The Latest on ‘Line 5’

On Mackinac Island, the Epicenter of the Oil Spill Threat, Attorney General Nessel Promises to Restore the Rule of Law


By Liz Kirkwood

MACKINAC ISLAND, Michigan – The biggest news coming from the Mackinac Policy Conference held here this week wasn’t even listed on the official agenda. Instead, Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel made headlines in interviews conducted on the margins of the main affair.

Nessel’s message: She intends ASAP to keep her campaign promise to shut down Line 5, the decaying oil pipelines underwater in the Straits of Mackinac, just west of the island the Mackinac Bridge. The danger is imminent. Her legal duty is clear. The Great Lakes belong to all of us, not a private Canadian oil pipeline company.

And by the end of June, absent a satisfactory agreement between Gov. Gretchen Whitmer and Line 5-owner Enbridge to decommission Line 5, the attorney general will take legal action. Her goal: halt the oil flow to protect the drinking water supply for Mackinac Island and half of all Michiganders and the lifeblood of the Pure Michigan tourist economy.

“How are we going to entice people to come here from other states with oil along hundreds and hundreds of miles of shoreline? With all due respect to Enbridge, this is a Canadian oil company. We utilize here, 5%, at very most 10% of the oil that goes through those pipelines but we take on all the risk,” said Nessel, in an interview with WWMT-TV in West Michigan.

“I’m tired of it and we can’t have a private company be more important than the natural resources and residents of our state. They don’t own us, they don’t own the natural resources in this state and I think it’s time that we had elected leaders in office that recognize that.”

It’s exactly the leadership Michigan needs to solve the environmental and existential threat posed by Line 5, while it continues to operate more than a decade past its life expectancy and pump whopping 80 percent more oil than the pipeline’s 1953 original design capacity. The majority of Michiganders, business leaders, environmentalists, and state and federal politicians all agree that Line 5 poses an unacceptable risk every day of operations, and that’s because Enbridge pumps up to 23 million gallons of oil through the heart of the Great Lakes, the worst possible place for an oil spill, according to a University of Michigan study. 

Enbridge is desperate to continue Line 5’s risky oil operations. Why? Because Line 5 continues to be a critical piece of Enbridge’s Canadian tar sands infrastructure, not Michigan’s.  Enbridge’s latest announcement is that the company thinks it could expedite completion of a tunnel by 2024 – by steamrolling through the environmental review process. But it’s 2019, and Michigan cannot lawfully waive environmental laws nor allow Enbridge to operate Line 5 for another five years, regardless of any proposed “safety measures” the company heralds.

Gov. Whitmer: Not Open to 5 More Years of Line 5 Risk

In response, Gov. Whitmer today declared the compressed 5-year timetable for opening the tunnel and shutting down the existing pipes in the Straits of Mackinac is not fast enough. “I think we’ve got a duty to get it out quicker than that, and I think that the attorney general feels the same way and that’s my goal,” Whitmer said.

What we do know is that Line 5 is a failing piece of oil infrastructure located in our Great Lakes and across 547 miles in Michigan where it endangers nearly 400 other water crossings.  And let’s not forget what Enbridge still does not know: the feasibility of constructing a tunnel through the unknown geology under the Straits for its oil transport operations, which it wants to run for the next 99 years despite global trends to decarbonize and address the climate crisis. 

The operation of the current 66-year-old pipelines must cease now based on the State of Michigan’s fiduciary duty under public trust law as held by the Supreme Court of the United States in the seminal 1892 case, Illinois Central Railroad v. Illinois: “The State can no more abdicate its trust over property in which the whole people are interested, like navigable waters and soils under them, so as to leave them entirely under the use and control of private parties.”

FLOW’s latest legal memorandum to the State of Michigan underscores this very point: the state cannot negotiate away its high, solemn, and perpetual legal duty by accommodating private interests that jeopardize waters, bottomlands, public trust, public property, private property, and public health of the citizens and tribes of Michigan.  Public trust law simply does not allow Enbridge to continue operations of Line 5 in the open waters of the Straits of Mackinac, while this Canadian company contemplates building a new oil tunnel under our Great Lakes.

Gov. Whitmer’s and A.G. Nessel’s legal duty, which aligns with the campaign pledges both made in their quest to gain office, is to shut down Line 5 and protect the Great Lakes, which define Michigan, drive our economy, and provide drinking water to half the state’s population.

Take Action: Click here to sign the petition calling on Michigan’s elected leaders to stop the Enbridge oil tunnel and shut down Line 5 to protect the Great Lakes, drinking water, and the Pure Michigan economy. The petition is sponsored by the Oil & Water Don’t Mix campaign, co-led by FLOW and other groups and tribes committed to protecting our freshwater and way of life from a disastrous oil spill.


9 comments on “The Latest on ‘Line 5’

  1. Kathie Weinmann on

    It is the moral and legal obligation of those who govern, to immediately Shut Down Line 5. Michigan owes nothing to Enbridge, they’ve outlived our contracts, they must GO NOW!

    Reply
  2. Heather Neitzke on

    Shut down line 5 & No new pipeline.
    It is Our fresh water source.
    A Canadian company with a bad track record for failed pipes is not worth the risk.
    We can be good neighbors without putting our fresh water on the line.
    Shut it down before something happens and we have to look back and wish we had.

    Reply
  3. helen on

    We want it shut down now!! No benefit but a huge risk we may Not take..We voted for both of you to close line 5, Now your job is to fo as promised!! SHUT IT DOWN PERMANENTLY, NO PIPES……

    Reply
  4. Donna Hardenberg on

    Our most precious asset should note be held captive to a private enterprise. “ ….of the people, for the people”

    Reply
  5. Tom Hamilton on

    Gov. Whitmer needs to partner with the sovereign CORA and First Nations to permanently plug Line 5 forever. This will test if Gov. Whitmer is serious about protecting our sacred Mother Earth Great Lakes waters for everyone. We’ll see if she is afraid of the state Republicans and the national news attack by Trump. CORA needs to demand Line 5 be permanently plugged as leverage before any 2020 Fishery Consent decree talks with the state can begin. Miigwetch!

    Reply
  6. Barbara Stamiris on

    Future generations will be asking …”Mommy what did you do back then? Did you stand and fight did you do what’s right? Will the water be blue again?” …in the words of a powerful Line 5 song by Doc and Donna Probes of Traverse City. Give a listen at
    https://youtu.be/XeBfekIt_Zw
    We need this now more than ever! And thank you AG Nessel for doing all you can to protect the Great Lakes!

    Reply

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On Mackinac Island, the Epicenter of the Oil Spill Threat, Attorney General Nessel Promises to Restore the Rule of Law