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Thursday, September 02, 2021

Events in Mackinaw City to bring awareness to Line 5 threats Sept. 3, 4, 6; press conference held in Detroit on Canada and Line 5

By Michele Bourdieu

During a previous Pipe Out Paddle flotilla against Line 5, Native and non-Native water protectors gather near the Mackinac Bridge with their kayaks and canoes, display their banners and sing songs about the water. This year the event will take place Saturday, Sept. 4, followed by a Water is Life Festival, both in Mackinaw City. (Keweenaw Now file photo © and courtesy Miguel Levy)

MACKINAW CITY -- Native and non-Native groups opposed to Enbridge's Line 5 oil pipeline under the Straits of Mackinac will gather in Mackinaw City this Labor Day weekend -- Sept. 3, 4 and 6 -- for several events bringing awareness to the threats posed by Line 5 -- an aging pipeline beneath the Straits of Mackinac -- as well as the potential threat to Great Lakes water and bottomlands should a tunnel be built for Line 5.  

Line 5, which carries light crude oil and natural gas, is owned by the same company (Enbridge) that allowed the Kalamazoo River oil spill to occur. This 68-year-old dual pipeline poses too great a risk to the Great Lakes. If Line 5 breaks under the Straits, it will devastate the pristine waters of Lake Michigan for centuries. Many people are unaware of the danger that will completely change our way of life.

Both Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer and Attorney General Dana Nessel have asked for Line 5 to be shut down. In fact, Line 5 has been operating illegally since May 2021. Gov. Whitmer and the Michigan Department of Natural Resources (DNR) notified Enbridge in November 2020 that the 1953 easement allowing it to operate dual pipelines in the Straits of Mackinac to transport petroleum and other products was being revoked and terminated. They gave Enbridge six months to decommission Line 5, but the company continues to operate it.*

On Friday, Sept. 3, a Potluck Feast will be held from 6:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the Minogin Market, 229 S. Huron, Mackinaw City, to be followed by the Light Brigade at 9 p.m. under the Mackinac Bridge in Mackinaw City. Opponents of Line 5 can join the Light Brigade for a direct action with light panels.

On Saturday, Sept. 4, the 6th Annual Pipe Out Paddle Up Flotilla will be held from 8 a.m. to noon on the Mackinaw City side of the Mackinac Bridge, 102 W. Straits Ave. This flotilla is a large group of kayaks/kayaktivists demonstrating on the water to bring awareness to Line 5 and call for action. Tribal jimanns (large canoes) are also invited. This family and dog friendly event will include Tribal leadership, Water Ceremony, Jimaans, Pipe Ceremony, Tribal Drum, and Jingle Dancers. Food and water will be provided. Please bring your own water bottle.

Poster announcing the Sept. 4, 2021, Pipe Out Paddle Up Flotilla. Click on poster for larger version. (Poster courtesy Jannan J. Cornstalk)

Please consider making a donation to help cover event costs!
Donate via PayPal here:
https://www.paypa l.com/paypalme/paddleout2019

Donate to the Water Is Life Festival here:
https://www.waterislifefestival.org/donate 

CAMPING: Please email Jannan Cornstalk at jcornstalk@gmail.com to reserve a spot. Camping is first come first served and limited to 50 people.

Following the Pipe Out Paddle Up Flotilla on Saturday will be the Water is Life Festival from noon to 8 p.m. in Conkling Heritage Park, Mackinaw City. It will feature music, art, speakers, youth activities, food and more:

Poster announcing Sept. 4 Water is Life Festival in Mackinaw City. (Poster courtesy Jannan J. Cornstalk)

On Labor Day, Monday, Sept. 6, Oil and Water Don't Mix supporters will gather at the Bridge Walk for two purposes: 1. To welcome Governor Whitmer as she finishes the bridge crossing. 2. To spread awareness about the urgency to shut down Line 5 by handing out postcards to bridge walkers. They will gather at the corner of Nicolet and Jamet streets in Mackinaw City, just off I-75 at the south end of the bridge where many people will begin and end their bridge walk. Click here to learn more and to sign up for a shift.

Oil and Water Don't Mix holds press conference on Canada and Line 5

DETROIT -- On Sept. 1 2021, citizen groups, including tribal members, gathered near the Canadian consulate at the international Detroit River to send a message to the Canadian government: "Canada: Protect the Great Lakes from the Line 5 oil pipeline." The event, organized by Oil and Water Don't Mix, was livestreamed on YouTube.

Sean Mc Brearty, campaign coordinator for Oil and Water Don’t Mix, spoke about the need to persuade Canada to support the Line 5 shutdown. 

During a Sept. 1, 2021, press conference in Detroit, Sean McBrearty, Oil and Water Don't Mix campaign coordinator, speaks about why Canada needs to support shutting down Line 5. (Screen shot from Oil and Water Don't Mix livestream by Keweenaw Now)

"Today we have with us a container of water from the Great Lakes, from the Straits of Mackinac -- clean, pure water of the Straits of Mackinac, where the Anishinaabe people who lived here first have their creation story," McBrearty said.

