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Barack Obama
"Lincoln Sells Out Slaves"
by: Rob Kailey - Sep 13
1 Comments
If You Haven't Seen This
by: Rob Kailey - Apr 28
5 Comments
Impeach the President?
by: Rob Kailey - Mar 16
15 Comments
It's the system, stupid!
by: Jay Stevens - Oct 25
7 Comments

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Rob Kailey is a working schmuck with no ties or affiliations to any governmental or political organizations, save those of sympathy.
Governor Brian Schweitzer

Where do MT politicians stand on Keystone XL Pipeline?

by: Matthew Koehler

Thu Sep 08, 2011 at 07:23:26 AM MST

Get the latest over at Clean | Green | Sustainable.
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Montana's growing eminent domain debacle

by: Matthew Koehler

Wed Aug 31, 2011 at 08:27:58 AM MST

Get the latest over at Clean | Green | Sustainable.  Plus, learn what you can do to help repeal HB 198, passed by the 2011 Montana Legislature, at the urging of Governor Brian Schweitzer.  
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Why We Fight

by: Matthew Koehler

Thu Aug 25, 2011 at 07:34:11 AM MST

Paul Edwards discusses his new Alberta tar sands, megaloads video over at Clean | Green | Sustainable.  
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BREAKING NEWS: Activists lock down MT Gov's office over oil pipeline

by: Matthew Koehler

Tue Jul 12, 2011 at 12:09:08 PM MST

(I remain confused about what 'principle' is being supported by trashing the State House.  Perhaps it can be explained in comments.   - promoted by Rob Kailey)

According to the Great Falls Tribune:

"More than 100 environmental activists from across the country descended on Gov. Brian Schweitzer's office Tuesday to demand that he rescind his support for the Keystone XL oil pipeline and the Exxon Mobile megaload transportation project.

Schweitzer met with the rowdy group of activists in the reception room of his office, but refused to meet their demands. Activists from Northen Rockies Rising Tide, Earth!First and other environmental groups said last week's rupture of an Exxon Mobile pipeline that fouled dozens of miles of the Yellowstone River downstream of Laurel is a prime example of why Schweitzer should "toss big oil out of Montana."

Great Falls Tribune reporter John S. Adams is, apparently, on scene and, according to his Montana Lowdown blog, will "have more on this as the day goes on, including photos and video from today's protest in Gov. Brian Schweitzer's office."

On Monday, Adams took a deeper look into the issue with his post, "Schweitzer still supports oil sands/Keystone XL despite tough talk on Yellowstone oil spill."

UPDATE from Reuters:

Montana pipeline spill may have carried oil sands crude

"An Exxon Mobil pipeline that ruptured, leaking oil into Yellowstone River, may have sometimes carried a heavier and more toxic form of crude than initially thought, federal regulators said on Thursday.

The U.S. Transportation Department's Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration spokeswoman Patricia Klinger said her office had learned that the pipeline may have been used to carry heavier crude.

"I just found out that apparently, and the regional folks just found out, there is an interconnect on the pipeline that possibly does carry some oil out of Canada," she said in response to a question about tar sands crude in the pipeline....

Tar sands crude may cause more wear and tear on pipes because of its chemical makeup, including corrosive and abrasive agents, said Tom Finch, the pipeline administration's technical services director for the western regional office.

Federal inspectors were trying to determine if transport of tar sands crude could have triggered internal corrosion that may have played a role in the rupture, he said....

Richard Opper, head of the Montana Department of Environmental Quality, said he was surprised to learn the pipeline buried in the streambed of the Yellowstone may sometimes have moved tar sands crude from Canada.

"If the question is, did we know it was carrying tar sands oil? Hell, no," he said in an interview on Thursday. "If companies are changing the kinds of materials in pipelines to mixes that make them more likely they will leak or rupture, that raises huge concerns."

Entire story at:
http://www.reuters.com/article...

Update #2: July 19 - Judge stops transport of giant oilfield equipment through western Montana

The Missoulian is reporting:

A district court judge has upheld a request by Missoula County and three conservation groups to stop the Kearl Module Transportation Project - and its trucking of giant oilfield equipment modules through western Montana.

Judge Ray Dayton of Anaconda issued his decision to partially grant a preliminary injunction against the Montana Department of Transportation and Imperial Oil/Exxon Mobil shortly before 5 p.m. Tuesday.

Dayton ruled that the transportation department was out of line in approving Imperial's proposal to transport an unprecedented 200 Korean-made megaloads of processing equipment to the Kearl Oil Sands in Alberta, Canada, via U.S. Highway 12, Highway 200 and other two-lane roads in Montana.

