Banned by the Valley News Network and recent posts elsewhere

North County Times and the Fallbrook Valley News like to delete my comments on articles related to Liberty Quarry.  I wonder why?

I came across some interesting articles the past 24 hours and have posted some comments which I am reproducing here:

Since AB-742 was recently introduced, Granite has been crying for “local government” to decide the issue. Given LAFCO’s denial of the City of Temecula’s original annexation plans due to a request from Granite, I’d be tempted to say some of the $10 million dollars that Garry Johnson has invested spoke louder than local government.

This fight is far from over:  Granite will not go away easily.

Support AB 742. Join both Native American and non-Native Americans to enact legislation which will save Native American sacred sites as well as the LAST wild river and LAST coastal wildlife corridor in Southern California:  http://www.ab-742.com
________

EVERYONE needs to stay committed to the political process. We MUST elect officials of integrity – and vote them OUT of office when they cease to represent us.

“The people, in delegating authority, do not give their public servants the right to decide what is good for the people to know and what is not good for them to know. The people insist on remaining informed so that they may retain control over the instruments they have created.” – Brown Act, 1953   http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brown_Act

Peter  Terezakis
5:53am on Thursday, September 15, 2011

———————

Tribe, Granite Fight Over Sacred Site

The construction company and the tribe argued about whether a site near a proposed quarry is sacred.

Granite cares about nothing except converting rock into cash.  They will continue to use their time-tested scripts to achieve goals and ride over local communities using millions of well-placed dollars to grease the wheels of the corrupt to do so.

Support AB 742. Join both Native American and non-Native Americans to enact legislation which will save Native American sacred sites as well as the LAST wild river and LAST coastal wildlife corridor in Southern California: http://www.ab-742.com

Peter Terezakis

6:36am on Thursday, September 15, 2011

——————–

County Planning Commission Rejects Mining Operation
Village News Network
… of its fifth and final public meeting regarding the 414-acre Liberty Quarry, … The city of Temecula attempted unsuccessfully in 2009 to annex the land …

• Quarry jobs:  Most would be taken by unemployed union members from outside of the area.
• There is no way to put a lid over the entire quarry.
• Winds blowing over the quarry will create a partial vacuum pulling material into the atmosphere.
• superfine particulate matter will mix with moisture in the air and form an aerosol which will not fall to the ground.
• ” Editor’s note: This story is actually from a news service; it is not an article written by one of our writers.”  – That is a pathetic excuse for how YOU have chosen to portray this issue to YOUR public.
• “….the news service is from Los Angeles who was there and they are in no way in Granite’s back pocket…”  This is an equally pathetic statement proven wrong by the contents of the article.

The Editor and Staff ought to be embarrassed for printing Granite’s press release spin as fact.  If FVN was at all concerned about advertising from the community which it ostensibly represents; this article would never have come to print.    Since you chose to endorse this article the only question is how much money are you directly taking from Granite or its affiliates?

Support AB 742. Join both Native American and non-Native Americans to enact legislation which will save Native American sacred sites as well as the LAST wild river and LAST coastal wildlife corridor in Southern California:  http://www.ab-742.com

Peter  Terezakis

Note:  This following comment on the article published above was removed twice by the Village News Network editors and/or staff.  After answering a challenge question on a return visit to prove I was not a SPAMBOT, I was allowed to post this same text a third time.   When assembling this page I went to check to see if my comment was still up.  As of today, my computer has been banned from their network.

Et Tu, KPBS? “Casino Money Goes To Protecting Indian Sacred Sites”

BY ALISON ST JOHN
September 2, 2011
The article on the KPBS website may be read in full here

I admit to being upset by the article referenced above.
So much so that I wrote the following – which KPBS has elected to leave visible.
————————————————

Great headline! Maybe the author could work in, “Granite Construction Corporation receives $29 Million Dollars of Federal stimulus money for work on roads within the Navajo Reservation and uses $10 million to destroy sites sacred to the Pechanga Band of Luiseño Indians.

Or a fact or two about the project:

The quarry would be a mile and a half long and as deep as the Empire State Building is tall. It would be one of the largest gravel pits in the nation. Blasting would occur every day that the quarry is open (six days) and operation would be from 7 am until 10 pm. Deforested areas visible from the highway (due to loss of ground water) would be painted green.

A note about the involvement of local government:

The communities surrounding the site selected by Granite Construction Corporation have been fighting the proposed quarry since at least 2005. Documentation to this effect is available to the public via PDF of the Temecula City Council. Over 40,000 residents, 500 local businesses, and 140 area physicians have signed petitions protesting the proposed quarry.

