Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumLand is Being Destroyed in Wisconsin by Frack Sand Mining
Land is Being Destroyed in Wisconsin by Frack Sand Mining
Presentation to Chippewa Countys Land Conservation & Forestry Department monthly meeting on January 20, 2016
My name is Johnne Smalley. I own and pay taxes on land in Wheaton Township in Chippewa County, Wisconsin. I am here today to find out what Chippewa County envisions for its future.
I have read Chippewa Countys Comprehensive Plan, but I dont see the county following it. Page 173, Section 6.4 states:
Goal 1 Maintain the physical condition, biodiversity, ecology, and environmental functions of the landscape, including its capacity for flood storage, groundwater recharge, water filtration, plant growth, ecological diversity, wildlife habitat, and carbon sequestration.
Goal 2 Maintain the capacity of the land to support productive forests and agricultural working lands to sustain food, fiber, and renewable energy production.
How many acres of land have been removed from productive forests and agricultural working lands to support frac sand mines owned by and operated for the financial benefit of people that are not from our area, often not even from our state, and sometimes, not even from our country?
How have all these frac sand mines maintained the physical condition, biodiversity, ecology, and environmental functions of the landscape, including its capacity for flood storage, groundwater recharge, water filtration, plant growth, ecological diversity, wildlife habitat, and carbon sequestration?
What Im seeing is a bunch of eyesores scarring our land, devastation of forested hillsides, businesses that were dependent on tourist trade closing, increased costs for agricultural businesses dependent on rail transport of fertilizers into the area and corn out of the area, decreased wildlife habitat resulting in increased crop destruction as the wildlife relocate into adjacent cropland, and tons of colloidal clay from their ponds washing into our trout streams and ruining the trout habitat. There are toxic levels of silica 2.5 dust in the air which affect our health and probably animal health. In other localities near frac sand facilities, veterinarians have noticed increased fertility problems including a significant lower conception rate and higher rate of stillborn and weak calves. There have been similar reports by farmers near mine sites in Chippewa County. Coincidence?
More:
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@frackcheckwv #fracking #environment
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DS Frac Sand Mine, Boomer, Wisconsin