‘Smoking Gun’ memo revealed

Michelle Halley of the National Wildlife Federation issued a statement yesterday that you should read in its entirety. Here’s a taste:

Today, Michigan’s Department of Environmental Quality issued a statement vacating its draft decision to permit a sulfide mine in the Upper Peninsula because of a ‘smoking gun’ memo critical of the mine that the agency’s own employees covered up …

We believe it is time for an independent investigation of the DEQ’s process for the Kennecott mining proposal, as well as other major permits that have come before the department.

We stand firmly behind the position we’ve had since Day 1: This mine puts the health of our people and communities at risk for no good reason … Sulfide mining has proven deadly to rivers, streams and communities in other states. And jeopardizing the health of our state for 75 jobs—that’s not the future we want for Michigan and our families. It’s not worth the risk.”

Read Michigan DEQ Admits Cover Up of ‘Smoking Gun’ Memo.

Editorial: Eric Baerren on Sulfide Mining

Opinion: Ghost towns, past and future

One of the most interesting things about Michigan history is that the Upper Peninsula used to be more populated than it is today. It’s not hard to understand why – when the mines and lumber gave out, so did the people.

My dad used to hunt for the U.P.’s old ghost towns, one of the few people who used an SUV for off-road travel (considering how poorly they’re constructed, I’m surprised he didn’t get stuck). You have to go off-road to get to most of them, he’d tell me, because they were built along now-abandoned railroad lines, back when trains were the most reliable way to move people and resources. They are the graves of a boom-and-bust economy.

Michigan was built on booms and busts. Early citizens of the state sawed and hacked their way through a seemingly endless supply of white pines. American prosperity was built, at the time, on a foundation of Michigan wood. The automobile has allowed us to forget this part of our state’s history, but the memories return with the auto’s fade.

In the Upper Peninsula, there were the copper mines. Like a poorly managed forest, the mines have a short life span. Once you extract all of your minerals, the mine shuts down and everyone employed at it is either let go, or has to move on to new mines.

As a tool of economic development, they are without rival as an act of short-sighted madness.

Some of you might be vaguely aware of a proposed new mining project in the Upper Peninsula. Called the Eagle Mine project, a company called Kennecott plans to mine nickel in the little bulge northwest of Marquette and southeast of the Keweenaw Peninsula. Kennecott itself is owned by a British firm, Rio Tinto.

The mine has of course divided the community, and much of the opposition is centered on the environmental damage the mine would cause. The damage, and there would be damage, would come from exposing sulfites to the air, which would lead to sulphuric acid run-off in local streams and rivers (it would also stain the river an yellowish-orangeish color called ochre).

The problem is that the nearest river, one very close to the proposed mine project, is a prime trout spawning bed; and the nearby plains are a recent new home for the Kirtland’s Warbler (Michigan’s best known endangered songbird, and more deserving of the title “state bird” than our friend the robin).

But, the real question isn’t just about trout and birds versus economic development. It’s about one kind of economic development versus another. Just as the Upper Peninsula’s undeveloped forests, beaches and rivers attract tourists, the Kirtland’s Warbler draws bird enthusiasts from all over the nation. This means fulfilling an important component in virtually everyone’s economic redevelopment plans – tourism (Dick DeVos campaigned last year on the need to re-energize it; and it has a prominent part of the governor’s plan). Tourism doesn’t just provide jobs and money, it’s also a self-sustaining industry as long as you don’t monkey too much with the product – the undeveloped forests, rivers and beaches.

The mine project would create hard jobs, and provide good paychecks in a struggling Upper Peninsula. According to company estimates, the mine would generate 150 jobs and about three times to provide those people with services.

Jobs are the only things that the mine would provide. Western civilization will not fall without the nickel from this mine. And, the question is how we weigh those jobs against what we might lose in embracing a new wave of boom-and-bust mines.

