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The Renewable
Resources Coalition's
Weekly News Updates

****Top Stories****
Bristol Bay residents submit petition
for vote on Pebble
CLEAN WATER: Three present list of signatures to
challenge mining.
By ELIZABETH BLUEMINK
Anchorage Daily News
April 26, 2007
Three Bristol Bay area residents applied to the
state this week for a statewide ballot initiative
to restrict mining activities near streams and rivers
used for drinking water or inhabited by salmon.
The bill's backers said they were motivated by
concern over a potential mine at the huge and controversial
copper and gold Pebble prospect, north of Iliamna
at the headwaters of two Bristol Bay drainages.
To view article in its entirety, please click on
http://www.adn.com/money/industries/mining/story/8827660p-8728461c.html
********************
Cyanide seeps from Fort Knox Mine
LARGEST GOLD MINE: Tests show the lethal chemical
didn't escape from site.
By ELIZABETH BLUEMINK
Anchorage Daily News
April 26, 2007
Cyanide was found seeping this winter
from a hillside next to the dam that holds back
waste from Alaska's largest gold mine, the Fort
Knox Mine near Fairbanks.
Testing ultimately showed cyanide
didn't migrate off the mine site, but the seep's
discovery provoked a quiet flurry of construction
and water testing at Fort Knox between January and
this month.
To view article in its entirety, please
click on
http://www.adn.com/money/story/8827666p-8728463c.html
Northern Dynasty to expand drilling in '07
By Margaret Bauman
Alaska Journal of Commerce
April 29, 2007
A Canadian mining firm with eyes on a huge copper,
gold and molybdenum prospect in southwestern Alaska
is revving up its exploration program to greatly
exceed its 2006 drilling efforts.
Sean McGee, a spokesman for Northern Dynasty Mines
Inc., said April 24 that the mining company plans
to have as many as eight drills on the job through
early December. The company aims to accomplish 243,000
feet of drilling at the Pebble prospect, compared
to about 100,000 feet last year.
To view article in its entirety, please click on
http://www.alaskajournal.com/stories/042907/hom_20070429045.shtml

My turn: Bristol Bay is big enough
It's possible for both sides in Pebble Mine dispute
to get what they want
By MONTE SMITH
Juneau Empire
April 27, 2007
The Pebble Mine may be a great opportunity to boost
Alaska's economy or it may bring about the destruction
of a world-class fishery. Therefore, we must thoroughly
scrutinize the positives and negatives.
To view article in its entirety, please click on
http://www.juneauempire.com/stories/042707/opi_20070427026.shtml

Residents want voters to decide Pebble Mine issue
by Steve Mac Donald
KTUU
April 26, 2007
ANCHORAGE, Alaska -- Alaska voters could get the
chance to decide whether a proposed controversial
gold mine has a future.
To view article in its entirety, please click on
http://www.ktuu.com/Global/story.asp?S=6434639

ANTI-PEBBLE POLLSTER RELEASES POLL
SHOWING 79% STATEWIDE SUPPORT FOR PEBBLE
Truth About Pebble website
April 25, 2007
ANCHORAGEA statewide poll conducted for the
Alaska House Finance Committee shows that 78.8%
of Alaskans support moving forward with environmental
studies to determine whether the Pebble Project
should be developed.
Hellenthal and Associates, which also is the Alaska
polling firm of record for the highly visible, anti-Pebble
Renewable Resources Coalition, interviewed 403 Alaskans
for the survey, asking questions that ranged from
budget priorities to state ownership of an Alaska
gas pipeline.
To view article in its entirety, please click on
http://www.truthaboutpebble.org/CN_Details/tabid/569/xmid/13/Default.aspx

My Turn: Protect Alaska's wild salmon
Bristol Bay commercial fishermen weren't asking
for open-pit mining
By BILLY MAINES
Juneau Empire
April 23, 2007
A few years back, our Bristol Bay commercial fishermen
were hurting from the bottom falling out of the
salmon market. They were asking for help to make
ends meet. They were asking for assistance to help
make loan payments, put food on the table, and help
pay for their fuel and electricity. They were asking
folks to help them address the decline in salmon
prices.
To view article in its entirety, please click on
http://juneauempire.com/stories/042307/opi_20070423005.shtml

