• Consumers Energy’s proposal to sell its aging dams has ignited debate about whether the structures should exist at all
  • The conflict is especially intense on the Au Sable, home to nearly half the dams
  • Similar debates are playing out nationally, with high stakes for the environment, public safety and local economies

AU SABLE RIVER —On any given summer evening along this storied Michigan river, Tom Buhr can be found fly fishing in cold, rushing water that makes him feel “more complete and better” than anywhere on Earth.

Fifty miles downstream on a pontoon in one of the Au Sable’s lake-like reservoirs, Douglas Ridenour can relate to the feeling. 

The agreement ends there.

Despite a shared love for the river, the men stand on opposite sides of a struggle for its future, prompted by Consumers Energy’s proposal to sell 13 century-old Michigan dams — including six on the Au Sable — to a private equity firm.

For the company, it’s a financial decision designed to avoid hundreds of millions in maintenance costs and liability for high-hazard structures that don’t generate enough electricity to pay their way.

For many residents along the nationally-renowned 138-mile waterway that originates north of Grayling and empties into Lake Huron at Oscoda, a regulatory review of the deal has become a proxy for a deeper battle over whether the dams should exist at all.

A sandy hill leads down to a river
Foote Pond Overlook is located at the top of a steep sand bluff known as Champagne Hill, offering visitors panoramic views in Oscoda Township. On a warm summer weekend, the Au Sable River below is often packed with boaters and swimmers. (Ella Miller/Bridge Michigan)

The struggle for the future of the Au Sable mirrors a national debate. It pits environmentalists and fly fishers like Buhr, who favor free-flowing rivers with colder water and more fish, against flatwater enthusiasts like Ridenour who value the lakefront living created by reservoirs. 

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Across the country, “you’ve got old mill dams and old power dams that were important things at the time, but now maybe aren’t,” said Bob Dalton, a national dam safety expert based in Illinois. The question then becomes “what are we going to do now, and what’s it going to look like 100 years from now?”

At stake are not just the environment and ways of life for water users, but public safety, taxpayer dollars and the future of scores of businesses and communities that have popped up along the artificial lakes.

A nationwide issue

Across the nation, thousands of dams have exceeded the standard 50-year lifespan and face mounting maintenance costs.

The average US dam is 65 years old, while Michigan’s average is 80.

Consumers Energy’s 13 dams on the Au Sable, Grand, Kalamazoo, Manistee and Muskegon rivers average 106 and generate only 1% of the utility’s annual power output, while the cost to maintain them keeps growing.

In view of that math, Consumers wants to sell them for $1 apiece before their federal operating licenses expire in the coming years. The proposition has drawn rebuke from critics, who fear new owners won’t pay to keep the structures safe.

A state judge has advised utility regulators to reject the sale in a final decision expected this September. 

Consumers officials say such an outcome would lead them to seek removal of all 13 dams — an effort sure to trigger yet more regulatory review and intense public debate.

Federal records show licenses for another 15 Michigan hydropower dams will expire in the coming decade, likely prompting similar debates about whether to keep, sell or remove them.

Nationwide, some 100 dams were dismantled last year, including six in Michigan. Experts expect the number to keep climbing as owners look to avoid costly repairs. 

Water flows through a dam
Foote Dam is one of six hydroelectric dams on the Au Sable River, located in Oscoda Township. Completed in 1918, the dam is the farthest downstream of the six and is nine miles away from the Au Sable’s mouth at Lake Huron. (Ella Miller/Bridge Michigan)

Here on the Au Sable, uncertainty about the fate of its six dams has reignited an age-old debate about what a river should be, and who gets to decide.

“Rivers are defined as flowing water,” said Bryan Burroughs, executive director of the river advocacy group Michigan Trout Unlimited. “You shut that off, and it’s going to cause a lot of problems.”

But to folks like Ridenour, who lives near the lowest Au Sable dam and has been recreating in its reservoir for more than 50 years, the impoundments enhance the river’s variety in ways too important to lose.

The Au Sable in its current configuration is “100% nature,” Ridenour said, but “I have no interest in being here if the river is only 20 feet wide.”

