National Native Day of Prayer,

Press Release: National Native Day of Prayer,

Friday, June 20th, 2008:

Aztalan to Koshkonong Mounds Run

Observances and ceremonies will be held across the country on Friday, June 20, to mark the 2008 National Day of Prayer to Protect Native American Sacred Places. The events serve to emphasize the need for Congress to enact a cause of action to protect Native sacred places.

In Wisconsin, Earth Keepers’ Voices for Native America (EKVNA) will host a short ceremony on Friday, June 20, 8:00 AM, at the entrance of Aztalan State Park on Highway Q in Jefferson County. This will be followed by a 15-mile relay run south to Fort Atkinson and then southwest to the Koshkonong Mounds. (The route will be south on Q, to Highway 89 south to Fort Atkinson; Highway 26 south to Old Highway 26 to Koshkonong Mounds Road.) The public is invited, at no cost, to join the ceremony and run.

That Friday night (6-20) there will be a music benefit in Fort Atkinson for EKVNA’s Sacred Sites Run 2008. The concert begins at 6 PM at Café Carpe, 18 S. Water St. West, Fort Atkinson, and features Skip Jones, Clinton Miller, and Patrick Klaybor. Tickets are $10 at the door.

The public is also invited to join EKVNA’s Summer Solstice celebration at Mitchell Park (27th and National Ave in Milwaukee), Saturday, June 21, 2008. Late morning open drumming; Potluck lunch; 12:00 to 3:30: musicians and poets, and speakers on Sacred Sites protection. Literature tables. Families welcome. No cost.

For more information, contact (414) 801-0534.

Kennecott’s Stuck in the Mud: Sulfide Mining Not a Done Deal

Kennecott’s latest low flying air surveys in which project manager Jon Cherry describes as “similar to an MRI” is yet another appalling display of this company’s arrogance and power. Another example is the contractual manipulation of our local electric co-op into a multi-million dollar commitment to carry a heavy power line through rural Powell and Champion Townships to feed their proposed nickel mine.  A glutted list of promised contracts with area businesses, ample donations to local charities and organizations, misleading relationships with township and county governments, and a total disregard of public outcry against their proposed industrial development of the Yellow Dog Plains round out their resume. The real MRI has been performed on our own Department of Environmental Quality and DNR, where Kennecott has been able to clearly define and attack the weaknesses of this inadequate state agency.

We are awaiting the outcome of the ongoing downstate contested case hearing.  IF the ruling is in favor of Kennecott’s permits, we can expect a loud announcement from the company, “full steam ahead!!” Citizens need to know that metallic sulfide mining in the UP is NOT a Done Deal!  Aside from Kennecott not having earned the social license to carry on their business here, there are many factors to consider.  Win or lose, either side of the contested case has the opportunity to appeal. This could take months, even years to legally process. Also, the EPA must review the controversial water discharge permit and allow comment at public hearings. Transportation issues, what little is known, do not meet the approval of local residents. The Coaster Brook Trout Federally Endangered Species determination has yet to be reviewed. Agencies and citizens are finally realizing that our fresh water resources have intrinsic as well as monetary value and needs strict protection.

Kennecott’s high-dollar media campaigns exemplify the company as a good neighbor and deliver a direct MRI into public consciousness.  Mining companies will always outspend their opposition to inject their ‘good buddy’ message into the innocent public. If each one of us who opposes metallic sulfide mining in Michigan would incite 25 friends, relatives and visitors about this issue, a new consciousness would emerge and the power shift could return to citizens where it belongs. Join us in spreading the news about Kennecott: Stuck in the Mud! This is not a done deal as they would like us all to believe.

Examples where mines have been halted or stopped

1. Esquel, Argentina: A recent Supreme Court decision in Argentina upheld the rights of provinces to locally regulate and restrict activities. Minera El Desquite, despite their public relations strategies, remains blocked by citizen-influenced Chubut laws prohibiting open pit metal mining and the use of cyanide.

2. Mendoza, Argentina: The province’s parliament voted to suspend open-pit metals mining indefinitely because the local government had failed to meet a 30-day deadline to draw up a plan to safeguard the environment from mining projects. The ban will last until an environmental plan is in place.

3. Cerro Quilish Mountain, Peru: However, when the Newmont Mining Corporation decided to expand their Yanacocha gold mine the Peruvian government ruled in the company’s favor and allowed Newmont to explore the mountain. Almost immediately after Newmont began drilling, on September 2, 2004, citizens organized to protest the desecration of their sacred mountain and strategically placed boulders and vehicles to blockade the Yanacocha Mine. Despite public outcry, Newmont kept the mining operations up and running; the company used helicopters to get workers to the mine site (Earth Island Institute, 2008). After two weeks, nearly 10,000 people gathered to protest the project (Earth Island Institute, 2008). On September 15, 2004 a regional strike and street demonstration caught the Peruvian government and Newmont’s attention. Newmont was forced to sign an accord and agreed to leave the sacred mountain.

