Kennecott Withdraws Woodland Road Wetlands Permit

Woodland Road permit withdrawn

By JOHN PEPIN Journal Staff Writer

ISHPEMING – With a deadline for a permit decision looming, Woodland Road LLC has temporarily withdrawn its application for a permit with the Michigan Department of Natural Resources and Environment.

The DNRE was set to issue a decision last Friday on whether to issue a permit for the 22-mile $50 million road project.

Read more http://www.miningjournal.net/page/content.detail/id/543985.html?nav=5006

Read the brief letter from Woodland Road LLC, aka Kennecott: DNRE withdrawal letter Woodland Road 5 7 10

Teaching to be Held on Sacred Sites and Treaty Rights

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE    May 10, 2010

Teaching to be Held on Sacred Sites and Treaty Rights

CONTACT:  standfortheland@gmail.com

A teaching on treaty rights and sacred sites will be held on Saturday, May 15 at 11 a.m. at Eagle Rock (migi zii wa sin), in Michigamme Township.  The teaching is open to the public.

Eagle Rock (migi zii wa sin) has been assessed as a sacred place by the Keweenaw Bay Indian Community’s Tribal Historic Preservation Office and is eligible for listing on the National Historic Register as a traditional cultural property.

Tribal members and treaty rights speakers will discuss the importance of preserving Native American sacred places and explain First Amendment rights to religious freedom.  An overview of the Treaty of 1842, in which the United States government ceded the area to the Ojibwa, will be also given.  The public and mine supporters are encouraged to attend.

According to one speaker, Jessica Koski, a member of the Keweenaw Bay Indian Community, “the event at Eagle Rock this Saturday is a very important educational opportunity.  Our struggle for the land and Eagle Rock is one of many.  Native Americans and indigenous peoples throughout the world face similar struggles to protect their homelands, sacred places and cultures.”

“The Constitution of the United States of America embraces the concept of liberty, freedom and justice for all, but Native Americans have been repeatedly denied this widespread democratic belief,” says Koski.

“Our stand at Eagle Rock is an important one,” says Koski.  “This is a time of global environmental destruction and also a time of cultural revitalization for our people.  We need to protect our last remaining sacred places and assert our rights and values for the land, water, plants and wildlife.  Our desire and right to continue our cultural traditions depends upon the protection of our land bases and natural resources.  Asserting our Treaty Rights will continue to be an extremely important strategy and will challenge the privileges afforded multinational corporations and the state.”

Please contact standfortheland@gmail.com for any questions or comments or to schedule an interview.

Citizens Rally in Marquette

MQT CO. Court House

Over 100 citizens gathered in downtown Marquette yesterday in support of clean water, the environment and activist Cynthia Pryor. Signs reading “Honk! for Lake Superior” and  “Keep it Fresh” were held by participants as well as “Hey Kennecott – No Trespassing!” The group walked from Washington Street to the court house on Baraga where they filled the front steps leading up to the main entrance.

At the pre-trial conference yesterday for Cynthia Pryor, County Prosecutor Dave Payant made an offer to accept a guilty plea and a delay of sentence, giving Pryor credit for her jail time and wiping her record clean. Pryor’s attorney Kevin Koch is reviewing that offer, however a jury trial is scheduled for Tuesday, June 15, 8:00 am in Courtroom 215 at the Marquette County Courthouse before Judge Roger Kangas.

For video coverage and photos go to   http://www.standfortheland.com

For local media coverage   TV-6:    http://www.uppermichiganssource.com/news/story.aspx?id=453744

Mining Journal http://www.miningjournal.net/page/content.detail/id/543888.html?nav=5006

PHOTO’s by Marjorie O’Brien

Join Eagle Rock Stand

Levi Tadgerson urges everyone to visit, support, camp out and pray for the group staying at Eagle Rock on the Yellow Dog Plains. This inspirational video was recorded by Gabriel Caplett, from atop the Rock over the weekend. Blessings to the folks staying there and protecting what is sacred.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zv542P75-fw

Up-to-Date Information on Eagle Rock can be found at http://standfortheland.com

Huffington Post FRONT PAGE GREEN  Article: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/cynthia-pryor/a-sacred-fire-is-burning_b_567652.html

Eagle Rock late summer 2009

Most Recent EPA News

By: Adrian B.

According to Steve Roy at the Region 5 EPA, in the department of Under Water Injection Permits (Sec. V), there is currently no set timeline for the decision on Kennecott’s withdrawal of their UIC Sec. V permit.

The Steve said that the current hold up is in part due to the fact that they are transitioning to a new Director of Region 5 EPA. Dr. Susan Headman, an appointee of the Obama Administration, is tentatively scheduled to start her term at the EPA office sometime during May, Steve’s best guess was May 18th.

The Keweenaw Bay Indian Community has requested a meeting with Dr. Headman when she takes office, to discuss both the UIC permit, and the issue of ceded territory. It will be up to Dr. Headman whether or not she will grant the meeting.

Native American activists protest at Eagle Rock

Native American activists protest at Eagle Rock

by Gabriel Caplett

April 25, 2010

Native American activists were setting up a tent camp at Eagle Rock Saturday, expecting to stay indefinitely peacefully protesting the Kennecott Eagle Minerals Company nickel and copper mine on the Yellow Dog Plains.

