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04/26/2019

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE – Wet’suwet’en Leaders Condemn Canada For Human Rights Violations at United Nations Forum

UN Headquarters (New York City) – Freda Huson, spokesperson for the Unist’ot’en house group of the Wet’suwet’en people traveled to New York City this week to attend the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues. On Wednesday, April 24, she addressed the forum and invited the UN Special Rapporteur on Indigenous Rights to visit Unist’ot’en territory and witness ongoing human rights violations against Wet’suwet’en People.

As she spoke, Indigenous delegates rose to stand behind her in support, including Chief Na’moks of the Wet’suwet’en Tsayu Clan (John Ridsdale), Omaha elder Nathan Phillips, and Ron Tremblay, Grand Chief of the Wolastoq tribal council.

Her speech emphasized Unist’ot’en people’s relationship to the land, the continued colonial violence inflicted by industry, the erosion of Indigenous rights, and the Canadian state’s perpetration of genocide. Huson concluded by extending an invitation to Ms. Victoria Tauli Corpuz, the UN Special Rapporteur on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, to visit Unist’ot’en territory.

In a separate statement, Chief Na’moks of the Wet’suwet’en Tsayu Clan spoke on behalf of the Office of Wet’suwet’en and with support from the Union of BC Indian Chiefs, concluding: “Indigenous legal orders and Indigenous systems of governance must be recognized and respected, and not trampled upon in the interest of corporate development. Indigenous people have the right to protect and defend our homes and territories. We have the right to free, prior, and informed consent from any industrial activities in and affecting our lands and territories. We should not be threatened or criminalized for the exercise of these established rights.”

Video of Freda Huson’s statement can be viewed here: https://bit.ly/2XD3wTg

Video of Chief Na’moks statement can be viewed here: https://bit.ly/2vnZSR4

Full text of Freda Huson’s statement to the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues and the UN Special Rapporteur on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, April 24, 2019:

"Thank you for the opportunity to speak
I am Freda Huson of Unist’ot’en – Wet’suwet’en People of Canada

I am here today to express concerns with human rights violations happening to my people. Since time immemorial, my people have lived in a balanced relationship with our lands. We depend on the land to survive, and we are responsible for protecting it. Since Canada began settling on our territories, we have been forced onto reservations and away from our traditional land base. There are fewer and fewer animals to hunt, the salmon run is diminishing, and the water in the river is low. In order to protect what we have left, my family has been reoccupying one of our territories at Talbeets Kwa which is along the Morice River in northern British Columbia. My ancestors have lived there since time immemorial, and I have been living there permanently for the last ten years. In these ten years we have constructed a cabin, a healing centre for members of our community who are healing from colonial trauma and addiction, a traditional pithouse and permaculture garden.

We re-occupied our lands to prevent industry from invading and polluting them for pipeline projects. We have practiced free prior and informed consent to determine who is given access to the territory.

We make decisions about our lands through our system of hereditary leadership and participation in our feast hall. Our hereditary chiefs have said “no” to pipelines on Wet’suwet’en territory.

This year, a pipeline company forced a court injunction on us. If we stop them from entering our territory because they don’t have consent, we face arrest. We have not been able to hunt or gather our traditional foods. The company has security and police force to keep us from exercising our Indigenous rights. Elders, women, and healing center clients have been threatened with arrest for accessing our own territory.

The pipeline company is violating Wet’suwet’en law, trespassing on our territory, and starting to destroy the land. They have already destroyed a heritage site. After they bulldozed part of the forest, we searched through the piles of dirt for evidence of my people. We found artifacts. The archaeology branch of the government with police assistance came in and took the artifacts, and then released a news bulletin claiming the artifacts were not from their original place.

They are trying to erase us from our own land. All these acts that continue are acts of genocide. They want to extinguish our rights to our lands.

My people depend on our territory for berries, medicines, meat and healing on the land.