Bipartisan Bill Introduced in House to Protect
Bristol Bay, Epicenter of Nation's Most Productive
Fishery PRNewsire USNewswire
April 19, 2007
WASHINGTON, April 19 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ --
Representatives Jay Inslee (D-WA), Wayne Gilchrest
(R-MD), and Maurice Hinchey (D-NY) are expected
to introduce legislation today in the U.S. House
of Representatives that would permanently prohibit
oil and gas leasing in
Bristol Bay, Alaska and the surrounding waters
in the Bering Sea.
On January 9, 2007, President Bush rescinded a
long-standing presidential moratorium that prohibited
drilling in Bristol Bay. In July,
the Minerals Management Service will release a
5-year plan that is expected to recommend oil and
gas development in Bristol Bay and other areas along
our nation's fragile coastlines.
To view article in its entirety, please click on
http://www.prnewswire.com/cgi-bin/stories.pl?ACCT=104&STORY=/www/story/04-19-2007/0004569632&EDATE

Immense Pebble project will be beneficial
to all Alaskans
COMPASS: Points of view from the community
By CHUCK HAWLEY
Anchorage Daily News
April 18, 2007
George Matz's April 10 Compass ("Pebble debate
an echo of our past") reflects a populist view
of Alaska that has been long held but without much
factual basis.
The bottom line -- and a much more accurate view
-- is that Alaska's copper, gold, silver, oil, gas,
fish and even tourism have never had much inherent
value within Alaska: They have value because they
are needed or desired in an outside world that has
what Alaska lacks to develop them, namely capital.
There are parallels between Wrangell Mountains copper
and the Pebble deposit.
To view article in its entirety, please click on
http://www.adn.com/opinion/compass/story/8803408p-8704632c.html

Northern Dynasty shares plans
By HAL SPENCE
Peninsula Clarion
April 18, 2007
Still years away from filing for its
first mining permit, Northern Dynasty Mines Inc.
continues work on its broad-ranging baseline environmental
studies program in anticipation of answering the
concerns of a skeptical public with what the company
hopes will be provable scientific fact.
To view article in its entirety, please
click on
http://www.peninsulaclarion.com/stories/041807/news_0418new004.shtml

PEBBLE FOES NOW STOOPING TO PERSONAL
ATTACKS
Truth About Pebble website
April 10, 2007
ANCHORAGE, AK Members of Truth
About Pebble expressed outrage today at the misrepresentation
of comments made by its co-chair and former Alaska
House Speaker Gail Phillips. The anti-Pebble Renewable
Resources Coalition produced a print and television
ad circulating today that calls out Phillips by
name, saying Attention Gail Phillips ... we
are not un-American. We are not un-Alaskan.
To read article in its entirety, please
click on
http://www.truthaboutpebble.org/CN_Details/tabid/569/xmid/8/Default.aspx

