by Carol Thompson
February 10, 2020
LANSING — A Wisconsin tribe is challenging Michigan’s decision to issue a permit for an open-pit mine proposed in the Upper Peninsula, the latest in a series of attempts to stop the controversial project from moving forward.
February 6, 2020
Dear Editor,
My name is Tom Boerner, I have been involved in two contested cases hearings against permits issued to Aquila by EGLE and have just filed contested case petitions for two more: Air Quality Permit and Amended Part 632 Permit.
February 6, 2020
Dear Editor,
Brumadinho, Brazil again? Why? It is still about water.
One year ago (with 21st-century mining technology — exactly the type Aquila is proposing here) a mining tailings dam collapsed (like one does world-wide roughly every 8 months) dumping millions of tons of toxic sludge killing 270 people. In its path, the surrounding forest, nearby towns and waters were destroyed.
by Michele Bourdieu
February 3, 2020
LANSING, Mich.; KASHENA, Wis. — In its efforts to protect the Menominee River from the dangers of Acid Mine Drainage and to save sacred cultural sites near the river from being destroyed, the Menominee Indian Tribe of Wisconsin (MITW) is still pushing back against a federal and state permitting process that ignores their concerns about Aquila Resources’ proposed open-pit sulfide mine threatening both Wisconsin and Michigan, the two states bordering the river.
Please read the Menominee Indian Tribe of Wisconsin’s resolution here: “Recognition of the rights of the Menominee River.”
January 31, 2020
Dear Editor,
A year ago a tailings dam in Brazil, which is exactly the same design that Aquila will be using, failed and collapsed and resulted in the death of over 250 people. The sad part is that this wasn’t the first time such a thing has happened in Brazil. It also happened in November of 2015, a tailings dam burst and killed 19 individuals. One would think the first time it happened, that the country would take measures to make sure it doesn’t happen again, but no, fast forward to January 2019, it happened again at another site. The mine is still in operation today and the mining company claimed that the structure provided inadequate drainage and couldn’t handle the high water levels. It is easy for us to brush it off as if Brazil is an apathetic country that does not care about its people.
A federal appeals court panel told a Wisconsin tribe this week it can’t review a decision by two federal agencies that reinforced Michigan’s permitting authority over a proposed mine on the Michigan-Wisconsin border.
The Menominee Indian Tribe of Wisconsin filed a lawsuit against the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and Army Corps of Engineers in 2018 after the agencies failed to address the tribe’s concerns that federal review of a wetlands permit for the mine was warranted.
January 25, 2020
Eagle Herald
Dear Editor,
As the people went about their daily lives in the town of Brumadinho they were completely unaware that the massive tailings dam at the mine was getting weaker every day. Then maybe just a small section started to fail, just a little. Then a little more gave way on the massive wall. That wall held the safety of every man, woman and child in the town, those working at the mine and every living thing below it. When it could no longer hold its contents the wall exploded with the sound a jet makes when it breaks the sound barrier. A force that could be heard and felt inside of every living thing. then it was over. It was just a matter of minutes and it was over. Hundreds were buried alive before they could even tell the ones next to them that they loved them. Two hundred and fifty lives were extinguished in a snap of a finger. Men, women, children and babies, precious pets, livestock and the town of Brumadinho died a terrible suffocating death under a wall of mud.
January 20, 2020
Eagle Herald
Dear Editor,
This letter is in response to Dale Anderson’s letter of last week.
Although he believes our environment was not a concern in the past like it is today, let’s look at history: Years ago, the only fertilizer applied to crop fields was cow manure, which was totally biodegradable. Then came commercial fertilizers, intended to increase crop yields. Next were chemical herbicides, pesticides, fungicides, insecticides, broadleaf sprays — including Round-Up which is now listed as a carcinogen — all formulated toward higher crop yields. When crops are sprayed with chemicals, they are assimilated by the plant and also absorbed into the ground; however, some are washed into creeks, rivers and into our water supplies. The scientific community was not aware of the pollution then, but now we all know.