“I’m here because this is a sacred spot to our people,” said Charlotte Loonsfoot, 37, a Keweenaw Bay Indian Community member from Baraga who organized the stand at the rock. “They’re going to drill underneath that rock. I’ve seen the spot, it’s like feet from the rock and it’s huge – the hole is huge.”

Loonsfoot and Chalsea Smith, 20, another KBIC member from Baraga, arrived Friday as the sun was setting, driving a small car packed with provisions up a dusty Marquette County Road AAA to Eagle Rock.

“We’re going to try to sit here and protect it for as long as possible until maybe we can do something like stop them,” Smith said, referring to Kennecott. “They don’t care about the land or anything that happens. They just want the money. As long as they get the money, who cares? ‘Cuz they don’t live here. They won’t be living here all the time. So they’ll just pack up and leave and go to the next project because they get paid. Money drives people.”

Kennecott officials said they were open to talks with the KBIC.

“The invitation for a cooperative relationship for discussion of issues and working together to address both parties’ interests – that is an open invitation that we hope the tribe will accept,” Deb Muchmore, a Kennecott spokeswoman in Lansing , said Saturday. “We’re looking for solutions.”

Kennecott recently sent a letter to the KBIC informing them construction at the mine site was to begin and stating they wanted to talk with tribal officials about access to Eagle Rock. According to Muchmore, the primary goal for Kennecott is to ensure safety for tribal members while at the site.

Red-lettered signs saying “No Trespassing” had been put up by Kennecott this week after anti-mine activist Cynthia Pryor of Big Bay was arrested Tuesday for trespassing. Pryor, who was freed from jail Thursday on a personal recognizance bond, allegedly stood in the path of a bulldozer, hoping to stop its work. Pryor is scheduled to appear in Marquette County District Court May 6.

Loonsfoot and Smith had been to the site the day after Pryor was arrested.

“We were here before and there was no signs here,” Loonsfoot said.

The bulldozer was preparing the site for erecting a fence and Kennecott beginning to construct surface facilities for the mine this summer. Kennecott is leasing 120 acres from the state. Long swaths had been cleared through the jack pine and stumps.

Loonsfoot and Smith slept in their car near the base of Eagle Rock Friday night. They climbed the tree-covered outcropping Saturday morning to pray. Loonsfoot leading the ceremony, Smith learning the traditional ways of her elders.

Many more people were expected to gather at the site over the weekend. Loonsfoot said she sent e-mail invitations to all tribal members and the tribal council. She also posted word of the gathering on her Facebook page.

“Everybody that I know knows that I’m coming out here,” Loonsfoot said.

Smith said she knew of others who were packing up food or other items and were en route to the rock, which is located within 10 miles southwest of Big Bay.

Loonsfoot said those coming to the site plan to camp and hold ceremonies. A sacred fire is expected to be lit and a tribal medicine man is set to visit the gathering Sunday from Minnesota, offering advice.

“Something will happen,” Loonsfoot said. “I trust the creator’s going to help us because we feel like we’re doing the right thing.”

Kennecott is apparently not planning to try to prevent the gathering.

“They have an interest in expressing their viewpoint on the project,” Muchmore said, “And we’re not going to interfere with that.”

National and Upper Peninsula members of the American Indian Movement in Republic, Trout Creek, Baraga and other places were also invited.

“Most of the big ones are in Arizona and word is out to them and hopefully they’ll be coming up,” Loonsfoot said. “We want people to come and help us if they believe in this and are strong with it.”

In her invitation, Loonsfoot told her fellow Native Americans, “The time is now. We have to go protect what is right and true to our people and our future.”

In addition to tribal rights to visit the site, those Indians gathering are also concerned about potential damage to the environment from the mine, including the Salmon Trout River.

Loonsfoot sighed deeply and turned away from the winds gusting into her face as the sun sank Friday.

“That’s such a beautiful spot and they’re blocking it from us to go and do our fasts, our spiritual ceremonies and everything else that we do up there,” Loonsfoot said. “And I don’t believe that they should be doing that to us because we are connected to the earth. The whole water thing, you know. Women are protectors of the water – and this is our main reason why we’re here.”

Read more  http://standfortheland.com

TAKE ACTION: To Support Cynthia and Protect Our Public Land

Citizen Jailed

Please act now and sign a petition to the EPA, DNRE and many others to support Cynthia’s actions and help to protect our right to recreate on public lands.

Support the Legal Fund

Donate to our legal fund to support Cynthia in court and to support anyone else who finds themselves in a similar situation in days to come.

Judge Kangas Removes Citizen Cynthia Pryor from County Jail

Earlier this afternoon, Cynthia Pryor was removed from the Marquette County Jail on a personal recognizance bond.  At this point it is unclear why Judge Roger W. Kangas released Pryor,  removing the cash bond option.

Upon her arraignment on Wednesday, Pryor pled NOT guilty and refused to pay $100 bond required by the court for release. She was returned to the jail and was expecting to remain there until May 6. Judge Kangas changed his ruling today after a brief discussion with Pryor today.

She will appear at a pre-trial hearing scheduled for Thursday, May 6, at 10:30 am.

We will pass along further details as they become available.