Emmet County Master Plan 2021-2025
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Southern Division Little Traverse Bay Bands Of
Case 1:15-cv-00850-PLM-PJG ECF No. 610 filed 04/29/19 PageID.11737 Page 1 of 66 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT WESTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN – SOUTHERN DIVISION LITTLE TRAVERSE BAY BANDS OF ODAWA INDIANS, a federally recognized Indian tribe, Plaintiff, v. Court File No.15-cv-850 Hon. Paul L. Maloney Gretchen WHITMER, Governor of the State of Michigan, et al., Defendants. Tribe’s Response in Opposition to Municipal Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment William A. Szotkowski James A. Bransky Jessica Intermill 9393 Lake Leelanau Dr. Andrew Adams III Traverse City, MI 49684 Hogen Adams PLLC Phone: (231) 946-5241 1935 W. County Rd. B2, Ste. 460 E-mail: [email protected] St. Paul, MN 55113 Phone: (651) 842-9100 Donna Budnick E-mail: [email protected] 7500 Odawa Cir. [email protected] Harbor Springs, MI 49740 [email protected] Phone: (231) 242-1424 [email protected] E-mail: [email protected] Counsel for Plaintiff Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Indians Case 1:15-cv-00850-PLM-PJG ECF No. 610 filed 04/29/19 PageID.11738 Page 2 of 66 Table of Contents I. Factual Background .................................................................................................. 1 A. The Land .......................................................................................................................1 B. The Treaties ..................................................................................................................5 1. March 28, 1836: The Treaty of Washington .......................................................... -
October News Letter.Indd
MEGWA EZHIWEBAAK October 2004 Vol. 1 Issue 8 Second Annual “Restoring Peace in Indian Country” Conference The Second Annual “Restoring the Peace” Conference was held at the Little River Casino Resort Conference Center on September 29th and 30th. Family Services coordinated this event last year to bring awareness to our tribal members and the community at large as to what Domestic Violence really is. “We hold this conference, to let individuals know that there is help, and hopefully bring The Tribal Community back to the values that women and children are Sacred – not property, which was learned from the Europeans.” Says Julie Ramsey. Member’s attendance was much greater this year than the last and Family Services predicts that it will increase from year to year. People will come to recognize it’s importance and pass the word around. The format changed somewhat this year from last, ABOVE LEFT - Shawn’s (Stalzer) drumming and singing was although last year’s conference went extremely well, it being the wonderful... first of this kind. - By Emily Drouin ABOVE RIGHT - Annie Humphrey, (...) sharing stories and songs with us... CONTINUED ON PAGE 3 GOOD THUNDER MOTORCYCLE CO. Don Stone, Matt Stone and Rob Bloch have a great deal to be proud of. Good Thunder Motorcycle Co. (GTM) is a unique company that builds custom motorcycles that… are worth more than a second glance. Thanks in part to the LRBOI Higher Education Scholarships, these men made their dreams come true, and created a one of a kind product. Don and Matt were among the first Tribal Members to receive education funding from the Little River Band. -
2021- 2025 Recreation Plan Resort Township Emmet County
2021- 2025 Recreation Plan Resort Township Emmet County Adopted: December 8, 2020 Prepared by: Resort Township Recreation Committee With the assistance of: Richard L. Deuell, Planning Consultant RESORT TOWNSHIP RECREATION PLAN 2021-2025 TABLE OF CONTENTS Title Page ............................................................................................................... i Table of Contents .................................................................................................. ii Section 1. Introduction and History ................................................................................... 1-1 2. Community Description ..................................................................................... 