4. Ottawa Valley/Kingston: A non-native coalition joined a peaceful protest that had been set up by the Shabot Obaadjiwan First Nation and the Ardoch Algonquin First Nation on June 28th, 2007. Tribal leaders Paula Sherman and Bob Lovelace were fined and sentenced. Lovelace is currently jailed. In February, the Ottawa city council passed a resolution (18-1) to urge Ontario Premier, Dalton McGuinty, to temporarily ban uranium prospecting, exploration and mining in eastern Ontario and the Ottawa River watershed and to conduct a public review of the 1990 Ontario Mining Act.

5. Crandon, Wisconsin: A nearly 30-year battle to stop a proposed metallic sulfide mine, near the Mole Lake Reservation and on ceded territory lands, ended when the Mole Lake Chippewa bought the land and its mineral rights in November, 2006.

6. Costa Rica: The country outlawed all new open-pit mining operations, in 2002.

7. Rosia Montana: Gabriel Resources and the Government of Romania have attempted opening a cyanide gold mine that would affect ancient cemetaries and historical artifacts, as well as requiring an entire town to relocate. Recently, the Romanian Government re-enforced its position in support of a new law proposal to ban cyanide: “We have to say very clearly: if we start to close the existing mines and rehabilitate the affected areas then this will create many jobs in Romania and the Government supports this approach.” The licensing procedure for the project has been stopped for an unlimited period by the Ministry for the Environment and Sustainable Development.

8. Irian Jaya (West Papua): Even with military opposition, residents have stopped production at the Rio Tinto/Freeport McMoRan Grasberg Mine, although the mine continues to operate. Rio Tinto is currently involved in a US lawsuit concerning the company’s participation with the Indonesia military in human rights abuses.

9. Northern British Columbia: Northgate Minerals has been obliged to withdraw consideration of expanding its Kerness South Mine, with another open-pit operation. In September, 2007 a joint federal and provincial environmental review panel said that, while the company met all necessary requirements to proceed, Northgate should not proceed with its project. The panel cited negative impacts on aboriginal peoples, lack of community support for the project, and a loss of the spiritually- valuable Duncan Lake, which would have been used to dispose of tailings. According to the panel, “The economic and social benefits provided by the project, on balance, are out weighed by the risks of significant adverse environmental, social and cultural effects, some of which may not emerge until many years after operations cease.”

10. Saugerties, New York: Beginning in 2001 and ending in November of 2004 an ambitious deep pocketed miner happened to choose a residential area in Saugerties to establish a bluestone mining operation to mine for 20 years or more. The community banded together and stopped the mine.

Grassroots Success Against Dangerous Mines in the US

By Gabriel Caplett

As the Upper Peninsula battles against a metallic sulfide mining district, citizens have turned to neighboring Wisconsin as an example of successful grassroots opposition to unsustainable mining.

Ironically, Kennecott has also found inspiration in Wisconsin. The company has showcased its now-closed Flambeau Mine in attempts to demonstrate that it is capable of operating a successful sulfide mine in the UP.

Kennecott, and the industry as a whole, has learned its lesson in losing to grassroots mining opponents in Wisconsin and around the world.

Kennecott’s Unfulfilled Obligations

In 2007, Kennecott attempted to obtain a Certificate of Completion for its reclamation activities at the Flambeau Mine site, in Rusk County. The Certificate does not address ground and surface water contamination and excludes from scrutiny the 32 acres that comprised the actual mine site.

In Rio Tinto’s March, 2008, “Review” Kennecott Eagle project manager, Jon Cherry, falsely claims that, in Wisconsin, the company “received a Certificate of Completion, which means that we’ve fulfilled all our obligations” at the Flambeau Mine.”

Although the mine has been closed for only 10 years, Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources (DNR) and company monitoring of the Flambeau River shows levels of mine contaminants, including heavy metals, in sediment and crayfish to be 10 to 100 times higher than Kennecott’s independent data anticipated during the Flambeau Mine permit process.

Despite this evidence, Kennecott claims that “the River has been fully protected at every stage of the….Project….Testing shows conclusively ground water quality surrounding the site is as good as it was before mining.”

Although Kennecott’s application predicted that groundwater pollution from the backfilled pit would continue for roughly 4,000 years, the company maintains that a security bond of $12 million was “never intended to address groundwater or surface water contamination that may exist now or in the future.”

