Our Public Lands
Please consider “upgrading” your subscription to support my work U.S. Senate passed H.J. Res. 140 (50–49) to overturn a 20-year mineral withdrawal protecting 225,504 acres in the Boundary Waters’ Rainy River headwaters, sending the resolution to President Trump. Ingrid explains the Quetico-Superior ecosystem’s vulnerability to sulfide copper mining, the history of canceled Twin Metals leases and the 2023 public land order, and argues the Congressional Review Act use is unprecedented and threatens broader public land orders. She outlines next steps including likely issuance of federal mineral leases, expedited federal and state permitting and environmental review, possible litigation, and pursuing permanent protections through federal and Minnesota legislation, while urging supporters to thank supportive senators, hold others accountable, volunteer, donate, and stay engaged. Save the Boundary Waters Action Fund [https://www.boundarywatersaction.org/donate] 00:56 Senate Vote Fallout 02:08 Meet Ingrid Lyons 02:49 Why the Boundary Waters Matter 05:26 Mining Threat Explained 06:51 How Protections Were Won 09:48 Withdrawal Area Breakdown 11:42 Legislative Attacks Timeline 13:34 How the CRA Was Used 17:02 Senate Vote and Precedent 18:51 Coalition Strength and Vote Count 23:23 What Happens Next 28:56 How You Can Help 33:23 Q and A Begins Get full access to Our Public Lands Podcast at ourpubliclandspodcast.substack.com/subscribe [https://ourpubliclandspodcast.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]
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