Our efforts will go on into the next administration unabated. The effort has been expensive and time-consuming but rewarding for our team at Piragis Northwoods Co. We continue with our meetings in Washington every month with Congress and with the agencies like The Bureau of Land Management and the US Forest Service. Our efforts in Washington, DC have to lead to serious consideration of at least a temporary withdrawal of mineral leases with the prospect of further action to permanently ban sulfide ore mining in our watershed. The Campaign now has grown to a full-time staff of 12 people and hundreds of volunteers across the country. We are proud to be able in our wild lakes to be able to drink the water directly from the lake and eat the fish we catch for dinner around the campfire. Our livelihood and those of our employees absolutely and unequivocally depends on clean pure water throughout the canoe country. Examples abound around the world of accidents from such mines having acid mine drainage into the ground and surface water and multiple blowouts of tailings dams rendering destruction downstream of such mines. Research led us to believe that this type of mining known to the US EPA as the most polluting industry in America was just not appropriate for this water-rich ecosystem. We opened a visitor center in Ely that summer to educate tourists and local people about this threat that could easily pollute the waters of the BWCAW. We formed a group that came to be known as The Campaign To Save The Boundary Waters. In 2013 our company called a meeting of informed environmentalists in our wilderness edge town of Ely, Minnesota to discuss what had become a looming threat of sulfide ore copper and nickel mining in the watershed of the BWCAW. That detail has lead to another great environmental effort to rectify the oversight. One provision was neglected however in these extensive protections and that was the withdrawal of mineral leases outside the wilderness but in the watershed that drains through the wilderness. The Boundary Waters was permanently protected in 1964 by the Wilderness Act and again in 1978 with the Boundary Waters Wilderness Act. Over the past 100 years, the wilderness has met many challenges from proposed dams to float planes and motor boats and remote resort development. It is the land of Voyageurs and trappers of 300 years past and the homeland of the Ojibway people who migrated here for the wild rice harvest and the fishing and hunting. The BWCAW links across the border with the Quetico Provincial Park of Ontario to make a canoe wilderness that is unmatched anywhere in the world. Some 80,000 people from around the US and the world come to camp and travel each summer by canoe without the use of outboard motors and by dog team in winter. From the air, the BWCAW appears to be more lake and stream than land. The 1.1 million acres with over 1,000 lakes holds over 20% of all the water in the national wilderness system. The Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness in northern Minnesota is America’s most popular wilderness with over 250,000 visitors each year.
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