While Kennecott did secure state approval and bypassed obtaining the people’s consent to operate its Flambeau mine, citizens did delay the project for years and began a campaign, in 1993, to pass a moratorium on metallic sulfide mining in the state.

Tough Enough?

In 1998, under immense public pressure, the Wisconsin legislature passed the “Churchill” Moratorium bill, requiring that a mining company present an example of a metallic sulfide mine that has operated for 10 years without polluting surface or ground water from the mine or its tailings. It must also show a mine that has been closed for 10 years without polluting surface or ground water.

Although the Wisconsin DNR refused to write administrative rules, thus weakening the law, the state’s “moratorium” is considered the toughest metallic mining law in the nation and has, for a decade, kept Kennecott/Rio Tinto and other transnational mining companies out of operation in the state.

Mining giant BHP-Billiton, through its subsidiary Nicolet Minerals, attempted to bypass the moratorium by citing examples in Arizona, Canada and California. Located south of Crandon, the 55 million ton zinc, copper and lead deposit, first discovered by Exxon Minerals had been stalled by massive citizen opposition since 1976.

By April, 2003, as the examples proved unable to pass scrutiny under Wisconsin law, BHP sold Nicolet Minerals and its surface and mineral rights for the project to Northern Wisconsin Resource Group, a subsidiary of Nicolet Hardwood Corp.

On October 28, 2003, the Mole Lake Sokaogon Chippewa and the Forest County Potawatomi tribes purchased Nicolet Minerals and the lands associated with the proposed project site, ending the 27 year fight between the citizens of Wisconsin and the world’s most powerful mining companies. Two days later, the DNR received a letter from the company announcing its intention to withdraw its permit applications:

“Given the number of sulfide mines that have caused catastrophic water pollution in North America and the lack of reliable data to suggest that modern sulfide mining technology has improved sufficiently to justify taking the risks that this project poses, it is doubtful that [Nicolet Minerals] could, in good faith, meet its burden of proof under the Wisconsin Mining Moratorium Law.”

Sticking it to the Locals

The law remains far stricter than Michigan’s new nonferrous mining laws. In early 2004, at the first public meeting to discuss creating a new law, Michigan Department of Environmental Quality’s Deputy Director, Skip Pruss, instructed a group of mining company officials, lawyers, local authorities, tribes and environmental groups, that Wisconsin’s law would not be a valid topic of discussion. A law and rules were then created that would regulate metallic mining, rather than prevent its use in the state until it could be done safely.

The law stripped local townships of authority to reject or approve metallic mining plans, a tactic that had been highly successful in Wisconsin. The law also failed to include a requirement for mining companies to obtain free, prior and informed consent from the local community and completely disregarded native treaty rights when considering applications.

As in Wisconsin, a community in New York State utilized township zoning authority to stave off an unwanted rock mine, successfully stopping the mine from opening.

Zoning Power in New York

Citizens in Saugerties, New York, used the town’s 1989 zoning laws to prevent the opening of a rock mine within a residential district. The proposed mine, located near federally-recognized wetlands would have excavated roughly 2.8 million cubic yards of stone over a 28-year period and affected the local water table.

Gilbert Shott submitted a mining application to the New York Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC). The application was rejected twice as incomplete. Despite Schott’s faulty application, the DEC ruled that excavation of 1200 pallets of bluestone was not considered “mining” and could be performed without a permit. Shott was stopped twice from excavating stone without a permit.

When the town board upheld a restriction on mining in residential areas, Shott sued the town for enforcing its zoning laws.

After 5 state and federal lawsuits rejecting Shott’s legal claims, Gilbert Shott decided against appealing the decisions in State Supreme Court.

While mining projects have been stopped by communities wanting to protect their fresh water in Wisconsin and New York, other communities have had success in stalling projects. Citizen opposition to molybdenum mining, in Colorado, has been referred to as one of the ‘most effective grassroots environmental movements in the Rocky Mountains.’

Crested Butte’s Battle

The grassroots High Country Citizen’s Alliance and local business group, the Red Lady Coalition, have been fighting US Energy’s Lucky Jack sulfide mine project, on Mount Emmons, in Colorado. The project covers 5,400 acres in mineral claims and reportedly contains roughly 22 million tons of high-grade molybdenum and 220 tons of low-grade ore, making it one of the largest deposits of molybdenum in the world. Opponents have expressed concerns over the high potential for acid mine drainage.

