Coaster Brook Trout Update

Efforts to have the Coaster Brook Trout listed as a federally endangered species could pay off by September.  Coaster Brook Trout are a population of Brookies that are much larger than average and spend most of their lives in the open waters of Lake Superior, only returning to rivers to spawn.  For more information read the article in the Mining Journal.

Also of interest is the Mining Journal article on the state of the Great Lakes and the role citizens and elected officials play in its future.   Read it and then write your legislators and tell them to get involved! 

Winners of the Video Challenge

The results are in from the public voting for the Save The Wild UP Video Challenge.

Drum Roll Please…

The Grand Prize Winner with 1907 votes is Josh Leo for his Video titled “Sulfide Mining Will Damage Michigan“. Prizes for the Grand Prize Winner include $2500 & a holiday package in the Huron Mountains of the Upper Peninsula.

The First Runner-Up with 1406 votes is Peter Schriemer for his video titled “Michigan’s Water and Wildlife“. Prizes for the First Runner-Up include a beautiful limited edition Coaster Brook Trout Print and a gift package from The Grocer’s Daughter Chocolate

The Second Runner-Up is Scott Lynch for his video titled “Kennecott Eagle Mine“. Prizes for the First Runner-Up include a beautiful limited edition Coaster Brook Trout Print and a gift package from The Grocer’s Daughter Chocolate.

Finalist Prize Package Every finalist will receive a prize package that includes a No Sulfide Mining T-Shirt (coming pretty soon!), Greg Brown’s new CD Yellow Dog (benefits the Yellow Dog Watershed Preserve) and a 1# bag of Higher Grounds Trading Co. coffee (fair-trade, shade grown, organic).

Save The Wild UP would like to give a heartfelt thanks to all the participants in this contest. Your creativitity and skills were enjoyed by thousands. Keep up the good work folks and get out and enjoy Michigan’s water!

We also want to thank:

The Water Festival

Earthwork Music

Grocer’s Daughter Chocolate

Higher Grounds Trading Co.

Absolute Michigan

Thunder Bay Inn

UPWaterFront.com

Michigan Waterways: Not For Sale

Private Mining Interests Try to Put a Price on Michigan’s Waterways
by Dick Huey

Salmon Trout RiverAmid the ancient forests and rocky outcroppings of the Upper Peninsula’s Yellow Dog Plains, the beautiful Salmon Trout River cuts a serpentine path as it alternates between flat water and cascading rapids on its way to the world’s premiere fresh water body—Lake Superior.

This river, set in pristine surroundings, is far removed from the hustle and bustle of Detroit and Lansing, but has nonetheless become a symbol of the best and worst of Michigan. The river is a testament to a state fiercely proud of its natural assets but increasingly neglectful of them in the face of budget crises and political combativeness.

While citizens discuss the economic future of the U.P. in terms of a clean environment, recreation and tourism, the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality (MDEQ) has revealed that its priorities lie elsewhere. The MDEQ is bumbling its way through a faulty review of a permit application to blast an acid-generating mine right beneath one of Lake Superior’s premiere tributaries, the Salmon Trout River. Despite an outcry from concerned citizens, the review of this proposed mine has taken place with the apparent blessing of a so-called ‘environmental Governor,’ who has consistently ducked and dodged the issue while the future of the Great Lakes hangs in the balance.

Read the rest of Not For Sale in Critical Moment magazine.

Governor Milliken: Join Voices, Protect Environment

From the Traverse City Record-Eagle and Detroit Free Press:

Let’s join voices to protect environment

No resource is more important to Michigan’s future than the Great Lakes. They literally surround us, leading to our identification as the “Great Lakes State.”

Any action that could threaten the quality of the Great Lakes must be approached with extreme caution, particularly by the State of Michigan. That is why all people who care about the future of this state and of the Great Lakes should be very concerned about a proposal now before the state Department of Environmental Quality to blast a nickel mine in the Upper Peninsula under the headwaters of the Salmon Trout River, one of Lake Superior’s primary tributaries.

The mine being proposed by the Kennecott Minerals Corp. would be much different from the iron ore mines that now exist and have existed in the U.P. for decades. It would involve blasting into underground sulfide ore deposits that contain nickel being sought by the mining company. Sulfide ores leach acid as soon as they come in contact with water or air.

Underground water seeping into the mine itself would create sulfuric acid, resulting in acid mine drainage of the equivalent of battery acid that would run off into rivers, contaminate groundwaters and end up in Lakes Superior and Michigan…

Read the rest of former Gov. William G. Milliken’s op-ed about sulfide mining in the Record-Eagle or in the Detroit Free Press (with photo but Freep only posts stories for a few weeks).

Investigation into processing of Eagle Project Mine Application appears a “whitewash”

On March 9, 2007, representatives of a number of environmental groups sent a letter to Michigan Department Environmental Quality Director Steven Chester regarding numerous grave concerns with MDEQ in connection with its review of the application filed by Kennecott Eagle Minerals Company. Click to read the letter to Steven Chester (PDF)

The report issued yesterday by a “independent” retired DNR official, Dr. Donald Inman of EcoLogic Ltd, regarding the investigation into the Processing of the Kennecott Eagle Minerals Company Eagle Project Mine Application appears to us to be an institutional whitewash. Click to read the MDEQ report (PDF)

Please read our letter, read the report and then YOU decide.

Analysis: Kennecott Eagle Minerals Company Proposal

An easy-to-read 6-page analysis of the Kennecott Permit Application from the National Wildlife Foundation

Analysis: Kennecott Eagle Minerals Company Proposal

NATIONAL WILDLIFE FEDERATION®
Great Lakes Natural Resource Center
213 West Liberty Street, Suite 200
Ann Arbor MI 48104-1398
734-769-3351
U.P. Contact: Michelle Halley, 906-361-0520


Fact Sheet: Kennecott U.P Sulfide Mining Proposal

A concise update on the Kennecot Permit Application from The National Wildlife Foundation

Fact Sheet: Kennecott U.P Sulfide Mining Proposal

NATIONAL WILDLIFE FEDERATION®
Great Lakes Natural Resource Center
213 West Liberty Street, Suite 200
Ann Arbor MI 48104-1398
734-769-3351
U.P. Contact: Michelle Halley, 906-361-0520

Online Article: “Battle Over Michigan Sulfide Mines Heats Up”

An interesting new article written by Kari Lydersen has been published by the New Standard.

The New Standard is an online newspaper who was “…founded on the belief that the dominant model and methods of profit-focused news journalism have failed the public interest.”

If the link above doesn’t work use the URL for the article: http://newstandardnews.net/content/index.cfm/items/4681

Kari Lydersen wrote an article for the Washington Post on April 3, 2007.