I am here today to make UN aware of the continued genocide happening in Canada, and to demand that our Indigenous rights and laws are respected."

Media contact:
[email protected]

Mayor Orlyn Kringstad details email hacking evidence to close three hour city meeting.
03/26/2019

Mayor Orlyn Kringstad details email hacking evidence to close three hour city meeting.

Mayor Orlyn Kringstad reads his report on his finding evidence supporting his claim emails were hacked and read

May 8, 2018 official Lake Vermilion ice-out date. WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2018 — When darkness fell last night, May 8, the ice...
05/09/2018

May 8, 2018 official Lake Vermilion ice-out date.

WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2018 — When darkness fell last night, May 8, the ice covering some of Lake Vermilion remained in place following a day of light rain. Wednesday morning, sometime before the noon hour, airplane flights across the area revealed that no ice remained anywhere on the lake and May 8 will be the official ice-out date for Lake Vermilion in 2018.

Tradition has long been to record the date the ice goes out as a day which starts at 12:00 noon and continues overnight until 11:59, in the morning the following day. Under the dark cover of night time it is impossible to be sure if the ice clears before, or after midnight. Such is the manner in which the ice has been recorded by The Tower News, and the Tower Weekly News before it, for many decades. Because the lake had cleared its ice before noon today, May 9, The Tower News will report in its Friday edition that ice-out occurred o May 8, four days before this year’s walleye fishing opener.

The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources records Lake Vermilion as spanning 39,271 acres, making it seventh among Minnesota’s 10 largest lakes. It stretches 37 miles end-to-end, has a maximum depth of 76 feet and boasts 365 islands and 341 miles of shoreline.

LakeVermilion.net has verified accurate ice-out records dating back to 1906.

http://lakevermilion.net/may-8-will-be-recorded-as-the-day-lake-vermilion-shed-its-ice-cover-this-year/

May 8, 2018, Lake Vermilion, Minn. ice-out

03/14/2018

Greenwood voters choose Tahija, Beihoffer and Drobac in township election
TUESDAY, MARCH 13, 2018 — Greenwood Township annual meeting moderator Mike Indihar announced the winners of today’s township election at the conclusion of the annual meeting. All three seats up for election on the town board were contested. Voter turnout was high with a total of 313 ballots cast, including 70 absentee ballots.

Township Supervisor, seat 3— Three year term

Larry Tahija . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 158 (winner)

Dr. John Bassing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 153

Township Supervisor, seat 5 — Three year term

Byron Beihoffer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154 (winner)

Rick Stoehr . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .148

Township Clerk

Sue Drobac . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 189 (winner)

Belinda Fazio . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 122

12/14/2017

City of Tower sets special meeting to complete annexation and set 2018 budget and levy

Wednesday, December 13, 2017 — Tower City Clerk-Treasurer Linda Keith today posted a notice announcing the City of Tower’s intention to conduct a special meeting of the city council on Monday December 18. The meeting will address adopting the proposed 2018 budget and 2018 levy. In addition, the city council will hold the second reading of Ordinance 81 A.

The city council received a copy of the clerk’s proposed 2018 budget at the regular meeting of the city council on Tuesday, December 12. The proposed budget reports actual, 2016, spending at $1,578,348.13. The 2017, year-to-date, spending is reported at $1,391.703.93 and sets the 2018 budget at $1,762,718.58.

The first reading of Ordinance 81 A was held on Tuesday, December 12. Ordinance 81 A will repeal Ordinance 81 and will add property described as T61N R15W Sec. 5 NW 1/4 of NW 1/4 to the city’s corporate boundaries. Although the noted property currently resides within the boundaries of Kuglar Township, it is now completely owned by the city, which proposes to annex that property into the city and extend the corporate limits of Tower

The meeting will commence at 5:30 p.m. and be conducted in the council chamber at Tower’s city hall.

