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Protect the Rapid Creek Watershed and the Central Black Hills from Damaging Gold Exploration

10/8/2021

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PictureRapid Creek feeds into Pactola Reservior and Jenny Gulch. Each one are havens for all Seasons of Recreation, our drinking water, tourism, agricultue, and a sanctuary for people of all walks of life and for its wildlife. Photo by Top Dog Publishing
URGENT - PROTECT JENNY GULCH - NOW!

GREETINGS FRIENDS OF THE RAPID CREEK WATERSHED;
WE NEED YOUR HELP - PLEASE TAKE ACTION NOW.


The Managers of the Black Hills National Forest are poised to grant a permit to a gold exploration company to drill exploratory holes in the area surrounding Jenny Gulch and Silver City. 

Not only is this area a priceless recreational resource, it is part of the Pactola Reservoir that provides the main source of drinking water to Rapid City, Pennington County, and Ellsworth AFB. You have the opportunity in the next several weeks to tell the Mystic Ranger District NO!

DEADLINE FOR COMMENT: OCTOBER 22, 2021
How to register your opposition to drilling in Jenny Gulch:
  1. Email your opposition to comments-rocky-mountain-black-hills-mystic@usda.gov with “F3 Jenny Gulch Gold Exploration Project” in the subject line.
  2. Or, Fill out a comment form to complete and mail to Jim Gubbels, 8221 Mount Rushmore Rd., Rapid City, SD 57702.  You can also hand deliver to the address - tell them you want a receipt.
  3. Watch this space for more information, including the Sierra Club's analysis of why the Environmental Assessment is insufficient. You can get a copy of the EA here.

Protect Pactola Reservoir, Jenny Gulch, and the entire Rapid Creek watershed for our water, for wildlife habitat, and to preserve sustainable forest resources that fuel our economy and nourish our hearts and souls.

SUGGESTIONS FOR A PERSUASIVE COMMENT
  1. REQUEST AN EXTENSION - Only 30 DAYS is not adequate time to review this Draft Environmental Assessment, which is vague and incomplete, making it impossible for the Public to be informed.
  2. Make it personal. State why you have a stake in preserving Pactola Reservoir for recreation. (Hiking, bird-watching, camping, hunting, fishing, bicycling, motorcycling, boating, snowmobiling, swimming, equestrian activities, and ATV/UTV riding.)
  3. Tell the Forest Service you oppose F3’s Jenny Gulch gold project and support the “No Action” alternative.
  4. A full Environmental Impact Statement is needed to assess the risk of drilling activity to our water, our forest, wildlife, and recreation. The assessment they have done is insufficient, relies too heavily on promises from the company proposing the drilling, and does not provide adequate time for comment: just 30 days on activity that poses a risk of decades of harm.
  5. The current Forest Management Plan (published in 1997) prohibits this drilling. Tell the Forest Service their proposal to amend a Plan that is already 16 years past its last amendment (2005) is unacceptable and negligent. More than a decade of change on the Black Hills National Forest through fire, pine bark beetle infestation, and unsustainable logging practices would be ignored in the proposed “amendment” to allow mineral exploration.
  6. The Forest Service has not met its legal requirements for Tribal Consultation. Not only did the agency fail to complete mandatory Tribal consultation during the scoping process on this project, they put the burden on Tribal officials to initiate requests on topics of cultural resources, sacred sites, and other issues that are mandated for consultation.
  7. Gold exploration just upstream from Pactola Reservoir in the Black Hills will have a direct impact on not only water, but wildlife, such as a unique bighorn sheep birthing area and their migration route would be negatively impacted.

DEADLINE FOR COMMENT: OCTOBER 22, 2021
PLEASE SHARE THIS INFORMATION WITH YOUR FAMILY, FRIENDS, COLLEAGUES, AND NEIGHBORS.
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Comment Now by email!
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Or Print This PDF
​and Mail in by Oct. 16
Help Keep the ​Action Moving!
​
Recreation for Future Generations.
Donate Here.
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EARTH DAY CHALLENGE!

4/15/2021

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DRINK WATER?
APPRECIATE WHERE IT COMES FROM?

