Senate Passes Mining Bill
Good statement from Midwest Environmental Advocates, a public interest law firm, commenting on a process that has shut out the public interest:
 
Midwest Environmental Advocates on Passage of SB1
Media Advisory
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: February 27,
 2013
CONTACT:        Kimberlee Wright, Executive
 Director, (608)251-5047
MADISON,
 WI – Today the State Senate narrowly approved a bill deregulating iron 
mining in Wisconsin.  The following can be attributed to Kimberlee
 Wright, Executive Director of Midwest Environmental Advocates:
“The
 vote in the Senate today marks two years of state lawmakers ignoring 
the majority of
 their constituents who are opposed to environmental roll backs, in 
order to push through a bad bill written largely by an out-of-state 
company to exempt themselves from our state’s environmental protections.
 It has been deeply disappointing to see how the
 power of special interest money so blatantly trumped the voices of 
Wisconsin citizens. The majority has thumbed their noses at science and 
the democratic process in voting for this legislation. Worse, they 
didn’t even bother to engage the sovereign nation
 whose health and way of life are put at risk by the largest proposed 
iron mine in our state’s history.
“The
 area where the mining company wants to create a massive, open pit mine 
by blowing up
 the Penokee Hills and filling lakes and streams with the waste, is one 
of the most extensive and pristine landscapes remaining in the world.  
The vast wetlands on the Bad River Band of Lake Superior Chippewa 
Indians’ reservation function as kidneys for Lake
 Superior: the billions of gallons of water that flow through the Bad 
River homeland refresh the largest freshwater lake in the world.  Over 
40 % of all the wetlands in the Lake Superior basin are on Bad River 
Tribal lands and it is truly due to the Tribal
 leadership and continuing conservation efforts that the Bad River 
watershed has been recognized as an internationally important wetland 
ecosystem.
“Despite
 the threats to their land, Bad River Tribal chair, Mike Wiggins, Jr. 
told a supportive
 crowd in the state capitol today, ‘although this has been a long and 
difficult two years, it is the equivalent of the blink of an eye for our
 people.  We aren’t going anywhere and we have a long history of 
defending our way of life.’
“As
 this legislative proposal moves forward to certain passage in the State
 Assembly, there
 is still not a clear path to an open-pit mine in the Penokee Hills. Our
 state’s proud history of non-partisan protection of our natural 
heritage is still cherished by the people of Wisconsin. This fight has 
just begun and the numbers of people standing together
 to protect the rights of future generations grows every single day.”
Midwest
 Environmental Advocates is a public interest organization that uses the
 power of the law to support communities fighting for environmental
 accountability. Learn more about the Midwest Environmental Advocates on
 the web at
midwestadvocates.org, like MEA on
Facebook
 or follow @MidwestAdvocate on Twitter.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

1 comment:
Organizations like this talk about supporting communities, but they don't do the ground work to get those communities organized or registered to vote.
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