Climate Justice Forum: Idaho Oil & Gas Forced Leasing Testimony & New Highway 95 Weather Hazards near Moscow, Jindalee Oregon Lithium Mine Approval & Impacts 12-24-25

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The Wednesday, December 24, 2025, Climate Justice Forum radio program, produced by regional, climate activists collective Wild Idaho Rising Tide (WIRT), features citizen testimony at a packed Idaho Department of Lands public hearing, opposing a Snake River Oil and Gas application to force hundreds of Fruitland property owners to lease and allow nearby dangerous drilling of their privately-owned methane gas against their will.  We also share news, videos, and reflections on Jindalee lithium mining exploration, federal approval, and impacts on sage grouse and Lahontan cutthroat trout in southeast Oregon, and weather-caused accidents during the recent wind storm and other hazards on the new Highway 95 section south of Moscow.  Broadcast for thirteen years on progressive, volunteer, community station KRFP Radio Free Moscow, every Wednesday between 1:30 and 3 pm Pacific time, on-air at 90.3 FM and online at KRFP and the Pacifica Network AudioPort, the show describes continent-wide, grassroots, frontline resistance to fossil fuels projects, the root causes of climate change, thanks to generous, anonymous listeners who adopted program host Helen Yost as their KRFP DJ. Continue reading

Comment by 12/24 Opposing Forced Idaho Gas Drilling!

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New Solar Year

Happy December Solstice, as the center of holiday traditions, first days of winter, and return of more daylight, to each and all of the amazing allies, friends, and supporters of Wild Idaho Rising Tide (WIRT), who continue to resist the root causes of climate change — fossil fuels, the oil and gas industry, and their local, state, and federal government facilitators [1]!  Although we have sent few written updates about our ongoing campaigns during 2025 — a tumultuous year of transitions as a regional, volunteer, climate activists collective — we have provided weekly news, videos, music, and reflections through the Climate Justice Forum radio program, broadcast on-air at 90.3 FM and online for almost 14 years, on progressive, community station KRFP Radio Free Moscow, every Wednesday between 1:30 and 3 pm Pacific time [2].  We plan to share with you a description of our year of work soon, after the annual rush of funding requests from the non-profit industrial complex.  If you would like to generously sustain WIRT’s grassroots, frontline activism, please support us via our new address at this letter’s conclusion, which, along with core WIRT organizers and internet presence, we have protected from intrusions over this past year.

Idaho Oil & Gas Updates

Despite the upcoming holidays, we offer the enclosed, urgent call to action and appeal for your comments, issued this Monday by Citizens Allied for Integrity and Accountability (CAIA), whom we also encourage you to support [3].  On Wednesday, December 17, the Idaho Department of Lands (IDL) held a daytime, evidentiary hearing and an evening, public hearing at Fruitland City Hall, to consider state permitting of a drilling integration application filed by Snake River Oil and Gas (SROG), which would “force pool” residents around the new well site to lease their sub-surface hydrocarbons cheaply and against their will.  Through several social media posts, CAIA president Shelley Brock alerted people to this issue that not only affects oil and gas ground zero Payette County, but also ultimately other Idaho communities, as fossil fuels extraction — and recent hydrogen exploration in Canyon County by a Colorado company — spreads across the already impacted Treasure Valley and beyond [4-7].

Southern Idaho holds only a fraction of the methane and oil exploited in larger fields in other states.  The expense and difficulty required to extract it has imposed more shortcuts in drilling and transporting operations, higher risks and lower royalties paid to landowners, and multiple hazards for the invaluable assets of natural environments, lands, waters, and air.  Over the last few decades, local officials have acted to both guard and betray their constituents imperiled by fossil fuels “development.”  For instance, Payette County commissioners recently proposed an ordinance that would extend setbacks between drill sites and homes, businesses, schools, etc. from 300 feet to 500 feet, although this change still requires public processes before codification into law, and no distance under one-half mile can adequately protect public health and private properties.  CAIA’s issue and legal expertise has secured better protections for force pooled property owners during the last few applications by SROG, who pursues increasingly more outrageous schemes to heist Idahoans’ resources.

Last Wednesday, December 17, Fruitland citizens and previously and currently affected property owners came together to voice strong opposition, through their public testimony against the latest SROG forced pooling attempt at both packed meetings.  The hearing officer listened intently and clearly showed interest in the concerns of participants, while Boise and nearby media outlets provided excellent coverage of these critically important hearings.  WIRT deeply appreciates the many Idahoans who rose to defend the health, safety, and constitutional rights of their families and neighbors, from this controversial integration process and its consequent, volatile drilling within a high-density residential, business, and traffic area close to the Payette River and sensitive wildlife habitat.  We will feature a recording of their hearing input on the Wednesday, December 24, Climate Justice Forum radio program broadcast and archived for two weeks on KRFP [2].  As cautiously optimistic CAIA prepares further legal documents on behalf of property owners and the state moves closer to a final order in coming weeks, WIRT joins these admired colleagues in urging you to read and act on the following CAIA alert as soon as possible.

CAIA Call to Action

“When Arkansas-based Snake River Oil and Gas filed an application early this winter to force hundreds of Fruitland property owners to allow the extraction of oil and gas they owned out from under their homes against their will, CAIA jumped into action to defend them.  Weeks of community outreach by our members, filings and conferences by our legal team, and communication with the press culminated in an Idaho Department of Lands contested hearing at Fruitland City Hall on December 17 [8].  Multiple media outlets showed up to hear compelling arguments by CAIA attorney James Piotrowski, on behalf of CAIA members included in this forced pooling application [9-11]. Continue reading