On March 8, 2011 the City Council of the City of Temecula passed Resolution No. 11 opposing the Liberty Quarry project after spending $784,000 to annex properties and analyze/debunk Lilburn’s EIR paid for by Granite Construction Corporation. Lilburn’s motto of “Getting to Yes” gives insight into their methodology.

It was only after the failure of local communities and local government to stop Granite Construction’s plans that the Native American community became involved. Now both Native and non-Native Americans are doing their utmost to prevent the project.

On Wednesday August 31, 2011, the Riverside Planning Commission voted to deny the project as the benefits of the project did not outweigh the risks.

And a closing thought:

Why KPBS has chosen to malign the efforts of concerned communities surrounding the proposed Gregory Canyon Landfill and proposed Liberty Quarry with a borderline racist slant is beyond my comprehension.

The Liberty Quarry project would destroy the LAST wild river and LAST coastal wildlife corridor in Southern California. The fact that it contains sites which are sacred to people who have inhabited those lands for 10,000 years is axiomatic and I respect that.  Native American beliefs and customs are different than those of my Christian heritage; but possibly not all that dissimilar from my forefathers belief system.  Here is something else which I understand: All Creation is Divine.

Mr. John Petty (3rd District Planning Commissioner) raised an interesting topic at Wednesday’s meeting regarding Riverside County’s outdated permitting process. I trust that this is something which will be pursued.  Regardless it is time to re-examine our treatment of “undeveloped land.”  The negative effects of eighteenth century attitudes toward our vanishing natural world is impacting us all and not in a good way.  It is time for a change based on facts: not the weight of a financial juggernaut.

http://sacredskysacredearth.com/ab-742/

A 1,000 residents of Temecula gathered to make their voice heard

A Message to Elected Officials and Granite Construction Corporation

SUPPORT AB 742 and STOP Liberty Quarry

You are reading this because you are family, friend, fan, or interested in the Sacred Sky Sacred Earth series of events. As such a person you are a vital part of that work.

Until recently, postings have always been to let you know about an upcoming event or exhibition.

This one is different. Today I am asking you to join a growing number of concerned individuals to help prevent the erasure of a site sacred to the Pechanga Band of Luiseno Indians, the destruction of Southern California’s LAST wild river and LAST coastal wildlife corridor, and more.

Please click through this link to show your support of the bi-partisan bill AB 742 which has been drafted to specifically prevent Granite Construction Corporation’s Liberty Quarry project.

Copies of the petition will be sent to elected officials concerned with this bill on the local and state level including the Board of Supervisors, Members of the Senate, and Congress and eventually to Governor Jerry Brown.

The bi-partisan legislation which is specific to defeating the attack on the land in question may be read here.   The City of Temecula has been fighting Granite Construction Corporation over the intended Liberty Quarry since 2005.   A Granite Construction Corporation spokesperson recently said that they had spent close to $10 million dollars on the project (without purchasing land or breaking ground) to date.  Another article indicated that Granite Construction Corporation had recently hired high-profile lobbying and PR firms in Sacramento.

There is little doubt that Granite Construction Corporation  is seeking to force itself on the community and is preparing a new strategy even now.

Granite Construction’s current official press release regarding AB 742 is at this link  with the spin that their most recent hire KP Public Affairs (Ka-Pow.com) is creating.

KP Public Affairs  The Experts at Winning

KP Public Affairs The Experts at Winning

I ask that you click on the petition to signal your awareness of these issues and to support this bill to elected representatives. I have been told that they log every call, every fax, every email, both for and against this issue.

Together I believe we can speak for the living land and prevent its death.

Thank you,

Peter Terezakis
San Diego, California
August 31, 2011

STOP Liberty Quarry SAVE Sacred Sites and the LAST Wild River in Southern California

Support AB 742 STOP LIBERTY QUARRY

Video of the Santa Margarita River flowing through the Santa Margarita Ecological Reserve, courtesy of the U.S. Department of Interior, Bureau of Reclamation (January 2005).
Granite Construction would destroy Southern California's Last Wild River for profit

Granite Construction’s newest hire: “KP PUBLIC AFFAIRS: THE EXPERTS AT WINNING”

According to Granite Construction operations manager Gary Johnson, Granite Construction has spent $10 million dollars to date on their intended Liberty Quarry project.   Their goal is to create one of the largest open pit gravel mining operations in the United States, less than a mile from the City of Temecula, on land sacred to the Pechanga Band of Luiseno Indians, at the source of the last wild river, and the last wildlife corridor in Southern California.  If you think this is a bad idea fraught with even more objections, you are not alone.

