DEFENDING THE WATER: Carl Sack on recent legislation to restrict public access to mining site

To: Senators Bob Jauch, Tim Cullen, and Dale Schultz
CC: Rep. Janet Bewley

Dear Senators:

Carl Sack

Carl Sack

I am writing to inquire as to why you feel the need at this juncture to propose new legislation restricting public access to mining work sites, and to urge you to cease and desist from these efforts.

Close observation of the activities of Gogebic Taconite by the public has yielded important information about how those activities are being conducted and whether or not they are complying with their permits and the law. Visitors have observed several violations of DNR rules, such as long ruts and standing water in the access road, slipshod erosion control, groundwater leakage from drill holes, and the spread of invasive species, as well as observing the presence of endangered and threatened species on the mine site.

Your bill would provide legal grounds for G-Tac to prohibit the public from observing their activities, potentially leading to environmental violations that go unreported. Most areas of the mine site are densely forested, and the 300-foot perimeter that you propose would prevent the bulk sampling sites that G-Tac wants to access from being visible to the public.

As you know, on June 11, a group of protesters approached workers at Gogebic Taconite’s proposed mine site and committed minor acts of vandalism and shouting of obscenities. This action was taken without consultation from groups who have been actively opposing G-Tac for more than two years, and was rightly condemned by those groups as illegal. No other violent acts have been committed by protesters, but were they to be, local law enforcement have already demonstrated that they are equipped to handle it professionally and appropriately, without more complicated regulations requiring enforcement. In fact, many other mine opponents have been up to the site and had friendly interactions with workers and security guards.

However, what is much more dangerous than some irresponsible youths is the paramilitary-style security forces armed with high-powered assault rifles that G-Tac has hired to intimidate observers away from visiting the site and seeing their operations. Amidst this atmosphere of intimidation, there have been minor acts of vandalism committed against those staying at LCO’s Harvest Camp, which had its flags stolen and an obscene and threatening sign posted next to it. One mine opponent was assaulted by G-Tac’s Bill Williams in June, but charges were never pressed by the local District Attorney despite a criminal complaint.

I much appreciate the letter sent to G-Tac by Senator Jauch and Representative Bewley condemning the use of these security forces. Now, in spite of Bulletproof Security and G-Tac clearly having broken the law, the Department of Safety and Professional Services has elected not to follow their own rules barring unlicensed outfits from the state for a year and instead grant BPS an immediate permit to resume their work for G-Tac.

Senators, if you are concerned about protecting someone, it should be protecting members of the public from G-Tac, not the other way around. The law was enough to put a stop to early acts of vandalism against the drillers, but it clearly was not enough to put a stop to G-Tac’s use of law-breaking paramilitaries, and I fear it will also not be enough to put a stop to their ultimate unholy atrocity against the Penokee Hills and the Bad River Watershed.

I know you are well aware of the destruction a 4 ½-mile long, 1,000-foot deep open pit iron mine would do the groundwater, waterways, wild rice beds, and air quality of northern Wisconsin. I do not know if you are aware that in their latest bulk sampling application, G-Tac disputes the opinion of professional scientists that there are dangerous asbestiform minerals in the iron deposit that could give their workers and surrounding residents mesothelioma when blasted to bits (and no, 300 feet is not an adequate perimeter to prevent bystanders from inhaling these needle-shaped dust particles).

The pretense used to justify the presence of the BPS guards—that G-Tac is concerned for the safety of their workers on the site—is clearly false. It’s just one more lie in a long string of fictions spun by the company, beginning with their statement in early 2011 that they had no interest in changing Wisconsin’s mining laws to facilitate their project. Their submissions to the DNR and work on the ground have shown a lack of experience or professionalism that is shocking to behold. They are a fly-by-night outfit that is looking to get a quick ripoff of our natural resources while the corruption of the legislative majority allows it, then stick Wisconsin taxpayers with the wrecked environment, wrecked economy, and long-term bill for the cleanup.

I urge you to please focus your lawmaking efforts on preventing the use of assault rifle-armed security guards at the site. Make destruction of the living, breathing Penokee Hills a felony. But please, don’t use your influence to hamper efforts of the public to stop this mine. Those efforts will continue regardless, but whether you will be regarded as helping or harming them remains to be judged by history.

Sincerely,
Carl Sack

DNR Holding Public Hearing on GTAC Bulk Sample Permit

photo: Ros Nelson

photo: Ros Nelson

News Release Published: August 1, 2013 by the Central Office

Contact(s): Ann Coakley, DNR Waste and Materials director – 608-516-2492.

MADISON – The Department of Natural Resources has scheduled a public informational hearing August 15 on the proposed bulk sampling activity and the preapplication notice to mine at Gogebic Taconite’s potential mining project near Mellen, Wisconsin.

The bulk sampling activity and potential mining site are located in the town of Anderson, Iron County, and the town of Morse in Ashland County, with the majority of the site in Iron County. For bulk sampling, the company has proposed to remove a total of 4,000 tons of rock. The rock would be removed from four or five sites using standard excavating equipment and could also involve some blasting activity. The rock would be loaded on to haul trucks and transported off-site for testing and analysis.

