Articles by Sarah K. Burkhalter
Sarah K. Burkhalter is Grist's project manager.
All Articles
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Native tribe wary of mercury in fish.
Grist has kept tabs on northern Wisconsin's Mole Lake Sokoagon Chippewa tribe for the past five years as they've striven to keep a mine from disrupting their community and way of life. The story culminated in a happy ending just recently as the tribe rassled up $8 million in mortgage payments to the mining company, and the company returned the payment in full in the form of a trust fund.
But -- go figure -- the tribe is facing other environmental troubles. The Washington Post reports that the Mole Lake Chippewas (also known as the Ojibwe), who spearfish every spring for food and traditional purposes, have now added a new tradition:
[T]hey consult a color-coded map that tells them which of the more than 50 lakes in the region have the highest mercury levels.
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Soccer’s biggest to-do goes green.
This article says that more than 30 billion people -- out of a world population of 6.6 billion -- are expected to tune into the upcoming
soccerfootball World Cup. So that just goes to show you how popularsoccerfootball is.The event kicks off (ha!) on Friday in Germany and my fiancé would be happy to tell you when all the games are being played, which team is playing which, what their chances are of moving to the next round, what color each team wears, the name of every player on every team, and precisely how to work, eat, sleep, plan a wedding, and watch six hours of
soccerfootball every day for over a month. Me -- all I've got is the green angle.Says the World Cup environmentalness website:
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Mining company returns funds to tribe
In the midst of our Poverty & the Environment series, we published a walking tour of Wisconsin's Sokaogon Chippewa community, which had partnered with another tribe to buy a nearby zinc and copper mine and keep it from reopening. At the time of our interview with tribe member Tina van Zile, the Sokaogon Chippewas -- one of the poorest tribes in the nation -- were struggling to raise funds to pay their share and save their community from being overrun by miners and the accompanying land degradation and pollution.
The Sokaogon tribe just made their final $8 million mortgage payment to the BHP Billiton mining company -- and BHP is donating the $8 million back to the tribe in a trust fund.
[Tribe administrator Tony] Phillippe said Tuesday the land will be used for conservation purposes, such as public trails and parks, and the mining project will never be developed.
"The minerals underneath it are basically sacred from now on into eternity," he said. "We own it all."Woo hoo! A bit of good news, and just in time for World Environment Day!
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What’s to do in New England?
I'm getting hitched in August (yay!) to this dashing young man, and we're talking about honeymooning in New England. Any of you Gristmill readers live in the area? Any ideas of where we should go? What we should do? Where we should stay? (No, I don't think we'll stay at your house -- but thanks for the offer.)
Any tips (eco- or otherwise) would be greatly appreciated!