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NEW! AMADOR-SUNRISE LAND REGISTRY

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The new Amador-Sunrise Land Registry is off to a great start, thanks to a grant received in July 2008 from Embrace Open Space, with support from the McKnight Foundation. As of mid-September, an advisory team has been assembled, consulting ecologists have been selected to serve Registry members, and a baseline ecological inventory of the Registry's 62-acre anchor property (WEI and adjacent parcels) is underway by ecologist Barbara Delaney. The program's focus is now shifting to a community outreach campaign, with design and printing of a program brochure, informational booths at area events and news releases in local media.  The Amador-Sunrise Land Registry is coordinated by Laurie Allmann, WEI's Community Liaison and Writer-in-Residence. All landowners in Amador and Sunrise Townships are welcome to attend.

For more information, click here.

Paul Wotzka Named WEI 2008 Scholar Under Fire

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Each year WEI honors the courage and integrity of a researcher and scholar who takes great risks on what they know and what they believe is the public's right to know. This year Paul Wotzka was unanimously voted by the WEI Board of Directors as WEI's 2008 Scholar Under Fire.

Watch for Paul's Upcoming WEI Scholar-Under-Fire Lecture Series at various locations in Minnesota: "Nitrates, Atrazin, and Corn-Based Ethanol: What's in Your Water?"

Paul Wotzka
is a scientist who leveled a whistleblower lawsuit against the state regarding his research on Atrazine, a common pesticide used by farmers in Minnesota. As a hydrologist, Paul had logged 16 years monitoring water quality for the Minnesota Department of Agriculture before moving to the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency last year. During the 2007 legislative session, he received a call from Representative Ken Tschumper, a dairy farmer who advocates banning Atrazine from use in Minnesota. He had read an article in a DNR magazine where Paul was quoted as saying we have observed some increasing concentrations of Atrazine in trout streams in southeastern Minnesota. Tschumper, the author of several bills aimed at tightening regulation of Atrazine, asked Wotzka to appear at a hearing planned for the next day and sent a request to testify to his supervisors which was denied. Wotzka persisted, provided the testimony, and was put on investigatory leave and six weeks later fired from his job. While the details of this firing are under review, the timing of the action and the nature of Paul's important research on Atrazine in Minnesota waterways have given WEI board members good reason to award Paul with our 2008 Scholar Under Fire Award. We hope to create more public knowledge about Paul's research and more information about the perils of Atrazine on human health and our rural communities. Paul Wotzka joins a former WEI Scholar Under Fire, Dr. Tyrone Hayes, whose work on Atrazine remains vitally important for the State of Minnesota and farm land and waterways everywhere.

Please join us in recognizing Paul Wotzka's courage and commitment to the public's right to know.

RENEW YOUR WEI ANNUAL MEMBERSHIP OR JOIN WITH A NEW MEMBERSHIP

WEI survives with the help of all our contributing members and volunteers. Our mission is becoming ever more pressing as environmental justice, agricultural justice, food security, and environmental health issues become the forefront struggles in the coming decades. To continue this vitally important work, we need your investment in the form of an annual membership, and we especially encourage your participation in WEI programs and volunteer opportunities in the coming year.

For Membership Options and Perks, click here. You can apply directly on-line or by check sent to WEI, P.O. Box 128, North Branch, Minnesota 55056. If sending by mail, please download our new membership form. Individual memberships are $48/year or $58/year for you and a friend. Student memberships are $25.

 

VOLUNTEERS NEEDED AT WEI FARM AND ORCHARD

Come and join the fam crew during the week or especially on Saturdays to complete work on the farm or help with final winterization of the farm fields and orchard.  If you are interested in joining this volunteer effort, call us at 651-583-0705,

Watch for the Release of New Reports from WEI

To fulfill our mission as an independent research and education institution, WEi will soon begin a publication series which will initially include the following monographs and position paper publications.

-- An Environmental Justice Analysis of Phillips Neighborhood, prepared by Dr. Cecilia Martinez and research team, ed. by Jacquelyn Zita
    and Karen Clark
-- WHAT'S IN A WOMAN: Get Personal, Get Political (How Everyday Products are Polluting Our Bodies
    and What We Can Do to Detoxify)
prepared by Janelle Sorensen, ed. Jacquelyn Zita and Emily Moore
-- The Arsenic Triangle Update, perpared by Jacquelyn Zita and the Arsenic Triangle Working Group
-- PFC Fact Sheet: A Citizen's Right to Know
-- Atrazine and Rural Environmental Justice