“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

Monday, May 9, 2016

join with Hundreds of other Midwesterners on Tuesday, May 10th in La Crosse

Want to do Something Special and Different on Mother’s Day for the Women in Your Life?

Bring your Wife, your Mother, your Significant Other, your Aunts, your Sisters, your Daughters , your Granddaughters and Yourself to the biggest Event ever to Stop Frac Sand Mining here in the Midwest!

Give them the gift of Clean Air, Clean Water, Protection of our Environment and our Communities by joining with Hundreds of other Midwesterners on Tuesday, May 10th in La Crosse for A Rally to Ban Frac Sand Mining and Address Climate Change!

Help us send a message to the  Frac Sand Industry, the Heartland Institute and the Koch Brothers  that we want a future built on Renewable Energy not on hydraulic fracking and frac sand mining. 


   

 
Join the Movement to Ban  Frac Sand Mining and  Address Climate Change!!!!!
 
Please share this message with likeminded people you know.
 
 
 
 

Frac Sand Industry Conference in La Crosse May 9-11


Opposition Growing to Frac Sand Industry Conference in La Crosse May 9-11
 
Hi All,
 
In case you haven’t heard the frac sand industry is having a conference at the La Crosse Center on May 9-11 to talk up the value of frac sand mining in our region http://www.fracsandinsider.com/index.php?c=3500&d=4578&w=9&r=Y. It is being organized by Frac Sand Insider and features, among others, the oil and gas industry- backed Heartland Institute.
 
A group of anti-frac sand activists have been discussing the need to have a response to this industry conference. A number of us met this weekend, including representatives from the Land Stewardship Project, Houston County Protectors, Citizens Against Silica Mining, the Ho-Chunk Nation, and Coulee Region Climate Alliance. We want to use the frac sand industry conference as an opportunity to make a powerful case to the public that our country needs to address climate change by banning frac sand mining and fracking and rapidly develop renewable energy.
 
We have begun to organize peaceful, non-violent activities which will occur simultaneously with the Frac Sand Conference. We have formed The Alliance to Ban Frac Sand Mining and Address Climate Change.  We invite you and your group to join this Alliance and participate in the actions outlined below on May 9th and 10th. Our goal is to energize a broad Alliance of anti-frac sand mining, environmental, social justice, renewable energy and climate change groups to refute and challenge the industry’s advocacy for extreme energy production and continued reliance on fossil fuels. The Alliance will focus on a clear message of banning frac sand mining and fracking, promoting renewable energy, and addressing climate change.
 
We are finalizing plans for two activities to convey this message to elected officials and the public. On Monday May 9th, at 1:00 PM members of the Alliance to Ban Frac Sand Mining and Address Climate Change will hold a press conference in or near the La Crosse Center. Each Alliance member group will select one of its own to participate in the press conference. Each participant can use this opportunity to relate what their group is doing and how it supports the unified message to ban fracking and frac sand mining and address climate change. We plan on making a video of the press conference, which will be uploaded to social media, posted to different group’s websites and emailed out to Coalition members within two hours.
 
The second activity is a Rally on Tuesday, May 10 at 5 PM, again at or near the La Crosse Center, with pre-rally activities starting two hours before. We plan on having several elected officials and representatives of major groups leading the opposition to frac sand mining speak at the rally.  This will be an opportunity for the membership of each Alliance group to support the goals of the Alliance by attending the Rally and demand action by their government representatives to chart a different, better energy future starting with banning frac sand mining and fracking.
 
We hope that you and your group will join our Alliance to Ban Frac Sand Mining and Address Climate Change. We feel this is a very important opportunity to refute the Koch Brothers-backed message of Climate Denial and support for extreme energy production. While this Alliance is being organized for this event only, it certainly could be the basis for future broadly-based initiatives.
 
We realize this is short notice, but we hope you will make a strong effort to have your group consider participating in this Alliance. Clearly the presidential election this year has demonstrated that Americans of many political perspectives are no longer going to accept a corporate energy agenda and an indifference to climate change.
 
So please make a concerted effort to have your group join this Alliance, specifically for these events in La Crosse. Call us or e-mail us to let us know of your support by Friday, May 6th. We can still add your group as a supporter of the Alliance after May 6th but it may not be included in the initial Press Release.
 
Thanks for all of your past work, your ongoing efforts, and your support.
 
 
Ken Tschumper                             Doug Nopar
Houston County Protectors           Land Stewardship Project                       
507-894-4248                                507-523-3366
ktschump@acegroup.cc                dnopar@landstewardshipproject.org
 
P.S. We’ll be releasing final details and activities in response to the frac sand industry’s conference later in the week.
 