Mt. Emmons has been home to mining operations in the past. An 1884 disaster claiming the lives of more than forty-four miners ended production at the Jokerville Coal Mine. Following exhaustion of anthracite coal at the Big Mine, in 1952, US Energy developed the Keystone Mine, on Mt. Emmons, in the 1960s, eventually selling the project to Amax. In the mid-1970s, four tailings ponds at the mine, which contained high concentrations of heavy metals, failed and drained into nearby Coal Creek. Crested Butte residents forced Amax, by then owned by Phelps-Dodge, to construct a water treatment plant and pay for operating expenses. Dissatisfied with costs associated with efforts to reclaim the tailings mess, the property reverted to US Energy, in 2006. In order to cover costs associated with treating water contamination from its old mining operation, the company is attempting to extract molybdenum from the mountain.

US Energy plans to mill its product on a 100-acre site, near the base of the mountain, using a process involving the use of sodium cyanide. The milled product would be transported through the town of Crested Butte. Mine tailings would be pumped, via a four-mile pipeline, and dumped near the headwaters of Ohio Creek at a 200-acre impoundment that would contain up to 200 feet of mine waste.

In March a Canadian mining company, Kobex Resources, withdrew from the joint venture project. Kobex was to operate and maintain up to a 65% interest in the mine. The company, which raised nearly $30 million to finance the operation, spent at least $8 million on rehabilitation of US Energy’s abandoned mine site and exploration.

In a press release, Kobex expressed that “the regulatory and legal uncertainties which currently exist at the Federal, State, County and Municipal levels, in the Company’s opinion, have become too great to justify the necessary time and major pre-development expenditures that are required to advance this property.”

US Energy, which claims it is entertaining bids for another joint venture from larger mining companies, remains committed to the project, and has hired Samuel Engineering to conduct a pre-feasibility study for the project.

A US Energy press release states, “This project has “world-class” potential, and [U.S. Energy] stands undeterred in its resolve to advance, permit and develop Lucky Jack into a premier primary molybdenum mine that the United States can be proud of.”

On May 14, Colorado’s Mined Reclamation Board rejected a review of the Division of Reclamation, Mining and Safety’s decision to allow US Energy to construct an “exploratory” tunnel, referred to as a “drift” by the industry, on Mt. Emmons. The Board noted that, under current law, prospecting decisions cannot be appealed by the public or any state agency. Opponents maintain that the tunnel is not necessary for exploration purposes and should be considered an un-permitted mining activity, as the tunnel would likely serve as a ventilation shaft or access point for a potential mine. US Energy still needs approval from the town of Crested Butte and Gunnison County to begin construction of the tunnel.

The Red Lady Coalition announced, in March, that one of the world’s largest law firms, DLA Piper, agreed to take their case, pro bono. Also, a state law is being considered that would allow public a degree of access to mine prospecting information, while much information would still be considered proprietary. Currently, Colorado keeps all prospecting information secret. The new law would allow public comment and some evaluation of environmental damages associated with prospecting and exploration.

Watch Our New Movie

Mining corporations try to control their public image and disempower the local people by spinning their projects as a “done deal”. Citizens may in fact lack the monetary and expert resources of a mining corporation, but well-organized, united citizens are a proven, effective grassroots tactic with a lot of power and a glorious history. We can stop metallic sulfide mining in the Upper Peninsula…it is not a done deal.

We will periodically update our website with information and lists about the possible roadblocks for Kennecott and other sulfide and uranium mining companies looking to create a new mining district that will effect our way of life in the UP. So, check back and see what you can do to make sure the sulfide mining deal doesn’t go down in the State of Michigan.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0X7G4GBS0hw[/youtube]

