6 posts tagged “uranium mining”
I had a fabulous sleep last night. It was a quiet morning and I took time to speculate at how surprised and pleased I am to be ‘weathering’ so well. I suspect others are feeling similar feelings. Going in, I imagined that by the end of a full month, I’d be in far rougher shape than I am, energy/strength-wise. Could it be that I continue to hold up so well because what I am doing here feels/is ‘right’ and, in conjunction with the efforts of others, the path remains clear.
Having internet service has definitely changed the look of my day. I only spent about four hours outside today, compared to the usual 14 or more. On the up side, the time was spent networking, mostly with radio stations across Ontario, and on an interview with Global TV. They will air tomorrow night at 5:30 on Shawn Mallin’s show (I’ve likely spelled that incorrectly). A positive response has quickly come back from radio-ecoshock, where they have already planned to speak with Jim Harding, author of Uranium – Canada’s Dirty Secret, and will add a bit on our struggle here.
I neglected to mention that we had an unusual guest at the site last night. Her (new) name is Mori (short for moratorium) and she is a feline, about 5 months old, mostly grey in colour, with very short hair. Incredibly thirsty and hungry, she was inclined to devour the single can of dog food that I found, but, to give her stomach a chance to stretch, we fed her in little bits. (That’s how we’ll be feeding me one of these days.) I’m not sure whether she is lost or has been dropped off. We’ve had a cat food donation and she is gradually getting her fill. Personality wise, she is a charmer. One of our MELT OPP officers has already fallen in love and I suspect that Kassia, Zephyr and Taegan will too when they visit on Wednesday. We’ll wait to see if someone shows up to claim her before doing anything drastic. Meanwhile, she is a lovely mascot for the site.
Today’s visitors included a couple of ladies who have been very active in Ottawa and in Carleton Place. One, a member of Ottawa CCAMU, has written a newsletter and distributed 200 copies, with more to come. I didn’t realize it when she visited, but she’s also responsible for the red ‘no uranium’ bumper stickers that you may have spotted. The other has sent numerous handwritten letters to the Premier, the Prime Minister and various ministries and has had her ‘letter to the editor’ published in several area newspapers. She’s planning to invite friends, feed them (potluck?) and have a letter writing party at her home. This is an excellent idea for others to entertain and to spread around. Maybe we could do it from here at some point, now that we have a nice warm spot to work from. If you can join us at the ‘sit-in/picket’ at Premier McGuinty’s office on Friday, Nov 16th, throughout the day, how about handwriting a letter to deliver in person.
Scott Reid’s office called tonight and he will be out for a visit on Wednesday morning. Scott is the MP (Conservative) in this riding and I’ve a personal connection to him, through Mike.Blessings
Donna (and Mori – she enjoys ‘helping’ me type by walking over top of the keyboard)
The last day of my first (I say that hoping there won’t be a second) full month on site proved to be a lively one. First off, I was able to get on the net, al-be-it briefly. There are still some kinks, but it is looking very possible to get hooked up, via dial-up, to the world.
About 50 interested supporters showed up for the community meeting, which will continue every Sunday at 1 p.m. An agreement is in place and the monitoring team will begin work tomorrow. They will be doing a baseline survey to record where the exploration company is currently, so that they can come in two or three times a week and check the progress. No date has been set for the mediation with the province and the feds, but the mediator has been agreed upon. It is unclear whether the twelve-week period before drilling will begin starts tomorrow, or on the date of the first meeting.
I’m very pleased with Janice Kennedy’s column in today’s Ottawa Citizen. Not only is it well written, but it also very well researched. As to, “She gets under the skin of people put off by the implied arrogance of her action, by the suggestion that one ordinary person should make a difference,” the way I see it, everything starts with one person, but never in isolation. For example, Ryan’s Wells Foundation www.ryanswell.ca is a huge and growing organization that has built 319 wells in fourteen countries because one six-year-old saw a need. It’s ever been thus. I’m a firm believer that changing the world happens one person at a time and somebody, ordinary or extraordinary, whatever that means, has to start. In fact, in this situation it was Frank and Gloria Morrison, local landowners who were not willing to sit by and let the status quo reign supreme. My action is one more cog in a wheel that they set in motion well over a year ago.
