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House Republicans and Senator Cortez Masto are trying to orchestrate the largest congressional giveaway to the mining industry in a generation. A few weeks ago, Senator Cortez-Masto introduced the Mining Regulatory Clarity Act. The bill is co-sponsored by our other Nevada Senator Jackie Rosen. House Republicans are also pushing the Limit Save Grow Act, which would fast-track bad mining projects, and cut critical safety net programs.
These bills would allow the mining industry to hold public land hostage indefinitely. This includes turning public lands into toxic mining-waste dumps and opening our land to man camps–which we know are the root cause of the crisis of Missing and Murdered Indigenous People.
We have seen how historically the 1872 general mining law (a federal law) has served as protection and free reign for the mining industry, to the detriment of the people, particularly Indigenous people.
In recent years, thanks to what is colloquially referred to as "the Rosemont decision", the judicial system has finally begun to interpret this antiquated law correctly, in a way that calls into question the ongoing irresponsibility and unchecked pollutive power of the mining industry.
This historical precedent just happens to offer some benefit to those on the frontlines of extraction.
Now that frontline communities are seeing some benefits from this decision, we see the mining industry rushing in trying to do damage control.
They seek to "reform" the 1872 mining law in a way that allows their practices to continue to go unchecked: they want to continue to dump their waste wherever they want to and make mining claims wherever they want to, with no oversight. And, with this debt ceiling bill, permitting for these mine projects would be fast tracked, bypassing existing environmental protection laws.
Yet when impacted communities and advocates rally for reform to benefit communities and ecosystems with the same urgency (like we have for decades), it continues to be an uphill battle.
Instead of answering the urgency of impacted communities, her constituents, Senator Catherine Cortez Masto has been at the beck and call of the most toxic industry in the country and the state. And now, House Republicans are trying to sneak toxic provisions that would worsen environmental injustices in Nevada into the debt ceiling bill.
The industry has proven time and again that they have zero concern for the communities and ecosystems they disrupt, displace, and destroy. We can’t let the industry get its way at the expense of communities in Nevada!
Call Catherine Cortez Masto’s office and let her know you are in opposition to this bill. Use the script to the right, or feel free to go off script and let her know why YOU are concerned about this bill!
Right now we are not targeting anyone in your area, but we would love to have you join our environmental justice work! Make sure to sign up for our email list and follow us on social media.
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