Mr. Great Lakes (Jeff Kart). As heard in Bay City, Michigan, at 9 a.m. Eastern Fridays on Delta College Q-90.1 FM … The Environment Report for April 5, 2013.

1- Attention Consumers Energy customers: If you’re interested in generating solar energy and selling it back to the utility, here’s your chance.
Consumers Energy is taking residential and non-residential applications until May 8 for its Experimental Advanced Renewable Program (EARP).
The contract program allows electric customers to sell the output of solar generating systems to Consumers Energy for a fixed price over a contract length of up to 15 years.
Qualified applicants will be selected by lottery (pdf).
To quality, you must own or lease the solar photovoltaic system, and install it at your billing address or on an adjacent property you own or lease.
This is the 11th and 12th phase of the program. In 2011, the Michigan Public Service Commission approved an expansion of the program in line with state energy standards.
2 – Public outdoor recreation improvements are coming to the Saginaw Bay area, courtesy of more than $23 million in Natural Resources Trust Fund grants awarded statewide.
Gov. Rick Snyder approved the grants recently, for 76 recreation development projects and land acquisitions in 43 Michigan counties (pdf).
In the Saginaw Bay area, the city of Saginaw will receive $67,000 for a boulder climbing garden and multi-use pathway extension in Celebration Park. The pathway extension will connect the park to the Saginaw Riverwalk and adjacent recreation facilities.
The city of Zilwaukee also received more than $254,000 for improvements to Riverfront Park, located on the Saginaw River. The proposed development includes a playground, benches, paved parking lot and walkway, fencing and a seawall to improve bank fishing opportunities.
The Michigan Natural Resources Trust Fund is made up of oil, gas, and other mineral lease and royalty payments made to the state.
3 – The Michigan Department of Natural Resources is seeking public comment on a draft land management plan at regional open houses.
The plan outlines a strategy for DNR-managed public lands.
The regional meetings include one on April 25 from 6-8 p.m. at the Delta College Planetarium in downtown Bay City.
The draft land use strategy would, for the first time, set a standard for public access to the Great Lakes and rivers. It also calls for improved access on DNR-managed public lands, according to the agency.
The draft plan also includes a new strategy for the possible disposal of about 250,000 acres of DNR-managed public lands.
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