supreme Court, however, has rejected such arguments in similar cases.
The 28-page PEER report, "See No Evil," provides graphic evidence of how deep the ideological attack on
the wetlands law has reached into the DEQ. The report found:
Senior DEQ officials in Lansing regularly overrule staff recommendations to protect wetlands, and direct
that permits be issued to developers in violation of the law.
Eighty percent of citizen complaints of wetland violations are closed without investigation.
DEQ employees intent on enforcing the wetland law are intimidated into silence with threats of demotion
or firing.
State lawmakers regularly intervene at the DEQ to acquire permits for their campaign contributors to fill
or drain wetlands.
Macomb's Lawsuit
Macomb County, which has lost 74% of its wetlands and is suffering pollution from sewage overflow in its
lakes and rivers (see the articles on pages 10-18), is especially intent on preserving what's left, said county
prosecutor Carl J. Marlinga.
Macomb's lawsuit focuses on an approximately eight-acre wetland that was part of a horse farm in
Chesterfield Township sold in 1996 to CPD Properties, which is building a subdivision called Sugarbush.
(continued on next page)
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