My schedule this week has me out at a meeting on Tuesday afternoon, Wednesday, from mid afternoon to late evening, and from Friday mid afternoon to late Sunday or into Monday (if I can get some press, or a meeting with the Premier in Ottawa). Please don’t let that stop you from coming by and saying hi to those that continue to keep the vigil on the side of the road. If you are able to help financially, the “Bring Gramma Home” campaign would like to have some bumper stickers, buttons, etc. printed. Click on the appropriate link (Editor’s note: How you can you help” tab) on the website www.ccamu.ca for more info on donating to help make this happen.
New numbers to report: BP 109/66; Pulse 77; Weight loss 15 lbs. (I
continue to feel blessed that I had an extra layer to work with there.)
I’m still feeling very positive about achieving our goal and grateful for
a good night’s sleep.
Love
Donna
It never ceases to amaze me how quickly the days pass here on the side of the road. Between boiling water, squeezing lemons, greeting visitors, keeping warm, making and tending fires, giving interviews (phone and in person), the time just flies by.
Today we were videotaped and interviewed by two students doing a paper on conflict for a course at St. Paul’s University in Ottawa and by a writer from a bi-monthly publication in the Killaloe area.
One of our MELT (Major Events Liason Team) OPP Officers was kept busy mediating over whether hunters would be allowed inside the gate for their annual hunt. The issue is one of safety. I’m personally fine with it so long as the hunters remain aware that there are people on this side of the gate.
One of our overnight guests, joining us for his first visit, came from Kingston bearing gifts of flour, oat flakes, rice, sugar, propane and organic chocolate bars. It was debated as to whether the bars could be juiced but we decided that it likely wouldn’t fly.
News came that the twelve-week negotiation period will begin on Monday and that more news would be forthcoming at the community meeting to be held early tomorrow afternoon. The campfire discussion this evening was stimulating, as is often the case.
If you have the annual Native Christmas gathering marked on your calendar,
please change the date from Dec. 1st to the 2nd. The hall had already
been booked for the former date, hence the change. Please do plan to
attend; it should be quite a party.
Love
Donna
Settlers, the more the merrier, are invited to join the annual Christmas party put on by the Shabot Obaadjiwan at the Catholic Church (across from Timber Mart) on Hwy 38 at Sharbot Lake on December 1st at 1 o’clock. There well be a short presentation on the sacredness of the land, followed by a feast (bring a desert if you are so inclined, but not to worry if you cannot). If you are a man, please do bring a wrapped gift marked ‘man;’ if a girl age ten, mark your gift ‘girl - 10 years old.’ ‘Santa will be responsible for the distribution. This will be a wonderful opportunity to celebrate the solidarity, the friendships and the extended community that has developed here over the months.
We, at the site are waiting patiently and with anticipation for the negotiations with the governments to begin.
Special thanks today for the pair of Alpaca socks received from a somewhat local lady. They are so cozy and soft I’m almost tempted to use them to warm my hands.
I’m including the rest of the “What you can do when times get trying?” list.
Whatever you are able to accomplish is one more step in the right direction
toward bringing sanity to a society that is dangerously close to the edge in
terms of resource drawdown, climate disaster, pollution and waste. While
the train is traveling one way and some of us are out of our seats walking in
the other direction, we must get the train stopped and turned around.
Enough of us, working together, can do that. We are on a roll.
At the Community Level:
* Support and invest in local initiatives/enterprises; buy locally - i.e. a 100-mile diet supports local farmers and producers; when buying from a distance, support fair trade initiatives; start a community garden; The more we do such things, the more adequate local provision will be when transportation costs become unaffordable.
* Invest in conservation, renewable energy, and in sustainable infrastructure - soil fertility; forest management; community cohesion, (festivals, craft and information fairs, block parent programs, community radio, theatre, etc.)
* Participate in your local community or intentionally bring people together to form community.
* Make your opinions known: Write letters to the editor of your local paper; expand your personal communication comfort zone to let others know that you see perpetual economic expansion (and specifically, in this case, uranium exploration and mining) as a recipe for calamity. Letting people know that you question the current direction gives them permission to question it as well, thus building support.
*Support people and organizations that are leading the way; begin discussion groups in your home, church, school or community centre and invite speakers; donate your time, your energy and/or your money to the effort.
* Develop/participate in a community currency or trading system and encourage others to do so.
