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Great Lakes Now Presents

Episode 1011: Drop, Soo and Lock It

Winter doesn’t stop work around the Great Lakes. See what happens at the Soo Locks when they close for maintenance, and drop into the chilly water with commercial divers who battle the zebra and quagga mussel invasions in the lakes. In a warmer setting, join us in the Mackinac Island school gym for a tournament just for island school teams.

Explore the Episode

Drop, Soo and Lock It | Episode 1011

Winter doesn’t stop work around the Great Lakes. See what happens at the Soo Locks when they close for maintenance, and drop into the chilly water with commercial divers who battle the zebra and quagga mussel invasions in the lakes. In a warmer setting, join us in the Mackinac Island school gym for a tournament just for island school teams.

WHERE WE TAKE YOU IN FEBRUARY


Watch Live on DPTV

Tuesday, February 25 at 7:30 PM

STATIONS CARRYING THE SERIES


DPTV
Detroit, Michigan

WCML-TV
Alpena, Michigan

WDCP-TV
Bad Axe, Michigan

WBGU-TV
Bowling Green, Ohio

WNED-TV
Buffalo, New York

WCMV-TV
Cadillac, Michigan

WTTW-TV
Chicago, Illinois

WKAR-TV
East Lansing, Michigan

WQLN-TV
Erie, Pennsylvania

WCMZ-TV
Flint, Michigan

WGVU-TV
Grand Rapids, Michigan

WGVK-TV
Kalamazoo, Michigan

WNMU-TV
Marquette, Michigan

WMVS-TV
Milwaukee, Wisconsin

WCMU-TV
Mount Pleasant Michigan

WNIT-TV
South Bend, Indiana

WCNY-TV
Syracuse, New York

WGTE-TV
Toledo, Ohio

WDCQ-TV
University Center, Michigan

WNPI-TV
Watertown, New York for Ontario signal

WPBS-TV
Watertown, New York for U.S. signal

Have a question about the Great Lakes or life in the region?

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In the Month of February on Great Lakes Now

Click the tabs to read descriptions of each feature in Episode 1011.

Island Basketball

SEGMENT 1 | Mackinac Island, Michigan

Traveling by bus, ferry, airplane, snowmobile and horse taxi, basketball teams from four Great Lakes island schools met on Mackinac Island for their second annual tournament.

The girls and boys teams from Beaver, Mackinac, South Bass and Washington islands — representing three lakes and three states — spent two days playing hard-fought games.

It’s really awesome because we’re playing against other teams who are just like us,” says Max Johnson, a guard on the Washington Island boys team, which usually plays bigger schools with deeper benches. “Here I feel like we’re at more of an equal level. We have an even amount of team members.

They had spectators and cheering sections. Beaver Island school board president Susan Myers attended and cheered especially loudly for her granddaughter.

“Sports on Beaver Island is a very big deal. Sports is more than sports,” she says. “Our

kids can’t go to another school and meet people or that kind of thing. … It’s good for them because they also get to meet other kids their age.”

Watch the Great Lakes Now segment to learn more about life on the islands — and to see which teams won the tournament.

Here is other Great Lakes Now work about life on islands in the region:

  • There are good and bad sides to Great Lakes island tourism. Read more HERE.
  • The “Island Life” segment in our first show is HERE.
  • Explore our MAP of islands where people live year-round.

Mussel Blasting

SEGMENT 2 | Port Huron, Michigan

When invasive zebra mussels arrived in the Great Lakes in the late 1980s, native mussels were not the only casualty. The mussels began clogging up pipelines and water pumps, overtaking seawalls — any hard surface seemed to be a suitable nesting point.

For power plants, zebra mussels meant clogged water intakes, choking off the water supply needed to cool plant equipment.

The Detroit-based energy company, DTE, needed to find a way to combat the mussels.

They were attaching to everything, not just power plant intakes, but drinking water intakes. It became a huge issue for any industry that uses water,says DTE biologist Matt Shackelford.

Commercial divers were sent in to take on the mussels. They developed an efficient method to help the plants remove the invasive mussels, called zebra blasting.

Meet Keith and his team of divers as we take a step into their underwater office.

Learn more about zebra mussels and the threat they pose in the Great Lakes:

  • Read about zebra mussels spreading to Lake Superior HERE.
  • Zebra mussels could be keeping mercury levels in fish high. Read more HERE.
  • Check out some creative uses people have come up with for zebra mussel shells HERE.
  • What are all the ways zebra mussels are impacting the Great Lakes? Click HERE to read the list.