Letters to the Editor
Lawmakers should stand up for wild salmon, Alaska
fishing
David Harsila, president, Alaska Independent Fishermen's
Marketing Association Shoreline, Wash.
Anchorage Daily News
April 30, 2007
http://www.adn.com/opinion/letters/story/8841370p-8742048c.html
Alaska's greatest salmon fishery is
facing a threat to its survival. The prospect of
an industrial mining district in the Bristol Bay
region anchored by the massive Pebble mine has struck
fear in the hearts of Alaska's commercial, Native
and recreational fishermen who are united in opposition
to it.
Alaska Independent Fishermen's Marketing
Association is the largest fishermen's association
in Bristol Bay. Many of our members live and work
in the region, and I've had the good fortune to
fish alongside them for more than 30 years.
AIFMA supports pro-salmon bills pending
in the state Legislature, House Bill 134 introduced
by Rep. Bryce Edgmon, and Senate Bill 67, the Jay
Hammond State Game Refuge bill, introduced by Sen.
Gary Stevens. Both have bipartisan support and recognize
the irreplaceable value of this extraordinary fishery.
Although details differ, both would install reasonable
measures to safeguard clean water and salmon habitat
from industrial mining, while allowing fishing,
municipal growth, and other economic development
to continue.
Unfortunately, lawmakers have barely
lifted a finger to move these bills, holding just
one hearing in the House Fisheries Committee on
the fate of the Bristol Bay salmon fishery. These
bills deserve immediate attention. Stalling in Juneau,
while Northern Dynasty seeks permits, won't sit
well with any commercial fishermen I know. Lawmakers
should stand up for Alaska's wild salmon and the
fishing industry that defines the region. I hope
they will.
**********************
Salmon: A thought to ponder
Robert L. Correia, Kasilof
Peninsula Clarion
April 30, 2007
http://www.peninsulaclarion.com/stories/043007/letters_20070430001.shtml
What if biologists were allowed to manage
the rivers for maximum potential, without political
restrictions?
There are many ideas on how to improve
fisheries from the perspective of every user group.
Personally, I wonder what our local biologists would
be able to accomplish without interference from the
public. Could you imagine no laws to mandate windows
of opportunity, no extremists sharing their
opinions, and no politicians trying to gain support
for their agenda?
If biology alone was used to produce the
maximum, healthiest run of fish possible, what would
the surplus be, and wouldnt we all benefit?
Lets allow the folks at Fish and
Game to use their education and research to do the job
we are paying them to do.
**********************
Those fighting the Pebble project are
fighting for this state's future
John B. Branson Port Alsworth
Anchorage Daily News
April 29, 2007
http://www.adn.com/opinion/letters/story/8838807p-8739462c.html
Sen. Gary Stevens' and Rep. Bryce Edgmon's
bills to establish a Bristol Bay state watershed refuge
are wise public policy and should be combined and become
law.
Location matters, and Pebble's location
is not valid. It is irrational to think mining should
trump a natural system that has supported people and
critters for the past 8,000 to 12,000 years. We have
wiped out Atlantic salmon from New England and drastically
reduced salmon in the Northwest. We need to take care
of Bristol Bay and do no possible harm to our noble
salmon. If the Bristol Bay region is transformed into
a mining district, then there is no more Last Frontier
in Alaska. No generation has a moral right to inflict
a Pebble kind of mine on the Bristol Bay country.
The fight over Pebble shows that environmental
issues are gaining an urgency, uniting people from diverse
backgrounds and interests. Pressing environmental issues
have a way of concentrating minds, to make common cause,
to do the right thing. It is in this spirit that Bob
Gillam's wise philanthropy is so refreshing. Gillam's
courage is an object lesson for the business community.
Not all development projects are socially responsible,
and self-destructive projects should be opposed. Gillam
is a wise man doing good with his money.
**********************
What is truth about Pebble?
Ray Fowler
Homer News
April 26, 2007
http://www.homernews.com/stories/042607/letters_8_002.shtml
The new pro-Pebble mine group, "Truth About Pebble,"
is making the Pebble mine debate very easy, because
they have told us, up front, that they are telling us
The Truth.
This is so simple. Alaskans could have saved billions
of dollars if we had simply had a group named the "Truth
About Transporting Oil." We would have known exactly
who to believe and we wouldn't have ended up with the
Exxon Valdez spill or the BP pipeline blowout.
And if, 25 years ago, my home state of Montana had
been lucky enough to have a group called the "Truth
About Giant Open Pit Mines," we wouldn't have ended
up with permanent pollution problems from every one
of those new mines.
Truth About Pebble is now making the same promises,
nearly verbatim, that pro-mining groups made in Montana
and elsewhere, and Truth About Pebble is using the same
basic play book that has resulted in tragedy elsewhere:
Tell the citizens to simply relax and trust the permitting
process. When it is granted, dig a massive pit, extract
the minerals and store the waste in a toxic lagoon.
Truth About Pebble promises us that using the same
basic approach that has failed elsewhere will somehow
turn out just fine over at Iliamna. They must be right.
They've already told us it's The Truth.
**********************
Hammond refuge deserves hearing
Steve Kahn Port Alsworth
Anchorage Daily News
April 25, 2007
http://www.adn.com/opinion/letters/story/8825635p-8726542c.html
Senate Bill 67, "An Act Establishing the Jay Hammond
State Game Refuge," which brilliantly dovetails
the state's respect for an honored citizen and protection
of resources at a time when they most need safeguarding,
has not yet been given a hearing in the Senate. Please
let Sen. Charlie Huggins, chairman of the Senate Resource
Committee, know that this is an important issue that
should not be delayed. Could it be that foreign interests,
which complain about not being allowed due process on
one hand, could be influencing the stalling on the other?
Makes me wonder.
**********************
Commercial and subsistence fishing both
deserve respect, preservation
Antone Johnson Anchorage
Anchorage Daily News
April 23, 2007
http://www.adn.com/opinion/letters/story/8818926p-8719810c.html
You can call me un-Alaskan or un-American
if you want; it doesnt matter to me. I know what
I am, I know who I am, I am Native Alaskan. I was born
and raised in the Bristol Bay area. Raised to be a commercial
fisherman during the summer. Raised in a subsistence
lifestyle during the winter. Commercial fishing and
subsistence fishing and hunting go hand-in-hand. Both
support each other and provide for a lifestyle handed
down from generation to generation. Fishing has been
a big part of my life and still is, and always will
be. Its something I want to hand down to my children,
as my parents and grandparents handed down to me.
If it takes someone like Robert Gillam to help protect
this lifestyle, then so be it. I would like to personally