Mergers of mining companies are booming


Mergers of mining companies are booming

By Ambereen Choudhury and Brett Foley
Bloomberg News

Salt Lake TribuneArticle Last Updated:06/14/2008 12:48:47 PM

Metals are the new green on Wall Street, as mining has displaced financial services to become the biggest source of mergers and acquisitions.
The value of announced mining takeovers more than tripled to $199 billion in the first five months of 2008 from a year ago, even as the global pace of M&A dropped 37 percent, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Financial-services companies, the largest driver of merger fees for the past two years, disclosed $173.5 billion of transactions in the first five months. It’s the first time mining mergers have topped the M&A table since Bloomberg began compiling the data in 1998.
”We have moved into the age of commodities,” said Carl Hughes, a London-based partner at Deloitte & Touche LLP, who oversees the firm’s energy and resources practice. ”You clearly have a large number of mining companies just generating cash and profit like there is no tomorrow.”
A $100 billion deal is ”imminently possible,” said Shaun Treacy, who runs Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.’s global metals and mining group from London. That would be in addition to BHP Billiton Ltd.’s $147 billion unsolicited bid this year for Rio Tinto Group, the owner of Kennecott Land and Kennecott Utah Copper, in the world’s largest mining transaction.
”The race is on for valuable, high-quality, scarce resources,” said Treacy. ”Rumors are circulating about various transactions, as there continues to be significant appetite.”
The increase in takeovers is occurring as companies compete for scarce minerals assets and as rising costs make it cheaper to buy rivals than to develop new mines.
”I wouldn’t be surprised to see megadeals in the next six months, whether it is $20 billion or $50 billion and up,” said Tim Goldsmith, 45, a partner at PricewaterhouseCooper’s mining practice in Melbourne. ”There is a global desire to grab whatever resources are available because they are in short supply. There are good times ahead.”
Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc., the world’s second-largest copper producer, Alcoa Inc., the third-biggest aluminum producer, and Grupo Mexico SAB’s Southern Copper Corp. are possible acquisition targets, bankers said. The companies have a combined market value of about $112 billion. Officials at all three companies declined to comment.
Cia. Vale do Rio Doce, the Brazilian iron-ore producer that scrapped a takeover bid for Xstrata Plc, said June 10 that it may sell as much as $15 billion of shares to pursue takeovers.
BHP, the world’s largest mining company, filed for antitrust approval last month in Europe, the U.S., Australia and South Africa to acquire Rio Tinto, which would create a producer of a third of the world’s iron ore and become the biggest provider of copper, aluminum and power-station coal.
The value of BHP’s offer for Rio is calculated from the day it sweetened its all-share bid to 3.4 BHP shares for each Rio share on Feb. 6.
”It’s a frenzy, and I don’t see it changing,” said Paul Knight, 48, the co-global head of UBS’ metals and mining business, who is based in London. ”Boards have confidence that this environment is going to stay.”
Much of the M&A business is being generated by Russian, Chinese and Indian companies snapping up assets to provide metals those economies need to fuel construction booms. It also has been boosted by demand for other commodities, from gold in the Middle East to copper and aluminum in emerging countries.
Aluminum Corp. of China and the Chinese state-owned Sinosteel Corp. have spent more than $16 billion buying stakes in mining assets worldwide to diversify their sources of raw materials after coal prices tripled and iron ore rose 65 percent this year. India’s Vedanta Resources Plc agreed to pay $2.6 billion last month for the assets of bankrupt Asarco LLC, its first North United Co.

Great Lakes Not a Dump

Will the Great Lakes become a nuclear dump?

No way!

But unless we join together and make our voices heard, the Canadian government will build a site right on the shores of Lake Huron to store radioactive waste from 20 nuclear plants for hundreds of years.

As if that wasn’t bad enough: Oil company Shell Canada wants to build a giant refinery along five miles of the St. Clair River that will process 250,000 barrels of heavy crude oil daily – and put one of our most important waterways at risk.

Lake Huron and the St. Clair River provide drinking water to millions of Michigan citizens. They are an important waterway that carries trade and commerce on the Great Lakes, creating jobs and opportunity in Michigan. Putting a dangerous nuclear dump and a highly polluting oil refinery along these bodies of water threatens our health and quality of life.

Instead of treating us like a good neighbor and the Great Lakes State, Canada is treating us like the Great Dumping State.

The nuclear waste site and the oil refinery pose a real danger to our families today and for generations to come.

Click here to say no to Great Lakes dumping

Bill Sells Superior National Forest Land to Polymet

Bill Sells Superior National Forest Land to Polymet

Duluth News Tribune – 06/06/2008

Legislation in the U.S. House would sell 6,700 acres in the Superior National Forest to the Polymet copper company without an environmental assessment or public input.

The federal land is precisely where the company hopes to mine for copper, nickel, platinum and palladium as early as next year.

It would be the first major sale of Superior Forest land to a private company.