Noting that Canada shares with the US and Michigan the responsibility of protecting the Great Lakes, McBrearty held up a bottle of that clean water from the Straits and announced a similar container of that clean water has been sent to Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau as a reminder of that responsibility.

McBrearty continued, "Our message in a bottle to the Prime Minister is history will remember you for the choices that you make right now and the choices that you make today. You can protect our Great Lakes and our climate and support shutting down Line 5 in the Straits of Mackinac -- and you need to do so -- or you can support Enbridge and its fossil fuel agenda, but you can't do both."

McBrearty also read a statement from the National Wildlife Federation's Beth Wallace, who commented on Enbridge's proposed tunnel and Canada's support of it. According to her statement, "Enbridge created this false narrative around a tunnel alternative to divide communities and prolong the life of Line 5. With a legal strategy that's also based around creating as much delay as possible, the Canadian government is now actively working alongside Enbridge to prolong the life of a pipeline that could devastate our way of life."

Christy McGillivray, political and legislative director for the Michigan Chapter of the Sierra Club, then spoke in support of Governor Whitmer's legal plan to shut down Line 5.

Christy McGillivray, political and legislative director for the Michigan Chapter of the Sierra Club, speaks on Canada's support of Enbridge. (Screenshot by Keweenaw Now)

"Since May Enbridge has been operating Line 5 illegally in defiance of the State of Michigan and with support from the government of Canada," McGillivray said.

Pointing out that Governor Whitmer's plan to shut down Line 5 protects the health and safety of Michiganders from a "ticking time bomb" while meeting Michigan's energy needs, McGillivray noted that Canadian government officials have supported Enbridge -- the company responsible for the devastating Kalamazoo oil spill -- in their "defiant refusal" to decommission Line 5 in the 6 months (November to May) allowed by the Governor.

McGillivray also noted that at least 33 spills were reported officially along the Line 5 pipeline since the 1960s.

"That does NOT include a Line 5 spill in Michigan's Upper Peninsula, just a few miles from the Straits of Mackinac, in the Hiawatha National Forest, that resulted in 825 tons of soil being excavated and removed to a contamination site. Enbridge kept that spill secret for 30 years," McGillivray said. "Canada should work with us right now -- should work with Michigan and the Biden administration -- and prevent Line 5 from continuing to contribute to our Code Red climate crisis."

Jamie Simmons, Michigan Climate Action Network engagement director, spoke about the effects of climate change -- noting its recent impacts on Detroit, other Michigan communities and Canada.

At the press conference, Jamie Simmons, Michigan Climate Action Network engagement director, notes that Canada's support of Enbridge conflicts with its signing of the Paris Climate Accord. (Screenshot by Keweenaw Now)

"The Line 5 pipeline is a threat to our lives," Simmons said. "Every day the Line 5 pipeline carries oil, a fossil fuel, that is causing a major carbon spill in our atmosphere -- every day -- which is warming our planet at alarming rates."

Noting that Canada was one of the countries to ratify the Paris Climate Accord, Simmons cited the recent IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) report, which calls for limiting warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius. The goal is to cut global emissions in half by 2030 and reach net zero by 2050 in order to limit the worst consequences of climate change. Canada agreed to that goal by signing the Paris Accord, she said.  

"Allowing Line 5 to continue to operate, or to be replaced by a new oil tunnel, as Enbridge is proposing, is not consistent with that climate goal," Simmons added.

Instead of supporting Enbridge's fossil fuel agenda, Canada should work with the US on a North American climate plan to cut emissions, Simmons concluded.

Andrea Pierce, chair of the Michigan Anishinaabek Caucus and a citizen of the Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Indians, represented her tribe and read a message from her Tribal Chair, Regina Gasco-Bentley, who was unable to attend the event.

Andrea Pierce, chair of the Michigan Anishinaabek Caucus and a citizen of the Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Indians, delivers a message from her Tribal Chair and speaks about Enbridge's threat to the bottomlands of Lake Michigan, where evidence of a 10,000-year-old cultural sacred site was recently observed.** (Screenshot by Keweenaw Now)

In her message, Gasco-Bentley stated, "Line 5 poses an immediate threat to our Anishinaabek homeland. This water in the Straits nourishes our people. It provides critical habitat for our fish and medicines. We depend on healthy clean water to feed our communities. We know the Enbridge pipeline leak in the Kalamazoo River has been devastating to escosystem of the river and the tributaries. We must continue on a path to make people realize the vision we want: Safe water for our next seven generations. Women, I call on you. We are the water protectors, and we must stand together. Water must be protected. It's time to shut down Line 5."

Pierce then spoke of her own experience as one of the team that recently discovered a 10,000-year-old cultural sacred site on the bottomlands of Lake Michigan.**  Enbridge could destroy those bottomlands. Her people need to research that site in order to learn about their tribal history, she explained.