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Feed-stream into Castle Creek, which is a part of the Rapid Creek Watershed. Photo by Top Dog Publishing.  
Drink a glass of water. Appreciate where it comes from. Know that its sweet, clear goodness is threatened by gold exploration here in the Central Black Hills.  

Then do something important — but easy — for Earth Day.  Take our Earth Day Challenge!

​First, if you already signed our petition - THANK YOU!
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NEXT, take our Earth Day Challenge and get one, two, three, or four of your friends or family members to also sign by sending them this link (via email, snail mail, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, what have you.)  Click. Post. Share. Repeat.  It's as easy as 1, 2, 3.  

​It's one small click for human kind, but a giant leap for the Rapid Creek Watershed. Enjoy and appreciate our water that comes from this precious watershed.

Need more information about RCWA?

The Rapid Creek Watershed Action (RCWA) launched this campaign in June, 2020 to have federally managed surface lands in the upper Rapid Creek watershed designated as a recreation area, subject to mineral claim withdrawal. 

We need to demonstrate local support for this action by presenting thousands of signatures to our Congressional delegation.  Sign here. and then share.

This small (198,000 acres) but special place is ground zero for gold mining exploration and production that have consistently resulted in water contamination problems over the years.

This designation is small. But it is critical. 
  • The watershed includes sites sacred to the Oceti Sakowin and other Indigenous Nations.
  • It is the source of drinking water for Rapid City, Ellsworth Air Force Base, rural towns, and beyond.
  • It provides irrigation and water for agriculture and ranching along Rapid Creek and the Cheyenne River.
  • It is an economic driver of our tourism economy.

It not only sustains wildlife populations, but also provides sustenance for local people who use it for recreation, food, and the well-being that comes with our access to the wild country of the Northern Great Plains. The time we spend in the Black Hills teaches and restores us.
​
Regardless of where we live, the Black Hills is special to us all, We are sustained by the knowledge that we are helping to protect healthy environments and that wild lands remain.

Thank you for taking on this Earth Day Challenge, if you choose to accept it. : )

Sign the Petition
Check out our video
donations welcomed
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the Time is now to create a recreation area in the rapid creek watershed.

4/3/2021

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We’re happy to see the following Rapid City Journal’s article about the economic value of recreation in the Black Hills.   Current mining claims and drilling threaten Rapid Creek (Rapid City’s drinking water) and the local economy.  Designating the Rapid Creek watershed as a Congressionally-designated Recreation Area will protect our water and our livelihoods. Sign our Petition.   Donate to our efforts here. 

OUTDOORS INDUSTRY HARVESTS MILLIONS OF DOLLARS FROM BLACK HILLS NATIONAL FOREST
Rapid City Journal
by Abby Wargo

The Black Hills can be deceiving — the region is rich in natural resources like timber, but it also has natural beauty in spades and wide swaths of wilderness for recreational opportunities.
​
“A lot of guests are on their way to Yellowstone or Glacier [National Parks], but they get to the Black Hills and fall in love and become repeat visitors. It happens more times than I can count,” Jennifer Lynch, owner of Big Pine Campground in Custer, said. “People don’t realize how beautiful it is until they get here. The element of surprise kind of grabs people.”

And that beauty in turn creates the state’s second-largest industry, tourism, and generates one-third of the state’s revenue each year.
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Although in recent days politicians like U.S. Rep. Dusty Johnson and Gov. Kristi Noem have had concerns about the closure of the Neiman Enterprises Saw Mill in Hill City and the loss of 110 jobs, the timber industry is not what is keeping the Black Hills region afloat.

Tourists generated $3.4 billion in 2020 and a record-breaking $4.1 billion in 2019. Tourism employs around 55,000 workers and brings over a billion dollars into their households, according to Secretary of Tourism Jim Hagen. 
“[Tourists] play a very, very important role in our economy,” Hagen told the Journal on Friday.  Read more.
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  • Home
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  • How to Help
    • How to Help
    • Sign Petition
    • Join Us
    • Donate
  • Donate
  • Why?
    • Why?
    • Recreation Opportunities
  • What is a Recreation Area?
    • What is a Recreation Area?
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