“Here is your country. Cherish these natural wonders, cherish the natural resources, cherish the history and romance as a sacred heritage, for your children and your children’s children. Do not let selfish men, or greedy interests, skin your country of its beauty, its riches or its romance.”
Theodore Roosevelt

Friday, May 31, 2013

Regional Gathering in Black River Falls



ATTENTION FRIENDS:

Below you will see the new agenda for the Regional Gathering planned for you in Black River Falls on Saturday, June 1. Please note the added speaker: Bill Mavity,  Pepin County.
If you and friends are planning to attend it is important  you register no later than noon today so there are adequate handouts and box lunches available for everyone attending. Please call Sheila Danielson at 715-284-5676 or email at reskdan@centurytel.net as soon as possible. We welcome your attendance!

SEE YOU ON SATURDAY!


STANDING AGAINST THE SAND STORM
SATURDAY, JUNE 1, 2013
BLACK RIVER FALLS MIDDLE SCHOOL/THE LUNDA CENTER
1202 PIERCE STREET
BLACK RIVER FALLS, WI  54615
REGISTRATION INCLUDING LUNCH: $15 DONATION
 
Registration  9:30 - 10:00
Welcome:   10:00 - 10:05 - Nate Timm
 
Resource Contacts Introduction 10:05 - 10:10 - Pat Popple
 
Opening Ceremony  10:10 - 10:25 - Bill Greendeer Ho-Chunk Nation
Keynote Speaker: 10:30 - 10:55 - Jeff Abbas World Gas and Oil Demand and Our Driftless Land
Panel Discussion  11:00 - 12:00  Moderator: Jody McIlrath - Examples of Negative Impacts on Our Communities
·  Lenny Shier - Coping With Quality Of Life Issues in the Village of New Auburn
·  Ken Schmitt - Sand Mining and Family Farm Concerns in the Town of Howard
·  Travis Mossman - Outdoor and Tourism Impacts of Mining
·  Forrest Nutter - Law Enforcement and the Effects of Mining
·  Jim Drost - Mining/Metallurgy - Developing a Plan for Reporting Mining
   Violations
·  Pam Schaefer - Midwest Environmental Advocates Attorney - Freedom Of
   Information  Act, Moratoria, Annexations and More
Lunch & Film  Frac Sand Land "The Incredible Story Of The Vanishing Hills"  
            12:00 - 1:00  Robert Nehman, filmmaker - Allamakee County, Iowa
Or 12:00-1:00 Box Lunch It with Others to Network
Breakout Sessions (1) 1:00 to 1:30
 1  Ancient Geology and the Roots of Sand Mining - Luke Kramer
 2  Citizen Involvement in Reporting Violations: Civic Engagement for the Long
     Haul - Jim Drost
 3  New Progressive Messaging - Scott Wittkopf
 4  Health Impact Assessments: The Dangers of Silica Dust - Juliee de-la-Terre
 5  Impacts on the Environment in Rural Areas - Air, Water, & Land -Ken Schmitt
 6  Legal Interventions for Citizens - Freedom of Information Act, Legalities of
      Developing a Moratorium, & Annexation Information - Pam Schaefer
 7  A Sign Making Workshop - Gaylord Oppegard and Adam Grabski
 
Breakout Sessions (2) 1:35 to 2:05
 8  Sharing the Minnesota Experience - Jody McIlrath and Johanna Rupprecht
 9  How does frac-sand mining threaten surface water and groundwater?
      Dr. Kelvin Rodolfo
10  Transportation Impacts of Sand Mining - Will Cronin
11  Protecting the Sacred Sites of Indigenous People - Bill Quackenbush
12  A Sign Making Workshop - Gaylord Oppegard and Adam Grabski
13  The Economic Impact of Sand Mining - Pat Malone
14  Protecting Special Assets - A County Overlay District - Bill Mavity
Organize For Action   A Participant Engagement Activity 2:10 to 3:00 - Nate Timm
Wrap Up & Photo Shoot  3:00 to 3:30  Conference Team
 
