High Water on the Great Lakes (2020)

As rising seas swamp coastal cities and the Mississippi River runs at a near-constant flood stage, another story of high water has bubbled up in an unexpected place – the Great Lakes.  Less than a decade ago, the story in the Great Lakes Basin was one of dramatically low water levels. But, by the summer of 2019, they had returned to record highs – a gain that has historically taken closer to 20 years in the lakes' long-term water level cycle. 

Now the lakes have risen so high that they’re threatening solid ground at levels not seen since the 1980s. Homes have fallen into lakes Michigan and Huron, roads are under water, vast swaths of near-shore farmland are flooded, and Great Lakes cities are grappling with a water-logged future. Some climate models indicate the potential for a sustained pattern of moisture from the Gulf of Mexico that could keep lake levels high for the foreseeable future, but not so long ago such models predicted the lakes would continue to fall.
 
On June 4-5, the Institute for Journalism & Natural Resources hosted an online workshop that introduced journalists to the new reality – and uncertainty – of Great Lakes water levels.