He agreed with the county and its co-plaintiffs - the National Wildlife Federation, the Montana Environmental Information Center and the Montana Chapter of the Sierra Club - that MDT violated the Montana Environmental Policy Act because it approved an insufficient environmental assessment.

The plaintiffs maintained that the transportation department "failed to adequately consider impacts of the project and failed to adequately consider reasonable alternatives."

Among his points, Dayton said the impact of turnouts constructed along the route could not be fully determined because MDT couldn't say which ones were permanent and which ones were temporary.

He ruled that the environmental assessment didn't analyze whether construction at a similar cost along an interstate route was a feasible alternate. And he said MDT didn't take a "hard look" at the environmental impacts of the Kearl project because it relied on the work of a private consulting firm, Tetra Tech, which was hired by Imperial Oil.

Dayton said he could not rescind encroachment permits already issued by the transportation department.

"The practical effect of this ruling is that ... activity which requires no further permitting or authorization from MDT may legally proceed," Dayton wrote. "However, as issuance of further 32-J permits, and any other permits ... are hereby preliminarily enjoined, construction would be at Imperial Oil's peril, as it may ultimately be determined that such further permitting will be permanently enjoined."

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Analysis: Additional Insight on Health Care Reform from MSU-Billings Poll

by: Montana Cowgirl

Tue Nov 17, 2009 at 19:44:56 PM MST

The results of the MSU-Billings poll, released Tuesday, offer some interesting insights into how Montanans view the issue of health care reform beyond the narrow and specific questions posed to us in the poll. In my opinion, the poll should have included more health care reform questions (and less about wolves and bears) since health care is one of the biggest issues facing Montana and the nation.

One way to interpret the results would be to conclude that the health care reform plan of a Democratic president is profoundly unpopular to the people of Montana.

A second way to look at the poll results, however, would be to compare the approaches to reform of the two major figures who have been the most outspoken on this issue: Senator Baucus (who has tirelessly worked on this issue and should be commended for his efforts) and Governor Schweitzer (who has been an unabashed proponent of progressive reform, praising the Canadian system in the media and at public events-including at President Obama's town hall meeting in Bozeman.)

Thoughts?

Discuss :: (16 Comments)

Governor Schweitzer Gets Stoned

by: Matthew Koehler

Wed Apr 08, 2009 at 13:05:40 PM MST

On Monday, Governor Brian Schweitzer emerged from a closed-door meeting at Smurfit-Stone's Frenchtown mill, looked right into a video camera and declared, "If we can harvest 15,000 acres of the 2 million acres of dead and dying [trees] that we've got on federal land in Montana we can keep this mill open." See video clip @ http://www.missoulian.com/arti...

This is just the latest in a long-line of claims from the timber industry and some politicians that more public lands logging is the solution to the industry's woes, despite the fact that demand for lumber, paper and packaging products is at historic lows and many mills simply cannot even sell the products they currently have on hand.

A careful video viewer will also notice that the governor didn't really seem comfortable making such a profound statement. I wonder why?  Could it be because Schweitzer knows that right now on just the Lolo and Bitterroot National Forests there are 15,000 acres worth of timber sales that are already through the environmental review process, with no appeals and litigation slowing them down, that could be logged anytime this summer?  Could it be that the governor remembered mid-interview that the Forest Service recently identified $126 million worth of "shovel ready" fuel reduction work on National Forests in Montana and Idaho as part of the stimulus bill? Time will tell if the timber industry will even bid on any of these projects, or if taxpayers will be forced to give away public timber for next to nothing.

What's even more bizarre about Schweitzer's claim is that Smurfit filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in January, not because the company couldn't log an additional 15,000 acres of national forests in Montana, but because the economic downturn has greatly reduced demand for Smurfit's products.

To put Smurfit's current financial situation in perspective, in 1998 a single share of Smurfit stock sold for $25.00 a share, today a share is worth three cents, a whopping 99.9% reduction in value.  And let's not forget that Smurfit is a large, multi-national corporation with 150 facilities in the US, Canada, Mexico and Asia. If you look at map of their facilities, it's clear that only a small fraction are anywhere near national forests.

To assume that Smurfit's future success depends upon more logging from national forests is as much wishful thinking as it is irresponsible, especially in light of this tremendous economic crisis, which is so clearly rooted in over-consumption and over-development.

Fact is, Smurfit is a large multi-national corporation that has expanded too much.  They need a new business model truly based on sustainability, not more public lands logging to do more of the same.

Discuss :: (1 Comments)
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