Continue reading

We need a new shade of green

We need a new shade of green
Jeff Gibbs

We live in a lite-green time. And it’s not working.Despite corporations, politicians and quite a few citizens being obsessed with going green our national, regional, and personal emissions are going up, up, and away. Every nation that signed Kyoto, including — yes, the supposedly eco-friendly Europeans — are headed in the WRONG direction: their greenhouse gases are rising. Indeed, the renewable energy revolution is so not working that Europe is rushing to build dozens of coal and nuclear-fired power plants.
We were told that if environmentalists got into bed with corporations, that if we all just did our one little thing, that if we changed our light bulbs, bought a hybrid car, and supported alternative energy, that things would begin to turn around. It hasn’t, and it won’t. If every person in the country did every suggestion in Al Gore’s film, it would only achieve a 22% cut in greenhouses emissions—and some scientists say we need a 90% cut to save ourselves.
The lite-green time is full of hope and talk of sustainability, opportunity, “positive solutions.” “Green is the new green” they say. We CAN have our planet and eat it too! There is “no conflict between the economy and the environment.” Well news flash: all that stuff you consume comes from SOMEWHERE on planet earth. And all the pollutants spit out when the stuff is made, transported, consumed, and thrown away, go somewhere on planet earth.
When we eat sushi, endangered blue fin tuna die.
In a day’s worth of flying, your seat on that plane consumes more fuel than an SUV driver does in an entire year.
Every time you flick on a light switch, fire up an iPod, or turn on your computer to write, a mountain in West Virginia is dying so that we might have the miracle of electricity.
So there is indeed a conflict. We can’t have it all. We can save the planet or our lifestyles—not both.
So what is it that keeps us from leaping into action given the dire environmental dilemmas we face?
One strong factor is the mixed messages of the lite-green movement. When Al Gore says change your light bulb while taking flight after flight and limo ride after limo ride—he is sending us a double message. I would prefer that my drug counselor not have a needle sticking out of his arm.
The lite-green movement plays on a basic human need. We all want to feel optimistic. But optimism at the expense of making a real plan to save ourselves is the opposite of hope. It’s ultimately suicidal. What is keeping us from robustly challenging the plans put forth that say we can sequester the carbon (unproven) offset of our flights (doesn’t work) or run civilization on windmills or ethanol? (Ethanol = food riots and gas is still double the price.)
For me, real hope comes from a full assessment of the mess we’re in. How else might we make a plan to save ourselves? You don’t say “I don’t want to know if I have cancer unless you have a solution” or “I am not going to turn around and see if my house is on fire unless you hand me a hose.”
Real hope also comes from community. By community I don’t mean “localization.” That’s good, but it’s not going to save us. For me the emotional, spiritual and mutually supportive aspects of community are what’s important. It is the coming together for mutual aid and support. It is the banding together to deal with a powerful threat–even if the threat is ourselves. AA comes to mind as quite good at this.
So instead of a lite-green movement, I propose a new shade of green: dark green. Healthy nature is dark green, not the pale green of trees struggling to survive in a dryer, hotter, more polluted world.
The first step on the path to recovery—of becoming dark green–is acceptance. Humanity is in a real mess and there’s a good chance we’re not going to get out of it alive. This really sucks and avoiding talking about it only makes it worse. Of course, those who really don’t want to give up their sushi or flights or electric toys or leaf blowers and weed whackers won’t want to hear any doom and gloom, because it might ruin their buzz and insert some guilt to that magical journey to India, China, or South America.
But through acceptance, and openness, and making plans to save ourselves that actually stand a chance of working, dark greens begin to transcend the doom and gloom, just as cancer patients report the freedom and hyper-reality that come from facing the disease square on and alcoholics in recovery find a heavy burden lifted and spirits soaring.
Earth First’s motto is that action is the antidote to despair. I think that’s right but the action must be paired with a full understanding of what’s called for in these times. And to the extent that our lifestyle is addictive (and it’s VERY addicting) ,we all need to get into a recovery program of sorts to even think straight about this. Otherwise our actions—whether spiking trees or ethanol or flying about the planet complaining that fossil fuel use is killing us—may be misguided or even make things worse.
Now I am not expecting tons of other folks are ready to be dark greens. The lite-green movement will not go down easy because none of us want this amazing ride we’ve had hepped up on fossil fuels to be over.
If so email me. We have to talk. Time for the dark greens to come out of hiding, stop being depressed, and help lead the way toward a real plan to save ourselves, or at least make what is waiting for us when the oil, gas and coal run out and the planet falls apart, more humane.
In crafting a way that we might survive this and save as much of this glorious, amazing, full-of-life planet we live on as possible, I find a deep amount of hope. And after all that is the only task before humanity, whether we know it or not: save the planet, or lose everything.

Jeff Gibbs is a musician and filmmaker from TC. Write him at JeffGibbsTC@aol.com.

Kirtland’s Warbler Survey Informational Meeting

Date: June 5th, 2008
Time: 7pm
Place: Peter White Public Library-Dandelion Cottage Room, Marquette, MI

Information about the federal Kirtland’s Warbler Survey Program will be given along with maps of jackpine stands and survey information. The survey will be focusing on singing males. Christie Deloria Sheffield, a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Biologist and Kirtland’s Warbler Survey leader for Marquette County, will be in attendance and available for questions. If you would like more information, call Nancy Moran at the Yellow Dog Watershed Preserve (906-345-9223).

The Dennis Muchmore Story

How things relate to one another: The Dennis Muchmore story

by: Eric B.

Sun May 25, 2008 at 12:00:11 PM EDT

What do Cliff Taylor, the Michigan United Conservation Clubs, Nestle, Eagle Mine, and George Bush all have in common?  Why, it’s Dennis Muchmore, longtime Lansing lobbyist.

