Final Straw Podcast: Continuing Struggle Against The Mountain Valley Pipeline

cross-posted from the Final Straw

This week, we’re sharing a conversation with Rose and Crystal, two comrades involved in the struggle against the Mountain Valley Pipeline, a 304 mile, 41 inch in diameter liquified so-called natural gas pipeline with a possible 75 mile extension crossing many delicate waterways, slopes and communities across Virginia, West Virginia and North Carolina.

Listen in: https://bit.ly/3pQ3on1

Past episodes with MVP resisters found here.

This project has been off and on under construction since 2018 and was recently forced through at a Federal level as part of the debt ceiling deal by the Biden administration and Democrats. For the hour we talk about the project, the land and water it threatens, the history of resistance and how to get involved in stopping this mess.

Just a headsup, there are some audio quality issues throughout the conversation with both guests, so if you have trouble hearing consider checking out the upcoming transcript or meanwhile watching on youtube with the subtitles on.

You can find more from the folks resisting the MVP by searching Appalachians Against Pipelines on various social media platforms or check the links in our show notes, where you can also find links to our various interviews with folks from this initiative from the last 5 years.

Links

Appalachains Agianst Pipelines (Facebook) (Twitter) (Instagram):

 

Community members blockade Sierra Pacific mill in protest of public lands logging

Cross-posted from Cascadia Forest Defense

For Immediate Release:July 5, 2023

Press Contact: Malcolm Rand, cascadiaforestdefenders@protonmail.com, 541-731-2675

 

Community members blockade Sierra Pacific mill in protest of public lands logging

Mature and old growth logging project sparks controversy amidst federal rulemaking and Biden campaign promises

 

Eugene, Ore – Dozens of community members and forest defenders rallied at the Sierra Pacific Industries (SPI) mill in West Eugene as four activists locked themselves together, risking arrest and effectively blocking the entrance to the mill and disrupting operations to protest the corporation’s public lands logging. The protest was organized in opposition to SPI’s purchase of contracts to log the Bureau of Land Management’s (BLM) “N126” mature and old growth timber sale. Logging is moving forward even as the Biden administration is considering rulemaking to create further protections for mature and old growth forests on federal lands. 

“We are here to shut down operations,” said Deb McGee, one of the protestors who risked arrest. “We want to make sure that the owners of Sierra Pacific hear loud and clear that we will not stand for a big out of state corporation to come into our community and start clearcutting our carbon-rich forest lands.”

The BLM project is set to commercially log over 25,000 acres in 30-130 year old Late-Successional Reserve (LSR) forests, which are specifically set aside for spotted owl habitat and old growth characteristics under the Northwest Forest Plan. The BLM claims that the forest within this sale is made up of mostly homogeneous stands in need of commercial thinning, but onsite visits by local community members and activists have found significant portions of the sale are dynamic old growth and mature forest ecosystems.

“Even as the Biden Administration is working to reform industrial logging practices on federal lands, the Bureau of Land Management and Sierra Pacific Industries are moving forward with massive clearcut logging projects on public forests,” said Malcolm Rand, an organizer with local forest defense organization WRENCH. “If we are to have any hope of mitigating the climate crisis, protecting the water that we drink and the air that we breathe, we must stop these reckless projects immediately.”

Protestors disrupted operations at the SPI mill, highlighting the corporation’s lead role in ecological destruction across the country. The SPI founder Archie Aldis “Red” Emmerson is the single largest private landowner in the United States. The corporation also recently announced plans to almost double the capacity of the Eugene facility, which would make it one of the largest mills in the country.

“The N126 logging project goes too far and risks heavy impacts on our local drinking water and wildlife” said Jason Gonzales, who lives in Walton with his wife and children. “Our land, like all of our neighbors, is directly connected to the forests threatened by this project. When the BLM came to Walton and asked for our input in 2018, we made it clear as a community that we did not want to see mature and old growth forests being cut, and that we strongly opposed any clearcutting. Now we see both of these things and the BLM is auctioning off thriving forests to a multi-million dollar out-of-state corporation.”

This protest comes just days after dozens of community members and forest defenders gathered in the N126 project to demonstrate their opposition towards the N126 logging projects. Community members blocked access to roads leading into the Walker Point sale, a parcel of the larger N126 project which was auctioned last Thursday, June 29. Activists left after a few hours with no arrests, feeling that they had made their point to the BLM and SPI, and vowed to return.