Photographer: Mary Kenosian
SPONSORS
Ho-Chunk Nation, SOUL of Wisconsin, Save The Hills Alliance
Wisconsin Grassroots Network, Jackson County Citizen Voices
Midwest Environmental Advocates, Echo Valley Hope, Wisconsin Interfaith Power and Light
 

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

urgent request from Sandra Steingraber

Dear Friends and Neighbors,
  We can sign even if we don't belong to a certain group.
Bonita

Friends in the Frac World,

      Below is an urgent request from Sandra Steingraber early this morning (Monday) to help stop the legislation in Illinois that would open up that state for hydraulic fracking.  
    Today, she is asking her allies from Wisconsin, Iowa and Minnesota to “sign” the letter below.  If you are willing to do so, please send your name, town and state, as well as the name of the anti-frac sand group you’re a member of, to Pat Popple.   Pat’s e-mail is    Sunnyday5@charter.net.
    Here is an example:  Doug Nopar, Winona, MN, Winona Area Citizens Concerned About Silica Mining (CASM)
   Pat will add your name and group to the list. Again, please act today, as the Illinois legislature’s vote is imminent.
    Certainly, circulate to your lists.
     Thanks much.  Hope you have a relaxing rest of the day.
Doug

Dear Members of the Illinois General Assembly,

 With great alarm, we the undersigned, your neighbors in Wisconsin, Iowa, and Minnesota, are watching as the Illinois General Assembly considers a regulatory bill that would serve to open your state up to large-scale, high volume hydraulic fracturing, or fracking. Although we do not live atop oil- or gas-containing shale, we do live in communities situated atop vast deposits of silica sand, which are a necessary ingredient in the fracking process. (Prized for its unsurpassed strength, silica sand is used to prop open the cracks so created when high volumes of high pressure water and chemicals fracture the shale. With the cracks held open by grains of sand, the gas can flow out.) Silica sand is the agent of fracking, and it is a limiting agent. The gas and oil industry go to great lengths to obtain sufficient quantities. The sand rush that accompanies the gas rush is, in our experience, a direct menace to our communities.

 We have suffered greatly from the industrial strip-mining and processing of silica sand that has been the direct consequence of the ongoing shale gas boom in this nation. Our communities, our land, and our health are literally being destroyed by it. WE BEG YOU TO DECLARE A MORATORIUM ON FRACKING IN ILLINOIS, AS WE ARE SURE, SHOULD YOU MOVE FORWARD WITH THIS REGULATORY BILL AND OPEN YOUR STATE TO LARGE-SCALE FRACKING, THAT THE DEMAND FOR FRAC SAND WILL INCREASE FURTHER, ALONG WITH THE PRICE, AND THUS ALONG WITH THE PRESSURE ON OUR OWN POLITICAL LEADERS TO ESCALATE FURTHER THE DEVASTATING PRACTICE OF FRAC SAND MINING AND PROCESSING.  While sand mining has long been part of our local economies, we have never before witnessed it at this scale, scope, and intensity. The demand for frac sand is literally changing the contours of our surroundings. The hills themselves are vanishing.

 With this letter, we also bring direct knowledge to the people and legislators of Illinois about sand mining, which will almost certainly take place along your own rivers and bluffs should you create a permissive environment for the oil and gas industry. Your regulations for fracking do not extend to the attendant process of frac sand mining—with which there are associated many dangers.

 First, industrial strip mining for frac sand threatens our ground- and surface water supplies. Strip mining for frac sand turns rural areas into vast moonscapes. Erosion caused by physical disturbance of the land itself as well as the migration of pollutants from the chemical processing of the sand pollute our aquifers. Also, high-capacity wells used by the mine threaten to deplete ground and surface water that we need for drinking, farming, and recreation.

 Second, frac sand mining is damaging the quality of our air. Fleets of diesel trucks run constantly on rural roads, as a single mine and processing plant is serviced by hundreds of truck trips per day. Even worse is silica dust, which is both a proven lung carcinogen and a cause of the disabling and often fatal disease, silicosis Wisconsin’s Department of Natural Resources admits that airborne silica is a carcinogen but does not require monitoring for it in our communities. Silica dust from freshly fractured sand formations is more toxic than silica found in naturally weathered soil.