thank Gillam for his contributions to protect a way
of life in Bristol Bay. If I am un-American or un-Alaskan
for opposing a project that threatens my way of life,
than I guess I am just that. I was taught by my grandpa,
the late Chief Antone Johnson of Koliganek, to respect
the land and the necessities it provides. To support
the Pebble project would be a dishonor and a show of
disrespect for all that he taught me.
**********************
Help save Bristol Bay watershed by supporting
establishment of refuge
Pudge Kleinkauf Anchorage
Anchorage Daily News
April 20, 2007
http://www.adn.com/opinion/letters/story/8808769p-8709540c.html
For many years I have had the opportunity to fish for
trout, grayling and, of course, salmon in Bristol Bay.
Myself and many others -- anglers, area residents and
visitors alike -- are concerned about the future of
these world-renowned fishery resources in the face of
proposed mining and other development. Senate Bill 67,
the Jay Hammond State Game Refuge bill, wants to put
the last great salmon fishery first, ensuring adequate
protections for the fish habitat provided by some of
the most critical rivers in Bristol Bay. The fish that
live there are one of our state's most precious resources
and need us to speak on their behalf.
There's a lot at stake in the Bristol Bay watershed,
and the facts show that development poses huge risks
that Alaskans need to be aware of. More than 70 percent
of mines in the United States have violated the water-quality
standards to which they promised to adhere during their
permitting process. We can't take the gamble that would
happen here. We need to let the Legislature know we
support the idea of a fish and game refuge in this area.
Call or e-mail your legislator and the members of the
Senate Resources Committee where SB 67 is now awaiting
a hearing. Let them know you support establishment of
the refuge. It won't happen unless we speak up.
**********************
Pro-Pebble mine group blurs truth in statistics
on salmon population
Ray Bulson Eagle River
Anchorage Daily News
April 18, 2007
http://www.adn.com/opinion/letters/story/8803407p-8704636c.html
"The Truth Report" is a series of ads run
by Truth About Pebble, a pro-Pebble group that is trying
to debunk what it says are myths about the impact the
mine will have on Alaskans and their environment. To
counter the claim that salmon and mining can't coexist,
the March 1 report provided a graph showing that Fraser
River salmon populations have been increasing for the
past 60 years despite being near the Gibraltar copper
mine and dozens of other mines in British Columbia.
However, the graph's conclusion is wrong. How do I
know that? Because the graph was annotated with a statistical
indicator called R-squared. As a chemical engineer for
25 years trained in statistics, I've learned that R-squared,
also known as the correlation coefficient, quantifies
how well the line drawn on the graph represents the
actual data. When R-squared is 1.00, the line represents
100 percent of the data. For an R-squared of 0.90 the
line represents 90 percent of the data and the remaining
10 percent does not, and so on.
In the case of the Fraser River salmon population graph,
the R-squared is 0.4024. Therefore, 40 percent of the
data supports the conclusion that the salmon population
is increasing; the other 60 percent does not. In reality,
the graph more likely should show a population decrease.
If Truth About Pebble uses this kind of misleading
data, you have to wonder how much truthfulness is in
their other claims
**********************
Let public, not PR, decide Pebble
Billie Rae Gillas, former Alaskan 1969 2005,
Galveston, TX
Anchorage Daily News
April 16, 2007
http://www.adn.com/opinion/letters/story/8798783p-8700016c.html
I question the integrity of those who
so vehemently oppose the Pebble project. The ad attack
maligning former House Speaker Gail Phillips is a dirty
campaign trick. The motives behind such an attack are
certainly dubious. A public process determines the suitability
of a proposed project. Do the people behind the Renewable
Resources Coalition not believe in the public process?
Or is the process only good if it favors a strictly
environmentalist cause? What could this group be so
scared of that it feels the need to circumvent the public
process and sling mud to hide its agenda?
**********************
Reform of mining tax laws overdue, reform
badly needed
By Sue Ely Eagle River
Anchorage Daily News
April 12, 2007
http://www.adn.com/opinion/letters/story/8786815p-8688232c.html
I am writing in response to the April 3 article, "Pebble
foes threaten mine tax initiative."
Although Pebble is the highest-profile project on the
table right now, the tax reform issue is a much broader
review of the entire mining industry in Alaska. It's
about ensuring that Alaskans, as owners of the mined
resource, receive a more reasonable share of mining
revenues as required by the Alaska Constitution.
Alaska's mining tax laws haven't changed since 1955,
before statehood. What has changed is that international
mining companies have moved into Alaska and are rapidly
extracting billions of dollars worth of our mineral
resources, making only minimal contributions to the
state. These mines have helped Alaska earn the No. 1
spot on the Environmental Protection Agency's pollution
list, yet we are below the national average for mining
tax receipts.
Between 2001 and 2003, $2.9 billion in mineral value
was extracted from Alaska, and yet the industry only
paid the state $18.4 million in taxes, royalties and
fees. That is 1.6 percent of the total mineral value.
Compare that to the 12.5 percent base royalty rate that
oil production pays, plus a production tax. With several
large mines on the drawing board, it's not hard to see
why many Alaskans are discussing tax reform.
EDITOR'S NOTE: The writer serves as legislative organizer
for the Alaska Center for the Environment.
**********************
Northern Dynasty's talking the talk; let's
see if it can walk the walk
By William Fell, Anchorage
Anchorage Daily News
April 12, 2007
http://www.adn.com/opinion/letters/story/8786815p-8688232c.html
The headlines tell of buried treasure under the floor
of one of our most beautiful rooms in our house we call
Alaska. These headlines push our want button. We cannot
let wants destroy reason. We have learned from other
renters in our house (Exxon, BP, etc.) that renters
sometimes act like renters, not like owners. They do
not follow through on judged responsibilities, even
in years of great profits. They have shown frugality,
without ethics.
If Northern Dynasty is going to rent one of the most
beautiful rooms in our house, it cannot rip up the whole
floor and build a pit in this room. This pit, holding
millions of gallons of toxic mining waste, will make
a large part of this most beautiful room in our house
toxic for maybe 100 or more years after the mine is
closed. Bad exchange.
I have great faith in human ingenuity. If there is
a real need for this gold, science can progress to a
better method to extract this resource. Northern Dynasty
should not start until it can demonstrate on a very
small scale of one square mile (or thereabouts) complete
resource removal and no toxic waste left on site.
**********************

