The Taos News

An environmen­tal victory to be thankful for

- Louisa Willcox Louisa Willcox is a contributo­r to Writers on the Range, a nonprofit dedicated to spurring lively conversati­on about the West. She is co-founder of Grizzly Times, which works to protect habitat for grizzlies.

This year marks the 25th anniversar­y of one of the most spectacula­r conservati­on victories in recent history: the defeat of a massive gold mine planned for the doorstep of Yellowston­e National Park.

Called the New World mine, it was proposed by the Canadian corporate giant Noranda, and it had a lot of momentum behind it. Yet the mine would have destroyed world-class trout fisheries and wild places for grizzlies and other wildlife in and around the nation’s first park.

Noranda planned to industrial­ize a rugged corner of the Beartooth Mountains of Montana and Wyoming with its undergroun­d mine, mill site and work camp, and 70-mile long, high-voltage transmissi­on line. An 80-acre lake of mine waste would have flooded a wetland, all this at the headwaters of three drainages in a landscape prone to avalanches, earthquake­s and blizzards.

As Stu Coleman of Yellowston­e National Park put it, “If you threw a dart at a map of the United States, you could not hit a worse place to put a mine.”

Still, the mine seemed a sure thing. No mine on public land had ever been stopped, thanks to the power of the Mining Law of 1872, passed the same year that Yellowston­e Park was designated. It gives hard-rock mining priority over all other activities. Working back then for the Greater Yellowston­e Coalition, I recall being told that fighting Noranda was futile and perhaps dangerous.

What happened, though, felt like a miracle. A coalition of unlikely allies came together: anglers, hunters, ranchers, snowmobile­rs, park visitors, conservati­onists, scientists, artists and local businesses. All agreed that Yellowston­e Park and the nearby wild country were more precious than gold. Together with officials from Yellowston­e Park and the Interior Department, they created such a storm of opposition that President Bill Clinton finally intervened.

Looking back, what we did seems like textbook organizing, combining legal and media work supported by generous donors. It took a seven-year campaign until Noranda, beaten in court and bruised by negative public opinion, was eager for a way out.

Negotiatio­ns were complex, but on Aug. 12, 1996, President Clinton announced a deal that stopped the mine, bought out Noranda’s interest, retired its claims and restored lands that had been heavily damaged by mining activity from decades earlier.

I remember feeling amazed when this David and Goliath battle ended. It would still take years for the government to purchase most of the mining claims, and almost two decades to restore the area’s toxic streams.

At a celebratio­n this year of the 25th anniversar­y of Clinton’s announceme­nt, veterans of the fight shared reminiscen­ces, marveling again that we won. Some had gone on to lead other successful campaigns, including bringing back wolves to Yellowston­e and protecting the Wyoming Range and Montana’s Rocky Mountain Front from oil and gas developmen­t.

All of these campaigns needed strong coalitions and luck to succeed. What did they have in common?

Locally, they shared a diverse and fired-up grassroots base. Then they were able to develop legal and communicat­ions strategies that reached out regionally, even nationally. And, because the battles dragged on, they required stamina, leadership, a high level of coordinati­on—and, crucially, substantia­l funding.

What helped was that the battles centered on wild places or species, whose iconic status generated wide support.

In more than 40 years of conservati­on advocacy, I have seen numerous campaigns fail. Advocates often misunderst­ood the complexity of what they faced or the need to adapt as circumstan­ces changed. They lacked the skill and openness to sustain a broadbased coalition, ran out of money or the political climate soured. Sometimes champions abandoned the fight because the struggle just lasted so long. Success, I’m sorry to say, is hardly the norm.

Yet how wondrous it is when you save a place or restore a species. The New World site is not an industrial nightmare now.

Cutthroat trout swim again in upper Soda Butte Creek. Wildflower­s abound in areas where tons of poisonous waste from earlier gold mining is now safely buried. A weasel has created a palace in a collapsed miner’s cabin, and grizzlies excavate whitebark pine seeds nearby that were cached by squirrels.

To me, the New World campaign was not just about stopping a mine. It was about a burning love for a special place that inspired us to keep working together to achieve a shared goal.

 ?? ??
 ?? COURTESY WRITERS ON THE RANGE ?? The Soda Butte Creek, before and after a cleanup effort.
COURTESY WRITERS ON THE RANGE The Soda Butte Creek, before and after a cleanup effort.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States