The river of dreams

Unlike other regions, where coldwater rivers are disappearing due to climate change, Ice Age glaciers blessed Michigan with a sandy landscape rich in frigid springs that produce blue-ribbon trout rivers.

The Au Sable stands out among them, a mystique owing to good publicity and relative proximity to Michigan’s population hubs.

The river’s easy accessibility from Detroit, Flint or Saginaw has won it some influential boosters, from early 1900s lumber baron William Mershon to the founders of Trout Unlimited, a national river advocacy group that was born on its banks

Au Sable disciples often describe it in near-spiritual terms: An 8-mile stretch near Grayling is known as “the holy waters.” A sign downtown glorifies it as “the best of all rivers.” People interviewed for this story called it “my cathedral,” “my happy place,” and “the place where I’m most at peace.”

On a late spring evening, it’s easy to understand the hype. 

Bullfrogs bellow in the cedar swamps, trout leap from the water to feed on mating mayflies, loons glide between cattails and wild rice beds in stillwater reservoirs surrounded by towering dunes.

But pristine as the Au Sable may seem, it has been dramatically altered by humans — a period Buhr, the fisherman who has written two books about the river, laments as its “225-year monetization.”

Children play on a log structure while a woman watches from below
Ezra Ferrier, 8, Gabriella Ferrier, 4, Clement Ferrier, 2, and Cece Ferrier, 10, of Monroe, scale a log jam with help from their grandma during a visit to Lumberman’s Monument Visitor Center in Oscoda Township. The site teaches visitors about the history of the area’s lumber industry through interpretive signs, exhibits, demonstrations and programming. (Ella Miller/Bridge Michigan)

The fur trade virtually emptied the watershed of its beavers. Unregulated commercial and sport fishing drove Arctic grayling to local extinction and dramatically reduced sturgeon, walleye, whitefish and sucker populations. Timber companies razed the pine forests, leaving the Au Sable sunbaked and sand-choked.

The subsequent building of hydroelectric dams fragmented the river into seven sections, submerging 59 miles between Mio and Oscoda under vast artificial lakes and prompting generations of debate about whether it was a good idea.

Should they stay or should they go?

Few along this river seem to be comfortable with Consumers’ plan to essentially give the dams away to a Maryland-based private equity firm in a deal that would cost ratepayers $3.4 billion and leave few guarantees about the structures’ future.

Prospective owner Confluence Hydro has vowed to shore up the dams to keep them operating for decades to come, but the deal doesn’t hold the company to those vows. 

Many, including the judge who recommended denying the sale, wonder how Confluence intends to turn a profit on such costly assets. They fear the answer lies in skipping maintenance required for safety, or selling off thousands of acres of landholdings that surround the dams.

But given Consumers’ vow to dismantle the dams if the sale doesn’t proceed, some fans of the impoundments are willing to take the gamble.

A man steers a boat on a lake
Douglas Ridenour, 68, takes his 50-year-old pontoon boat for a ride around Foote Dam Pond in Oscoda Township. Ridenour has been visiting Foote Dam Pond for decades, but moved there six years ago in his retirement to take advantage of the recreational opportunities the reservoir provides. He’s one of dozens of homeowners who have leased access to dock their boats in the reservoir. (Ella Miller/Bridge Michigan)

“They are the only horse traveling in our direction right now,” said Ridenour, the reservoir resident who co-administers a pro-dams Facebook group that has grown to 3,400 members. “So we kind of feel like the only choice we have is to hop on.”

The environmentalists and trout fishing enthusiasts who oppose dams see that as a perilous choice. In their eyes, removal is the best way to eliminate safety risks posed by the aging structures while righting a historic wrong.

Thanks to decades of tree-planting, sediment removal and other restoration work, the Au Sable has partly recovered from its industrial past, said Karen Harrison, president of the local Trout Unlimited chapter, “but it can come further.”