"We can't do that if the water is destroyed and the bottomlands are covered in oil," Pierce said. "All of the lakes are in jeopardy. All of our water is in jeopardy. When that breaks, think about Kalamazoo."

A Q and A session, facilitated by David Holtz of Oil and Water Don't Mix, followed the speakers. To hear those questions and the full statements of the speakers see the video recording on YouTube. Since audio difficulties delayed the event, scroll to about 9 minutes, 34 seconds, for the actual beginning of the press conference.

Editor's Notes:

* See our Nov. 13, 2020, article, "Governor Whitmer, DNR take action to revoke Enbridge easement, shut down Line 5 dual pipelines through Straits of Mackinac; AG Nessel files new lawsuit."

** See: "Ancient underwater tribal cultural site discovered in Mackinac Straits near Line 5."

Wednesday, September 01, 2021

"The Spirit of the Hunt" -- ecological art exhibit reception, wolf talks Sept. 3 in MTU's Forestry Noblet Building

"Peace in the Forest," by Jim Brandenburg. (Photo © Jim Brandenburg and courtesy Michigan Tech University)

HOUGHTON -- Michigan Tech’s College of Forest Resources and Environmental Sciences (CFRES) is hosting an ecological art exhibit and public talks calling attention to local carnivore populations. The exhibit, titled "The Spirit of the Hunt," is a collaboration between CFRES, the Department of Visual and Performing Arts (VPA), and Project Coyote. 

Local and national artists are featured in the exhibit, including U.P. artists Joyce Koskenmaki and Ladislav Hanka. The exhibit is guest-curated by Catherine Plank, a graduate student in ecSeptosystem science and management at the University of Michigan, who arranged the exhibit "to create discussion and to highlight the beauty and value of native predators."

"Wolf," by Joyce Koskenmaki. (Image © Joyce Koskenmaki and courtesy Michigan Tech University)

The exhibit is open now through Oct. 15, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday-Friday in the CFRES atrium.

At 4:30 p.m. on Friday, Sept. 3, John Vucetich (Michigan Tech, Forestry) and Tanya Aldred (Great Lakes Indian Fish and Wildlife Commission) will lead a public discussion on wolves, and the species’ history with mankind.

All events are free and open to the public:
Michigan Tech, CFRES Noblet Building, Room G002:

    Presentations and Reception -- Friday, Sept. 3, 4:30-5:30 p.m.
    John Vucetich: "On the relationship between humans and wolves"
    Tanya Aldred: "Ma'iingan (wolf): An Ojibway Perspective."      

Michigan Tech, CFRES Noblet Building, Hesterberg Hall and Atrium:   

    Exhibit -- Aug. 30 - Oct. 15, 9 a.m. - 4 p.m., Monday-Friday.

Tuesday, August 31, 2021

Live events return to Rozsa for 2021-2022 season

Michigan Tech's Rozsa Center for the Performing Arts will open its doors in September 2021 for live events. Tickets go on sale Sept. 1. (Photo courtesy Rozsa Center)

HOUGHTON -- Live events at the Rozsa are back! After more than a year of a dark theatre stage, the Rozsa Center for the Performing Arts joyfully announces that its doors will open in September to bring the U.P. incredible performances. Once again, we will celebrate the togetherness we have all missed -- complete with people scooting past you to get to their seats, the whispers of neighbors behind you, and a theatre full of laughter. Tickets will be available on September 1 through the MTU Ticket Office.

The new season will feature 70 performances and art exhibits on the Rozsa Stage, in the McArdle Theatre and the Rozsa Gallery, and in the community. This year has the whole community in mind: theatre productions, dance, community workshops, poetry, visual art exhibits, and concerts ranging from country to classical to psychedelic indie rock. 

"We’ve been looking forward to this season for two years," says Mary Jennings, Rozsa Center director. "A theatre is meant to have an audience, and I know that we’ve all been aching for live shows to come back to the Rozsa. This year is going to offer something for everyone. We’ve got a great lineup of musicians, starting with Vieux Farka Touré in September. We’re showing Rocky Horror Picture Show again, back by very popular demand. And of course, a highlight of this season is the return of the Nutcracker, which is always a community favorite."

Performances include the following:

  • Vieux Farka Touré, "The Hendrix of the Sahara," one of the top guitarists in the world
  • A screening of Rocky Horror Picture Show
  • Renowned country music performer Erik Koskinen 
  • Sinkane, a "funky, lighter-than-air global pop" band
  • The beloved Nutcracker with the Minnesota Ballet, Superior School of Dance, and the Keweenaw Symphony Orchestra
  • The world premiere of Anchorage, a dance show choreographed and composed on a remote island in Lake Superior (no, not Isle Royale)

View the full calendar of events and ticket information here.

As we rejoice in coming together again, the Rozsa Center will prioritize health and safety in its reopening plans for all so that we can all focus on the joy. The Rozsa will follow the latest public safety guidelines and release updates to its COVID policies to reflect changes. Plan your family’s year with the complete Rozsa season at mtu.edu/rozsa.