 Third, massive sand mining operations are jeopardizing wildlife habitat and natural resources. Clear-cutting, open-pit mining, and hilltop removal are all part of frac sand mining. As hills and bluffs are  loaded into trucks and hauled away, our landscape is disappearing, and the water cycle itself is being altered. Of course, our hills and the sand desposits of which they are made are not replaceable.

 Fourth, the dramatic increase in heavy truck traffic make safety and traffic congestion a huge problem. Also, the heavy hauling causes road damage, interferes with tourism and recreation, and generates costs  for local taxpayers. The unrelenting noise of blasting, traffic, rail  cars, and vibrations are also health threat.

 Fifth, our property values are sinking. All the mines, haul routes, processing plants, and rail spurs can reduce our property values by 30 percent. Meanwhile, this industry provides us few local jobs, even as it destroys farmland.

 As your neighbors, we stand together with citizens in your great state of Illinois who also do not want to an economy dependent on the boom and bust cycle of extractive mining and drilling. The jobs provided by both
frack sand mining and horizontal fracking are temporary and toxic. We invite you to visit our altered communities and tour our sand mines.

Let us show you the open trucks and barges, with silica dust flying off  them into our neighborhoods. We will gladly share information with you. We beg you, however, to declare a moratorium on fracking until you do.

 Sincerely,

Help Wanted: Sand Mine Inspectors



May 29, 2013
Volume 7
 
Help Wanted: Sand Mine Inspectors
“We really need concerned citizens to be our eyes and ears,” wrote DNR Storm Water Specialist Ruth King in response to citizen complaints about frac sand mines. “I am only a half-time employee and cannot be everywhere at all times.”
Ms. King’s appeal was reported in an article written by Kate Prengaman of the Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism who closely follows the growing sand mine industry.
“Nearly a fifth of Wisconsin’s 70 active frac sand mines and processing plants were cited for environmental violations last year,” wrote Prengaman. She quoted Air Management Specialist Marty Sellers who said he sent letters of noncompliance to “80 to 90 percent” of the sites he visited.
The DNR’s limited resources means some frac sand mines are not inspected or only inspected when citizens complained about the mine.
To address the staff shortage, the state budget includes two positions as dedicated sand mine monitors. However, additional positions were recently considered by the Legislature’s Joint Finance Committee.
Monitors are needed to oversee air quality during mine construction and operation. New inspectors would monitor compliance with storm water rules, high capacity wells, wetlands and endangered resources. Inspectors review permits, blasting and fugitive dust control plans, discuss best management practices with the operator, inspect equipment and review company operation reports.
The Joint Finance Committee was informed about the sand mine industry through a paper written by the nonpartisan Legislative Fiscal Bureau (LFB) which provided detailed information on the industry that has exploded in western Wisconsin.
“Three years ago there were 5 industrial sand mines and 5 industrial sand processing plants in the state,” wrote LFB analyst Kendra Bonderud. “DNR officials recently estimated that as of April 1, 2013, there are 105 industrial sand mines and 65 industrial processing plants in the state, which is two to three times the number the Department was aware of in the summer of 2012.”
The LFB paper noted last summer the DNR reviewed staffing needs for permitting, compliance and monitoring of frac sand operations. At that time, the Department estimated 10.2 full-time positions were needed to oversee the 54 known sites. The fast growing industry now needs two to three times more inspectors.
Joint Finance Committee member Senator Jennifer Shilling offered an amendment to fund at least those 10 positions. Still, the majority of Finance Committee members voted down Shilling’s amendment.
Adequately funding sand mine monitors is important for neighbors, local government and the mine owners and workers. I receive many calls of neighbors concerned about mine operation. Local government officials are stretched thin and are often unable to monitor the mines. Most counties have few staff dedicated to the inspection of mines. Workers need necessary health and safety protections. Owners that do follow the rules are at a competitive disadvantage with those who do not.
Citizens are rightly concerned when the state relies on them to monitor mine safety. It was from citizens that I learned of one of the most serious violations. Last year Preferred Sands’ mine in Trempealeau County had a mudslide that affected a neighboring property. The WI Center for Investigative Journalism reported this mine also had “multiple violations of its air quality permit”. The violations are now being considered by the Department of Justice.
Trempealeau County is the epicenter of sand mining. With 28 mines there is no higher concentration in the state. Recently, citizens delivered to Trempealeau County Board Supervisors petitions with 821 signatures in favor of a year-long sand mine moratorium. Petitioners were upset when supervisors ignored the stack of signatures and instead failed to pass the moratorium on new county mines.
Citizens should not be charged with the monitoring of mines in their neighborhoods. If Wisconsin allows sand mining, Wisconsin must invest in staff to monitor compliance with the law.
Not all 170 mines and processing plants are up and running. But it is reasonable to expect they will be by June of 2015, the end of the upcoming state budget. The Legislature should act to phase-in the funding for all 32 needed positions before the final passage of the two-year state budget.
If you know someone who would like to be added to this distribution list, please let us know.
 