I first winced a couple of years ago when I first heard the name Dennis Muchmore, when he was named to head Michigan United Conservation Clubs.  You see, the name Muchmore, Deb Muchmore, was familiar to me as the name of the P.R. flack for the Ice Mountain bottling facility in Mecosta County. Later, she added the Kennecott Mine Project to her client list. Indeed, she and Dennis Muchmore are wife and husband.

Today, among other things (we’ll get to those later), Muchmore is the head of MUCC, an organization perhaps best known as the principle driver behind the state’s bottle deposit law.  The most notable thing about MUCC’s history has been its willingness to break ranks with … well, whomever, and go its own way.  In recent years, as some of it’s more pre-eminent presidents have passed away, the group’s reputation has become that it is essentially a tool of the Sportsmen for Bush crowd, people who say they like to kill things with guns and eat them, but that the shape of the environment isn’t so important to them (supporting President Breaks Everything He Touches is an easy fit).  Indeed, not only have the Muchmores given money primarily to Republicans (Deborah Muchmore, who used to be Deborad Wudyka back when Ice Mountain was Perrier instead of Nestle, gave two grand to him in ’04, as did he … and someone bearing the name Dennis Muchmore and listed as a consultant for DHR International gave the RNC $2,100) over the years, but Dennis Muchmore himself was a Bush Pioneer in both 2000 and 2004 (that is, he raised more than $100,000 for Pres. BEHT).  Muchmore isn’t just a Lansing lobbyist whose firm previously defeated a public smoking ban and who raises lots of money for terrible presidents while also presiding over one of the state’s most influential outdoors advocacy groups, but he’s also a vice president of a proposed ethanol project in the Gratiot County city of Ithaca.

But, why today do we concern ourselves with Dennis Muchmore?  Because he’s putting his fund raising talents to work for Cliff Taylor.  Muchmore is apparently part of the host committee (which itself includes Joe Schwarz and Tim Walberg) for a fund raising event in Jackson at the end of the month.  Speaking there will be Steve Forbes.  $500 gets you in the door, $3,400 gets you and a guest a seat at a special roundtable with Taylor.

I could leave open to contemplation of why the head of what is supposed to be the head of a non-partisan outdoors group is raising money for a supreme court candidate notable for his anti-environmental positions and reckless rulings that have given the state’s supreme court the reputation as one of the most tainted and worst across the country, but we already have the answer.  The head of MUCC is raising money for Cliff Taylor (and other Republicans) because he’s primarily just a lobbyist and is very good at it.

Action Alert to protest violent tactics against opponents to mining projects – regionwide alert

May 24, 2008

Dear Supporters of the Wisconsin Resource Protection Council,

Since the shameful decision of Michigan’s Department of Environmental Quality (MDEQ) to approve permits to Kennecott’s controversial nickel sulfide mine on the Upper Peninsula’s Yellow Dog Plains, the opposition has mounted a variety of legal, administrative, and political challenges that have delayed the project. Despite growing public opposition to the project, Kennecott has tried to portray the opposition as an unrepresentative minority. This is exactly what Kennecott tried to do in Ladysmith. In both cases, the tactics of the company divided neighbor against neighbor and split the community into hostile factions.

In Michigan, these tactics have led to a violent assault on Cynthia Pryor’s husband, Robert, while Cynthia was attending a contested case hearing challenging MDEQ’s decision to permit Kennecott’s sulfide mine. He was assaulted by three unknown males in the late hours of the evening at his cabin which is located in a remote area near Big Bay. The three identified themselves by asking if he “was one of those anti-mining guys.” When he asked them to leave they knocked him to the ground and beat him, leaving him unconscious outside in the freezing rain. Cynthia, one of the most outspoken critics of the proposed mine, called the crime “beyond appalling, shocking and distressing – in my mind it is attempted murder. Bob is 60 years old, was attacked by three younger men and left to the elements…The fear and shock reverberating through our small community is something that should make everyone take note. What are the stakes in this project that would lead to such violence against a citizen of this state – unprovoked and at their home?”

Mining companies have increasingly resorted to violent tactics against opponents to mining projects in the Third World, but this is the first instance where pro-mining individuals have used violence to intimidate those who dare criticize ecologically dangerous mining projects in Michigan, Wisconsin or Minnesota. It is important that bureaucrats, company officials and politicians hear from citizens who are outraged at this assault. Their names and phone numbers are:

Governor Jennifer Granholm 517 373-3400

DEQ Director Steve Chester 517 373-7917

DNR Director Rebecca Humphries 517 373-2329

Jon Cherry – Kennecott Minerals 906 225-5791

Tom Albanese – CEO Rio Tinto (Kennecott’s parent company) 011 44 20 7781-2000 (London Main #)

Shortly before this violent assault, several members of the Michigan Coalition against Kennecott’s proposed mine attended Rio Tinto’s annual shareholder meeting in London on April 17. The Michigan delegation included Susan La Fernier, Vice President of the Keweenaw Bay Indian Community, Fran Whitman from Friends of the Land of Keweenaw, Gabriel Caplett, from Northwoods Wilderness Recovery and Yellow Dog Summer, and Cynthia Pryor from the Yellow Dog Watershed Preserve.

