John --
My parents taught me how to harvest, clean, and prepare salmon. It's part of our way of life. It's how I fill my freezer. My parents also taught me to protect our waterways and respect salmon for everything they provide to us.
I am a born and raised Alaskan, doctor, gillnetter, and am an ally to all fishermen. I will never abandon Alaska or leave our resources vulnerable to anti-Alaska corporate interests.
So when Governor Mike Dunleavy used his influence with President Donald Trump to overrule scientists at the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) who say the proposed Pebble Mine in Bristol Bay will be an environmental and economic disaster for Alaska, I didn't hesitate to fight back.
John, please read my op-ed published in the Anchorage Daily News at the bottom of this email, and then share it with your friends and family by forwarding this email or posting it to Facebook right now.
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I know how important Bristol Bay is to our fishing industry -- it's the world's most vibrant and valuable salmon fishery and supports 14,000 jobs. Sockeye, king, coho salmon, and other fish from Bristol Bay bring in $1.5 billion in economic revenue each year.
But a Canadian company wants to build an open-pit mine and support operations that is as large as Manhattan and nearly three-quarters as deep as the Grand Canyon. The huge project will not only destroy habitats and wetlands at the site, but also have massive pits holding tons of waste and toxic chemicals the EPA fears will leak into two rivers that empty into the bay.
But the scientists were overruled by President Donald Trump's political appointees after Governor Mike Dunleavy personally lobbied on behalf of the mining company on Air Force One.
It's special interest politics at its worst.
Please read my op-ed on why the Pebble Mine must be stopped, and then share it with your friends by forwarding this email or posting it to Facebook.
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Thank you,
Dr. Al Gross
__________________
The following appeared as an op-ed from Dr. Al Gross in the Anchorage Daily News on August 30, 2019:
We must defend Alaska against foreign corporate interests
By Dr. Al Gross
The proposed Pebble mine in Bristol Bay is the epicenter of crony capitalism, and the poster child for what's wrong with politics.
On July 30, after a meeting between Gov. Mike Dunleavy and President Donald Trump on Air Force One, the Environmental Protection Agency announced it is doing away with a protection that the Canadian Pebble mine operators viewed as an obstacle. No longer will these foreign developers have to worry about section 404C of the Clean Water Act, which provides veto authority over dredge or fill operations shown to have harmful effects on aquatic life. Scientific evidence shows that the Pebble mine footprint will cause irreversible damage to our wild Alaska salmon population. President Trump, Gov. Dunleavy, and the corporate interests from Canada don't seem to care.
As a fisherman, an Alaskan, and an American, I am outraged. As a U.S. senator, I will do everything in my power to stop this travesty from happening.
Southeast Alaskans have been fighting for action on transboundary mining issues from our congressional delegation ever since the doomed Canadian Mount Polley mine disaster in 2014. Gov. Dunleavy and President Trump should be working on transboundary mining protections, and implementing world-class standards on the Canadian mines operating in our shared rivers. Instead, they have worked to allow a Canadian corporation to come into Alaska and conduct risky development in our critical local watersheds.
Like most Alaskans, my parents taught me how to harvest, clean and prepare salmon. It's part of our way of life. It's how I fill my freezer. My parents also taught me to protect our waterways and respect salmon for everything they provide to us. I am a born and raised Alaskan, am a doctor, a gillnetter, and am an ally to all fishermen. I will never abandon Alaska or leave our resources vulnerable to anti-Alaska Outside corporate interests.
Gov. Dunleavy's efforts to clear the way for Pebble mine erodes Alaskans' way of life and undercuts the public process that have made our fisheries world renowned.
Clearing obstacles for the proposed Pebble mine and cheering the ultimate destruction that the open-pit mine will wreak on Alaska's largest sockeye run is an act of cultural genocide against Alaska Native peoples in Bristol Bay. Without healthy waterways, the people of Bristol Bay could lose sockeye, the main source of food and economic activity in the area. An attack on sockeye is an attack on Native communities along the Kvichak and Nushagak rivers, as well as Bristol Bay.
The proposed Pebble mine is the single greatest threat to our Alaska wild salmon, and it has been fast-tracked by Gov. Dunleavy on behalf of a Canadian corporation. Sen. Ted Stevens said "Pebble mine is the wrong mine in the wrong place." He was right.
Gov. Dunleavy and President Trump's treacherous deal to eliminate section 404C of the Clean Water Act is the first step for their friends at Pebble mine in following through with Phase One; building any mine, no matter how small initially. They will surely launch a second phase, in which they will design a larger mine. Once the phase one footprint of the Pebble mine is established, it will undoubtedly grow. Corporate shareholders won't allow operations to end after only 20 years when there's more profit for the Canadian company to drain from Alaska. There will, undoubtedly, be a Phase Two.
Thankfully, the Pebble mine won't be built tomorrow. The project will need legislative approval, state and federal permits for the main footprint and local permits for constructing the roads and bridges it will require. Unfortunately, because the permitting process has been greased by Dunleavy and his Department of Environmental Conservation commissioner, Jason Brune (who served as the former public affairs and government relations manager of the Pebble Partnership), shovels could hit the ground as early as 2021.
Alaskans can't wait until the 2022 election to defend ourselves against the governor's cronyism. Elected officials should join Alaskans and speak out against the proposed Pebble Mine.
Alaska should be open for business, not for sale.
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