Here, the graves of old Upper Peninsula boom towns that went bust with the lumber and copper industries gave out provide us with reminders of the short life expectancy of something as purely extractive as mining.

It’s expected that Eagle Mine project would be the first of several (the company hasn’t said so, but it owns mineral rights to at least 460,000 acres in the area; and there are other mining companies looking to start operations in the U.P.), but if they’re like the Eagle Mine project, each would last for about 7-10 years. That’s less than half the time it would take an average worker to pay down an average mortgage. A boom-and-bust economy of this nature thus provides no incentive for long-term community building, which is why you can still find ghost towns on long-abandoned rail lines.

What impact this would have on local tourism is really anyone’s guess. The area that would be developed for mine operations would require a great deal of infrastructure – rebuilding railroads, hard asphalt roads, etc… – that would remain after the mine itself was closed.

That raises the question of whether it’s wise to sacrifice long-term sustainability for short-term boom. The time when we can conveniently overlook this question ended a long time ago, and it’s time for us to think seriously and strategically about the future. The answer calls to us from the hidden graves of deserted lumber and mining towns.

Eric Baerren is a Morning Sun Columnist who also runs the blog Among the Trees.

The Mining Journal: Kennecott Eagle Project

Kennecott Eagle project
EPA involved?

By JOHN PEPIN, Journal Staff Writer

The Mining Journal

MARQUETTE — Opponents of a proposed Kennecott Eagle Minerals Company nickel and copper mine on the Yellow Dog Plains claim necessary federal permits beyond state approvals could indefinitely delay the project.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency recently notified company officials that at least one federal permit will be required before construction can begin, opponents said.

According to a press release from the National Wildlife Federation, EPA Water Division Director Jo Lynn Traub sent a letter to Kennecott representatives urging the company to submit previously-requested information regarding a treated water infiltration system proposed by Kennecott. EPA representatives could not be reached for comment this morning.

The proposed system is a series of pipes buried underground that allows treated water to trickle back into the ground, impacting the entire aquifer, the release said.

“This permit is required to ensure that the infiltration system would not endanger an underground source of drinking water,” according to the release.

Acting independently of state regulators, Traub stated that, upon receiving the requested information, the agency will “make a determination about other potential requirements,” according to the NWF release.

Kennecott representatives were unavailable for comment this morning.

Michelle Halley, an attorney for the NWF, said the EPA’s involvement in the issue is an important step.

“With the oversight of the EPA, the people of Michigan gain another layer of protection for our groundwater resources,” she said.

Halley said that an EPA permit could stall the project for an unknown period of time, depending upon the information that is provided by the company and whether it satisfies EPA requirements.

A public hearing and comment period will also likely occur as part of the federal permit process, she said.

Several groups, including the NWF, have opposed the mining company’s proposed project on the basis of alleged permit application deficiencies and an inappropriate location.

These groups are still advocating for the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality to reject the company’s permit applications.

State regulators will hear from the general public at a series of hearings in March, beginning with a three-day hearing in Marquette March 6 through 8, followed by a March 12 hearing in Lansing.

Chicago Tribune: Trout Spawn Mine Battle

Trout spawn mine battle

Critics fear proposed dig would threaten rare fish

By Michael Hawthorne

Chicago Tribune

Tribune staff reporter

Published February 18, 2007

Despite the area’s long history of mining, many who live here contend the short-term profits aren’t worth the potential for long-term damage to the Salmon Trout and another stream popular with anglers.

… “The company is making an appeal to go back to the old days when mining first brought people to the UP,” said Russell Magnaghi, director of the Center for Upper Peninsula Studies at Northern Michigan University. “But mining no longer is our economic mainstay. We’re looking more toward tourism today.”

(full story available on website)

Exclusive track from Greg Brown’s new Yellow Dog CD

Greg Brown in ConcertSave the Wild UP is proud to offer a multimedia presentation featuring a track from Greg Brown’s soon-to-be-released CD Yellow Dog (Earthwork Music). The CD benefits the Yellow Dog Watershed Preserve and will also help to raise awareness of the threat that metallic sulfide mining poses to Michigan’s legacy of unspoiled rivers, lakes and streams.