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Sen.Vinehout@legis.wisconsin.gov State Capitol Room 316 South - P.O. Box 7882, Madison, WI 53707-7882 Toll Free: (877) 763-6636 or
(608) 267-2871

German brewers warn fracking could hurt beer industry - NBC News.com

What else do we need to know?

 http://www.nbcnews.com/business/german-brewers-warn-fracking-could-hurt-beer-industry-6C10077831

Friday, May 24, 2013

Webinar: The Economic Benefits and Costs of Frac-Sand Mining in West Central Wisconsin

Thursday, May 30, 2013
10:00 a.m.–11:00 a.m. CST
The Wisconsin Farmers Union, Wisconsin Towns Association and the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy (IATP) invite you to join Dr. Thomas Power, mining expert and principle author of The Economic Benefits and Costs of Frac-Sand Mining in West Central Wisconsin, for a webinar on Thursday, May 30 at 10:00 a.m. (CST) when he will review the findings of his first-of-its kind report on the economic realities of frac sand mining in Wisconsin. The report was commissioned by Wisconsin Farmers Union, the Wisconsin Towns Association and the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy (IATP).
Dr. Thomas Power, Professor Emeritus in the Economics Department at the University of Montana, has a long history of research on the economics of the mining industry.
Dr. Power will focus on how frac sand mining affects communities, the economy and rural livelihoods and outline a series of questions that communities need to have answers for when assessing the cost and benefits of frac sand mining.

Learn more and RSVP!
IATP works locally and globally at the intersection of policy and practice to ensure fair and sustainable food, farm and trade systems. IATP has offices in Minneapolis, Minnesota, and Washington
iatp.org
Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy

Sand News Articles

Fracking and Frac Sand Mining

Thursday, May 23, 2013

Barb Miller's LTE re: Sen. Miller

http://www.hometown-pages.com/main.asp?SectionID=26&SubSectionID=185&ArticleID=48783&TM=75311.43

Sandra Steingraber: My name is Illinois


The message is symbolic and also a realistic parallel to our struggles with the frac sand industry in the mid-west and Chippewa Falls......a soon to be 5-year challenge. 


Please distribute widely. 

----- Forwarded Message -----
From: Sandra Steingraber <ssteingraber@ithaca.edu>
Sent: Thursday, May 23, 2013 8:02 AM
Subject:  My name is Illinois

Dear fellow New Yorkers,

As many of you know, I was born and raised in rural Illinois where my cousin still farms and all my family lives.  That state now teeters on the fracking brink, as a bad regulatory bill has just passed a key panel at the end of the legislative session and now heads for a vote in the IL General Assembly.  

A daily sit-in at Governor Quinn's office is now underway and civil disobedience has broken out. 

