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40 U. Mich. J.L. Reform 907 (2006-2007)
The Public Trust in Surface Waterways and Submerged Lands of the Great Lakes States

handle is hein.journals/umijlr40 and id is 917 raw text is: THE PUBLIC TRUST IN SURFACE WATERWAYS AND
SUBMERGED LANDS OF THE GREAT LAKES STATESt
Bertram C. Frey*
Andrew Mutz**
The modern public trust doctrine compels each Great Lakes state to protect the sus-
tainable future of the Lakes and to preserve traditional public uses. At the same
time, the doctrine constrains the states' powers to allow exploitation of trust re-
sources. This Article provides a brief historical overview of the public trust doctrine
in waterways and their submerged lands. It next explores how the eight Great
Lakes states have applied the doctrine, discusses the surprising number of differ-
ences in the doctrine's development from state to state, and provides comparison
charts. After analyzing the variety of approaches used by the eight states to imple-
ment the doctrine, the Article builds upon some of those approaches to craft a new
model.
The Article proposes three levels of analysis for applying the trust doctrine in the
Great Lakes states. The first level addresses the geographic scope of the doctrine in
waterways. The second level analyzes public rights of access to waterways. The
third level examines which uses of the waterways should be protected and how im-
pairments of those uses should be remedied. The Article offers new tests at each
level for implementing the trust.
While the Article argues for an expansive application of the public trust doctrine
in the Great Lakes, the Article also reviews a number of arguments about the na-
ture of the doctrine and whether it is compatible with private property rights.
Finally, the Article concludes that, if ever there was a natural system on earth so
fundamental to a region and worthy of protection under a public trust, it is the
Great Lakes system.
t     Copyright © 2007. All rights reserved by the copyright owners.
The views expressed in this Article are those of the authors and are not necessarily those
of U.S. EPA.
*     Bertram C. Frey is Deputy Regional Counsel for the United States Environmental
Protection Agency, Region 5, Chicago, Illinois.
**    Andrew Mutz is a second-year student at Harvard University Law School and served
as a legal extern for the U.S. EPA Office of Regional Counsel, Region 5, Chicago, Illinois,
during the summer of 2006.
The authors thank Nicole Wood, a graduate of DePaul Law School, for her able editorial
assistance and her patience.

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