Locking Up

SEGMENT 3 | Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan

The coal and iron ore shipped from Lake Superior ports fuels the U.S. steelmaking and manufacturing industries, but not before the freight goes through the Soo Locks in Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan. The locks allow 1,000-foot freighters to bypass the rapids of the St. Marys River and move between Lake Superior and the rest of the Great Lakes and beyond.

”About a hundred percent of the iron ore mined in the United States flows to this facility,” says Kevin Sprague, the Soo Locks’ Area Engineer. “That’s really critical for the integrated steel mills on the Great Lakes. The blast furnaces and those feed, those create the advanced high strength steel for the auto industry so that the auto bodies, that kind of thing.”

There are four locks at “the Soo,” but nearly 90 percent of the cargo moves through one of them: the Poe Lock. It’s the only one that can handle a fully loaded modern freighter.

But the Poe, which was built in 1896, is showing its age.

If the Poe is out of service for six months—and this is a Department of Homeland Security statistic — 11 million Americans will become unemployed. Three to 5 million Canadians and Mexicans will be unemployed, and the layoffs will start within a matter of weeks,

says Jim Weakley, president of the Lake Carriers’ Association, which represents operators of U.S. flag vessels on the Great Lakes.

Construction of a new Poe-sized lock is planned for the next seven to 10 years, but until it’s completed, workers labor through the winter to keep the Poe in working order.

Check out the rest of Great Lakes Now’s coverage of the Soo Locks:

  • Explore THIS interactive timeline of the history of the Soo Locks.
  • The Soo Locks are a priority for the Great Lakes shipping industry. Read more HERE.
  • Join Great Lakes Now’s Ric Mixter on a behind-the-scenes tour of the Soo Locks HERE.

Line 5 Archive

SEGMENT 4  |  Straits of Mackinac

If you want to see photographs, architectural plans and other documents about the original construction of Enbridge Line 5, they’re now online thanks to the Detroit Historical Society. 

An archival collection from the construction companies involved is now available to the public and researchers. Read HERE for more information about how to access it.

“We expect to have great interest in this collection given the interest and ongoing news coverage about the pipeline,” says Joel Stone, senior curator at the Detroit Historical Society.

Here’s more from Great Lakes Now about Line 5 and its controversies:

Michigan seeks extensive records about Line 5 from Enbridge

Energy Alternatives: Outside of Line 5, where can Michiganders get energy?

Line 5 Agreement Upheld: Michigan court says Enbridge tunnel project is constitutional

Videos from Episode 1011

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Previous Episodes

Waters Infected

Episode 1007

Household waste, lead and agricultural runoff are byproducts of modern life. Get the down-and-dirty reality of what can happen when these substances get into the region’s water systems.

Watch the Show

In the Waters

Episode 1008

Politics, economics, recreation and science are all part of the latest episode of Great Lakes Now. Go underwater in the five lakes with a group of women who dove them all in 24 hours, and learn more about the controversy about controlling water levels in Lake Ontario and the St. Lawrence. Get aboard a commercial fishing boat on Lake Huron, and meet Dr. Katfish, who wants you to know that Great Lakes fish can be fun and festive.

Watch the Show

Finding Impacts

Episode 1009

Search for a meteorite on the bottom of Lake Michigan. Learn how a little striped fish might help us understand the health impacts of industrial chemicals on people, and see how a Milwaukee community is UN-developing a river to improve the environment and water quality.

Watch the Show

Sand, Sinkholes and Science

Episode 1010

Travel with Great Lakes Now to the remote Canadian research station where scientists are working to understand – and protect – freshwater. Go deep into Lake Huron to see mysterious sinkholes, and watch as some homeowners try to save their Lake Michigan coastal homes while the waters wash away the beaches below them.

Watch the Show

Featured Articles

Waves of Change: Meet Protect the Porkies founder Tom Grotewohl
- by Great Lakes Now

This month, we spoke with Tom Grotewohl, a resident of Wakefield Township in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula and founder of the Protect the Porkies campaign.

Winter Wellness Pantry
- by Lisa M. Rose

As winter sets in, it’s the perfect time to reflect on your year of foraging, plan for the coming seasons, and ensure your pantry is stocked and your health fortified.

Oil Spills and Buried Rivers
- by Mila Murray

Preparing for a Great Lakes oil spill and a look at buried rivers beneath our feet.

The fight to keep grass carp out of the Great Lakes
- by The Narwhal

Canada and the U.S. are working together to stop a massive fish from gobbling up Great Lakes greenery.

Digital Credits
The Great Lakes Now Series is produced by Rob Green and Sandra Svoboda.

Digital Designer: Shelby Jouppi

Additional Video Provided by: Mlive Media Group, Fishtown Preservation Society, National Weather Service, Oceana County Road Commission, WTTW/Chicago Tonight, WRVO Public Media, Robert Carlisle