Pipelines Spill, Exxon Kills!: Big Oil Out of Montana

Northern Rockies Rising Tide and Earth First! Activists Occupy Montana Capitol Building Demanding Governor Schweitzer Publicly Oppose Keystone XL Pipeline and Tar Sands Megaload Shipments

On the morning of July 12th, six activists from Earth First! and Northern Rockies Rising Tide occupied Governor Schweitzer’s office in an act of non-violent civil disobedience. The activists locked their arms in a mock oil pipeline made out of PVC plastic pipe. In the wake of the Silvertip spill, Governor Schweitzer has publicly chastised ExxonMobil for their negligence and lack of transparency, while at the same time continuing to promote the construction of TransCanada’s Keystone XL pipeline, Exxon’s megaload shipments bound for the Alberta Tar Sands, and other extreme fossil fuels projects throughout the state. Governor Schweitzer eventually agreed to meet with the activists, responding to their questions with evasive and irrelevant pleasantries, but later declined to continue the conversation and refused to meet their demands. The Capitol building was redecorated with colorful banners addressing climate change and the need to discontinue filthy fossil fuel projects.

“If the Governor has his way, Montana will be transformed into what is essentially an energy extraction colony for Big Oil. The Silvertip spill is simply a short preview of what this would mean for the lives and livelihood of all Montanans,” says Great Falls native Peter Dolan, one of the eight occupying the office.

Activists inside the Capitol are also demanding that Schweitzer stand up to TransCanada and other international criminal organizations by publicly opposing Alberta Tar Sands exportation. This project is widely known as the most destructive energy process on the planet by leading environmental organizations. According to a recent report by University of Nebraska-Lincoln engineering professor John Stansbury, neither TransCanada nor the regulators evaluating the proposed Keystone XL pipeline have properly considered the risks. Stansbury said TransCanada underestimated both the frequency of spills on the pipeline and the severity of the worst-case scenario spills.

“As the recent Exxon Mobil pipeline disaster has made clear, Governor Schweitzer is attempting to turn Montana into an extraction state, while at the same time publicly proclaiming his supposed support for clean energy, protecting the environment and building healthy communities. It’s one or the other. You can’t be clean and dirty at the same time,” according to Bozeman’s Erica Dossa, who also took part in the action.

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Rondy Readiness and Wish List

Getting ready to leave for the Rendezvous? We have a couple of last minute things to let you know. The first is a brief orientation to the Seeds of Peace kitchen protocols concerning  food allergies. The second is a wish list of items (mostly food) that we could use if you have the ability to acquire and transprot them.

1) Greetings to all activists with food allergies:

Well, you’re packing for the Rondy, eh? Got your tent, sleeping bag, mosquito net…hmmm…don’t forget those snacks.  We at Seeds of Peace are cooking a minimum of two meals a day for the week of the Rendezvous and we strive to provide allergen free food options for activists allergic to gluten, soy, dairy and nuts…. but it’s impossible to prepare for every allergy. 60% or more of our food is donated and you know we don’t have much control over what people give us! So please bring snacks that you can rely on in case of emergency.  If your food allergy is life threatening, bring your own food for the event. Do not put your life in our hands! We work with several volunteer cooks every meal and there is no guarantee that someone didn’t miss-label a bulk ingredient or mix up the wheat bread sandwiches with the rice bread. We do our best but we are not perfect.

When you get to camp, don’t forget to come by the kitchen and talk with one of our food allergy coordinators. This Rondy, ask for Sarah or Garlic. Please, do not give your information to a volunteer. We need to meet you face to face so we can remember who you at the meal servings.

Safe travels and we will see you soon!

2) Wish List

-Bread/tortillas!
-Fresh Produce (esp., potatoes, garlic, onion, carrots, beets, cabbage, and other less-perishable items)
-bulk grains, legumes, etc.
-coffee/tea
-canned food
-eggs/cheese
-nutritional yeast
-really, any food items you can get your hands on
-tarps
-tools (shovels, chainsaws, etc.)
-art/sign- & banner-making materials

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DIRECTIONS to the Earth First! Rendezvous

Here it is, folks: Directions to the 2011 Round River Rendezvous site:

This year’s Round River Rendezvous is taking place along Hyw. 12 near the Montana/Idaho border in the Lolo National Forest.

From the West (e.g., Lewiston, Idaho):

Head east on Highway 12 toward Lolo, Montana. About 6 and a half miles after crossing into Montana (between milepost 6 and 7, about 183 miles from Lewiston), take a left onto Fish Creek Road. Go 2 miles on Fish Creek Rd. and lake a left onto Forest Road 9942 (Granite Creek Road). Go a few miles and look for signs for “RRR.” Check in at the Welcome Center.

From the East (e.g., Missoula, Montana)

If your traveling on I 90, take the Reserve St. Exit in Missoula and head south on Reserve St.. Take a right onto Hyw. 93/Brooks St. towards Lolo. In Lolo, Take a right onto Hyw. 12 and head west. After you pass Lolo Hot Springs, take a right onto Fish Creek Rd. (between milepost 6 and 7). Go 2 miles on Fish Creek Road and take a left onto Forest Road 9942 (Granite Creek Road). Go a few miles on 9942 and look for signs for “RRR.” Check in at the Welcome Center

See you in a couple weeks.