Not satisfied with the “NO” from over 30,000 signatures from residents, 159 area physicians, 467 local businesses, and now a pending bi-partisan article of legislation (AB 742) written to block this specific project from erasing a sacred site,

A 1,000 residents of Temecula gathered to make their voice heard

A Message to Elected Officials and Granite Construction Corporation

Granite Construction continues to seek to have over six years of documented “NO QUARRY” reinterpreted as “Yes.”

To accomplish this end, they have  recently hired the largest and most powerful public relations firm in Sacramento KP Public Affairs (KA-POW.com) to prevent the city of Temecula and its residents from preserving their land.

Within polite societies in most parts of the world, young adults are taught that when it comes to dating, “NO” means “NO.”  Could it be that an 89 year-old corporation may need to update its ethics?  What part of “NO” does Granite Construction not understand when it comes to courting Mother Earth?

Granite Construction has hired Ka-Pow.com to re-engineer “NO” to , “YES, please!.”  As of today all those opposed to the intended taking of the land by force of finance need to redouble their efforts to prevent this action.

The Truth Will Be Modified?

Granite Construction hires Ka-POW public relations

Specialized Regulatory Practice
Successfully addressing California’s regulatory activism requires a comprehensive knowledge of the issues as well as the political experience to impact the rulemaking process.

"For the last 20 years, KP has been involved in nearly every major environmental law and regulatory effort,"

“California has created the most stringent environmental regulations in the world. For the last 20 years, KP has been involved in nearly every major environmental law and regulatory effort, including AB 32 implementation and greenhouse gas regulations, California’s Green Chemistry Initiative and “Safer Substitutes” regulations, Brownfield and site cleanup standards, storm water policy and regulations and groundwater monitoring and protection programs. We also work on air quality issues, fuel regulations, energy efficiency standards and Proposition 65 listings and regulations.” – Ka-Pow.com website

AB 742

BILL NUMBER: AB 742 AMENDED BILL TEXT

AMENDED IN SENATE AUGUST 16, 2011
AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY MARCH 31, 2011

INTRODUCED BY Assembly Member Nestande Bonnie Lowenthal
( Principal coauthor: Assembly Member Roger Hernández )
( Principal coauthor: Senator Wyland )
( Coauthors: Assembly Members Allen, Atkins, Beall, Block, Bonilla, Bradford, Brownley, Butler, Carter, Davis, Eng, Beth Gaines, Gatto, Hagman,
Hill, Hueso, Lara, Ma, Mitchell, V. Manuel Pérez, Silva, Skinner, Smyth, Solorio, Torres, Wieckowski, Williams, and Yamada )
( Coauthors: Senators Harman, Lieu, Padilla, Price, Runner, Strickland, Vargas, and Wolk )

FEBRUARY 17, 2011

An act to amend Section 2773.3 of the Public Resources Code, relating to mining, and declaring the urgency thereof, to take effect immediately.

LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL’S DIGEST

AB 742, as amended, Nestande Bonnie Lowenthal . Tribal gaming: local agencies.
Surface mining: Indian reservations and Native American sacred sites.
(1) The Surface Mining and Reclamation Act of 1975 prohibits a person, with exceptions, from conducting surface mining operations unless a permit is obtained from, a reclamation plan is submitted to and approved by, and financial assurances for reclamation have been approved by, the lead agency for the operation. Existing law prohibits a lead agency from approving a reclamation plan for a surface mining operation for gold, silver, copper, or other metallic minerals or financial assurances for the operation if the operation is located on, or within one mile of, a Native American sacred site and is located in an area of special concern, unless certain criteria are met.

This bill would also prohibit a lead agency from approving a reclamation plan for an aggregate products operation if the operation is located on or within 2,000 yards of the external boundaries of an Indian reservation and is on or within 5,000 yards of a Native American sacred site, and is on or within 4,000 yards of the Santa Margarita River or an aquifer that is hydrologically connected to the river, unless the tribe whose reservation is nearest the operation consents to the operation.
This bill would declare that it is to take effect immediately as an urgency statute.

    THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:

