-
Local activists and residents are growing impatient as the U.S. military delays clean up at PFAs contamination sites in Oscoda and Grayling. Plus, a new proposal from the EPA aims to rollback regulations on the forever chemical.
-
Northern Strike is one of the largest Department of Defense's military reserve training programs in the country, taking place from Aug. 2 through Aug. 16 at Camp Grayling. It brought 7,500 service members to Michigan from 36 states and nine countries.
-
Horizontal construction on the Saab munitions plant in Grayling began last week.
-
Some projects could break ground this year but questions over funding and public opinion remain.
-
Grayling residents are calling on the Department of Defense to pitch in and fund a project that would bring clean drinking water to contaminated parts of their community.
-
Locations in Oscoda, Grayling and Mount Clemens have made the list of nearly 40 communities where the DOD will implement PFAS cleanup actions this year.
-
Grayling Charter Township is hoping to construct a line that would bring municipal water to neighborhoods with PFAS-contaminated wells.
-
WCMU's Teresa Homsi toured Camp Grayling this past fall and is tuned into the PFAS cleanup process. She brings an overview of some ongoing National Guard initiatives.
-
Documents obtained through the Freedom of Information Act show a shapefile map detailing which specific public land parcels could be permitted to the National Guard to expand its training footprint has yet to be drawn.
-
Local officials in northern Michigan say the Memorandum of Understanding between the state and the Michigan National Guard lacks transparency.