Click to listen to Greg Brown’s song and experience the beauty of the Yellow Dog (new window).

Editorial: Promote tourism – oppose the Eagle Project mine

Here’s a blog post by Eric B. (Feb 20, 2007):

Jobs grow on trees, you often hear our good friends in the logging industry say. But, here’s a little known fact … when you chop down trees, you have nothing else to log. There are stories all over the Pacific Northwest about booms and busts over the logging industry. In fact, I seem to remember that at one time, Michigan had its own logging-related booms and busts.

irtland's Warbler image by Mike McDowell…Jobs do grow on trees, and not just the kind that require that you chop them down. Turns out there’s good money is leaving a place like it is, because people will pay real money for the opportunity to see something pristine and full of natural splendor. This is something that Dave alluded to the other day.

In fact, if memory serves me right, lots of folks these days talk about tourism as an important component of Michigan’s revitalization. Why would tourists spend tourist dollars in Michigan?

Read more and see some great photos and comments on Promote tourism … oppose the Eagle Project mine over at Michigan Liberal. Kirtland’s Warbler image © 2007 Mike McDowell.

DEQ Will Hold Lansing Hearing March 12

UPDATE MARCH 2, 2007

The Department of Environmental Quality has withdrawn its proposed decision to approve a permit to conduct mining operations at the proposed Eagle Project Mine and cancelled the hearings. Read More>

Stay tuned to Save the Wild UP for further updates!

Congrats to all those who worked very hard to make this happen!

The DEQ announced today that in addition to Marquette hearings March 6-8, it will hold a public hearing in Lansing on a proposed decision to approve a mining permit to the Kennecott Eagle Mining Company to conduct nickel mining operations at the proposed Eagle Project Mine.

The Lansing hearing will be held March 12, 2007 at the Lansing Center from 1:00 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. and 6:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m.

Read the press release (PDF)

More information about the Kennecott Eagle Project is available on the OGS web page.

For information about the Lansing Center: 333 E. Michigan Avenue, Lansing, MI 48933, Phone: (517) 483-7400

Editorial: Dave Dempsey on Sulfide Mining

Sulfide Mining and the Soul of Michigan

by: Dave Dempsey

 

Anyone who grows up in Michigan knows that some Great Lakes State experiences are sacred – sunsets and wild storms over Lake Michigan, standing beneath the few remaining 300-year-old white pines in the Keweenaw, the feeling of release when you realize you’ve arrived “up north.” And so much more.

Even in the teeth of the economic windstorm raking Michigan, these things are not worth sacrificing. Future generations deserve to enjoy them unimpaired. And so it is that the state must soon make a choice between protecting the majesty and promise of the Yellow Dog Plains and unspoiled streams, northwest of Marquette, or ransom them for a scattering of short-term jobs and the likelihood of long-term costs to Michigan taxpayers.

The battle is over sulfide mining – an inherently destructive technique of extracting (in this case) a deposit of nickel and copper from the ground. Unfortunately, this deposit, sought by Kennecott Corporation, underlies the headwaters of the Salmon Trout River, believed to be among the last spawning streams on the south shore of Lake Superior for the native coaster brook trout. Sulfide mining is a process that releases toxic sulfuric acid into nearby water. It’s like putting a chemical factory in one of the wildest places in Michigan – and then counting on good-faith promises not to leave an expensive mess behind for taxpayers to pay for. But acid mine drainage has already polluted more than 12,000 miles of rivers and streams and over 180,000 acres of lakes and impoundments in the U.S.

