Tag Archives: Earth First!

Last-Ditch Bid in Texas to Try to Stop Oil Pipeline

Reposted from the NY Times

Brandon Thibodeaux for The New York Times

A group of activists protesting the Keystone XL oil pipeline have fashioned a web of tree houses, structures and pulleys in a last-ditch effort to keep the massive project from rumbling forward.

By
Published: October 12, 2011

WINNSBORO, Tex. — Deep within the oak and pine forests that blanket this stretch of East Texas, the chug of machinery drones on late into the day, broken only by the sounds of a band of activists who have vowed to stop it.

Brandon Thibodeaux for The New York Times

Susan Scott said she came to regret accepting $20,000 for access to her property for the pipeline after she learned the kind of oil that would be used.

Brandon Thibodeaux for The New York Times

Eleanor Fairchild, a landowner, was arrested last week along with the actress Daryl Hannah for trying to block equipment clearing a path through her property.

Brandon Thibodeaux for The New York Times

TransCanada says it is trying to work around protesters in Winnsboro, Tex.

The New York Times

Here, among the woods and farmland, what might be one of the last pitched battles over the Keystone XL oil pipeline has been unfolding for weeks now, since construction of the controversial project’s southern leg began in August.

As bulldozers and diggers churn up a 50-foot-wide path for the pipeline — this portion will run from Cushing, Okla., to the Gulf Coast — a small group of environmental activists have taken to the towering trees in its way.

And with the blessing of some landowners who live here, and whose property the pipeline will cross, the protesters have fashioned a web of tree houses, structures and pulleys in a last-ditch effort to keep the enormous project from rumbling forward.

“Initially, a lot of the environmental movement on a national scale had kind of written this fight off,” said Ron Seifert, a spokesman for the Tar Sands Blockade, a group of environmental activists who have gathered near Winnsboro and contend that the oil sands crude that the pipeline will carry is especially toxic.

“But we have awakened folks from that slumber,” he said. “I think now there is an understanding that people are not going to give this up.”

TransCanada, the company behind the project, said construction had not been impeded in most cases, proceeding safely around where some activists have remained perched in the oaks for nearly three weeks. The tree sitters, as they are known, have survived on canned food and water and spent much of their time reading.

But at times, the company acknowledged, the situation has become dangerous. “In one case, protesters jumped underneath a truck and tied themselves to the rear axle with plastic,” Shawn Howard, a TransCanada spokesman, said by e-mail. “They were fortunate that the driver saw them go under — if he had not, it could have had very serious consequences for everyone.”

Mr. Howard said the company was making sure that work sites were safe, “even for those who are breaking the law and trespassing on these locations.”

Still, as protesters have staked out positions in tree platforms 70 feet high and along a 100-foot-long wall lashed together with timber, tensions in East Texas have risen along the route of the pipeline — slated for completion next year.

Off-duty police officers, hired by a TransCanada contractor, patrol the perimeter of construction sites day and night. This month, one man chained himself to a concrete capsule buried in the dirt before police managed to disconnect and arrest him, Mr. Seifert said.

And on Oct. 4, the actress Daryl Hannah was arrested alongside a local landowner, Eleanor Fairchild, 78, after they blocked heavy equipment clearing a path through Ms. Fairchild’s property.

Both women were taken to the Wood County Jail on criminal trespassing charges and released, according to jail records. Ms. Hannah also faces resisting arrest charges.

Sheriff Bill Wansley of Wood County did not respond to a request for comment. Mr. Seifert said 21 protesters had been arrested since the end of August.

It is not by accident that environmental activists chose Winnsboro, about 100 miles east of Dallas, to make their stand. They have found an unlikely ally in the battle-weary Texas families here who have fought the project for years.

One landowner, Susan Scott, said she had no idea the pipeline would carry oil sands crude, and signed over a right of way to TransCanada only because she feared a lawsuit.

Ms. Scott, 62, has since taken the $22,000 she was compensated and buried it in a fruit jar on her 60-acre property.

“I don’t care if it rots. It’s tainted money,” she said, staring at a thick scar that now skirts her land. “I felt like I was guilty of destroying my farm.”

Mr. Howard said TransCanada understood that some landowners were not in favor of the pipeline and that the company was respectful of those people whose land it needed.

“We have always been up front about the materials that are going into the pipeline,” he said.

At some level, the standoff also belies a deeper sense of inevitability around Keystone XL.

This year, after saying TransCanada must reroute the project around environmentally delicate areas in Nebraska, President Obama encouraged the company to submit a fresh application to the State Department.

And he embraced the less controversial southern portion of Keystone XL, which received final permits from the Army Corps of Engineers this summer.

A particularly crushing blow for opponents came in August, when a Lamar County judge ruled that TransCanada could use eminent domain to condemn private land to build the pipeline.

