And now:[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

Date: Sun, 14 Nov 1999 12:26:17 -0600
From: Wolf Watershed Educational Project <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

For immediate release       Contact:  Bill Ahrens  (715) 275-3679
  Please post and circulate

WISCONSIN RALLY AGAINST PROPOSED TRANSMISSION
LINE  TO CRANDON MINE DRAWS 100

The Wolf Watershed Educational Project (WWEP) drew 100 people
to a Saturday, November 13 rally to stop a proposed transmission line
to the Crandon mine. It was held at the intersection of Highways 8 and
45/47 in Monico, 12 miles west of Crandon. The purpose of the rally
was to link movements against high-voltage transmission lines, metallic
sulfide mining, and hydroelectric dams.  The rally also alerted local
landowners about the proposed construction of a 115 kv feeder
transmission
line to the Crandon mine, which involves Right-Of-Way land purchases
and possibly condemnations. Numerous motorists and truckers blew their
horns in support of the rally. The Hwy. 8-45/47 intersection is on the
proposed transmission line route and near the Venus substation that is
key to the feeder line, which would emanate from a planned 345 kv
Duluth-to-Wausau line.

Representatives spoke from the interconnected movements that oppose
the Crandon mine, oppose new high voltage transmission lines through
Wisconsin/Minnesota, and oppose the Manitoba dams that would be the
source for much of the project's electricity.  The representatives
included
members of the Mole Lake Chippewa, Save Our Unique Lands (SOUL),
Midwest Treaty Network, Wisconsin Resources Protection Council,
Mining Impact Coalition, Rusk County Citizens Action Group, U.W. student

groups from Stevens Point and Oshkosh, and a spokesperson representing
the Cross Lake Cree of Manitoba. A local landowner voiced opposition to
the line, and gave rally participants to stop it. Bill Ahrens of the
Wolf Watershed
Educational Project read a statement supporting the rally from Rep.
Sarah
Waukau.  He added, "This rally marks the expansion of the transmission
line opposition into northeastern Wisconsin, and bring together
environmentalists,
farmers, and Native peoples opposed to the interconnection of dams,
transmission
lines, and sulfide mines."  Participants performed theater depicting the
toppling
of a mock "transmission line" by shouts of opposition, and formed a
circle
at the end depicting the victory of "people power" over so-called "power
lines."

For information on the transmission line connection to the mine, see the

Midwest Treaty Network web site at
http://www.alphacdc.com/treaty/powerline.html
or see SOUL site at http://www.wakeupwisconsin.com  For updates, call
Bill
Ahrens at 715-275-3679 or [EMAIL PROTECTED]   For background
information,
call the Mining Hotline at (800) 445-8615, or log on the Midwest Treaty
Network
site at http://www.treatyland.com



Reprinted under the Fair Use http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.html doctrine 
of international copyright law.
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           Tsonkwadiyonrat (We are ONE Spirit)
                   http://www.tdi.net/ishgooda/       
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