Showing posts with label Uranium One. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Uranium One. Show all posts

Sunday, February 11, 2018

~~ Bear Essentials ~February 11, 2018~~


v San Juan County friends: you are urgently needed tomorrow Monday, Feb. 12th at 5:30 PM for a town hall hosted by Representative John Curtis. This is your opportunity ask those hard questions you’ve been complaining about related to H.R. 4532.  Even though the monument has been reduced substantially, there are questionable items included.  Meet at the Hideout Community Center in Monticello.  5:30-7:00 PM       Car pool if possible.
Linda Patterson:I found a better map. Apparently all of Elk Ridge and the Blue Mountain are being assessed for wilderness designation. The scary part about this for ranchers is: that when they created the Dark Canyon Wilderness they eliminated grazing in that area. Here is the map link https://www.fs.usda.gov/.../FSE_DOCUMENTS/fseprd547675.pdf

Without your voice the Green Swamp Will Continue to Grow  



Good News Bears
Dwight Lomaintewa, who lives in the Hopi village of Mishongnovi, said the 65-mile (104 kilometer) daily drive to Peabody Energy's Kayenta Mine is well worth it. A steady job means his family can stay on the reservation and his children can learn the language and traditions, the 33-year-old said.
Myron Richardson, a 42-year-old Navajo welder, said he was fortunate to get a job at the mine after being away from home for construction jobs. If the power plant and mine close, he said he'd likely have to move, and his children's cultural lessons with their grandfather would cease.”
A county commissioner’s poor job performance and conflicts of interest have spurred a group of concerned citizens in La Plata County, Colorado to launch a local recall effort. Calling itself the La Plata Liberty Coalition, the group is busy gathering recall petition signatures with the hopes of ousting Commissioner, Gwen Lachelt.
n Montana Senator Writes Resolution supporting Justice for Western Ranchers  “WHEREAS, A seventeen page whistleblowing letter, released by the federal government’s lead investigator (Special Agent Larry Wooten) in the Nevada standoff case, cited multiple cover ups within the federal agencies and a “widespread pattern of bad judgment, lack of discipline, incredible bias, unprofessionalism and misconduct, as well as likely policy, ethical and legal violations among senior and supervisory staff”

n  Be Good Stewards of the Land as Sportmen  Sec. Zinke sets the pace
n  BLM works on Reshuffling the Swamp.  Good?   Or Bad?
n  Petition to Free the Hammonds.  Your Support is needed

 
Bad News Bears

n  Environmental Hype Falls Flat: No one shows up!

n  If pro-monument advocates can’t control themselves to not illegally vandalize Utah’s public buildings, paid for by your tax dollars, WHO KNOWS what type of desecration they have in mind for Bears Ears.... This happened at the Utah State Capitol Feb. 10!
          
Other Articles/ Events of Local Interest


v Drought Conditions in San Juan; please continue to pray for snow!
v  
                                                                 ~~~~~~                                                                   
 http://beyondthebears.blogspot.com/          
                     Documenting Bears Ears “No Monument” efforts since July 2016



Friday, November 3, 2017

~~ Bear Essentials ~ Nov. 3, 2017 ~~


Green Groups Oppose Trump’s Utah Visit: Time to Speak Up
Facts included in the letter: “Radical environmental groups have shown disrespect to Local Native American residents by narrating a false scenario, using identity politics and questions of “Native American” sovereignty in terms of the Monument designation. Native Americans closest to the Bears Ears have told us time and time again that “sacredness should not be synonymous to national monuments.”
We understand much of the sacred sites and cultural heritage areas of Native American origin are already thoroughly protected to include:
*Grand Gulch Wilderness Area - 105,213 acres
*Dark Canyon Wilderness Area - 57,248 acres
*Road Canyon Wilderness Area - 52,420 acres
*Mancos Mesa Wilderness Area – 50,899 acres
*Fish Creek Canyon Wilderness Area - 40,160 acres
*Cedar Mesa Special Recreation Management Area (SRMA) - 30,752 acres
*Butler Wash Wilderness Area - 24,277 acres
*Cheesebox Canyon Wilderness Area - 14,831 acres
*The Indian Creek Wilderness Area - 6,870 acres
*Mule Canyon Wilderness Area- 5,990 acres
*Bridger Jack Mesa Wilderness Area - 5,290 acres
*Natural Bridges National Monument - 7,780 acres
All within the unnecessary boundaries of the Bears Ears National Monument, over 90% of the area included in the list were designated through a democratic congressional legislative process.
We are certain that under these existing federally protected areas, sites of significant historic and cultural concern will remain in the capable hands of the federal agencies charged with protecting these places of wonder. How are we certain?
The current powerful laws already in existence to protect these places are:
*1935 Historic Sites
*1960/1974 Reservoir Act
*1966 National History Preservation Act
1980 Amendment NHBA - Exec. Order Protection & Enhancement of Cultural Environment
*1974 Archeological & Historic Preservation Act
*1978 American Indian Religious Freedom Act
*1979 Archeological Resources Act (Heavily Enforced)
*1990 Native American Graves Protection & Repatriation Act (Heavily Enforced)
*1996 Indian Sacred Site
*2000 CONSULTATION & Coordination with Indian Tribal Government
*2003 Preserve America Act
Bears Ears National Monument has proven to be an unneeded layer of federal bureaucracy which our great Nation simply never needed. The Antiquities Act demonstrates the abuse of federal power as well as being obsolete in its current form.”
We welcome a visit by the 45th President of the United States to the State of Utah.
Write to Secretary Zinke: Dept. of the Interior  1849 C Street, N.W.  Wash. DC 20240 

Good News Bears

n  Pruitt (EPA Head) Plans Overhaul of Advisory Boards Whatever science comes out of EPA shouldn’t be political science,” said Pruitt, a Republican lawyer who previously served as the attorney general of Oklahoma. “He suggested many previously appointed to the panels were potentially biased because they had received federal research grants.”


Throughout Ms. Budd-Falen’s career, the foundational principles that appear to have consistently guided her work are: That the freedoms we are entitled to in this country are the product of rights bestowed upon us, not by man, but by God; That our Constitution was written for the purpose of limiting our government’s ability, if not proclivity, to erode those rights; and That, unless those freedoms are vigorously defended, they will be vanquished in the course of time.”  [Ms. Falen was also one of the presenters at the Kansas conference that 10 SJC residents attended this past summer.]


Bad News Bears         

“The prosecution seems to think that the Inspector General’s Office is not accurate in their reporting, and its documents cannot be trusted. The report is accurate enough to fire Dan Love from the Bureau of Land Management. It is accurate enough for our elected officials. It is accurate enough for Washington DC bureaucrats. Yet it is not accurate to the Federal prosecutors?”

n  EPA bans wood burning, and wood burning stoves  Old news, but may be new to you.

            Other issues related to San Juan County
n  Possible Incorporation of Bluff Discussed  KSJD radio interview
n  Utah Navajo Health   KSJD interview with Michael Jensen, concerning Utah Navajo Health Services

~~~~~

                                     Documenting Bears Ears “No Monument” efforts since July 2016