If you have friends or family living in the Land of Lincoln, please extend to them the invitation below. What happens in Illinois affects us all, and while we may no longer be able to affect the outcome of this particular vote, we still control the story of how it was received and who will be held responsible and whether or not, in the words of Illinois abolitionist Elijah Lovejoy, "a spirit of freedom still resides" in Illinois.  

broken-hearted but unfractured, Sandra

----


An Urgent Invitation to the People of Illinois from Sandra Steingraber


Come to Governor Quinn's office, 2nd floor, Capitol Building in Springfield, Friday, May 24 at 12 noon, to say no to fracking Illinois

(See Illinois People's Action for carpooling: https://www.facebook.com/ILPeoplesAction)


I am sorry to report that on Tuesday May 21, in an unanimous decision, an eleven-member executive committee, approved a bill that opens my beloved home state to the brutal, water-destroying, carcinogen-dependent practice known as fracking.  

Together with my friend, Oscar-nominated filmmaker Josh Fox, I was there.  

I was there when Josh asked the lawmakers, how many of you have ever visited a fracking site?  I was there when not one raised a hand.  

I was there when Jen Walling of the Illinois Environmental Council testified--like a woman held hostage--that, given the political climate in Illinois, she had no choice but to endorse these regulations. 

I was there when the man sitting next to her on the witness bench--Mark Denzler of the Illinois Manufacturers' Association--agreed.

I was there when the former board chair of the Illinois Environmental Council, Carolyn Raffensperger, testified that, in fact, the state's regulatory agencies were too broke and too impotent to be capable of enforcing any regulations. 

I was there when, after the unanimous vote was cast, the packed hearing room erupted into cries of "shame! shame!" 

You can read my own testimony to the House committee here and watch it here.  And here is my op-ed in today's Springfield Journal-Register

Today or tomorrow Senate Bill is likely to be voted on by the full legislature.  It is likely to pass. It is likely to be signed into law by Governor Quinn.  But likely is not a synonym for inevitable.  And, whatever the outcome of this vote, what's essential now is for all of us to topple a toxic narrative and replace it with a story of our own.

That narrative is about how industry and environmental groups can cooperate to write regulations for fracking that magically make it safe and serve as a model for the nation.  As neatly encapsulated by the reaction statement of Governor Quinn shortly after the panel vote: 

"Many months ago I directed my staff to bring together a coalition of legislators, labor, industry and advocates to develop a hydraulic fracturing bill that would set a new national standard for environmental protection and job creation potential....I commend the members of the Illinois House Executive Committee who voted to put this proposal on the path to becoming law in Illinois. 

Here's what we can write together as the replacement to the above:  It's story is about people coming together and saying NO.  No to closed-door negotiations without public input.  No to blowing up the bedrock and pumping it full of toxins.  No to learned helplessness in the face of bullying.  No to a batch of unenforceable, loophole-riddled rules endorsed by a hapless environmental lobby and the gas industry that serves as its ventriloquist.  

Our story is about citizens converging in the Governor's office to demand a moratorium on fracking.  And scientific study.  And public hearings.  And a jobs plan that is not dependent on blasting out of the earth a few year's worth of non-renewable, climate-killing fossil fuel extraction.  

Our story is about resistance, courage, and democracy.  It's about protecting what you love. 

Come to Springfield and co-author that story.  The one that will be told in the history books.  The one you can tell your children about.  The one that your great-grandchildren, gazing back at you from the future, are begging you to write.  The story that you already know that you want to be part of. 

Illinois' greatest living poet, John Knoepfle, age 90, will there with you.  And he will bring his words to add to yours.  

So, drop everything and head to Springfield.  There is no more important work for you to do on Friday than to peaceably assemble at Governor Quinn's office, 2nd floor of the Capitol Building on 2nd Street, and demand he listen.   All you need to bring is your voice.  And your heart. 

to the unfractured future,

Sandra  (born in Champagne, raised in Pekin, educated in Bloomington-Normal, post-doc in women's public health policy, University of Illinois, Chicago)

. . .this world in peace
this laced temple of darkening colors

it could not have been made for shambles

this green twilight of echoing voices

as the sun hurls its fireball

down the other side of the world

it is long miles through marshgrass
the sangamon sifting to its ending

and beyond us the illinois

intensifies south

beneath the eagles at grafton

our ancient mississippi

its wide slow waters
--"Confluence," John Knoepfle
--