The hearing will be held at the Hurley High School, 5503 W. Range View Drive, Hurley, from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. The hearing will be a public informational hearing, where individuals can provide oral or written comments as well as learn about the proposed bulk sampling activity and the preapplication description of the potential mine project.

Agency staff will provide a brief summary of the available information about the bulk sampling and DNR approvals needed by Gogebic Taconite. These informational presentations will be at 10 a.m. and again at 5 p.m., The department will also provide a summary of the steps that must be followed prior to the submission of a mining application for the project.

The department will accept both written and oral comments at the hearing on the proposed bulk sampling activities and the preapplication description. A hearing officer will be present to conduct the hearing and may put time limits on individual oral statements to ensure an opportunity for all persons present to make statements. The hearing officer may also limit the number of representatives making oral statements on behalf of any person or group.

The public may also submit written questions at the hearing through the hearing officer, and there may be an opportunity for department staff to respond as part of the hearing.

30-day public comment period ends September 3

Any member of the public may also submit written comments on the proposed bulk sampling activity or the preapplication description of the potential mining project. The DNR will review all comments that are received on or before Sept. 3, 2013.

Comments may be submitted via mail to Larry Lynch, DNR, 101 S. Webster Street, Madison, Wisconsin 53707, or by e-mail to: DNRWAMINING-GOGEBICTACONITE@Wisconsin.gov.

More information available on-line and at local libraries

Information submitted to the agency by Gogebic Taconite, including the proposed bulk sample plan and preapplication description, is available on the Gogebic mining project page of the DNR website. People can sign up to receive email updates on the project through that page by clicking on the link for “subscribe to Gogebic Taconite project email updates.”

Gogebic Taconite’s project materials are also available at the Hurley Public Library, 405 5th Ave. N., Hurley, 715-561-5707; and at the Vaughn Public Library, 502 West Main St., Ashland, 715-682-7060.

Iron County, Lac Courte Oreilles Make Peace

LCO Vice Chair Rusty Barber shakes hands with Iron County Board Chair Joe Pinardi.

LCO Vice Chair Rusty Barber shakes hands with Iron County Board Chair Joe Pinardi.

Last night, the Iron County Board decided to negotiate with the Lac Courte Oreilles Band of Lake Superior Chippewa about their Treaty Education and Harvest Camp in the woods near the proposed mine. The Iron County Board was to vote on a recommendation of the Forestry Committee to pursue criminal and civil charges against the Camp for camping without a permit. Board Chairman Joe Pinardi announced that they had received a letter from LCO requesting that the county go back to the bargaining table to discuss terms for the camp. At the end of the meeting the Board voted to postpone the vote on the issue until after those negotiations have taken place.

Of the 50 people showed up for the meeting, only about five were pro-mine.

Photos: Rebecca Kemble

Senators Schultz and Jauch Visit Harvest Camp

Last Saturday, Sen. Bob Jauch (D-Poplar) and Sen. Dale Schultz (R-New Richmond) made a visit to Harvest Camp, where they and their wives were treated to a lunch of chicken soup and dumplings made by camp denizen Felina La Pointe. Area residents concerned about the mine spent time talking to the Senators. Paul Demain, official camp representative took them on a tour. Photos: Rob Ganson

Bad River Chairman Rejects Tactics Used by Protesters in Video and GTAC Security

logoIn a statement to Wisconsin Public Radio,  chairman of the Bad River Band of Lake Superior Ojibwe Mike Wiggins Jr. says he’s against the tactics used by the anti-mine protesters in a June 11 action.

Members of an unidentified group attacked workers at an exploratory drilling site June 11, the day Gogebic Taconite (GTAC) began drilling the first of eight bore holes. One person from the raid has been charged with four criminal counts of theft and damage to property.

Bad River Tribal Chairman Mike Wiggins says the video is not what they’re about. Their strategy is non-violent opposition. For example, the tribe is participating in the GLIFWC 2013 Healing Circle Run/Walk, from July 13-19, 2013. The run/walk will connect eight Ojibwe reservations in northern Wisconsin, Michigan, and Minnesota. He explains Bad River’s approach:

For a nation to heal, it must begin with the individual. As a person heals, then that person can help heal his/her family. As a family begins to heal, they can help heal their community. As communities heal, they can help the nation heal. As nations heal, they can help Akii (the earth), our plant and animal relatives to heal. The 2013 Healing Circle Run/Walk is an opportunity for people to come together to pray for healing for themselves, their families, their communities, their nation, Akii, and our relatives.

Wiggins thinks this entire week has traumatized the region, climaxing with GTAC bringing in an unlicensed security force illegally carrying assault rifles in the hills outside of LCO Harvest Camp.

“The semi-automatic assault weapons … was a public relations ploy to try and label the good people of Wisconsin and the others who are peacefully resisting as violent people,” says Wiggins. “It’s a shame, it’s really a shame and no one’s buying it.”

United in Defense of the Water stands with the Bad River Band in denouncing the tactics of the protesters in the video and GTAC, and once against makes a strong commitment to working cooperatively to empower our neighbors in peace and non-violence, and affect change through education that will unite and inspire all people to take action to protect the water.