“This action is just the beginning of our resistance to the N126 project,” said Riley Fields, an organizer with WRENCH. “We are ready to fight to the bitter end to protect these forests, and the communities that rely on them.”

Find free-to-use photos of the protest here.

 

Background:

On Earth Day of 2022, the Biden Administration signed an executive order (EO 14072) which directed federal agencies to catalog mature and old growth forests in an effort to increase protections for these critical habitats. Now, both the BLM and National Forest Service (USFS) are in the midst of rulemaking processes to increase protections for carbon rich mature and old growth forests. Despite the ongoing rulemaking, both agencies are pushing forward controversial logging projects in mature and old growth forests, including the N126 sale, which was first proposed under the Trump administration. 

The forests of the Pacific Northwest have the potential to take up and store as much if not more carbon per acre than any other forest in the world – including the Amazon rainforest. With more protections and broad reforms to forestry practices, these forests can not only be a powerful tool for combating climate change, but can also help this region to adapt to the worst effects of global temperature rise through protecting local freshwater resources and biodiversity, and increasing community resilience to wildfire. Yet currently, logging is the number one source of greenhouse gas emissions in the State of Oregon, and is putting communities at greater risk of severe wildfires.

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More than 2 dozen disrupted Mountain Valley Pipeline construction work site in Montgomery County, Virginia

cross-posted from Appalachians Against Pipelines

More than 2 dozen disrupted Mountain Valley Pipeline construction work site in Montgomery County, Virginia

This morning, people in Montgomery County, Virginia entered a work site and disrupted construction on the Mountain Valley Pipeline. People carried banners onto the easement reading “Join the Resistance”, “No Pipelines on Stolen Land”, and “Down with the Capitol, Doom to the Pipeline”. More than 2 dozen people walked onto the active site and stopped work.
One local who participated in the work stoppage was quoted as saying “Today we are taking a stand against a corporation (equatrans midstream) that has been given a free pass by corrupt representatives of the government, through must pass legislation known as the fiscal responsibility act to destroy, pollute and plunder the wealth of the region, the land and the people. A project with over 500 environmental violations , who could not through the normal legal process get this project completed!!”
This work stoppage occured on the first day of the renewed construction of the pipeline. Work on the pipeline had been tied up due to permitting issues, but has been fast tracked through the courts as part of the recent debt ceiling deal. Originally slated to be completed in 2018, the project has been delayed by five years and is 3.5 billion dollars over budget due to spirited opposition by local pipeline fighters.
Another local who participated in the work stoppage said “The government has decided once again to sacrifice the people and climate of Appalachia to fuel extractive industry. The people of this region have a long history of resistance to industrial destruction, and we don’t intend to back down now.”
The morning after July 4th, pipeline fighters carried signs referencing solidarity with indigenous groups and saying “No Pipelines on Stolen Land”.. Stolen land refers not to the eminent domain to build the pipeline, but to the history of colonization and land theft from people indigenous to so called North America. The Mountain Valley Pipeline and the climate destruction it has caused is a continuation of this legacy of colonization and destruction.
Join the resistance: bit.ly/AAPIntakeForm
Donate to support resistance: bit.ly/supportmvpresistance

Columbus, Ohio: Land Defenders Occupy Corporate HQ of Nationwide Insurance Demanding– STOP COP CITY

cross-posted from EF! Journal

On the morning of June 29th a group of activists stormed the lobby of Nationwide headquarters, urging the company to stop insuring the controversial “Cop City” project proposed for Atlanta, Georgia. The group chanted, distributed flyers, and asked to meet with executives of the company before being escorted out by security.

Cop City is a $100 million police training facility proposed by the Atlanta Police Foundation. The project would involve clearing hundreds of acres of the Weelaunee Forest – the largest urban forest in the country known and locally as the “lungs of Atlanta.” A wide ranging coalition of activists have been resisting the project for three years, with some camping out in the forest in hopes of delaying construction.

On January 18th, one of these activists, Manuel “Tortuguita” Teran, was shot and killed by police while in their tent. An independent autopsy, performed by a retired Georgia State Police medical examiner, found that Tortuguita was shot while sitting cross-legged with their hands up.