Legislators discuss Kensington Mine solution
today
Brittany Retherford
The Muskegger Juneau Empire
April 30, 2007
Lawmakers at the Capitol today consider
a bill, HJR 17, that supports Coeur Alaska to pursue
all legal options to resolve its lawsuit with
several regional environmental groups. This could include
appealing to the Supreme Court.
The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals has not
yet issued its final ruling on the lawsuit over Coeurs
proposal to use Lower Slate Lake as the tailings disposal
facility for Kensington Mine. It did, however, announce
its intention to do so.
To view article in its entirety, please
click on
http://juneaublogger.com/naturalresources/?p=104
Public needs to keep Chuitna Mine in mind
Editorial
Peninsula Clarion
April 29, 2007
Alaska is a resource development state.
The balancing act between development and conservation
is played out over and over again as far away as the
North Slope to right here in the Kenai Peninsula Borough.
Our home in Cook Inlet gives us front-row
seats to two major balancing acts -- Pebble and Chuitna
mines.
To view article in its entirety, please
click on
http://www.peninsulaclarion.com/stories/042907/oped_0429ope003.shtml

Federal legislation looks to prevent drilling
in Bristol Bay
By Margaret Bauman
Alaska Journal of Commerce
April 29, 2007
Oil and gas officials, the environmental
community and Alaska Native corporations are all weighing
in on proposed federal legislation to permanently halt
oil and gas leasing in Bristol Bay.
The Bristol Bay Protection Act was introduced
April 19 in the U.S. House of Representatives by Rep.
Jay Inslee, D-Wash., Rep. Maurice Hinchey, D-N.Y., and
Wayne Gilchrest, R-Md. The measure comes in the face
of mounting concern over the permitting of offshore
oil and gas development in Bristol Bay.
To view article in its entirety, please
click on
http://www.alaskajournal.com/stories/042907/hom_20070429041.shtml
Interior Dept.s Drilling Plan Includes
Gulf and Alaska Bay
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
New York Times
Published: April 28, 2007
WASHINGTON, April 27 (AP) The Interior
Department has put the final touches on a five-year
plan to expand oil and gas drilling in the Gulf of Mexico
and offshore from Alaska and Virginia.
Department officials said Friday that
the plan would include more environmental buffer zones
around lease areas and make other minor changes to a
previous draft. Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne will
announce the major oil and gas development program
on Monday, a department statement says.
To view article in its entirety, please
click on
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/28/washington/28drilling.html?_r=1&oref=slogin
My Turn: Time to act against climate change
By KATE TROLL
Juneau Empire
April 25, 2007
With the latest report from the International
Panel on Climate Change, there is no more pussy-footing
around it; greenhouse gas emissions from human activity
are creating ecological, economic and social challenges
around the world, including Alaska, which is ground
zero for global warming.
To view article in its entirety, please
click on
http://juneauempire.com/stories/042507/opi_20070425024.shtml