2-1 3. Administrative Structure .................................................................................... 3-1 4. Recreation and Resource Inventories ............................................................... 4-1 5. Description of the Planning and Public Input Process ....................................... 5-1 6. Goal and Objectives .......................................................................................... 6-1 7. Action Program ................................................................................................. 7-1 8. Plan Adoption .................................................................................................... 8-1 Appendix A: Survey Findings ...................................................................................... A-1 Appendix B: Supporting -
Fact Sheet: Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Indians Emmet and Charlevoix Counties, Michigan
Fact Sheet: Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Indians Emmet and Charlevoix Counties, Michigan Michigan State Police, CONTACTS Emergency Management and Emergency: 911 Homeland Security Division (24 Hour emergency Primary Tribal POC: Caroline Moellering, Environmental Services Manager, Office: (231) 242-1571, Cell notification): (800) 292-4706 (906) 458-8621 Tribal Environmental Response Coordinator: Traven Michaels, Office: (231) 242-1573, Cell: (231) 758-2399 Michigan Department of Health LEPC Chair: Megan Anderson, (855) 515-1624 and Human Services Division of Environmental Health: (800) Tribal Chair: Regina Gasco Bentley, (231) 242-1401 648-6942 Tribal Administrator: Phil Harmon, (231) 242-1421 Tribal Police: (231) 242-1500 For public health emergencies, Tribal Health Clinic: (231) 242-1700 contact the Emmet County Tribal Historic Preservation Officer: Melissa Wiatrolik, (231) 242-1408 Health Department (Northwest Michigan): (231) 347-2861 https://www.ltbbodawa-nsn.gov.org Michigan Pollution Emergency RESERVATION DESCRIPTION Alert System [PEAS] Hotline County FIPS Codes: MI.26.047 (Emmet); MI.26.029 (Charlevoix) [Reservation Map] (24 Hour): (800) 292-4706 Land Area: 337 Square Miles Michigan Department of Estimated Population: Over 4,568 tribal members Environmental Quality Environmental Assistance Major Industries: Gaming, Tourism, Commercial Fishing, Government Center (non-emergency): (800) Major Rail Lines: None identified 662-9278 Major Roadways: U.S. Route 31, U.S. Route 131, State Route 119 Major Towns: Petoskey, Charlevoix, -
CORA Code – Great Lakes Fishing Regulations
CHIPPEWA OTTAWA RESOURCE AUTHORITY COMMERCIAL, SUBSISTENCE, AND RECREATIONAL FISHING REGULATIONS FOR THE 1836 TREATY CEDED WATERS OF LAKES SUPERIOR, HURON, AND MICHIGAN Adopted August 31, 2000 Effective September 7, 2000 Revised March 4, 2019 CHIPPEWA OTTAWA RESOURCE AUTHORITY COMMERCIAL, SUBSISTENCE, AND RECREATIONAL FISHING REGULATIONS FOR THE 1836 TREATY CEDED WATERS OF LAKES SUPERIOR, HURON, AND MICHIGAN CONTENTS PART ONE: GENERAL MATTERS PART FIVE: NON-COMMERCIAL FISHING I. Purpose……………………………………1 XVII. Recreational Fishing……………………….…28 II. Scope and Application……………………1 XVIII. Tribal Charter Boat Operations………………28 III. Definitions……………………………...1-4 XIX. Subsistence Fishing……………………….28-30 PART TWO: ZONES PART SIX: LICENSES AND INFORMATION IV. Commercial Fishing Zones………………4 XX. License and Registration Definitions and Regulations…………………………………...30 V. Tribal Zones………………………........4-8 XXI. License Regulations……………………....31-32 VI. Intertribal Zones………………………8-10 XXII. Harvest Reporting and Sampling………....32-34 VII. Trap Net Zones…………………........10-12 XXIII. Assessment Fishing……………………… 34-35 VIII. Closed or Limited Fishing Zones……12-14 PART THREE: GEAR PART SEVEN: REGULATION AND ENFORCEMENT IX. Gear Restrictions……….…………......14-17 XXIV. Tribal Regulations……………………………35 X. State-Funded Trap Net Conversion Operations……………………………17-18 XXV. Orders of the Director…………………..........35 XXVI. Jurisdiction and Enforcement…………….35-37 PART FOUR: SPECIES XXVII. Criminal Provisions………………………….37 XI. Lake Trout…………………………...18-19 XII. Salmon……………………………….19-21 PART EIGHT: ACCESS XIII. Walleye…………………………….…21-23 XXVIII. Use of Access Sites……………………..37-38 XIV. Yellow Perch………………………...23-26 XV. Other Species………………………...26-27 XVI. Prohibited Species……………………… 27 CHIPPEWA OTTAWA RESOURCE AUTHORITY COMMERCIAL, SUBSISTENCE, AND RECREATIONAL FISHING REGULATIONS FOR THE 1836 TREATY CEDED WATERS OF LAKES SUPERIOR, HURON, AND MICHIGAN PART ONE: GENERAL MATTERS SECTION I. -