SECTION 1. Section 2773.3 of the Public Resources Code is amended to read:
2773.3. (a) In addition to other reclamation plan requirements of this chapter and regulations adopted by the board pursuant to this chapter, a lead agency may not approve a reclamation plan for a surface mining operation for gold, silver, copper, or other metallic minerals or financial assurances for the operation, if the operation is located on, or within one mile of, any Native American sacred site and is located in an area of special concern, unless both of the following criteria are met:
(1) The reclamation plan requires that all excavations be backfilled and graded to do both of the following:
(A) Achieve the approximate original contours of the mined lands prior to mining.
(B) Grade all mined materials that are in excess of the materials that can be placed back into excavated areas, including, but not limited to, all overburden, spoil piles, and heap leach piles, over the project site to achieve the approximate original contours of the mined lands prior to mining.
(2) The financial assurances are sufficient in amount to provide for the backfilling and grading required by paragraph (1).
(b) In addition to other reclamation plan requirements of this chapter and regulations adopted by the board pursuant to this chapter, a lead agency may not approve a reclamation plan for an aggregate products operation if the operation is located on or within 2,000 yards of the external boundaries of an Indian reservation and is on or within 5,000 yards of a site that is a Native American sacred site and is on or within 4,000 yards of the Santa Margarita River or an aquifer that is hydrologically connected to that river, unless the tribe whose reservation is nearest the operation consents to the operation.
(c) For purposes of this section, the following terms have the following meaning meanings :
(1) “Native American sacred site” means a specific area that is identified by a federally recognized Indian Tribe, Rancheria or Mission Band of Indians, or by the Native American Heritage Commission, as sacred by virtue of its established historical or cultural significance to, or ceremonial use by, a Native American group, including, but not limited to, any an area containing a prayer circle, shrine, petroglyph, or spirit break, or a path or area linking the circle, shrine, petroglyph, or spirit break with another circle, shrine, petroglyph, or spirit break.
(2) “Area of special concern” means an area in the California desert that is designated as Class C or Class L lands or as an Area of Critical Environmental Concern under the California Desert Conservation Area Plan of 1980, as amended, by the United States Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management, pursuant to Section 1781 of Title 43 of the United States Code.
SEC. 2. This act is an urgency statute necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, or safety within the meaning of Article IV of the Constitution and shall go into immediate effect. The facts constituting the necessity are:

To protect from imminent destruction Native American reservations and sacred sites threatened by proposed aggregate products mining operations, it is necessary for this measure to take effective immediately. All matter omitted in this version of the bill appears in the bill as amended in the Assembly, March 31, 2011.
(JR11)


MAKE YOUR VOICE COUNT: Let our elected representatives know that you support this very important piece of legislation by sending the petition below.

AB 742 Protect Pechanga Sacred Sites

Governor Jerry Brown,
Members of the California State Assembly and Senate of the State of California
Sacramento, CA 95814

August 29, 2011
Re: SUPPORT for AB 742 (B. Lowenthal)

I write today to ask you to support AB 742 (B. Lowenthal). AB 742 is an important measure which would provide greater protection for Native American sacred sites by adding aggregate operations to the list of mining activities prohibited near such sites; specifically the project which threatens the creation place of the Pechanga Band of Luiseño Indians. This legislation will also help to protect the Santa Margarita River, the 4,500 acre Santa Margarita Ecological Preserve of San Diego State University, and the Quality of Life for residents in the communities of Temecula, Murrieta, Fallbrook and Rainbow.

This specific article of legislation will not affect mining anywhere else in the state.

Granite Construction Company has applied to the County of Riverside for a Surface Mining Permit to produce 5 million tons aggregate (crushed rock) per year from the proposed Liberty Quarry. The proposed quarry would have a working surface area equivalent to 17 football fields and a depth twenty feet less than the Empire State Building is tall. This would be one of the largest open-pit hard rock mines in the United States and it would also be located at the Pechanga and Luiseño Place of Creation.

The referenced site, while critical to the Pechanga and the Luiseño, is important to the people of the Temecula Valley. Tourism is a critical element in the Temecula Valley, employing 6,600 people directly, providing services to 67,000 visitors per month with an estimated annual impact of 605 million dollars per year. A recent report by the Rose Institute of Claremont McKenna College estimated a negative impact of a minimal impact on tourism of 60.5 million dollars. When considering all costs, the Rose Institute estimated an annual cost to the community of over 80 million dollars. While the quarry might create 99 new jobs, it would destroy at least 660 existing jobs in the tourism industry alone.

It is because of these potential impacts as well as impacts on air quality, water quality and traffic, and the loss of the only remaining wildlife linkage between the Santa Ana mountains and inland mountain ranges, that over thirty thousand valley residents have signed petitions seeking to prevent the quarry. In addition, over 520 Businesses and Non-Government Organizations have signed up opposing the quarry. These businesses are joined by 159 local physicians opposing the quarry.

The proposed “Liberty Quarry” project would mark the end of the LAST wild river of Southern California and with it the region’s LAST wildlife corridor between the coastal Santa Ana Mountains and inland Palomar Mountains. Granite Construction’s project would degrade this LAST section of living, vital land., which is filled with the living history of the Pechanga Band of Luiseño Indians. The area of living earth which Granite has targeted for destruction is part of a greater area which is replete with all the plant and animal life unique to our area. Wanton destruction of the living earth is easily indulged with dynamite and machines. Stewardship of this unique gift of a vital, dynamic, living ecosystem for generations to come may be the more difficult route. It is also what the community wants, what the voters want, and what is right for future generations.

