Wednesday, August 26, 2020

Tweet your support of this Morning's Border Wall Protest: against the Stinger, Bridge, & Iron - Fisher Industries



Please, share the twitter links below to show support of this morning's this Morning's Border Wall Protest: Akimel O’odham, Hia-Ced O’odham, Tohono O’odham, & Allies Against Stinger, Bridge, & Iron - Fisher Industries.

COOLIDGE, ARIZONA - On August 26, 2020 Akimel O’odham, Hia-Ced O’odham, Tohono O’odham, & Allies will gather at Stinger Bridge and Iron, a bridge manufacturing company that is owned by Fisher Industries, to protest its production of panels for the border wall extension. Fisher Industries prides itself in building “unbuildable’ walls”, using their patented bollard hanging system, allowing them to build one-mile of border wall per day. Located in Akimel O’odham territory in so-called Coolidge, Arizona, Stinger Bridge & Iron loads panels of steel slabs to be transported to Hia-Ced O’odham traditional territory - known to settlers as Organ Pipe National Monument, Cabeza Prieta Wildlife Refuge, and the Barry Goldwater Bombing Range.

Tax fraud, environmental harms, underhanded dealings, and corruption were well documented in the Fisher family business long before Bannon’s ‘We Build the Wall” illicit dealings made headlines. Legal issues with the Fisher family range from tax fraud, to child pornography, to multiple infractions with the Environmental Protection Agency. These types of behaviors are unacceptable on O’odham jeved.

Current harms perpetuated by Fisher Sand and Gravel and its subsidiary companies includes the destruction of sacred sites, burial sites, and environment in unceded O’odham territory. The border wall’s impact is permanent. Depletion of vital water sources for the mixture of concrete and paving of roads has already caused irreversible damage. In the interest of protecting the water, our culture, and the future of our people we must stand together and against this attack on our traditional territory.

We demand that Fisher Industries, the United States Government, and all other occupying entities cease and desist building the wall. We demand that Stinger Bridge and Iron stop assembling panels for transport. We demand that Fisher stop abusing our sacred ecosystem, and stop using groundwater for their destructive projects.

-Dan Millis of the Sierra Club


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Tweets to share:

Sunday, August 23, 2020

Tell EPA to tighten national limit on dangerous smog pollution



Smog -- pollution caused by emissions from everything from coal plants to cars -- is choking too many of our communities. Even worse, when you look at the communities most impacted by bad air quality, almost all of them tend to be Black, Indigenous, or Latinx neighborhoods -- a remnant of decades of redlining and environmental racism which continues today.

In March of 2018 we fought TEP's proposal to install 10 gas-fired RICE engines at the Sundt power plant in Tucson's South-side. One of the problems the community faced in responding to how TEP's permit complied with PDEQ's code was the absence of cardon dioxide standards. That's right! The code doesn't include carbon dioxide standards because Scott Pruitt put a hold on the Clean Power Plan.

The Trump administration's new proposal for smog pollution is to literally do nothing -- another botched response during a time that demands radical change. Send in an official public comment now and be sure to tell your story about how air quality affects you and your community:

We're in the middle of a major pandemic that attacks our lungs, and the Trump EPA is proposing a 'do-nothing' smog pollution plan that will make it harder for Americans to breathe clean, safe air.

Smog pollution from power plants, factories, cars and other sources irritates the lungs, exacerbates conditions like asthma, and is linked to a wide array of serious diseases and even premature deaths. Children and seniors with respiratory illnesses are especially harmed by smog pollution, as are the people that live primarily in Black, Indigenous, and Latinx communities.

To keep us safe from harmful smog pollution, the EPA is supposed to regularly update the national standard based on the best available medical and scientific evidence. But instead of following the strong evidence that the current standard is inadequate to protect Americans from smog, the Trump EPA wants to keep the existing weak standard in place.

Please, tell the EPA to tighten the national limit on dangerous smog pollution -- down to 60 parts per billion -- to protect Americans from smog.

We must raise our voices and demand the EPA stop putting Americans' health at risk, including those living in our most polluted communities. The best way to do this is by sharing your own personal story.

Do you or a loved one have asthma or a respiratory disease that is particularly dangerous by smog pollution? Please tell the EPA your story and why it's important for the administration to strengthen the smog standard today.

EPA is taking comments from the public on its 'do-nothing' smog pollution plan through October 1. The agency is also hosting virtual hearings on August 31 and September 1. Share your story here.

The medical and scientific evidence is clear, and the status quo is insufficient. EPA must strengthen the outdated smog pollution standard now.

- Jonathan Levenshus
Beyond Coal Campaign, Sierra Club

Sign up to testify for EPA's virtual hearings here!  Mon, Aug 31, 2020 8:00 AM (Eastern) - Tues, Sep 1, 2020 6:30 PM (Eastern)

Want to receive a text alert every time the air is unsafe in your area? Sign up here or text BADAIR to 69866.

More Information:

The American Lung Association "State of the Air" report.

Arizona Department of Environmental Quality: Air Quality Hourly Forecast | Tucson


Formaldehyde is top air pollutant in South Tucson, according to EPA’s outdated data - Jan. 2020

Tucson's air pollution violates federal ozone standards for the first time - July 6, 2020


Saturday, August 22, 2020

Say “No” to the Lake Powell Pipeline


There is a massive proposed diversion of the Colorado River to provide municipal water to Washington and Kane Counties in southwest Utah. These municipal water users are among the most wasteful water users in America, using more than twice the national average of water, per-person.

