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Save Our State!

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Grand Rapids Citzens team up with MLAWD and Clean Water Action to create a day of workshops and an evening of music in Lansing.

 

http://mlawd.org/save-our-state/

Press release:

MLAWD & Clean Water Action present

"Save Our State!" - March 16, 2013

at the Avenue Cafe in Lansing, Michigan

Register at: www.MLAWD.org

 

March 16, 2013:  Michigan Land Air Water Defense (MLAWD) and Clean Water Action present "Save Our State!" - a full day of workshops (1-6pm) geared toward engaging the public in the fight to protect Michigan's fresh water, followed by an evening of music from Michigan bands (8-midnight) committed to building consciousness and community. There will also be a silent art auction which workshop attendees and the public are welcome to attend.

 

Lead organizers Sarah Barker (MLAWD) and Kate Holloway (Clean Water Action) hope to inspire Lansing's diverse population (particularly students) to educate themselves on recent developments in horizontal hydraulic fracturing and the State's leasing of public land for oil and gas development.

 

The process of horizontal slick water hydraulic fracturing (for gas and oil) uses 5-7 million gallons of fresh water for each and every well that is completed - water that is never returned to the hydro-cycle. According to the DEQ, up to 500 wells will be permitted in our state this year. In 2012, the Michigan Department of Natural Resources auctioned off the mineral rights to 108,000 acres of our State Forest areas in May and another 193,000 acres in October, to private energy companies for oil and gas extraction. 

 

The May, 2012 auction leased 23,400 acres in Barry County, including the Yankee Springs Recreation Area. In response, a group of concerned citizens came together to create MLAWD and hired prominent environmental lawyer Jim Olson. They have filed a lawsuit against the MDNR for violating the public land trust. Their aim is to nullify the state land leases purchased in Barry and Allegan counties during the 2012 auctions and to set a precedent for others to follow

 

Others have filed legal action against the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality for failing to have a protocol (or even full disclosure) for chemical contamination. This drilling process is also largely EXEMPT from regulation by the Federal EPA, a result of the Energy Policy Act of 2005.

 

Workshops, led by citizen activists experienced in each area, will begin at 1:00pm and include sessions on:

- Writing and activism,

- How to file lawsuits,

- Petitioning,

- Campus organizing,

- Community organizing,

- Water monitoring,

- Direct action

- a screening of Josh Fox's short film The Sky Is Pink

- and a special guest from Pennsylvania: Restoration Ecologist Kevin Heatley, who will educate workshop attendees on Pennsylvania's ongoing fight against fracking.

 

MLAWD's President, Steve Losher is quoted saying, "Michigan is tumbling over a fracking precipice that respresents the death throes of the fossil fuel economy. To allow this industry, with it's dismal track record of health and saftey, to proceed unchecked is a betrayal nature, posterity, and common sense."

 

Workshops are free of charge, and Registration is encouraged. (Register at: www.MLAWD.org.) 
Dinner will be served for workshop attendees who register.

 

The Silent Art Auction will run throughout the day, with results announced by evening.

 

The Concert begins at 8 pm. Tickets are $10 and funds will go to MLAWD to help cover legal expenses.

Bands on the evening's line up include:

- Gifts or Creatures (Lansing folk)

- Big Dudee Roo (West Michigan grunge rock)

- One Blown Speaker (Flint rock)

- and Sairuhnaid (Grand Rapids folk).

 

When asked why they're doing this, performer Max Lockwood responded, "We make music to help make the world a better place. Something like hydraulic fracturing creates an emotional response in us because we feel it's working against that, working against our desire to build a sustainable future in Michigan. And we try to connect with that emotion and express it through music, hopefully giving people a space to connect with themselves, the people in their community, and maybe even the land, and to work on making those connections stronger."

 

For tickets and more information go to MLAWD.org

 

Contacts:  For interviews, information, and sources please contact organizers:

 

Sarah Barker

[email protected]

(616) 458-5715

 

Katherine Holloway

[email protected]

(765) 717- 1800

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