 




Thursday, April 7, 2016

Calls needed TODAY. Bill to Weaken Local Control Gets Senate Hearing on Monday

Dear Bonita,
We asked you and other Land Stewardship Project members to make calls (see action alert below) to Minnesota state legislators opposing the bill to weaken local control and you did! Senators were flooded with calls and this bill, which was on track to pass when this action alert went out over the weekend, stalled in the Senate Local Government Committee on Monday. At the hearing, after strong testimony in opposition and Senators on the committee voicing concerns, Chair Sen. Patricia Torres Ray tabled the bill. The bill needed to advance past this committee to meet a critical legislative deadline.
Nothing is certain until the legislative session adjourns on May 23, but this is good news and the result of legislators responding to grassroots opposition. Take action now to give your legislative leaders an update and let them know you want this to be the end of the issue.
Bobby King
Land Stewardship Project organizer
612-722-6377 
LSP Action Alert: 
Calls needed TODAY. Bill to Weaken Local Control Gets Senate Hearing on Monday
Corporate interests are pushing bills to weaken the rights of cities and townships to effectively respond to unwanted and potentially harmful developments. This in turn weakens our ability as citizens to work through our local government to protect our community.  
  • House File 2585: Reps. Jim Nash (R-Waconia), Mark Uglem (R-Champlin), Mike Nelson (DFL-Brooklyn Park), Leon Lillie (DFL-North St. Paul), Josh Heintzeman (R-Baxter), Jerry Hertaus (R-Greenfield), Linda Runbeck (R- Circle Pines)
  • Senate File 2694: Sen. Melisa Franzen (DFL-Edina)
The bills weaken the interim ordinance powers of townships and cities. Interim ordinances allow cities or townships to quickly put a temporary moratorium on major development. This is an emergency power that is essential when the community is caught off-guard by unanticipated and potentially harmful proposals, especially those from outside corporate interests. The interim ordinance freezes the status quo and gives the community time to review or create the appropriate zoning ordinances. Corporate interests have long pushed to weaken these rights because citizens have used them effectively to stop unwanted developments like factory farms.
  • The bills require a two-thirds super majority to enact an interim ordinance. Currently, an interim ordinance can be enacted by a simple majority — that’s how democratic rights should work.
  • The bills would delay enactment of an emergency interim ordinance for so long that it will often be ineffective. The bill requires public notice and a public hearing before a city or township enacts an emergency interim ordinance on "activities related to housing." The problem with this is that neighbors often don't learn about a proposed project until just days before a permit is going to be issued. Under this bill, by the time the township or city posts a notice and has a public hearing on adopting the moratorium, the project could already be permitted. This provision is particularly problematic for township boards and small cities, which often only meet once a month. For them, meeting this requirement may take months. By that time, the project could be permitted and the moratorium be ineffective.
We are making progress. Because of grassroots opposition, two co-authors took their name off the bill.  Rep Paul Thissen in the House and Sen. Karin Housley in the Senate removed their names from the bill. That leaves only one author in the Senate and this is a clear signal to others that this bill is controversial and not liked.
However, the bill did move out of the House Government Operations Committee on March 24 and gets a Senate hearing this Monday, April 4.   
TAKE ACTION! The Senate bill will get a hearing in the Senate State and Local Government Committee on Monday at 2 p.m.  All members of the Senate Local Government Committee, as well as the bill author, Sen. Melisa Franzen, need to hear from you that this bill is bad for local democracy and you oppose it.
Suggested message: “On Monday, April 4, Senate File 2694 will be heard in the Senate State and Local Government Committee. Minnesotans value strong local control and township rights. Senate File 2694 weakens these rights and I oppose it. Townships and cities need to keep their power to enact an interim ordinance strong. An interim ordinance is an emergency power that in order to work needs to be enacted quickly. It allows for a moratorium on major development when the community is caught off-guard by unanticipated and potentially harmful proposed developments. Township and city local control is working as it stands now and should be left alone, especially during this year’s rushed and unusually short legislative session.”
Telephone calls are best. You can call now and leave a message. Be sure and leave your name and where you are calling from.   
Top priority calls:
Author of the bill: Senator Melisa Franzen (DFL-Edina) at 651-296-6238 or MAIL FORM
Members of the Senate Local Government Committee:
If you have more time, the rest of the committee is:
Please, let me know if you need more information or hear back from any legislators.
Bobby King
Land Stewardship Project
612-722-6377