Should the quarry go forward its legacy will be the destruction of irreplaceable natural resources, degradation of the environment, and the birth of long-lasting animosity towards all who would have permitted the project. There are currently over thirty thousand signatories who have expressed their desire to NOT have this project in their community. Other sources for aggregate currently exist in San Diego, Riverside, and Imperial Counties.

I respectfully ask you to preserve the Earth and Sky which are Sacred to both Native Americans and to those of us who have made this great land our home. Do not let Granite Construction destroy this land and malign all those who have taken the oath of office to support the will of the people. Please support AB 742 and help to ensure the preservation of this sacred site for generations to come.

154 signatures

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Unlike social media and commercial web sites, your contact information will remain private.


Pechanga Sponsors Legislation to Protect Tribe’s Place of Creation

Pechanga Sponsors Legislation to Protect Tribe’s Place of Creation

Pechanga Indian Reservation, CA, August 4, 2011 – The Pechanga Band of Luiseño Indians announced that it is sponsoring a bipartisan bill with more than 30 co‐authors in the State Legislature to protect the mountain that is the very birthplace of creation for Pechanga and other Luiseño tribes from being blasted and excavated as a mine for the next 75 years.

Granite Construction Inc. is seeking Riverside County’s approval of its Surface Mining Permit Application to develop the Liberty Quarry, which would be one of the largest open‐pit hard rock mines in the United States generating 5 million tons of aggregate each year. Located just 500 yards from the Pechanga Indian Reservation, the Liberty Quarry would produce 270 million tons of aggregate by blasting a crater as wide as 117 football fields and as deep as the Empire State Building is tall less than ¼ of a mile from the heavily populated City of Temecula.

Upon reviewing Liberty Quarry’s Draft Environmental Impact Report, the Pechanga Band determined the 414‐acre project would cause irreparable and immitigable destruction to this place of creation. “Our Tribe participated in the environmental review process and took extraordinary and unprecedented steps to provide Riverside County with ethnographic and other evidence detailing the significance of this area to Pechanga,” said Tribal Chairman Mark Macarro.

Granite’s own ethnographic experts acknowledged the site as significant to the Tribe. Published in May 2009, the Ethnography Study noted, “…it is clear that much if not all of the Liberty Quarry project area… lies within a landscape that the Pechanga Tribe regards as spiritually significant… As such, this landscape is eligible for National Register of Historic Properties nomination as a TCP [Traditional Cultural Property] district.”

County planning staff in March, however, wrote in the Final Environmental Impact Report “…the County respectfully disagrees with the Tribe’s characterization of the area in and around the Project Site as TCP” and found the devastating cultural impacts to be “less than significant” under the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA).

“That county planners deemed our Tribe’s place of creation ‘insignificant’ under CEQA despite overwhelming and independent evidence to the contrary is disgraceful,” said Tribal Chairman Macarro. “Because county planners have failed to honor the spirit of the law designed to protect such areas, we are forced to seek additional legislation to protect our place of creation from destruction.”

Authored by Assembly Member Bonnie Lowenthal, D‐Long Beach, AB 742 would amend the Public Resources Code to include aggregate operations on the list of mining activities restricted near Native American sacred sites.

“I believe respecting one another’s religious beliefs is key to a healthy society,” said Lowenthal. “And there’s probably no better place to demonstrate this than on a mountain where some believe life itself began,” she said.

Scholars say that Káamalam Pomki is analogous to the Garden of Eden as the location of creation or to the Wailing Wall or Sistine Chapel in terms of spiritual significance.

“It is not an option to tell our future generations that their place of creation, the basis of their history and their very identity, used to be here,” said Macarro. “As any other People would, we will bring to bear all of the resources at our disposal to protect this sacred area from the permanent destruction this massive mine would cause.”

The controversial Liberty Quarry is also opposed by the City of Temecula, the Santa Margarita Ecological Reserve that is immediately adjacent to the proposed area, thousands of residents, hundreds of businesses, more than 150 physicians that live and work in the Temecula Valley, Southern California Indian Tribes, and every federally recognized Luiseño Tribe.

Proponents of the Liberty Quarry argue that the mine will create a total of 99 jobs. However, the Rose Institute of State and Local Government at Claremont McKenna College analyzed Granite’s economic impact report and found “these quarry jobs will be more than offset by job losses in tourism, real estate, construction, and agriculture.”

Calculating all of the benefits and the costs associated with the proposed Liberty Quarry, the Rose Institute estimates that, “the quarry will reduce property values by $540 million and cost the region an additional $80 million per year” with an “estimated total cumulative net negative impact of $3.6 billion to the region.”