My Turn: Coeur, you did it wrong
Dumping tailings into Lower Slate Lake violates Clean
Water Act
By FRED EINSPRUCH
Juneau Empire
April 25, 2007
In response to Rick Richins' My Turn of
April 16, I would like to set the facts straight. Coeur
Alaska has not done it right. Here is why:
1) Richins writes, "America's commitment
to clean water has always taken into account a balance
of water uses." This is not based in fact. The
United States ignored water and air pollution from industrial
sources from its founding until the mid-20th century.
Prior to passage of the Clean Water Act in 1972, industry
(including the mining industry) largely belched toxic
pollution into the waterways with no restraint. Coeur's
plan to use Lower Slate Lake as its industrial toxic
waste dump, killing all existing life in a public-clean
water resource, is a clear violation of the Clean Water
Act. Coeur, you got this wrong.
To view article in its entirety, please
click on
http://juneauempire.com/stories/042507/opi_20070425023.shtml
My Turn: A novel proposal for the governor
By BILL YANKEE
Juneau Empire
April 22, 2007
I'm proposing that Gov. Sarah Palin appoint
Coeur Alaska to take over the former Fish and Game Habitat
Division (now run by the Department of Natural Resources).
Now you might think this would be the
"fox guarding the henhouse," and you would
be right. Nevertheless, hear me out.
Juneau's business community has gone on
the record of supporting Coeur's Kensington Mine, including
its controversial tailings proposal, which involves
submerging tailings in Lower Slate Lake.
To view article in its entirety, please
click on
http://juneauempire.com/stories/042207/opi_20070422011.shtml
Gold exploration raises hackles along
Kuskokwim
STRONG OPPOSITION: Mining in Kisaralik Lake area causes
concern.
By TOM KIZZIA
Anchorage Daily News
April 20, 2007
News that a gold mining company was flying
equipment into the pristine mountains around Kisaralik
Lake spread fast along the Kuskokwim River in the past
few weeks.
Villages up and down the river quickly
passed resolutions opposed to mining exploration in
Kisaralik region, which they said is a vital traditional
hunting and fishing area. Tribal and Native corporation
officials complained the state allowed the exploration
without public notice.
"We were blindsided," Akiak
tribal administrator Sheila Williams said Thursday.
To view article in its entirety, please
click on
http://www.adn.com/money/story/8808716p-8709506c.html

