8A - Wednesday, October 17, 2007A U.P. mine plan draws fire from across Michigan The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com DRUM CIRCLE Kennecott drilling proposal under review by state TRAVERSE CITY (AP) - Bik- ing enthusiast Michael Robold recoils at the idea of a copper and nickel mine amid the woods and rivers of the Yellow Dog Plains. "It wouldbe atravesty!" he exclaimed during a rally called by opponents. Such determined resistance is nothing new in the Upper Penin- sula countryside where Kennecott Minerals Co. wants to drill the mine. But Robold was attending a standing-room-only gathering abut 300 miles away in Traverse City, where opponents distributed petitions and form letters to Gov. Jennifer Granholm. The debate over the mining project began several years ago as a mostly local squabble in Mar- quette County. Now it's reverber- ating across Michigan as the state Department of Environmental Quality approaches a final decision on whether to issue permits. Supporters and opponents are. contacting government officials and legislators, renting billboards and sounding off in the media and cyberspace. Combined, they've spent at least $99,000 on lobby- ing efforts, according to records filed with the Secretary.of State's office. About 1,000 people attended a series of public hearings last month in Marquette County and Lansing. Even former Gov. Wil- liam Milliken weighed in with a newspaper column denouncing the project. The public comment period ends today. The DEQ, which has given tentative approval, is sup- posed to make a final ruling by mid-November. But spokesman Robert McCann said the deadline might be extended so staffers can properly consider the points citi- zens have raised. "It's an unusual case, where people all over the state have been taking interest and following it very closely," McCann said. "Both sides are very passionate." Kennecott, which calls the would-be mine the Eagle Proj- ect, is targeting a six-acre underground deposit expected to yield 250-300 million pounds of nickel and about 200 million pounds of copper. Both are in heavy demand for use. in elec- tronic devices such as comput- ers and'cell phones. The mine would operate six to eight years, providing more than 100 full-time jobs and generat- ing millions in economic activity and tax revenue, says Utah-based Kennecott, a subsidiary of the international conglomerate Rio Tinto. "These types of jobs are the backbone of the economy in the U.P., besides the forest industry," said Tom Petersen, president of a pro-Kennecott group called Citi- zens for Responsible Mining. Petersen, now a consultant, previously managed one of the Upper Peninsula's two remain- ing iron ore mines - both in Mar- quette County. Supporters hope the Eagle Project would herald a new era of metal extraction in the central and western U.P., where abandoned copper and iron shafts dot the landscape and companies are exploring other potential sites. Petersen said he helped estab- lish the Citizens group to coun- ter "the misinformation and fear tactics and emotional pleas of the anti-mining community." Opponents say the mine would ruin the serenity of the isolated Yellow Dog Plains and pollute its Lake Superior tributary rivers. They contend any economic ben- efit would be short-lived and offset by damage to industries such as tourism. The company says it can build and operate the mine without harm to the nearby Salmon Trout and Yellow Dog rivers and while keeping surface effects to a mini- mum. Citizens for Responsible Mining has raised about $8,000 in dona- tions but has accepted no money from Kennecott, Petersen said. It has a Web site and is sponsoring billboard messages, speaking to civic groups and writing guest edi- torials for newspapers and televi- sion. Kennecott has sought support locally and in Lansing. Records with the Secretary of State's office show the company has spent more than $63,000 on lobbying in Michigan since 2004. It also has contributed to nonprofit funds operatedby political parties, Kennecott project manager Jon Cherry said, although he would not reveal how much. Operators of such funds are not required to dis- close their donors. "We want to make sure people in Lansing know what our project is about, what the benefits to the state of Michigan will be," Cherry said. The National Wildlife Federa- tion has spent about $36,000 lob- bying against the Eagle Project. "We will never be able to match their spending," federation attor- ney Michelle Halley said. "But we have advocates and citizens with a genuine sense of place, an authen- tic stake in where they live. Ken- necott can't buy that." Save the Wild U.P., a home- grown opposition group, is rely- ing on its Web site and grassroots activism to make its voice heard instead of hiring professionals to lobby the DEQ or lawmakers, director Alexis Raney said. "I'll write to them, I'll talk to them but I certainly don't wine and dine them," she said. McCann said DEQ officials are giving supporters and foes a fair hearing, but won't base their decision on which side campaigns more effectively. It ultimately will depend on whether the DEQ judges Ken- necott's permit application as meeting the state's nonferrous mining law and regulations, he said. "This is not a popularity con- test," McCann-said. MAX COLuNS/Daily People gathered in the back room of the Crazy Wisdom Book Store to participate in a drum circle open tothe public organized by a group called Drummunity. Drummunity runs the high energy percussion activity once a month and also offers various drum- ming-based workshops for parties and other events. Jackson prison begins closing Sick inmates had sued state to keep facility open LANSING (AP) - Sick inpates at a prison in Jackson are being taken elsewhere now that the state has approval to close the facility. Twenty-five to 30 prisoners were moved to other prisons yesterday, said Russ Marlan, spokesman for the state Department of Correc- tions. Another 100 will be moved this week, with the remaining 435 transferred gradually over the next month. The Corrections Department planstoclosethe SouthernMichigan Correctional Facility by Nov. 15. U.S. District Judge Robert Jonker in Grand Rapids has again approved a plan to transfer the sick inmates. Federal appeals by inmates lawyers' have been unsuccessful, and the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Monday issued a mandate giving effect to an earlier decision to large- ly stayout of the dispute. Governor Jennifer Granholm's admigistration wants to close the 1,400-bed Jackson prison to save $35 million and help balance the state budget. Inmates' lawyers who sued to block the prison's closure have said the state wants it closed to escape long-standing and costly federal oversight of the health care system at the Jackson prison complex. Jonker recently took over the class-action case after U.S. District Judge Richard Enslen in Kalama- zoo asked that it be transferred. While Enslen had blocked the plan to close the prison and ordered the department to revise it, citing con- cerns over moving sick prisoners, Jonker said the transfer proposal was OK. The Corrections Departmenthas been under a federal consent decree in the case, known as Hadix, since 1985 to improve medical care and other conditions at the state prisons in Jackson. The case has struck a nerve as lawmakers and Granholm continue grappling with major budget prob- lems, including how to slow spend- ing in the prison system that costs $2 billion a year to run. About 335 employees who work at the Jackson prison will get letters in the next two weeks asking for volun- teers to transfer to prisons in other partsofthestate.Thenthedepartment will see how many of the remaining workers can be moved to other parts of the Jacksonprisoncomplex. The Corrections Department also plans to officially close Camp Manistique, a minimum- security facility in the Upper Peninsula, this weekend. The prisoners already have been transferred out. Some state lawmakers want to keep the facility open during budget nego- tiations in coming weeks, but Gran- holm's administration has much of the control over closing facilities. U I TO COMMUNICATE MORE EFFECTIVELY WITH. OTHER COUNTRIES, WE MUST FIRST BE ABLE TO SPEAK THEIR LANGUAGE. If you speak a foreign language or are currently learning one, we have countlesB opportunities awaiting you in Air Force ROTC. " Tuition assistance " Monthly living allowance " Officer commission " See the world. Our current language needs include Chinese, Persian, Hindi, Indonesian and countless others. Call 1-866-4AF-ROTC or visit AFROTC.COM. 0