Watch Granite Construction take the land apart at about 4:30

Real-life AVATAR drama re-enacted in Temecula Granite Construction Corporation (RDA) vs. citizens of Temecula and surrounding areaWill Regional Government side with Big Business Against Local Government?

SAVE THE LAST RIVER

Link

Granite Construction Corporation’s proposed Liberty Quarry project is inconsistent with the needs and land use within the targeted area of southern Riverside County.

The Santa Margarita Ecological Reserve is part of uninterrupted forest adjacent to the proposed quarry. On this same land, the existence of the last wildlife corridor between the coastal Santa Ana Mountains and inland Palomar Mountains is threatened. The Santa Margarita is the last free flowing river in Southern California and is in danger of becoming polluted. Failure to consider cultural, environmental, and social issues beyond the letter of the law will lead to irreversible consequences within the vicinity of the site and at locations distant from the site. These include threatened loss of Native American Sacred Sites, pollution of groundwater, pollution of the Santa Margarita River from quarry runoff, pollution of the drinking water at Marine Corps Base Camp Pendelton, loss of San Diego State University-based research funding and ultimately, loss of the LAST pristine, wild river and wildlife corridor of Southern California’s American West.


Take Action

“All it will take for Granite Construction to triumph is for good citizens to do nothing.” –Edmund Burke (with respect)
A 1,000 residents of Temecula gathered to make their voice heard

Don’t let cynicism rob you of your will to speak up for what you know is right. If you elect to do nothing to speak for the land which cannot speak for itself, the corporation will win through the default of your inaction.

Send the petition below, post on FaceBook, make calls to your elected representatives, tell your friends, read more about what we all stand to lose if Granite Construction Corporation has their way. They may win anyway. Guaranteed you will sleep better at night knowing that you at least tried to make a difference.

Help ensure the survival of this important area, including the last free-flowing river in Southern California by signing this petition:

SAVE THE LAST RIVER

OVERVIEW

I would like to petition the Riverside County Board of Supervisors to deny Granite Construction Corporation's application for the proposed Liberty Quarry on land adjacent to the Santa Margarita Reserve.

I urge you to do whatever possible to prevent the construction of Granite Construction Corporation's proposed Liberty Quarry. Some say that the location of this quarry is too far from Riverside County offices, too removed from public scrutiny to be a problem for anyone except the relatively few residents of the area. The fact is that Granite Construction Corporation's intended project, jeopardizes the last free-flowing river in Southern California, the last wildlife corridor, and the ecosystem surrounding the Santa Margarita Reserve. It is also true that there will be tons of air and water pollutants released during the course of the 75 year mining operation forever fouling the river and atmosphere of the area, and that sites sacred to Native Americans would be removed from existence.

It is also true that regular blasting would be occurring on a well-documented fault line less than 45 miles from the 42 year-old San Onofre nuclear power station. Granite Construction Corporation's investment in our area is strictly profit-driven; much the way any multi-national corporation would approach a third-world people and their resources. The destruction of this last bastion for nature in Southern California will affect us all.

I have read enough to believe that the proposed quarry will result in significant negative impacts to air quality, noise, traffic and the health of all within the region. The project also has the likelihood of damaging the economic health of Riverside County because of impacts to tourism, agriculture, and real estate values. The project will also irreparably harm the multimillion dollar investment by San Diego State University in the the Santa Margarita Ecological Reserve, a world research resource. It will also endanger a vital wildlife corridor and a wild river, as well as potentially invalidating the Mutli-Species Habitat Conservation Plan (MSHCP). The project will also contribute to existing water shortages.

Beyond the immediate financial gain of a select few individuals, generations of Californians would lose a heritage that many can only dream about.

Please consider what will be lost if this project is allowed to go forward in this sensitive, vital, and now singularly unique area. Prevent Granite Construction from destroying that which can never be repaired or replaced: Save Southern California's Last River.

135 signatures

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Granite Construction Company vs. The Last River

The following was written in response to an article within the Indian Country Media Today Network website, specifically referencing Granite Construction Corporation’s proposed “Liberty Quarry” which would impact land sacred to Native Americans in an area now called Temecula, located in southern Riverside County.   (Click this text for the full article.)

I’d like to thank the staff writers for that that article as it motivated me to write about a subject which I believe to be of critical importance, and provided the requisite momentum to tip the Sacred Sky Sacred Earth website into existence.

In researching this issue I found a number of citizen and environmental groups banding against the proposed quarry for many legitimate reasons, apart from and including the fact that the quarry would dismantle a sacred site regarded as the point of origin of the Pechanga Band of Luiseno Indians.