In another setback, TransCanada recently sued a leading pipeline opponent, a Texas landowner, David Daniel, for refusing to recognize a 2010 easement agreement he reached with the company, his lawyer said.

Mr. Daniel, 45, a soft-spoken carpenter, has since settled the lawsuit and asked the protesters to leave his property.

“It’s actually out of respect for David Daniel that we stay,” Mr. Seifert said. “I stand by the fact that protecting his forest is the best thing for him, the best thing for the community, the best thing for the Planet Earth.”

On a recent day on Mr. Daniel’s land, off-duty police officers warmed themselves by a campfire, as a protester used a rope to shimmy from platform to platform through the oak canopy above them.

Mr. Daniel was there, too. He gazed up at a tree house he built — now being used by the protesters — turned around and walked quietly back toward his home.

“Pickaxe” Free showing Thurs Aug 16th

Film Screening of the historical documentary, “Pickaxe”
at Internationalist Books this Thursday Aug 16th 7 p.m. 405 W. Franklin St.
Come to this screening and learn some Earth First! history.

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This excellent documentary takes us into another world; the world of rogue loggers and firefighters turned eco-warriors. This documentary is on par with Manufacturing Consent, Waco: The Rules of Engagement, and Breaking the Spell: The Anarchists, Eugene, and the WTO Here is the summary from the promotion: “An arsonist burns 9000 acres of protected old-growth public forest in Oregon that can not be logged unless it burns. To stop the proposed “salvage” logging of this incredible ancient forest, citizens are moved to blockade a road and keep the government out. After facing down a bulldozer and the State Police, the fort now known as the gateway to the Cascadia Free State becomes the focus for a developing community dedicated to protecting ancient forests throughout the mountains of Oregon. Continue reading

Wednesday July 18th MRPA Presents “Donny Quixote!” A benefit in the fight against fracking

 

Thank you to everyone who attended this benefit.  We made 400 dollars to put towards next summer’s earth first! rendezvous in NC!Image

A large portion of the proceeds from this event go to Croatan Earth First! who will be fighting fracking in the Piedmont and hosting the 2013 Round River Rendezvous next summer.  The admission is just a suggestion.  If you can give more, please do!

Cascadia Earth First! Locks Down, Climbs Flagpoles in State Capitol

Earth First! Newswire

10:00am: “We are occupying the Oregon State Capitol in Salem to end widespread clear cutting in state forests! We are currently locked down in the offices of Secretary of State Kate Brown and Treasurer Ted Wheeler, climbers are back on the flag poles and the establishment is generally shaking in its boots.”

2:00pm: 50 protesters remain onsite. Flagpole banner droppers have been arrested descending into applause and leaving banners flying. The people locked down in the office of Kate Brown  have had their support crew removed by police, who are currently bringing in extraction equipment

View original post 321 more words

Chapel Hill Says No To Fracking

Posted: Tuesday, 27 March 2012 7:53PM

Fracking Hearing Preceeded By Rally

Ran Northam Reporting

CHAPEL HILL – Citizens both for and against hydraulic fracturing in North Carolina stood outside East Chapel Hill High School before Tuesday night’s hearing on fracking


The State Department of Environmental and Natural Resources hosted the hearing, but before the meeting, many people gathered at the entrance of the high school to further voice their opinion and rally together.

“This is giving people the opportunity to express their concerns about fracking and the need to make sure we have adequate protections for our air and water,” said NC Sierra Club Communications Director Dustin Chickurel-Bayerd.

Snow Camp resident Roger Owens agreed. “I don’t understand why we don’t produce our own energy here, and keep our dollars here rather than buy it from countries in the Far East that hate us. We’re sending our money over there to countries that don’t even like us to start with. (We) need to keep those dollars over here and produce jobs over here.”

“The reason we’re out here rallying is (we’re) in support of clean water in North Carolina,” said Margaret Hartzell, Policy Advocate for Environment North Carolina. “Fracking is a dangerous form of natural gas extraction that we don’t need in North Carolina. We’ve seen thousands of cases of ground water contamination in places like Pennsylvania where fracking is prevalent and we want to make sure that the Department of Environmental and Natural Resources goes slow when it comes to fracking. Now is not the time. We don’t have the infrastructure. We don’t have the laws in place…We don’t have the proof that fracking is safe.”

Orange County Resident Michael Coon said, “I’m out here to support this rally because I believe we need home-grown energy. We need to produce energy in this country and it would be nice if we could even produce it in this state. It would bring revenue to the state. (It) would bring jobs to the state. I think it would help the economy overall. As far as fracking goes, from the research I’ve done on it, what I’ve heard is there are 30 other states that have gone through fracking and we can learn from whatever they’ve done to make it better here (so) that we won’t have any problems.”