If you have any questions, please contact Northern Rockies Earth First at (208) 596-3319

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An UPDATE regarding the location of the 2011 RRR

We know, we know: July 5th is only a few weeks away and we have still not posted directions to the site of the Round River Rendezvous. We apologize for this, but it’s honestly out of our control. The access road to the site is still snowed in, but is very close to clearing out and should be opening up in the next few days. Just in case things don’t work out with this location, we have a backup site secured in the Nez Perce National Forest near Kooskia, Idaho. But we’re checking the road regularly and should have directions up by June 20th at the latest. For now, we can say that if our first-choice location works out, it will be located 10-15 miles north of Hyw. 12 on Forest Service Road 107 (accessible at mile-marker 139 on Hyw. 12 between Kamiah and the Powell Ranger Station in Idaho). Thanks for your patience and check back soon for detailed directions.

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2011 Earth First Rendezvous, July 5th-12th Mon(Ida)tana(ho) Wilderness

In the Wild Rockies of western Montana and northern Idaho, a battle is being waged by a small group of committed citizens against one of the largest and most powerful corporations in the world–and the people are winning. ExxonMobile and other international criminal organizations are attempting to transform the Hyw. 12 National Scenic Byway–a breathtaking, mountainous corridor that slithers along the Clearwater and Lochsa Rivers–into a “high and wide” industrial shipping corridor that would be used to transport strip mining equipment to the Alberta tar sands, one of the most destructive industrial projects on Earth.

What began as a small grassroots campaign spearheaded by Northern Rockies Rising Tide has evolved into a regional movement which has successfully halted the contruction of Exxon’s proposed Kearl tar sands mine in northern Alberta for over a year by means of public demonstrations and litigation. As the proposed tar sands corridor remains stalled in the courts, activists in Montana and Idaho are hoping for the best and preparing for the worst.

This July, environmental justice advocates and impacted community members from around the country will converge for the 2011 Earth First Round River Rendezvous, a week of education and action focused around issues of resource extraction and environmental injustice in the Intermountain West, and we would like to invite you to join us.

Why Earth First!?  And what is the “Round River Rendezvous”?:

Now more than ever–in an age when mainstream environmental organizations take donations from oil companies and advise weapons contractors on how they might “green” their image–it is our duty as environmental and social justice activists to make certain things clear: Firstly, the plethora of (financial, ecological, and social) “crises” that grow worse with each day are not isolated or anomalous phenomena; they are the inevitable results of a specific ideological system that has been forced on the world by a relatively small group of wealthy elites. Secondly, therefore, it is essential that any tenable solution to these crises address the root causes of their emergence and that this solution come from the people who have been put most at risk, not from the people and institutions that are responsible for the problem in the first place. More specifically, then, there can be no such thing as “green” or “socially responsible” capitalism–unsustainability and social irresponsibility are encoded into capitalism’s DNA, they are it’s lifeblood. (Watch this for a more detailed explanation on this perspective)

Earth First! formed in 1979 in response to an increasingly corporate, compromising and ineffective environmental community–a community which has since become even more corporate and compromising. EF! is not an organization, but a movement. There are no “members” of EF!, only Earth First!ers. We believe in using all of the tools in the toolbox, from grassroots and legal organizing to civil disobedience and nonviolent direct action. When the law won’t fix the problem, we put our bodies on the line to stop the destruction.

The Earth First! Round River Rendezvous is a week long gathering for anyone interested in or involved in the Earth First! movement. Annually, this week-long gathering is held in a bioregion that is threatened with ecological devastation. During the week folks set up a primitive camp and attend or give workshops on a wide variety of topics, get to know one another, listen to music and other performances or share their own, brainstorm, network, organize and take action.

Earth First! activists blockade a coal plant after the 2006 Rendezvous

But don’t think that we’re a bunch of boring fanatics that just like to sit around and theorize about “movement strategy.”  The Rendezvous is a also a celebration. There will be lots of great opportunities for anyone to share music, stories, circus acts, theatre, etc. and there will be scheduled performances by radical musicians and other performers.

We encourage anyone coming to engage in primitive camping, treading as lightly as possible on the ecosystems that we will be inhabiting. We also ask that people come as self-sufficient as possible. Town and amenities are typically a distance away – so come with everything you will need for the week.  The week will end with a direct action that is most strategic and relevant to our ongoing campaigns at the time. You can learn more about this action at the Rendezvous.

Some Things to Consider:

We are inviting a wide variety of folks from a wide variety of backgrounds to this year’s RRR, so we ask people to leave oppressive and elitist attitudes at home.  We are attempting to make this space open and welcoming to locals and all types of environmental justice activists. We will not tolerate oppressive or elitist behavior. There will be spaces for alcohol and partying, and there will be spaces conducive to sobriety and quietude.  It is expected that these spaces and policies will be respected.  In short, don’t be a jerk!

There will be on-site medics with herbal medicine knowledge and training, as well as spaces to go for health and healing.  If you have any particular skills that would help with any of these things, contact us.

Police or other law enforcement agencies sometimes like to stop in and see what we are up to or try to shut down the whole camp all together.  It is usually not a big deal, but please be aware of these possibilities.  There will be delegated members of the camp responsible for communicating with law enforcement. There will also be folks working security throughout the gathering to keep any unwelcome people out.  As is usual at the RRR, we will be constantly signing up volunteers to help with camp security, childcare, conflict mediation, and other tasks to keep the camp functioning.

See you this July!

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