At the Government Level:
* Write, email or call your MP. (For MP's contact information, call 1
(800) 622-6232 )
Let him/her know that you support:
- The Well-Being Measurement Act www.SustainWellBeing.net/WBMA.html
The WBMA measures environmental and social factors in addition to economic
ones,
i.e.: unpaid work; extracted resources, both renewable and non renewable; food
quality; community stability; income distribution; education; pollution levels;
quality of employment; amounts of exercise & stress; participation in
decision making; levels of violence and more;
- The enactment of laws/subsidies that encourage sustainable activities and discourage non-sustainable activities;
- The formulation of a more equitable tax system, which draws revenue from pollution, natural resource use and speculation, while lowering or removing taxation from local businesses and low-income jobs;
- Full cost accounting; Extended producer responsibility; Proportional
Representation;
Reigning in usury and, ultimately, adopting a monetary system that is not based
on debt and the consequent need for perpetual growth.
Thank and Blessings,
Donna
Into the 4th week here on the side of the road, more people are expressing
their concern for my well-being. I’d like you all to know that I expect
to come through this just fine, with our goal accomplished. Please be
assured that, if I did not, I would quit the hunger strike today. The
daily letters and calls you are making and the actions you are taking to reach
and educate others are making themselves heard. As a society, when we
make that kind of concerted effort we cannot NOT succeed. Our job is to
keep on keeping on and I, too, intend to keep on calling attention to this
issue by not eating.
Someone suggested to Mike that governments refuse to be ‘held ransom.’ I was surprised (yes, I’ve been accused of being naive at times) to hear that someone considered that this hunger strike was a form of blackmail. I don’t perceive it that way and I hope that others don’t and haven’t. My aim is to influence the populace to act, as is our democratic right. If I’m able to influence Premier McGuinty directly, so much the better, but it is more likely going to take thousands or tens of thousands of us to accomplish this. And we are doing that.
A hunger strike is no more blackmail, in my opinion, than is the Native Blockade or a road closure for a rally. I am protesting what I think is a moral, ethical and deadly irresponsible decision by the Ontario government. Given their commitment to consult with the Natives over mining on unceded territory, it was also out of integrity and possibly illegal as well.
Longest distance visitor today was Patsy George a long time activist from Vancouver. She was in the area to receive the Order of Canada. News came that the Council of Canadians passed a resolution at their annual general meeting in Kelowna, BC in support of a moratorium on uranium mining in Canada. I’ve yet to see it, but I’m told that Elizabeth May put out a press release about this issue recently, and Jeff Green from the Frontenac News was here for an interview today.
In the comfort of the room temperature Dickey Moore Trailer, I weighed in with a loss of 12 lbs. Does anyone have access to a small solar panel and a battery – something just large enough to boost the battery on a lap top computer? With that I’d be able to get dial- up and that would plug me in to media and press possibilities. It would also save the people who are running back and forth with the one gig memory stick some driving, not that any of them for even one minute is complaining. Every part we play is important. Thanks again for yours.
Blessings
Donna
The old saying “It never rains, but it pours,” was certainly true here yesterday. Heating equipment arrived for the Boler, the HTHB got well on its way to being fully insulated and a wood stove was installed in the Dickey Moore Trailer. The new, fully insulated, to code, stove-pipe was donated by a local, very sympathetic business. (If corporations are people, I figure business could and should have feelings.) Thanks to everyone for the parts he or she played in bringing us heated accommodations.
Janice Kennedy, from the Ottawa Citizen, paid a visit and will write about us in her column in Sunday’s edition. One of her many interesting inquiries was around what I say to people who think that I’m a ‘flaky.’ The question amused me, mostly because I assumed some might think me crazy, but flaky hadn’t entered my head.
On this, the first day of my 4th week on the side of the road, I am still feeling positive, still appreciative of the company and the incredible support and glad to have the amenities that are coming our way – specifically the land phone line and warm beds. My blood pressure remains good at 115/75 and my pulse strong (61). My upper arm muscles are weakened slightly and I have to watch to not stand up or turn too quickly. I haven’t weighed myself, sans clothes, yet, but now that there is a warm space I’ll be able to remove the numerous layers long enough to get an accurate reading, so stay posted.
With the government having named its new ministers, please keep the letters
rolling out to them, handwritten if you have the time, and hopefully we’ll soon
have our assurance that uranium will be left in the ground, undisturbed, where
it belongs.
Blessings
Donna