Croatan Earth First was in attendance and publicly announced they are prepared to take further action to stop fracking.

“Just because they legalize this, doesn’t mean it’s going to happen,” an Earth First representative said. “…If they legalize this, Earth First will be organizing civil disobedience and direct action to physically confront and stop hydro-fracking.”

About 75 to 100 people were present for the demonstration; hundreds more attended the hearing itself.

Join The Anti-Fracking Pledge

Join the Anti-Fracking Pledge of Resistance

Want to step up the resistance to fracking? Then join the pledge of resistance! Also  the word from the hills is that the 2012 Earth First! Rendezvous is being held in the belly of the fracking beast in the Marcellus region this summer. Details TBA

In the hills surrounding the Susquehanna River and its tributaries,  rural Pennsylvanians have created a new campaign, called Occupy WELL Street, as a way to confront and speak out against the oil and gas corporations laying siege to our communities in their relentless pursuit
of natural gas. Participants of Occupy Well Street have been working side by side with several Earth First! groups in the region to create a Pledge of Resistance to hydraulic fracturing and the promises of gas royalties at the cost of ruined land, toxic water, polluted air, and  divided communities. Continue reading

This week’s news coverage

Channel 17 Protesters Greet Lawmakers

Group protests natural gas drilling: News coverage from Sunday night’s demonstration on ABC 11.

Dozens of Protesters Gather in Capital

News Coverage from Sanford Rally

Opponents, proponents of fracking speak at Sanford meeting

By Steve DeVane
Staff writer

SANFORD – People in Lee and surrounding counties told state officials Monday night they had numerous concerns about a controversial method of drilling for natural gas called fracking.

About 310 people attended a meeting about the state’s plan to study the environmental and economic impact of natural gas exploration in the Sandhills.

Large deposits of natural gas are believed to be buried in prehistoric rock formations beneath the region.

Most of the 35 speakers at the meeting either opposed fracking, which is known as hydraulic fracturing, or urged state officials to proceed cautiously.

Six members of Croatan Earth First, an environmental group based in the Triangle, protested before the meeting.

They carried signs that said, “Don’t frack with my water,” and “Water is life! Don’t frack it.”

About 10 feet away, four ladies who called themselves the “Raging Grannies” sang songs with anti-fracking lyrics.

“We are very, very concerned about the quality of air, water and soil,” said Ruth Zalph, one of the members of the group.

The ladies sang one of the songs during the public comment portion of the meeting.

“No fracking, no way,” they sang. “We say keep those frackers away.”

Officials from the N.C. Department of Environment and Natural Resources talked about the study and asked for feedback.

Several people said more money and time is needed to look into the issue. The General Assembly allocated $100,000 for the study, which is scheduled to be completed by May.

Sanford resident George Birchard said he didn’t think the state’s plan showed an ability to regulate the gas industry.

“You do not realize how big a tiger you have by the tail,” he said.

Jeff Sheer said he and his wife own property near Deep River, where shale believed to contain natural gas is near the surface. Sheer said he’s seen a lot of commercials promoting natural gas exploration.

“When you see that many television commercials telling you how safe it is, you can only imagine how much lobbying is going on up in Raleigh to get people to vote for this,” he said.

Sheer said lawmakers can’t cut the department’s budget and expect it to monitor the natural gas industry.

Robin Smith, the department’s assistant secretary for the environment, said the organization would try to answer as many questions as it could.

“We’re going to do the best job we can with the resources and time we have,” she said.

Rep. Mike Stone, a Republican from Sanford, and Rep. Mitch Gillespie, a Republican from Marion, co-sponsored the law calling for the issue to be studied. Both were at the meeting.

Stone said he appreciated people raising questions.

“I want to assure you, I want the answers to those questions,” he said.

Gillespie said several more steps might be needed after the study is complete.

“I assure you whatever happens, you’ll be satisfied with the outcome,” he said.

Before the meeting, Gillespie said he wants a comprehensive study.

“My experience in government is most of the time public hearings don’t matter,” he said. “I can tell you, this one matters.”

The department is accepting written comments by mail or email through Oct. 18. The department’s address is 1601 Mail Service Center, Raleigh, NC 27699-1601. The email address is on the department’s website at ncdenr.gov.

VETO SB 709 No Fracking, No Offshore Drilling in North Carolina!

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Demonstration at the House of Representatives against SB 709

June 15, 2011- Raleigh, NC – On Tuesday night, over twenty-five people
showed their opposition to hydraulic fracturing and offshore drilling in
North Carolina outside of the legislative building before heading inside for
the final vote on SB 709 in the House of Representatives, leading to three
arrests. Hydraulic fracturing or “fracking” is a method of extracting
natural gas that involves blasting underground rock thousands of feet into
the ground with a cocktail of sand, water, and chemicals.

