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Stop I-69



Last Updated: 7/17/2008

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Gender: Female
Status: Single
Age: 40
Sign: Capricorn

City: Evansville to Indianapolis
State: Indiana
Country: US
Signup Date: 3/16/2008

Who Gives Kudos:


Tuesday, May 20, 2008 

In the Wee hours of May 18th, fading into the early morning of May 19th, a small group of activists braved the pre-dawn chill (and the threat of arrest and imprisonment!) and slipped into the trees alongside a country road about 25 miles north of Evansville, Indiana. They went in loaded with ropes, tarps, platforms, and guts. By the time the sun had risen full up in the sky, two brave Earth First!ers–Grant Reynolds and Harriet Ray–were gently swaying thirty-five feet above the ground. Below them, banners reading "I-69 and NAFTA: Destroying Communities Here Through Mexico," "Resist Construction," and "Defend Farms" announced this act of physical defense to the Monday morning commuters along State Road 68.

By mid-afternoon–sometime around 4 pm, Central Time–the authorities arrived. Eight Indiana State Troopers joined representatives of INDOT and the Indiana Natural Resources Conservation Service. They detained the tree-sitters' ground support crew and held them in their cars. The Roadblock: EarthFirst! team got the call and more supporters lept into action. One team rushed to back up the ground support crew; another headed out to announce the action to local residents and farmers in persyn. In the end, the cops released the support crew, but not before intimidating the sitters–tugging on their support lines and tossing them about with downdraft from patrol helicopters.

It's never a good idea to interfere with a sitter's lines. It's an even worse idea when the sitters are on "dunk 'em" platforms: their platforms are suspended from lines that run through a pulley. The pulley is anchored to "their" tree; the lines are anchored elsewhere. In this case, one line runs to a tree forty feet away. Gohmann Asphalt and Construction–INDOT's golden contractor for I-69–has already hacked away the trees on the actual route of the highway, so the other support line is anchored to the fallen logs they left behind. If either of these lines are disturbed or cut, one end of the platform will dip and drop the sitter thirty-five feet to the ground. Needless to say, the ground support crew is keeping a close (digital, recording) eye on the situation; if anyone gets hurt, the responsible parties will be held accountable.

As of seven o'clock on the evening of the 19th, no arrests have been made and there's no police presence at the site. Local news media are on their way to interview the sitters. The platforms have been in the trees for over twelve hours; folks are on their way to spend the night on the ground. Harriet is in good spirits, and Grant is sound asleep.

So… what are y'all waiting for?

(The three banners read "I-69 and NAFTA: Destroying Communities Here thru Mexico," "Resist Construction," and "Defend Farms")


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3wK1B53zUY0


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In the waning hours of Sunday May 18th, dedicated community members in resistance to I-69 set up a defensive encampment high in the trees above the farmland that INDOT and Mitch Daniels consider the future site of the NAFTA Superhighway.

Landowners, neighbors, and concerned residents are joining together in a multi-faceted struggle to end the $4 billion debacle that is this road. 450 Indiana families stand to be evicted, and a growing number are committing not to bend over easily to INDOT's intimidation tactics. Eminent Domain suits, community solidarity networks, public meetings, nature walks and bike rides along the route, barbeques, marches, and demonstrations allow participation in this effort by folks of all commitment levels and time constraints.

Nearly 10,000 fertile acres await a fate of asphalt and concrete if we fail to act, but this road is not a done deal, and this first act of physical land defense will not be the last. As long as bulldozers continue to threaten our communities we will do everything we can to stop them.

To learn more and plug into the resistance visit: StopI69.wordpress.com

For free legal support and assistance finding free lawyers to defend your land contact the legal hotline at: 812-650-4414 (Leave a message and someone will get back to you)

MORE INFORMATION AND PICTURES FORTHCOMING!!
Fox7cameraman

 
WAY TO GO!!!!!
 
Posted by Fox7cameraman on Monday, May 19, 2008 - 4:16 PM
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