The more I read, the more I thought of the plot line of James Cameron’s simplistic Avatar:  A giant soul-less mega-corporation hell-bent on destroying a living planet to extract a valuable mineral at all costs, pitched against stone-age savages, using every manner of advertising, force, and technology available to sell their mission.

Our current cast of characters includes the behemoth Granite Construction Corporation (descending from the home planet of Watsonville, the California), seeking to dismantle a mountain of granite to crush into building material.  Standing against this scheme are concerned citizens, home owners, tree-huggers, businesses, doctors and the like – including me.

Given the scale and scope of Granite Construction’s proposed “Liberty Quarry” the amount of resistance from residents within the community and surrounding area is not surprising:

“Associated with the development of this project will be the construction of a aggregate processing facility, which will include crushing and screening components, two hot-mix asphalt plants, a ready mix concrete plant, a concrete recycling facility, an asphalt recycling facility, and related administration and support facilities.”

The project also calls for an excavation deeper than the Empire State Building is tall, over a mile in length, and its to operate on a 24/6 schedule with 1600 truck transits per day.

According to Granite Construction Corp. plant engineer Chris Kiser’s 2008 published report, Liberty Quarry would remove 5 million tons of material per year and use a whopping 130 million gallons of water in the process (398 acre/feet of water/year x 325851.4 gallons of water/acre foot =129,688,857.2 gallons).  This issue has also been covered and somehow approved, despite drought conditions in the area.  Before leaving this not-insignificant issue, like any other commodity purchased in quantity, water would be discounted.  So the rates that you and I would pay would be deeply discounted.

Given the recent (and still developing) events at Fukushima the fact that the 42 year-old San Onofre nuclear facility is less than forty miles from the proposed quarry cannot not be ignored.  The section of land proposed for development is close to a number of fault lines (and earthquakes) including one that appears to coincide with major sections of Interstate route 15 right around the Rainbow-Fallbrook area.  According to the USGS link, that fault hasn’t seen any action in 130,000 years.  Granite Construction Corp. must be very confident that blasting a dozen times a week for seventy-five years will have “zero effect” on any of our area geology: now and into the unimaginable future.

“Granite representatives have stated that Liberty Quarry will use 10,000 pounds of explosives in a single daily blast. So how big a bang do you get with 10,000 pounds of explosives? Well, only 5,000 pounds of the same explosive were used in April 1995 to bring down a major portion of the Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City.”

Here’s another way to look at the blasting – even though the concussive force will be directed into the ground, and not the atmosphere:

In the wake of Fukushima, who could possibly predict that this is either a good idea, or safe?

Within Granite Construction’s code of conduct page I found, Accept responsibility for your own actions or inactions and for those whom you supervise.  I cannot help but wonder what management’s course of action with respect to Liberty Quarry (or any other of their projects) would be, if they were deprived of the personal immunity currently afforded to their actions via the proxy of a corporate entity?  What if Granite Construction Corporation President Scott D. Wolcott and fellow corporate officers, board members, employees, staff, and their families, were held accountable in criminal and civil courts for their actions; both now and for future generations?  Why shouldn’t they be?  They are in effect telling all concerned that we will have to live with whatever fallout occurs from their actions.  Why should this be a one-way transaction?  Fact is that all who live in the area would be affected by the actions of a company in search of profit from this time forward.

Why shouldn’t the individuals and families employed by and benefiting from Granite Construction Corporation be saddled with the same level of risk as all those whose health and lives would be changed by Liberty Quarry?

I can subscribe to the concept that a seismic-induced nuclear event would be fitting karmic reward to all who support the Liberty Quarry project.  The only problem is that Granite Construction Corp. executives and staff would only experience a loss of corporate income as they are headquartered in Northern California.   This would leave the rest of us local-types (within fifty miles of San Onofre) to fry or fly.

There is another question than all the potential side-effects from the construction (destruction) of land which has been unsullied since the end of the last ice age:  Why is the euphemistically named “Liberty Quarry” is even being considered for this area?  Other area quarries currently exist to supply aggregate to private, city, and state customers.  While they may not be owned by Granite Construction Corporation they do exist as Google quickly shows.

Greater still is the issue that what is at stake in this discussion is a final section of the living, breathing, fecund Earth.  This area contains the LAST free flowing river in Southern California and its ecology has been the subject of intense study for many years. The Santa Margarita Reserve and the area in question are also the last remaining wildlife corridor connecting the coastal Santa Anna Mountains with the inland Palomar Mountains.

Again this is the LAST.  Not fifty zillion million tons or more of granite aggregate.  No.  This top layer of life is the LAST of its kind in Southern California.  The LAST.  There aren’t any more.  Finished. Final:  Man has conquered the Wild West and paved it into submission.

