If a wind farm is built in Lake Erie ...

... this is what the view could like from the Cleveland coast, according to the Ohio Office of Coastal Management, which has gathered an enormous amount of information on turbine siting in the area.


Thanks to David Beach at GreenLakeBlueCity for the informative post sharing this info.

Birthing batteries

Andy Grove recently pointed out that the U.S. lost its competitive advantage in lithium ion battery production 30 years ago.

Now Jason Plautz blogs over at NYTimes about how America finally is birthing the industry with fantastic tax incentives.

Michigan and Ohio are sited as leading indicators of the trend.

Improving the Rust Belt jurisdiction

Writer Alexis Madrigal sat down with Braddock, PA Mayor John Fetterman and produced this vignette for the Atlantic on How to Bring Back the Rust Belt.

Around the 7:50 mark Mayor Fetterman joins the growing chorus of Midwesterners who aspire to reclaim and save the meaning of Rust Belt:

"I want to reach a point where the term "Rust Belt" loses it's pejorative status and actually becomes synonymous with opportunity."

Dear Cleveland,

This Reason series is interesting. But let's not read too much into LeBron's leaving. His circumstances are a bit different than "half of Cleveland's population."

Chicago's (Not) Sanitary and Ship Canal

According to Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Reporter Dan Egan's latest investigative piece Chicago's water strategy is to siphon off Lake Michigan and shit in the Gulf Coast:

Chicago has been treating Lake Michigan like a giant toilet tank since it engineered a crude sewer system to suck from the lake about 6 billion gallons of water per day, a flow big enough to drain a body of water the size of Lake Winnebago in a single summer.

You can think of that colossal water grab as a super-size flush, inside a continent-sized commode. Chicagoland's raw sewage once plunged into the man-made Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal, and that canal whooshed the Windy City stew into the Mississippi River and down to the Gulf of Mexico, Chicago's toilet bowl.


Production = prosperity

In this recent Hardball segment, MSNBC's Chris Matthews says America must become a nation that builds things again. He seizes on high speed rail around the 1:20 mark.

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

What does Detroit...

...need in the next 5 years? Light rail. Light rail. Light rail.



Vid via producer Tom Hendrickson and Model D - Happy 5th!

Superior streets make sense

Complete Streets legislation passed unanimously out of the Michigan House Transportation Committee this morning. Now on to the Senate.



Thanks to Let's Save Michigan for the vid.

What is Minneapolis doing...

... that Milwaukee, Detroit, Cleveland and countless other Great Lakes cities aren't?


This graphic was part of a Milwaukee Journal Sentinel package exploring the link between talent and competitiveness. The investigative report includes audio clips of insights from twenty-somethings, several options for action offered by experts and numerous pages of interesting reader reaction.

USA in your Chevrolet

What? No clip of Bob Seger singing "Out in the backseat of my 60 Chevy..." Shame on you NBC.

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

MKE mobility movement in a minute

Milwaukee is considering several transformational transportation projects, perhaps more initiatives than any Great Lakes city at this time save Chicago. Thanks to the Journal Sentinel for compiling this useful summary. The accompanying article reports on some of the politics surrounding the region's pursuit of modern mobility.

Carville's words work...

This short clip doesn't do justice to James Carville's extensive comments on Anderson Cooper's Friday night broadcast. But it's good game film for Great Lakes restoration advocates to study. Carville delivered a genuine, reasoned, compelling and urgent message about the need for action to save the Gulf's environment, economy and culture. He killed the Oval Office with kindness.

Minneapolis pedals past Portland

Minneapolis finished first in Bicycle Magazines Top 50 Bike Friendly (U.S.) Cities.

But Milwaukee, Cleveland, Grand Rapids, Rochester and several other Great Lakes metros made the list.

Here's a video from Streetfilms that highlights the Major Bike Mojo in Minneapolis...

Finally, a finer Detroit?

Extensive package in yesterday's Detroit Free Press about the numerous initiatives planned to reshape the city.

The Freep even pulled in the power of Mitch Albom's pen to cast a fresh vision for the city's future.

Despite the encouraging words, promising plans on paper and editorials urging action, I just can't get this 1965 video outta my mind...