Susan La Fernier tried to ask the Rio Tinto board how they planned to protect and guarantee the Keweenaw Bay Indian Community’s treaty rights to hunt, fish and gather on lands in the ceded territory of Michigan but was interrupted and cut off by Chairman of the Board Paul Skinner. Roger Moody, of Partizans and Gabriel Caplett called out from the audience, demanding that Skinner show some respect for an Indigenous Nation representative. Susan was able to continue, concluding that “If metallic sulphide mining is allowed to proceed on this land, not only will our territorial sovereignty be jeopardized, but also our survival as a people.”

Paul Skinner asked CEO Tom Albanese to respond to Susan’s comments. He responded that the Eagle Project had the support of the majority of the community with only a small group opposed to it. He also pointed to the successful reclamation of the Flambeau copper mine in Wisconsin, which had now become a park. Gabriel Caplett responded that the local project manager, Jon Cherry, has lied to the community and to the company’s shareholders about the degree of local community support for the project. Cynthia Pryor responded that Tom Albanese was terribly misinformed about community support and needed to visit the area and meet with the community without Jon Cherry. Gabriel also informed the board that Kennecott had not received a Certificate of Completion for the entire mine site, contrary to the company’s statements to shareholders. After the meeting, the Michigan delegation met with Tom Albanese and Cynthia presented him with group resolutions against the mine and 10,000 signatures from an on-line petition against the mine. Gabriel gave him a copy of Roscoe Churchill and Laura Furtman’s book, The Buzzards Have Landed: The Real Story of the Flambeau Mine . The book documents ongoing pollution at the Flambeau mine site.

As Paul Skinner pointed out at the meeting, Kennecott’s Eagle Project is just one of many projects being planned for a new mining district in Michigan. Skinner announced its Lakeview nickel-copper project, located in central lower Michigan is in the exploration stage. Other companies, such Bitterroot Resources and Trans Superior have been exploring for uranium in the western Upper Peninsula (see map by Save the Wild UP). Trans Superior reports on the Bitterroot Resources website (http://www.bitterrootresources.com/s/Home.asp) that they are encouraged by the area geology and the results of their initial exploration activities in the area. Bitterroot is a partner with Cameco, the largest Canadian uranium company. Cameco is currently negotiating with China to supply uranium for nuclear power plants. Michigan does not have regulations for uranium exploration, mining or waste disposal. The Keweenaw Bay Indian Community has requested that the U.S. Forest Service conduct an Environmental Impact Statement on uranium exploration to consider whether there may be significant radiation exposures to the public and the environment during exploration. Ongoing uranium mineral exploration is located within the Ceded Territories of the Lake Superior Chippewa.

Finally, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has taken the first step toward placing the coaster brook trout on the endangered species list. They have begun a status review to gather more information about the coaster brook trout. The only self-sustaining populations in the U.S. are in four Lake Superior streams. One is the Salmon Trout River in the Upper Peninsula where Kennecott proposes to construct a nickel sulfide mine beneath the Salmon Trout headwaters. The Sierra Club and the Huron Mountain Club sued the agency for failing to act on petitions to list the coaster brook trout submitted in 2006. Officials blamed the delay on budget constraints. The agency plans to make a tentative determination by December 2008.

The Wisconsin Assembly voted to repeal Wisconsin’s Nuclear Plant Moratorium Law but the bill was not taken up by the Senate. Nuclear proponents plan to re-introduce the bill in the next session. Stay tuned.

Sincerely,

Al Gedicks, Exec. Sec. Gedicks.al@uwlax.edu

New Comics by Local Artist John Taylor

“A good tactic is one that your people enjoy” by Walter Wink

John Taylor is a local artist from Marquette. John is currently working on a comic book about Kennecott’s Eagle Project that he will have finished and printed in the next couple of weeks. John frequently visits our office for information and updates to incorporate information into his artwork. He is involved in Marquette Citizens for Peace and Justice and considering attending Northern Michigan University for the art and design program. Save The Wild UP strongly encourages other citizens to also incorporate their hobbies and talents into fighting metallic sulfide mining and protecting our freshwater resources. Please send pictures, explanations, or final works to info@savethewildup.org.