Two men move a log in a river
Retired Michigan Department of Natural Resources Fisheries Biologist Steve Sendek, right, and son Alex Sendek, of Grayling, push a dead pine tree they cut down into the Au Sable River, which will be used to repair a woody trout habitat first created by the DNR about 50 years ago, in Grayling Township. When the DNR stopped maintaining the habitats in the late 1990s, Sendek stepped in with the help of funding from local organizations to hire a crew to restore them each summer. The woody habitats provide trout with a place to conserve their energy and take shelter from predators. “We’re taking care of that original investment the DNR put into the fish habitats and making sure it stays functional for a long time,” Sendek said. (Ella Miller/Bridge Michigan) 

The dams block migratory fish from their habitat, contributing to sharp declines for a host of species. They trap sediment, starving the river of nutrients while muck piles up in the reservoirs. Fish die in the spinning hydroelectric turbines and the sun beats down on the pooled water, warming it to unsafe temperatures for coldwater fish.

Five reasons to love the Au Sable

  • “Holy,” historical trout fishing grounds: The river is considered one of the country’s greatest fly fishing destinations, a reputation owing to its cold, consistent flows and abundant mayfly hatches. National fly fishing group Trout Unlimited was born on its banks in 1959.
  • Ideal for floating: The springwater-fed river’s stable flow and scenic beauty make it a popular choice for kayakers, canoers and tubers. It’s home to the annual AuSable River Canoe Marathon, a 120-mile race through the night that’s been going strong since 1947. 
  • Beautiful scenery: The Au Sable is surrounded by lots of public land, including the Au Sable State Forest and Huron-Manistee National Forest. A 23-mile stretch through towering pines and sand dunes between Mio to Alcona Pond has been named a National Scenic River.
  • Quite a variety: The Au Sable is among the more heavily dammed rivers in the state, with six major hydropower impoundments. The dams divide the river into distinct reaches: Trout-filled coldwater upstream, lake-like environments between the dams and a rivermouth frequented by Great Lakes species. The reservoirs, which collectively cover 10 square miles, are also popular boating and swimming spots.
  • Rich history: Before its present form as a beloved recreational river, the Au Sable was a key food source and navigational route for Native Americans and a prominent site in the fur trade and lumbering eras. Several sites along the river pay homage to its past.

Three of the Au Sable dams warm the river so badly they violate state standards, complicating their path to relicensing. 

Were it not for the dams, officials with the Michigan Department of Natural Resources have estimated, the lower Au Sable river could support millions of salmon and steelhead, tens of thousands of lake sturgeon and abundant trout, walleye, whitefish and other species.

Experience with other dam removals has shown changes can happen quickly. 

Burroughs of Trout Unlimited recalls a dam removal on another Michigan river, in which “before we even finished with the excavator, we saw trout moving upstream.”

Old dams are also prone to failure without constant maintenance — which Buhr called his primary reason for supporting removal. 

“They aren’t getting any younger,” he said. “I think getting the dams out — or at least most of them — has to be done from a safety standpoint.” 

And then there’s the question of cost: By Consumers’ estimate, removing all 13 dams would be tens of millions of dollars cheaper for its ratepayers than keeping them in place and relicensing them, although critics on both sides have disputed that math.

“We have a responsibility to prioritize customer affordability in decisions about the future of the dams,” company spokesperson Katie Carey said.

But in the communities surrounding the dams, removal is seen as a threat to local economies and a way of life. 

In their century of existence, the dams have helped cultivate a multi-million-dollar tourism economy in a region with few other economic opportunities.

Public boat ramps and campgrounds have cropped up along their collective 10 square miles of reservoirs, attracting swimmers and water skiers, pontoon cruisers and RVers who supply welcome business to area restaurants, bait shops and grocery stores. 

While Consumers owns much of the shoreline and bottomlands, it has leased dock access to hundreds of private residents, making them de-facto lakefront homeowners. It’s not clear what would happen to that land if the reservoirs were drained.

Portaging over the dams has become a rite of passage for participants in the river’s annual canoe marathon, which boasts Consumers Energy as its chief sponsor. 

And while the dams have displaced coldwater and migratory fish, they’ve created habitat for lake species like bass, perch and bluegill. The lowermost barrier — Foote — blocks invasive sea lamprey that might otherwise travel upstream to spawn by the millions.