Download the Inland Waterway and Straits Area Water Trails Plan
Water Trail Plan Inland Waterway and Straits Area Cheboygan and Emmet Counties Funded by: Office of Ocean and Coastal Resource Management, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce and the Michigan Coastal Management Program, Michigan Department of Environmental Quality with support from the Emmet County, Cheboygan County, Mackinaw City, and volunteers. June 2014 1 Inland Waterway and Straits Area Water Trail Plan Introduction The Inland Waterway is a 40 mile long historic water route that connects Lake Huron by way of Cheboygan, Indian River, Alanson, and Conway and with series of long portages at the headwaters to Petoskey State Park and Lake Michigan. A coastal route, part of the Huron Shores Blueways, connects the City of Cheboygan to Mackinaw City and the Straits of Mackinac. Like the interior water trails, the coastal waters have been used for transportation for thousands of years. The Inland Waterway has long been marketed as the motor boating paradise. Sitting along the banks of the Indian River on a summer afternoon and watching a steady stream of motored craft pass by, attests to the marketing success. There has never been a multi-community effort to organize and promote a paddle trail. Human-powered quiet water sports are among the fastest growing outdoor recreation activities. Combined with other active sports facilities such as the North Central State Trail, North Western State Trail and the North Country Trail, the water trail will bring visitors to the area, add to the quality of life for residents and enhance the rural-recreation sense of place. Furthermore, development of the water trail represents a regional, multi organization effort and will support economic development in the region of the state dependent upon recreational visitors. -
Biodiversity of Michigan's Great Lakes Islands
FILE COPY DO NOT REMOVE Biodiversity of Michigan’s Great Lakes Islands Knowledge, Threats and Protection Judith D. Soule Conservation Research Biologist April 5, 1993 Report for: Land and Water Management Division (CZM Contract 14C-309-3) Prepared by: Michigan Natural Features Inventory Stevens T. Mason Building P.O. Box 30028 Lansing, MI 48909 (517) 3734552 1993-10 F A report of the Michigan Department of Natural Resources pursuant to National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Award No. 309-3 BIODWERSITY OF MICHIGAN’S GREAT LAKES ISLANDS Knowledge, Threats and Protection by Judith D. Soule Conservation Research Biologist Prepared by Michigan Natural Features Inventory Fifth floor, Mason Building P.O. Box 30023 Lansing, Michigan 48909 April 5, 1993 for Michigan Department of Natural Resources Land and Water Management Division Coastal Zone Management Program Contract # 14C-309-3 CL] = CD C] t2 CL] C] CL] CD = C = CZJ C] C] C] C] C] C] .TABLE Of CONThNTS TABLE OF CONTENTS I EXECUTIVE SUMMARY iii INTRODUCTION 1 HISTORY AND PHYSICAL RESOURCES 4 Geology and post-glacial history 4 Size, isolation, and climate 6 Human history 7 BIODWERSITY OF THE ISLANDS 8 Rare animals 8 Waterfowl values 8 Other birds and fish 9 Unique plants 10 Shoreline natural communities 10 Threatened, endangered, and exemplary natural features 10 OVERVIEW OF RESEARCH ON MICHIGAN’S GREAT LAKES ISLANDS 13 Island research values 13 Examples of biological research on islands 13 Moose 13 Wolves 14 Deer 14 Colonial nesting waterbirds 14 Island biogeography studies 15 Predator-prey -
Short Circuit 175