The third vote on SB709, also dubbed the “Energy Jobs Act”, was met with
resistance before the session convened with a call-in day to legislators and
a demonstration outside. Signs read, “Don’t Frack with Cackalack!”, “Don’t
Frack With My Water!”, “No Offshore Drilling in NC!”, and “Expect
Resistance!”. The demonstrations consisted of people from Chapel Hill,
Durham, Pittsboro, and Raleigh who called on the legislators to vote against
SB 709, in favor of a healthy future for North Carolinians.

Upon moving inside, the quiet and respectful demonstration was swarmed by
security agents as the wait began for SB 709 to be called. At least one
representative switched his vote to be against the bill before it was
called, which was met with applause. Once SB 709 was brought to the floor,
two people unfurled a banner reading “Third times a charm! No to Fracking!”,
leading to their arrest. A third person was also arrested for proclaiming
dislike of the destruction of the fine state of North Carolina. The
arrestees, who live in counties that contain shale deposits that could be
fracked, are all facing misdemeanor disorderly conduct charges.

The third reading of SB 709 resulted in 68 ayes and 49 noes. At this point
the bill goes back to the senate for a reading, and then it is in the
governor’s hands. We call on Governor Perdue to protect the future of North
Carolina by vetoing SB 709.

“It is alarming that the General Assembly is so readily allowing
corporation’s interests to harm the citizens, water, air, and land of North
Carolina. Is this really what the General Assembly wants for its
constituents?”- Heidi Grenmier (Durham County) Croatan Earth First!

“To Representatives Avila, Boles, Burr, Crawford, Dollar, Howard, McCormick,
Murry, and Stam, all who represent areas with fracking potential and
despicably voted in favor of SB709, know that we will hold you personally
responsible when our tap water turns brown and explosive, our children and
wives are sick, and our crops are toxic. We’ve seen what’s been happening
in Pennsylvania, Montana, and Colorado. We don’t want it here.” – Adam Nash
(Orange County)

This is merely the beginning of the fight against hydraulic fracturing and
offshore drilling in North Carolina. Community groups, including Croatan
Earth First!, will be holding regular events and demonstrations against
hydraulic fracturing throughout the region.

Click here to urge Bev Perdue to veto SB 709!  Leave a message at her phone number at 919-733-5811.  A decision will be made probably in the next day or two.

Croatan Earth First! is committed to halting ecological destructive projects
throughout the Piedmont.

Contact:

Kassidy Birch (919) 695-3530

croatanearthfirst@gmail.com

Earth First! Activist Locks Down To Forest Service Property To Protest Logging

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

On Monday July 12th, Earth First! held a large protest outside
of the Forest Service office on Zillicoa St. in Asheville to protest the
commercial logging of national forests and their continued plan to cut the
Globe Forest in Blowing Rock, NC. As negotiations continue on this timber
sale to remove an old-growth stand from the project, Earth First! wishes
to call attention to the continued exploitation of our disappearing
forests by timber companies. Recent studies show the United States now leads all
developed countries in deforesting its land the fastest, and this trend is
most prevalent in the Southeast. The Globe Forest provides important
habitat and nesting sites for woodpeckers and migratory songbirds whose
numbers are declining due to forest fragmentation. The Forest Service
continues to cut stands of trees that are directly connected to old-growth
forest communities, causing destructive edge effects, and they have
refused to provide a buffer because it is not required in their “Forest
Plan.” Treating and cutting these stands will cause erosion, soil
destruction, and will pollute the nearby streams with herbicides. Until
all of Thunderhole Creek is protected, Earth First! will campaign to stop
the cut.

Earth First! Demands That the Forest Service in North Carolina:

-stop attempting to cut old-growth habitats or any stands connected to these rare areas.
-put an end to all commercial logging our national forests
-immediately revise the Forest Plan to include rehabilitating previous clear-cuts into early successional habitat instead cutting healthy, mature forest expanses.

-an end to all road building in our national forests

“Any cuts within the Globe will affect vital old-growth ecosystems and our stance is end all commercial logging of our national forests,” says Joseph Ferguson, a Croatan Earth First! activist.

“Historically, the Forest Service has catered to timber companies, but we believe the public does no longer supports logging in our National Forests.”

Croatan Earth First! activist with his neck U-locked to Asheville Forest Supervisor’s office

front door.   Thank you Kryptonite!

Mainstream news articles on the action along with more photos can be seen at:

http://www.citizen-times.com/article/20100712/NEWS01/100712037/1009

http://www.mountainx.com/news/2010/earth_first_protest_outside_the_forrest_service_office