Coeur to remove temporary dam
Court nixes 'interceptor' ditch to divert snowmelt
By BRITTANY RETHERFORD
JUNEAU EMPIRE
April 20, 2007
Coeur Alaska, under court order, will
remove a temporary dam intended to hold spring snowmelt
near Lower Slate Lake and the Kensington gold mine,
federal officials said Thursday.
Everybody is struggling to come
up with the best environmental solution. This is what
we feel is the best one," said Victor Ross, a project
manager for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
The cofferdam was intended as a temporary
structure to hold back water while building a permanent
barrier as part of the mining company's tailings disposal
plan for the Kensington Mine, about 45 miles north of
Juneau. Tailings are the ground rock left over after
the metal is extracted.
To view article in its entirety, please
click on
http://www.juneauempire.com/stories/042007/sta_20070420018.shtml

Bristol Bay group buys into Ocean Beauty
By WESLEY LOY
Anchorage Daily News
April 16, 2007
Bristol Bay Economic Development Corp.
will buy a 50 percent share of Seattle-based fish processor
Ocean Beauty Seafoods Inc., the companies just announced.
Ocean Beauty is one of the states
largest salmon processors.
Bristol Bay, based in Dillingham, is one
of the states six Community Development Quota
companies. Through a federal program, the CDQ companies
harvest Bering Sea fish and crab set aside for the benefit
of Western Alaska villages.
To view article in its entirety, please
click on
http://www.adn.com/front/story/8798986p-8700235c.html
My turn: Coeur has done it right
By RICK RICHINS
Juneau Empire
April 16, 2007
In an April 2 My Turn column, Russell
Heath, the executive director of the Southeast Alaska
Conservation Council, said Coeur Alaska has attempted
to break the law, specifically the Clean Water Act,
by developing a mine plan that would place inert tailings
fill into "waters of the U.S.," even though
such action is in full compliance with nearly 60 federal,
state and local permits.
To view article in its entirety, please
click on
http://juneauempire.com/stories/041607/opi_20070416014.shtml

Heavy snowpack leads to flooding concerns
at mine
By Tim Bradner
Alaska Journal of Commerce
April 15, 2007
There have been record-breaking snowfalls
in the Juneau area this winter, and the spring thaw
will be unusually wet and sloppy.
Coeur Alaska Inc. is watching a temporary
cofferdam built at Lower Slate Lake near its Kensington
Mine very closely out of concern that an unusually heavy
melt could lead to erosion of the structure and flooding
from the lake.
The cofferdam figured in an injunction
ordered by federal courts stopping construction of a
permanent dam at Lower Slate Lake after conservation
groups filed lawsuits against federal permits issued
to Coeur for mine construction.
To view article in its entirety, please
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http://www.alaskajournal.com/stories/041507/hom_20070415014.shtml

'Lousy corporate citizens'
Labour boss blasts Rio Tinto
MICHELLE STEWART
The Aurora
April 16, 2007
The president of the provinces Federation
of Labour made a special trip to Labrador West last
week in support of Steelworkers on strike against the
Iron Ore Company of Canada (IOC).
Reg Anstey, a familiar face and voice
on the labour scene since the 1970s, visited the picketline
and offered a motivational speech to the membership
at the union centre.
The veteran advocate for labour didnt
mince words when he spoke of IOCs controlling
company Rio Tinto.
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http://www.theaurora.ca/index.cfm?iid=2449&sid=20666

9th Circuit upholds Bougainville residents
right to sue Rio Tinto, PNG in U.S.
The U.S. Ninth Court of Appeals has allowed Bouganville
Island residents to pursue legal action against Rio
Tinto.
By: Dorothy Kosich
Mineweb
April 17, 2007
RENO, NV -
The U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals
Monday upheld the right of Bougainville Island residents
in Papua New Guinea to pursue class-action litigation
against London-based über miner Rio Tinto.
The plaintiffs claim that they or their
families were victims of numerous violations of international
law as a result of Rio Tinto's Bougainville copper mining
operations, and the decade-long uprising generated by
the controversy over the mine. Rio Tinto has argued
that the plaintiffs need to exhaust all PNG court remedies
prior to seeking U.S. court intervention.
To view article in its entirety, please
click on
http://www.mineweb.net/mineweb/view/mineweb/en/page68?oid=19676&sn=Detail

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