On the Monday, May 7, Climate Justice Forum radio program, Wild Idaho Rising Tide (WIRT) will host Bruce Mohun of North Vancouver, spokesperson for British Columbians for Climate Action, who warned Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railway owner Warren Buffet of their intent to impede Asian export coal trains near White Rock, B.C., and were arrested for their peaceful blockade on Saturday, May 5, International Stop the Tar Sands/Climate Impacts Day. Justin Ellenbecker of Occupy Spokane will also talk about the Climate Justice Protest against ExxonMobil’s Megaloads, in observance of the same occasion, which mobilized Spokane citizens opposing Alberta tar sands expansion on Sunday night, May 6. Listen to the KRFP Radio Free Moscow show between 7:30 and 9:00 pm PDT at 92.5 FM or online for other regional dirty energy resistance news and adopt WIRT as your DJ!
Daily Archives: May 7, 2012
Spokane Climate Justice Protest against ExxonMobil’s Megaloads 5-6-12
In recognition of International Stop the Tar Sands/Climate Impacts Day on Saturday, a group of about eight activists met near East Third Avenue in Spokane, Washington, on Sunday evening, May 6, to protest megaloads of oversized equipment bound for Alberta tar sands operations from the Port of Pasco. ExxonMobil/Imperial Oil has been using Highway 395, Interstate 90, and city streets in Spokane and Spokane Valley since mid-October to transport road damaging shipments weighing up to 400,000 pounds and stretching over 200 feet long. Diverted in Idaho from their originally intended Highway 12 route by court challenges and from their alternative Highway 95 path by Moscow area protests, these pieces of a tar sands/bitumen processing plant will expand Canadian carbon fuel extraction, American dependence on oil, and continental greenhouse gas emissions, while reaping exorbitant profits for one of the wealthiest corporations on Earth. Continue reading
Hunt is on for More Natural Gas in Idaho
BOISE – The new owners of natural gas wells in western Idaho plan to spend more and drill more to find more gas in the state.
“This is exciting news for Idaho,” Snake River Oil and Gas President Richard Brown told the Idaho Statesman in a story published Saturday. “This acquisition of the productive wells and the thousands of associated leased acres means we can expand our oil and gas exploration program, drill more wells, and bring major investments to the region and the state.”
The company is partnering with AM Idaho LLC, a subsidiary of Texas-based Alta Mesa Holdings.
The companies recently purchased the Idaho gas wells from Bridge Resources Corporation and its partner, Paramax Resources Ltd. Those companies in 2010 produced what appear to be commercially viable natural gas wells after drilling 11 wells in Payette County.
The new owners plan to use advanced technology that allows geologic mapping of the region to find more natural gas. Continue reading
Civil Disagreement, Not Disobedience
Victoria Seever, Moscow
The Moscow-Pullman Daily News
It is not illegal to gather in protest against an action or law – it is a guaranteed freedom in this country. For many, it is a civil duty if things get to that point. When done well, opposing parties maintain a respectful demonstration and neither property nor persons are injured. In this country, political dissent does not reap the immediate response of prison and torture or death – a point not lost on our founding fathers.
The megaloads are a hot button and part of a critical issue on multiple fronts. Please do consider the many angles and make your concerns known in appropriate venues where you feel compelled to do so.
If it is the mayor’s prerogative to include megaload protestors as an Earth Day award, I’m sure she is recognizing it takes commitment to stand up and be counted, even on the streets. I’m sure she knows there would be some flack and disagreement because of it. Continue reading
Megaloads Protester Turns to Forestry

Megaloads protester Jim Prall has started planting a small forest in a hay field on the edge of Moscow (The Lewiston Tribune/David Johnson photo).
Veteran activist Jim Prall begins ambitious tree-planting project at Moscow
Two months after being jailed for going into the street to protest passage of oil company megaloads through town, Jim Prall said he’s making amends by planting a forest.
“I’ve never felt so good about being patriotic as I have this spring, planting these baby trees,” said Prall, 67. “I feel like, well, it makes up for the trouble I’ve caused with the megaloads.”
More importantly, Prall said while extracting a bit of his tongue from cheek, converting his five-acre hay field to an urban forest will be a lasting reminder that natural resource extraction must be countered by restoration.
“It’s really an honor to be making this place appropriate for the 21st century by planting trees on the edge of Moscow.”
Prall was among the last three of 11 protesters arrested here during months-long demonstrations against oversize oil company infrastructure loads being trucked through town en route to tar sand fields in Canada.
More than 30 demonstrations ranged in size from around 300 people in the beginning down to a couple of dozen toward the end. Prall, who was among those protesting the Vietnam War in the 1960s, initially stayed away from the late-night megaload protests.
“It was past my bedtime,” he quipped. Continue reading