Author Archives: Save the Wild UP
Enough is Enough! Worldwide, communites tell mining companys “NO More!”
Here are some story’s on sucessful opposition movements from around the world.
Mendoza, Argentina says no more mining!
Peru Town votes on mine plan amid pollution fears
Eastern European Governements Agree to Tackle Mining Pollution
Salt Lake County No. 2 in U.S. for toxic deposits due to Kennecott
The following is from a March 2 story in the Deseret Morning News.
” Salt Lake County ranks second in the nation as a depository for the most materials containing toxic substances.
According to the Environmental Protection Agency’s annual report of the top 20 counties in the country that have these deposits, 120.3 million pounds of materials containing toxic substances were deposited in Salt Lake County in 2007.
That puts Salt Lake County behind Alaska’s Northwest Arctic County, with 615.3 million pounds of materials deposited, but ahead of Humboldt County, Nev., which had 84.6 million pounds of materials deposited — and 17 other counties with smaller numbers.
Ostensibly, Salt Lake County’s numbers are so high because Kennecott Utah Copper, one of the world’s largest copper mines, is located in the county.”
“Do you think the Grand Canyon is a good place to mine?”
The following is from a March 1, commentary ran in the Statesman.com
“Nineteenth-century explorer John Wesley Powell wrote that “the wonders of the Grand Canyon cannot be adequately represented in symbols of speech, nor by speech itself. The resources of the graphic art are taxed beyond their powers in attempting to portray its features. Language and illustration combined must fail.”
You would think that the federal government would have the power to protect a place so extraordinary that it leaves visitors at a loss for words. But under the 1872 Mining Law, the Forest Service said its hands were tied when it approved uranium mining operations a stone’s throw from a national treasure.”
Click here for the whole story
Click here for additional information on our threatened national tresures!
Powell Township Officials host “Economic Business Meeting” with Kennecott and LSCP
“Vince Bevins, Powell Township supervisor, and Jim Gauthier, from the Powell Township Planning Commission, sponsored an “Economic Business Meeting”, March 3, at the Powell Township Hall, in Big Bay. Their guest presenters were Jon Cherry, Kennecott Eagle Project manager; Bill Henry, a project planner for Kennecott; and Gregg Nominelli, from the Lake Superior Community Partnership. The meeting, intended to outline economic opportunities related to Kennecott’s potential mining activity, was attended by 64 citizens. Bevins said that he, and Gauthier, initiated the meeting because the Big Bay “economy is going down the toilet.””
New Wilderness Area in the UP?
Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore may house the newest Wilderness are in Michigan.
“MUNISING — The effort to designate the 11,739 acres of the Beaver Basin as wilderness at Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore is making its way to Congress.
The National Park Service is working to finalize the establishment of the Beaver Basin Wilderness Area, which is one component of the park’s General Management Plan completed and approved in 2004 after five years of planning and extensive public involvement.”
Click Here for the full story in the Mining Journal
Local governments outspend feds to protect Great Lakes
TRAVERSE CITY, MI — A recent report released by a coalition of Great Lakes area local governments argues that the federal governments of the United States and Canada are not shouldering their fair shares of costs to care for the lakes, said a recent Associated Press story.
The report claimed local governments spend about $15 billion annually on Great Lakes environmental programs while the
Save The Wild UP presentation in Menominee well attended
Mining Seen as Serious Threat To U.P. Resources
By Kurt Steidl, Eagle Herald Staff Writer, ksteidl@eagleherald.com
STEPHENSON– A group based in Lake Township has long expressed its concerns about the effects of exploration for metallic sulfide mineral mine along the Menominee River in the township.
The group, known as Front 40, invited a speaker to its Wednesday meeting to lay out problems that have stricken other areas with mines.
The speaker, Alexis Raney of Save The Wild U.P., kept the audience of close to 40 spellbound for almost an hour with graphic photographs of landscape damaged by acid mine drainage.
“It was founded specifically in an effort to address some of the threats seen by acid mine drainage,” Raney said of her group.
For the full story: 2008-0221-eagle-herald-front-40-amd-presentation.pdf
2005 NY Times article may give glimpse into UP future
Click here to read the whole article
“It was quiet and peaceful when we moved in, but by the time we decided to move last March, there were 24 gas wells within a mile radius of our house,” Ms. Utesch said.
The couple was helpless to stop the encroachment because they did not own the mineral rights to their land. So-called split estates, where ownership of the land does not include whatever bounty (gas, oil, gold, uranium, etc.) lies beneath it, are common in the United States.
“Often the landowner doesn’t know that they don’t own the mineral rights until the oil company shows up to start drilling,” said John S. Lowe, professor of energy law at Southern Methodist University in Dallas. Real estate agents rarely address the matter, he said, “and most people anxious to close on a home don’t read the fine print of the deed.”
They should, because the law in most states allows whoever owns or leases mineral rights to do whatever is “reasonably necessary” to extract subterranean riches. As Ms. Utesch can attest, this includes not only digging wells but also running roads and pipelines across a yard as well as setting up housing for employees at the well site. Ms. Utesch said that she barely broke even on her house when she sold it and would probably have made money if the drillers hadn’t shown up, because nearby real estate prices were rising rapidly. The man who bought her house, she said, builds custom-made jeeps and trucks with large wheels, and saw the gas well workers as potential customers.
Canadian city coucil takes a stand against Uranium mining
The following excerpt is from a Feb. 28 CBC news story, click here for the whole story
“Ottawa city council is urging Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty to temporarily ban uranium prospecting, exploration and mining in eastern Ontario and the Ottawa River watershed.
The council voted 18-1 Wednesday in favour of a motion calling on the province to impose the moratorium immediately and to keep it in effect until:
- All environmental and health issues related to uranium mining are “resolved.”
- There are settlement plans for all related aboriginal land claims.
The same motion calls on the province to do a public review of its 1990 Mining Act.”
I hope this will remind us that there are options and opportunities to say “no”.
This is NOT a DONE DEAL!
Here is some additional information on the people uniting against Uranium mining in Canada:
http://www.cbc.ca/canada/ottawa/story/2008/02/15/ot-contempt-080215.html
http://www.cbc.ca/canada/ottawa/story/2008/02/13/ot-algonquin-080213.html
http://www.cbc.ca/canada/ottawa/story/2007/10/19/ot-sharbot-lake-071019.html
http://www.cbc.ca/canada/ottawa/story/2007/09/18/ot-algonquins-070918.html