The 140-mile-long Lake Powell Pipeline would pump 86,000 acre-feet of Colorado River water each year to Utah’s Washington County. The proposed routes for the Lake Powell Pipeline would pass through lands that are culturally significant or sacred to the Kaibab Band of Paiute Indians, potentially disturbing or impeding access to these areas. 

Reducing water consumption through conservation is a better way for Utah to meet its water needs, rather than building the Lake Powell Pipeline. Too much is at stake for the people and wildlife that rely on the Colorado River.

The Colorado River Basin not only supports 40 million people, but also some of the most abundant and diverse bird communities in the arid West. We must find water solutions that work for both people and nature.

Take action, and tell the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation that any alternative approving the Lake Powell Pipeline is unacceptable.

The environmental analysis for the Lake Powell Pipeline fails to document the complete range of expected impacts to Colorado River flows and the 27 endangered, threatened, and sensitive species of fish, amphibians, reptiles, plants, birds—such as the Southwestern Willow Flycatcher, Summer Tanager, Western Yellow-billed Cuckoo, and Yuma Ridgway’s Rail—and other wildlife that depend on downstream habitats. Compounded by a changing climate and 21-year drought effectively reducing water flows in the Colorado River, the additional depletion of more than 80,000 acre-feet of water annually through the proposed Pipeline will increase the magnitude of these impacts.

Without rectifying these problems, both the environment and the Basin’s communities—including those in Utah—face a great risk.

- Karyn Stockdale
National Audubon Society




The deadline for comments is September 8, 2020.

For more impact, please, include a personalized message with the following statement (follow link to the petition above.) :

Subject: Please reconsider alternatives to the Lake Powell Pipeline

To the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation:

At this time, the only alternative I support for the Lake Powell Pipeline is the "no action" alternative. As presented, this project poses a threat to the Colorado River and the people and wildlife that rely on it. We must find solutions to our water demands that work for both people and nature.

The environmental analysis for the Pipeline fails to document the complete range of impacts expected with development of the proposed project. The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation has a responsibility--not presently met in the draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS)--to provide a full analysis and accounting for all impacts of the proposed Lake Powell Pipeline. The DEIS is based on an incomplete hydrologic assessment, does not adequately address the water conservation alternative, fails to fully consider senior Tribal water rights, and does not take into consideration the unresolved legal implications of inter-basin transfers.

Water demands exceed supply in the Colorado River Basin, and climate change is further exacerbating this supply-demand imbalance. An additional depletion of more than 80,000 acre-feet annually through the proposed Lake Powell Pipeline will increase the magnitude of each of these impacts.

The Bureau of Reclamation should follow past successes by working with the seven Colorado River Basin states, Mexico, and water providers and users throughout the Basin to find solutions that work for both people and nature. The Bureau of Reclamation should not issue a Record of Decision for the Lake Powell Pipeline until the seven Colorado River Basin States reach consensus on the nature of any required legislation to permit the Pipeline's inter-basin water transfer.

At this time, the only supportable alternative is the "no action" alternative for the Lake Powell Pipeline.


MORE INFORMATION

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A county in Utah wants to suck 77 million gallons a day out of Lake Powell - Los Angeles Times

Thursday, August 20, 2020

Protect native voting rights now!


Voting rights are under under attack in America. It's time to pass legislation protecting our most vulnerable communities. The Native American Voting Rights Act (NAVRA) — co-authored by Sen. Tom Udall (D-N.M.) and U.S. House Assistant Speaker Ben Ray Luján (D-N.M.) — will ensure tribal polling places have proper voting equipment, require tribal consultation on polling site locations, and provide tribes with the resources they need to carry out full and fair elections. Join us in calling on Congress to pass NAVRA. Let's ensure that the voices of Native communities are counted and heard.

Find the call to action here: https://action.lakotalaw.org/action/pass-navra

Watch video: https://youtu.be/MBS6_s6r_vY

You likely recall that, in 2018, North Dakota passed a voter ID law specifically aimed at disenfranchising Native citizens without street addresses. I remain grateful that you leapt into action at that time, helping us Standing Rock the Vote. Together, we put 100 tribal volunteers on the street, printed 800 new IDs, and doubled turnout over the prior midterm.

But other Indigenous communities around the U.S. aren’t so fortunate. Many face significant hurdles, such as remote or difficult-to-reach polling locations, language barriers, and no vote-by-mail option. NAVRA will address these concerns and more.

I also want you to know that we’re just getting started. We intend to engage the members of the Great Plains Tribal Chairmen's Association — the leaders of 16 tribes throughout North and South Dakota and Nebraska. We’ll also organize with tribal nations around the country to gain bipartisan support, and we’ll train a group of ambassadors from Standing Rock to phonebank and turn out the national Native vote, come election time. The tribe has also requested a congressional hearing.

Voter suppression within communities of color must end, right now. We have the opportunity to make a tremendous difference — not just for folks on reservations, but for the future of our nation. Please join us in what could be the most important action we’ve ever undertaken together.

Wopila tanka — my thanks for standing with Native voters!

Phyllis Young
Standing Rock Organizer
The Lakota People’s Law Project