 Flooding in downtown Midland, MI. Photo courtesy of the City of Midland, MIAs reported by the Washington Post.
Flooding in downtown Midland, MI. Photo courtesy of the City of Midland, MIAs reported by the Washington Post.
Fortunately, the Midland commercial nuclear power plant was never  fired up, so there is no radioactive contamination there, nor high-level  radioactive waste in on-site storage. 
Dr. Mary Sinclair, a co-founder  and co-leader of Don't Waste Michigan*, helped lead the successful  resistance to the Midland nuclear power plant, way back in the 1970s and  1980s.
The reason the Midland nuclear power plant was stopped, at 90% construction completion on one reactor and about 50% on the other, was that safety-significant buildings were sinking into the ground, not unlike the Leaning Tower of Pisa. Of course, it took many years of dedicated commitment and hard work by anti-nuclear activists, talented environmental attorneys, and even a courageous Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) whistle-blower testifying before Congress, to prevail against greed-driven companies like Midland-based Dow Chemical, and Jackson, MI-based Consumers Energy.
Speaking of Dow, there is, however, a 1967-era research  reactor at its Midland facilities, that is potentially in harm's way from the flooding, as we speak (See NRC Event Notification Report, May 20, 2020, Event Number 54719) . And there  is, of course, off the charts bad dioxin and other toxic chemical  contamination in or near these waterways, compliments of Dow. This includes a Superfund site, severe contamination downstream in the Tittabawassee River, as well as wastewater retention ponds at Dow Chemical itself. Groups like Citizens for Alternatives to Chemical Contamination (CACC)*, Lone Tree Council, and others, have for decades watch-dogged the toxic goings-on at and downstream from Dow.
 
Mary Sinclair's son, Peter Sinclair, a climate protection leader, is quoted in the Washington Post article linked above. Here are some passages from the article, including Peter Sinclair's quote:
Dow Chemical Co.’s Midland headquarters was  evacuated, with only  essential staff remaining on-site to monitor the  situation. The  facility is associated with a Superfund site due to  excess dioxins,  which are known to cause cancer, in the riverbed  downstream of the  plant. New video released by the Michigan State Police appeared to show some flooding on the Dow property, though the extent and severity is unclear.
“Dow  has activated its local emergency operations center and is  implementing  its flood preparedness plan which includes the safe  shutdown of  operating units,” wrote the company on its Facebook page.  Dow also filed  an “Unusual Event Report”   with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission because of the possibility that   floodwaters could affect its 300 kilowatt nuclear research reactor,   located at the plant, though the reactor was already shut down due to   the coronavirus outbreak. That reactor was built in 1967.
“This is a solidly middle to upper class town because of the Dow  plant  here,” Peter Sinclair, a Midland resident who is a videographer  for Yale  Climate Connections, said in an interview. He said a 2017  seasonal  flood event, combined with this disaster, may cause property  values to  decline. This includes expensive lakefront property, since  these lakes  are now being drained by the flooding.
...Sinclair, who is on the dry side of Midland and is  sheltering  family members who live closer to the flood-affected areas,  says this  event illustrates what climate scientists have been warning  about for  years.
“[There is the] Larger issue  of aging infrastructure plus  incremental climate change, this is a point  that all the scientists  make that the change is gradual, gradual,  gradual until the  infrastructure fails.”
 
 
While  this catastrophic flooding is very bad enough in its own right, it also  raises the specter of worsening flooding impacts on nuclear facilities,  
in the Great Lakes Basin and across the continent, including the  worsening high risk of dam bursts upstream of nuclear facilities.
The  July 16, 1979 uranium tailings dam burst in n.w. New Mexico, inundating  the Rio Puerco with a flood of radioactive and toxic wastewater, is  considered one of the single worst nuclear disasters in U.S. history  (that most people have never even heard of). Navajo/Diné shepherds live  downstream, such as in the Red Water Pond Road Community. The Rio Puerco  is their sole source of drinking and irrigation water. The shallowest  of "clean ups" was carried out, leaving most of the escaped  contamination in the environment.
The mass evacuation of 10,000 Michiganders to escape the floodwaters, amidst global pandemic stay-at-home and social-distancing orders, also raises the specter of a radiological disaster requiring mass evacuation at a time like this. The NRC, FEMA, related state government agencies across the country, and the nuclear power industry itself, have not addressed this question and concern. How are people supposed to shelter at home, and maintain physical distance from others, when forced to flee for their health and lives, whether from floodwaters as in Midland, or from hazardous radioctivity if a nuclear diaster were to occur during this pandemic emergency. 
David Lochbaum, retired from UCS, raised just such questions recently in the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, when a tornado struck his hometown of Chattanooga, TN, amidst the pandemic; Chattanooga "hosts" multiple atomic reactors in the area.
Dr. Mary  Sinclair herself presciently warned about the high risks of storing  high-level radioactive waste on the shores of the Great Lakes and the  banks of major rivers -- the fresh drinking water sources for both  Canada and the U.S. -- as well as along the ocean coasts (also  experiencing climate change-induced sea level rise). She did this in a  mid- to late-1990s presentation she delivered on public access  television in her area.
 
*Kevin Kamps, Beyond Nuclear's radioactive waste specialist, serves on Don't Waste Michigan's board of directors, and on Citizens for Alternatives to Chemical Contamination's advisory board.
        
  
          
  
        
  Update on May 22, 2020 by
          
  
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