If all that went away, “there goes the summer revenue,” said Debbie Sytek, who manages the office at Alcona Park, a 440-site campground on the reservoir created by the thirdmost-downstream dam.

With a summer staff of 23 people, Alcona Park qualifies as a major employer in an area this remote.

“What draws people here is the pond,” Sytek said. “The beauty, the slowness … What does this park look like if the water’s not there?”

Economic studies commissioned by Consumers found that removing the Au Sable dams would reduce gross regional product by $8.7 million while costing 278 jobs. 

“It’ll be another Air Force leaving the area,” predicted 68-year-old Ray Rolwing, who owns a home near Cooke Pond and remembers the boarded up shops and population exodus that followed the military’s 1993 closure of its Oscoda base.

Fans of flowing rivers have criticized the analyses by Public Sector Consultants, arguing a free-flowing river has greater economic potential than researchers acknowledged.

Kayakers traversing a river
A group of kayakers take off on a trip down the Au Sable River from Carlisle Canoe Livery in Grayling. Known for its clear waters, steady currents and scenic views, the Au Sable River is one of the most popular spots in Michigan for paddlers. (Ella Miller/Bridge Michigan)

Upstream of the dams, in the reaches famous for their stable currents and abundant trout, canoe liveries, fly shops, motels and restaurants bustle with visitors all summer. As diminishing snowpack imperils coldwater rivers from Montana to Minnesota, some predict Michigan’s reliable springfed flows will become an even bigger draw. 

Michigan’s beautiful, troubled rivers 

Michigan has more than 76,000 miles of rivers, creeks and streams. They’re ideal places to fish, boat, snorkel and otherwise enjoy our state’s natural beauty, but many rivers are heavily polluted and the future of others is in question as dams age with limited oversight. This spring and summer, Bridge Michigan is exploring the troubles and opportunities of Michigan’s rivers. Catch up:

“People will travel from all over the world to fish a run of Atlantic salmon up the world-famous Au Sable, or to fish for trout in sections of river that haven’t been fished for a hundred years,” predicted Josh Greenberg, a fishing lodge owner who leads the conservation group Anglers of the Au Sable.

Room for compromise?

In view of the tradeoffs, some on the Au Sable see room for a compromise in which some dams stay and others go.

Many see Foote Dam — where Ridenour lives — as a strong candidate to stay in place. Beyond its utility as a lamprey barrier, it impounds the river’s largest and most popular reservoir, generates more electricity than any of the other five dams, and needs the least near-term investment, according to 2022 estimates Consumers shared with area residents.

Many dam opponents see the upper impoundments — Mio, Alcona and Loud — as prime targets for removal. Taking them out would mitigate the river’s temperature problems while extending its free-flowing section by dozens of miles.

Savings from decommissioning rather than repairing the dams, Buhr suggested, could compensate residents who’ll lose lakefront property while helping affected communities transition to a river-based economy.

“I won’t be satisfied unless the local economy and property owners are satisfied,” he said.

It’s a reasonable prospect to Curtis Township Supervisor Kevin Perry, whose community surrounds the Alcona Dam.

“I would rather not lose the dam, because let’s face it, change always hurts,” Perry said. But “if you market it correctly,” an undammed river could become an asset, just as the reservoirs are today.

Back at Alcona Park, campers Marjon and Michael Jones spent a recent breakfast pondering what such an arrangement would mean for them. 

Every summer for the past 16 years, the Detroiters have parked their RV along the shoreline and spent the season fishing, boating and watching sunsets over the Alcona Dam Pond. 

Were it to be replaced with a narrow river, Michael said, “we would have to go somewhere else.”

Marjon agreed. But noting Michigan has thousands of other lakes to explore, she said she would still support dam removal.

“In spite of how much we love this place,” she said, “if you really want things natural, then dams are an unnatural thing.”

A river is seen surrounded by trees
An overlook gives visitors a view of the Au Sable River from the AuSable Valley Scenic Vista in Glennie. Designated a “blue ribbon trout stream” by the Michigan Department of Natural Resources, the 138-mile river is known for its clear waters and abundant recreational opportunities. (Ella Miller/Bridge Michigan)

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