There is something very sad about this; beyond BP’s oil and Corexit in the Gulf, past the tar sands of Canada, the oil spill in the Yellowstone River, the radiation from Fukushima, the pollution from the flood states of the Mississippi, synthetic estrogen in mountain trout, and the great swirling patches of garbage in our oceans.  As if these recent news items are not indictment enough of big business’s approach to the natural world, Granite Construction Corporation has now put a price tag on the last open river, the last wildlife corridor, the last section of living earth in Southern California.

The Liberty Quarry project is in the wrong location.

Comments for the Granite Construction video included in the article contained in this link have been disabled on YouTube. While I can wonder why this is so, silencing the voice of the public is a good tactic to avoid critical commentary and questioning.

The other video in the article helped to convey a feeling for the area and is worth watching. I had the privilege of visiting SDSU’s filed stations there in 2003 and have only the smallest inkling of the area’s importance.

 

At the heart of this issue is a conflict which I see as theological in nature. The notion that a section of the earth in its natural state is “undeveloped” and therefore available to be exploited in the pursuit of profit is the vision held by many corporations – including Granite Construction Corporation. Bureaucratic legitimation condoning the destruction of the living earth represents the worst type of corrupt nineteenth century expansionist thinking. Permitting callous indifference to works of the Creator damages us all.

The intended rape of the land by Granite Construction must be stopped. [Given Mr. Johnson's patronizing report, it seems that trucks and construction companies need to pay more taxes for the wear and tear on our roadways. ]

There are plenty of resources for construction material in Southern California; even if they are owned by companies other than the Northern California Granite Construction company.

The value of gold is determined by its scarcity.  I would like to submit that LAST is more valuable than something measured in millions of tons.  Clean air, water, open space, and the freedom of migrating wild and living things, trump dreams of profit and dust.

Supporting the destruction of an irreplaceable natural resource in a wholesale effort to degrade the land and usher in the reality of a San Angeles is not a positive dream.

Granite Construction Company’s proposed Liberty Quarry is a nightmare dwarfing Biblical proportions and consequences.

All it will take for Granite Construction to triumph is for good citizens to do nothing.” –with respect to Edmund Burke

Don’t let cynicism rob you of your will to speak up for what you know is right. If you elect to do nothing to speak for the land which cannot speak for itself, the corporation will win through the default of your inaction.

Send the petition below, post on FaceBook, make calls to your elected representatives, tell your friends, read more about what we all stand to lose if Granite Construction Corporation has their way. They may win anyway. Guaranteed you will sleep better at night knowing that you at least tried to make a difference.

Peter Terezakis

San Diego • July 15, 2011

 

SAVE THE LAST RIVER

OVERVIEW

I would like to petition the Riverside County Board of Supervisors to deny Granite Construction Corporation's application for the proposed Liberty Quarry on land adjacent to the Santa Margarita Reserve.

I urge you to do whatever possible to prevent the construction of Granite Construction Corporation's proposed Liberty Quarry. Some say that the location of this quarry is too far from Riverside County offices, too removed from public scrutiny to be a problem for anyone except the relatively few residents of the area. The fact is that Granite Construction Corporation's intended project, jeopardizes the last free-flowing river in Southern California, the last wildlife corridor, and the ecosystem surrounding the Santa Margarita Reserve. It is also true that there will be tons of air and water pollutants released during the course of the 75 year mining operation forever fouling the river and atmosphere of the area, and that sites sacred to Native Americans would be removed from existence.

It is also true that regular blasting would be occurring on a well-documented fault line less than 45 miles from the 42 year-old San Onofre nuclear power station. Granite Construction Corporation's investment in our area is strictly profit-driven; much the way any multi-national corporation would approach a third-world people and their resources. The destruction of this last bastion for nature in Southern California will affect us all.

I have read enough to believe that the proposed quarry will result in significant negative impacts to air quality, noise, traffic and the health of all within the region. The project also has the likelihood of damaging the economic health of Riverside County because of impacts to tourism, agriculture, and real estate values. The project will also irreparably harm the multimillion dollar investment by San Diego State University in the the Santa Margarita Ecological Reserve, a world research resource. It will also endanger a vital wildlife corridor and a wild river, as well as potentially invalidating the Mutli-Species Habitat Conservation Plan (MSHCP). The project will also contribute to existing water shortages.

Beyond the immediate financial gain of a select few individuals, generations of Californians would lose a heritage that many can only dream about.

Please consider what will be lost if this project is allowed to go forward in this sensitive, vital, and now singularly unique area. Prevent Granite Construction from destroying that which can never be repaired or replaced: Save Southern California's Last River.

135 signatures

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