When sulfide mining was proposed in the north country of Wisconsin a few years back, the same concerns about the long-term environmental risks of sulfide mining were heard. There, legislators enacted a law with a simple, easily defensible standard – sulfide mining would be allowed provided that its proponents could demonstrate the safety of the method. There’s been no new sulfide mining in Wisconsin. But Michigan has taken a different approach, enacting a law that assumes that sulfide mining can be made safe – when it is inherently unsafe with current technology.

Michigan’s historic economic difficulties can be addressed one of two ways. First, mortgage the future by consuming natural resources for short-term gain – the same process that wrecked the state for several generations after the initial timber and mining boom. Or, second, build a base of jobs and economic prosperity – and quality of life – around the very assets that make Michigan a special place: its waters, its forests, its lands and the workers and tourists these attract.

It’s not trout alone that are at stake – or even the Yellow Dog Plains. It’s the very definition of Michigan itself, its future, and its soul.

(Reprinted with permission from author)

Editorial: Letter to Editor, Mining Journal

A recent ‘Letter to the Editor’ explained that sulfide mining proposed for the Yellow Dog Plain cannot be done safely. The letter from 2/9/07 explained: the Wisconsin law prohibits sulfide mining until mining companies can demonstrate successful mining and post-mining without polluting surrounding surface and groundwaters. The aforementioned letter supports our position that this requirement makes it “…very difficult, if not impossible, for companies…”

Yes, we agree it is near impossible to operate a sulfide mine in a water-rich area with-out pollution. In desert or year-round frozen conditions sulfide mining has much less difficulties. Beyond that we are concerned about the potential loss of character of our region. We live here because of the extremely good salaries. Oh No! That’s not it! We live here because the open lands, minimal traffic and recreational activities give a wonderful quality of life.

Here are a few of our concerns:

~ Increased traffic: Our organization estimates that an additional 200 round trips per day of traffic to northern Marquette county will result from this first short-lived proposed mine. More traffic could come from additional sulfide mines.

~ Few short term jobs: Mining is a mature industry that employs very few compared to previous years. Mining now is very mechanized. The jobs are fewer and higher skilled. Many of us have met Kennecott employees who have moved here to work. Perhaps they are already taking the best of the promised jobs.

~ Fencing-off public land: The request to fence-off 160 acres of public land for 40 years sets a precedent that could require regulators to approve numerous other companies who could request fencing-off public land.

~ Dust exhausted from the mine: According to the Kennecott Air Use Permit application, approximately 20 tons/year (4.6 pounds per hour) of particulate matter will be exhausted from the main ventilation stack including some copper, nickel, and sulfur (acid generating). This stack would be about 300 feet from the Salmon Trout River.

~ Industrialization of our camp, hunting recreation land: This foot-in-the-door sulfide mine will lead the way for numerous other short-lived sulfide mines and cause an industrialization of our open lands that is unprecedented.

People talk about wanting jobs, which could help their young friends and family stay in the area. Many of the changes we see associated with sulfide mining could cause people to choose to leave this area anyway.

Respectfully,

Babette Welch

Director, Save The Wild UP

info@savethewildup.org

(This letter was submitted 2/14/07 to the Mining Journal in Marquette, MI)

Wisconsin grassroots “grandfather” passes away

Roscoe Churchill

By Al Gedicks
gedicks.al@uwlax.edu

Roscoe Churchill, a dearly loved leader of Wisconsin’s environmental
movement passed away on February 9, 2007 in his sleep after a long
struggle with prostate cancer.

Roscoe Churchill of Ladysmith, was the grandfather of Wisconsin’s
grassroots anti-mining movement. For more than 30 years, this retired
school principal, part-time farmer, former Republican, and Rusk County
supervisor, along with his late wife Evelyn, were the heart and soul of
the efforts to stop some of the largest mining companies in the world,
including Kennecott, Noranda, Exxon, Rio Algom and BHP Billiton from
destroying the land and clean waters of communities from Ladysmith to
the Mole Lake Chippewa Reservation near Crandon, and from La Crosse
County to the Upper Peninsula of Michigan.

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