Dear Friends and Neighbors,
We need to forward this to any Wisconsin residents we know to generate energy on
these regional issues:
Paragraph 2. Sign resolution to stop FSM.
Paragraph 3. Sign petition to retain local governmental control.
We
can join the effort by connecting with our Wisconsin neighbors who can add their
names.
Wishing
you well,
Bonita
On Monday, January 20, 2014 2:24 PM,
Patricia J. Popple <sunnyday5@charter.net> wrote:
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Citizens Groups to Lawmakers: Stop Frac Sand Mining and SB 349
MADISON--A resolution calling for a ban on frac sand mining and a halt to
attacks on local democracy has been sent to Governor Scott Walker, members of
the Wisconsin Legislature, and State and Federal environmental regulators.
The resolution (PDF available here) was created by the Wisconsin
Network for Peace and Justice's Environmental Working Group and has been
endorsed by more than 75 civic and environmental organizations, including 49
Wisconsin groups and 29 groups from seven other states where Wisconsin sand is
used for hydraulic fracturing.
An additional online petition with the same language currently
has 165 individual signers.
It calls for the rejection of SB 349, a bill introduced last fall that
would outlaw local ordinances regulating frac sand mining, local air and water
quality, or blasting. The bill impacts communities facing water contamination
from factory farms and potential iron mining in addition to frac sand areas.
Although the legislation raised an outcry from democracy advocates, it is likely
to be reintroduced in the new session.
The number of frac sand mines in the state has more than doubled in the
past two years, to over 140 facilities in operation or planned, according to
data from the Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism. The industry has
been exempted from environmental impact studies, despite numerous complaints
from nearby residents of 24-hour noise, heavy truck and train traffic, and
cancer-causing silica dust.
The Center reported in March that 80 to 90 percent of frac
sand sites receive letters of noncompliance from the Wisconsin Department of
Natural Resources, and up to a fifth of active sites have been cited for
environmental violations, but the DNR can't keep up with all of the industry's
problems. The resolution asks Federal agencies to step in with tougher
environmental enforcement, and ultimately seeks a statewide ban on frac sand
mining.
"Since 2011, Legislative efforts have undermined Wisconsin’s
democratic tradition and conservation heritage by weakening environmental
protections, eroding the authority of the [DNR] to make science-based rules,
preventing DNR enforcement staff from doing their jobs, and reducing public
involvement in the iron mine permitting process," the resolution
says.
"Wisconsin has historically used strong regulation to ensure that a
clean environment is preserved for future generations because our well-informed
citizens have stood up to demand it."
The resolution's endorsers are connected by struggles to protect
the water, air, and small farming economy from frac sand mining in Wisconsin and
hydraulic fracturing (or fracking) for natural gas in other states, for which
the sand is used. The resolution cites methane leaks from fracking that
contaminate local aquifers and contribute to global warming.
The resolution also goes beyond local agitation to demand broader solutions
to the underlying driver of the industry, U.S. dependence on fossil fuels. It
calls for improvements to the state's Focus on Energy program and a shift in
national priorities to "energy efficiency and the development of local, clean,
renewable energy sources."
The Wisconsin Network for Peace and Justice is awaiting a response to the
resolution from state lawmakers and regulators. The resolution and more
information are available online at www.wnpj.org/fracsand.
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WHAT: Resolution Opposing Frac Sand Mining Industry and
Environmental Degradation (attached)
WHO: Sponsored by the Wisconsin Network for Peace and Justice
(WNPJ); endorsed by 78 civic and environmental organizations (49 in-state, 29
out-of-state)
CONTACT: Carl Sack, WNPJ Staff, carl@wnpj.org, (608) 250-9240; Pat Popple, Frac Sand Activist, sunnyday5@charter.net