Short Circuit 175 Anthony Sanders Hello, and welcome to Short Circuit, your podcast on the Federal Courts of Appeals. I'm your host, Anthony Sanders, Director of the Center for Judicial Engagement at the Institute for Justice. If you enjoy this podcast, you should check out our newsletter and often irreverent take on recent Court of Appeals opinions, which we publish every Friday, you can subscribe at shortcircuit.org or find it on the Volokh Conspiracy Blog. And, please also check out our sister podcast, the documentary series, Bound by Oath. We're recording this Friday, May 28, 2021. And we have what you might call the Big 10, Eastern Division episode. That's because with apologies to the other members of that half of the conference from other states, today, we have cases from Ohio and Michigan and both of course from the Sixth Circuit. In fact, we wanted to go straight to the front lines to find out what was going on. So, we have a special guest who litigated one of the cases. Emily White is a partner at Dann Law in Columbus, Ohio. There, she practices in the areas of student loan debt, disability rights and consumer law. Previously, she worked for Legal Aid Society of Cleveland, and Disability Rights Ohio. She's a graduate of City University of New York School of Law and of the University of Illinois on the other side of the Big 10. Emily, welcome to Short Circuit. Emily White 01:23 Good morning. Thanks for having me. Anthony Sanders 01:25 - 1 - Transcribed by https://otter.ai Now, Emily is going to tell us about a takings case appeal on a preliminary issue but a very important preliminary issue that she recently won at the Sixth Circuit. -
The Straits of Mackinac an Exhibit
Imaging the Sacred The Straits of Mackinac an Exhibit MATERIALS ON DISPLAY ARE AVAILABLE FOR CHECKOUT WHEN A SECOND COPY IS HELD BY THE LIBRARY. MORE TITLES MAY BE FOUND ON OUR CATALOG, ANSWERCAT.ORG. CASE ONE, FIRST IMPRESSIONS, 1ST FLOOR ATRIUM Material that imagine the first contact era of the Straits of Mackinac. Carroll, Justin M. The merchant John Askin: furs and empire at British Michilimackinac. East Lansing, MI: Michigan State University Press, 12017. F572.F6 C38 2017 Dunnigan, Brian Leigh A picturesque situation: Mackinac before photography, 1615-1860. Detroit, MI: Wayne State University Press, 2008. F572.M16 D965 2008 Shimizu, Eileen Concannon Michigan Indian place names, the Little Traverse Bay region. MI: E.C. Shimizu, 1977. Michigan Flat File G4111.N8 A8 1977 S55 Tanner, Helen Hornbeck, Et al. Atlas of Great Lakes Indian history/ cartography by Miklos Pinther. Norman, OK: Published for the Newberry Library by the University of Oklahoma Press, 1987. E78.G7 A87 1987 MILITARY, EXPLORATION AND COMMERCE, 2ND FLOOR ATRIUM These three cases hold material portraying the military presence on the Straits from the French era to the American occupation. Before the Bridge and the Grand Hotel, one of the most imaged structures was Fort Michilimackinac. The military forces at the Straits facilitated early exploration and commerce, evidence of which can be found in the archeological record. Most materials in this section are the work of the Mackinac Island State Park Commission or the Mackinac State Historic Parks. Library of Michigan ● 702 W. Kalamazoo St. ● Lansing, MI 48915 ● 517-373-1300 ● www.michigan.gov/libraryofmichigan Page 2 of 13 Armour, David A. -
Little Traverse Bay Watershed Protection Plan
Little Traverse Bay Watershed Protection Plan March 31, 2004 Updated December 31, 2005 Tip of the Mitt Watershed Council 426 Bay Street Petoskey, MI 49770 Table of Contents List of Partners Executive Summary ... ............ ............ ............ ............ ............ ............ ............ ............ ............ 1 Chapter One: Getting to Know the Little Traverse Bay Watershed ...... ............ ............ ............ 3 1. Introduction... ............ ............ ............ ............ ............ ............ ............ ............ ............ ............ 3 A. What is a Watershed Management Plan? .. ............ ............ ............ ............ ............ ............ 4 B. Geologic History and Geographic Description.........……..... ............ ............ ............ ............ 9 C. Water Quality Monitoring in the Watershed ............ ............ ............ ............ ............ ............ 11 D. Interesting Features Around the Bay.......... ............ ............ ............ ............ ............ ............ 14 E. Fish of Little Traverse Bay ............ ............ ............ ............ ............ ............ ............ ............ 15 F. Waves, and Seiches, and Ice ........ ............ ............ ............ ............ ............ ............ ............ 15 2. Designated Uses and Water Quality Summary ............ ............ ............ ............ ............ ............ 16 A. Watershed Concerns........ ............ ............ ............ ........... -
Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Indians Native Plant Initiative
Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Indians Native Plants Initiative Prepared by, Jacqueline Pilette, Wetland Specialist, Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Indians Environmental Services Department for Conservation Resource Alliance October 19, 2009 Purpose This document is intended to aid resource managers of Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Indians (LTBB) and Conservation Resource Alliance (CRA) in incorporating culturally significant plants into their management plans. In addition, LTBB Citizens and local land- and home-owners that are interested in protecting, preserving, or managing for culturally significant plants can also learn to incorporate them into their management plans, while at the same time contributing to biodiversity and promoting healthy habitats for both wildlife and people on areas within and adjacent to the LTBB Historical Reservation boundary. Acknowledgements: This project was funded through the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) Conservation Innovation Grant awarded to Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Indians and Conservation Resource Alliance from 2006-2009. Chi-miigwech (Thank you) to: Doug Craven, LTBB Natural Resources Department Director; Rachel Schwarz, LTBB Environmental Services Director, Conservation Resource Alliance (CRA) Director Amy Beyer, and CRA staff: Eric Ellis and Chris Pierce, and Dr. Anton Reznicek, University of Michigan Herbarium. Thank you to the following LTBB Tribal Citizens for their valuable help, knowledge, and input on this project: Yvonne Walker-Keshik from LTBB Archives and Records Department, Joe Mitchell (formerly from LTBB Archives and Records Dept.), former LTBB Language Department instructor Isabelle Osawamik, language instructor George Trudeau, traditional storyteller and LTBB elder Simon Otto and his wife Andrea Otto, LTBB Elders Department Coordinator Marie “Tootsie” Miller, LTBB GIS Director Alan Proctor, and to all who participated in surveys and presentations. -
“Land of the Million Dollar Sunsets”
“LAND OF THE MILLION DOLLAR SUNSETS” Where is your favorite spot to enjoy a 'Million Dollar Sunset' in Michigan? When Ernest Hemingway married the first time in 1921, he and his bride were driving through Northern Michigan. The car crested a hill and Little Traverse Bay was spread out in front of them. “See all that,” Hemingway told his new wife. “Talk about the beauty of the Bay of Naples! I’ve seen them both, and no place is more beautiful than Little Traverse Bay in its autumn colors.” Follow in the footsteps of Hemingway as you travel winding roads to the gorgeous harbor towns of Charlevoix, Petoskey & Harbor Springs. You’ll understand why this region has been called ‘Land of the Million Dollar Sunsets’ since 1874. Day One – Charlevoix Nicknamed, “Charlevoix the Beautiful”, it is easy to see why. Beautiful petunias are blooming each year that span a 5 mile stretch along the main road coming into Charleviox. Separating the south and north end of town, Charlevoix’s draw bridge creates a beautiful view from the water and land. It’s a gorgeous sight to see the bridge opening & closing as the sailboats and yachts travel through. The Charlevoix Historical Society does a wonderful step on tour of the harbor town and offers a fascinating tour of the Mushroom Houses. Shaped with boulders, these rounded and curved homes with wavy, curvy roofs are known world-wide. And the only place you can see them is in Charlevoix, Michigan. Discover these fascinating stone houses that are snuggled into the hillside - learn about Earl Young, the architect who built & designed the houses into the landscape.