Three people enjoy a moonlit paddle on Lake Vermilion in this 1939 full-color linen postcard. The card was used to repor...
12/14/2017

Three people enjoy a moonlit paddle on Lake Vermilion in this 1939 full-color linen postcard. The card was used to report on a trip to Lake Vermilion and mailed from Tower, Minn. in the spring of 1939.

—Lake Vermilion Archives postcard.2017.12.10

PLEASE HELP US OUT! The Lake Vermilion archives recently added this image to its collections. Assuredly this photograph ...
11/21/2017

PLEASE HELP US OUT! The Lake Vermilion archives recently added this image to its collections. Assuredly this photograph dates to the earliest years of the 20th century. Anyone who can add to our knowledge of this photograph, the tour boat, it’s geographic location on Lake Vermilion, or Vermilion Lodge are encouraged to contact us at info*at*LakeVermilion.net

September 12 opening set for Lake Vermilion–Soudan Underground Mine State Park campgroundThe anticipation of the opening...
08/31/2017

September 12 opening set for Lake Vermilion–Soudan Underground Mine State Park campground

The anticipation of the opening, September 12, of the new Vermilion Ridge Campground will be worth the wait. The State of Minnesota has delivered on all that it has promised—a New Minnesota State Park for the 21st Century, at Lake Vermilion-Soudan Underground Mine State Park. Beginning at 8 a.m. on Wednesday, Sept. 6, campers can make reservations for arrivals Sept. 12 and later, just in time for fall color.

The campground has 33 campsites with electricity and Wi-Fi, three large group camps with screened picnic shelters and modern shower buildings, designed with a focus on energy efficiency and a light carbon footprint.

“As you drive into the park, you’ll notice a new style of signs, a new style of buildings that incorporate local stone and better Wi-Fi connectivity than at any other Minnesota state park,” Rivers said. “These are examples of what makes this a ‘next-generation’ park.”

Visitors to this northern Minnesota state park will have access to the Armstrong Bay picnic area, the Mesabi Bike Trail and a new boat ramp that provides access to LakeVermilion. Tours of Soudan Mine will run daily through the end of September and weekends in October through the annual Education Minnesota conference (Oct. 19-22).

The $7 million campground project was primarily funded by state bonding dollars.

The park is still a work in progress. Although most campsites will be open for fall camping, some will have to wait until spring, after grass and landscaping have had more time to become established. Hiking trails and additional camping capacity will be added in the next phase of development.

Saturday, Oct. 21, will be the last night to camp at Lake Vermilion-Soudan Underground Mine State Park in 2017. The campground will reopen in May for the 2018 camping season. The DNR anticipates a grand opening celebration in May as well.

Make reservations online or by phone

Camping reservations are required at all Minnesota state parks and recreation areas. Reservations can be made up to one year in advance by visiting the DNR website, www.mndnr.gov/reservations or by calling 866-857-2757.

For more information, contact the DNR Information Center at [email protected] 888-646-6367 (8 a.m.-8 p.m. Monday through Friday, 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Saturday).
LakeVermilion.net

Fishing resorts were established across Lake Vermilion during the early decades of the 20th century. One hundred years l...
08/12/2017

Fishing resorts were established across Lake Vermilion during the early decades of the 20th century. One hundred years later most have disappeared into the pages of history. This week, the Lake Vermilion Archives and LakeVermilion.net acquired two photographs, c. 1925, of Birchwood, a resort believed to have once been located on Everett Bay.

Each year many of the details of these businesses vanish from our collective memories. We encourage anyone with photographs, stories or recollections of this history, or any Lake Vermilion history, to please contact LakeVermilion.net

07/31/2017
07/09/2017
http://lakevermilion.net/camping-on-pine-island-in-1919/The first of many wonderful summers on Lake Vermilionby Elizabet...
06/27/2017

http://lakevermilion.net/camping-on-pine-island-in-1919/

The first of many wonderful summers on Lake Vermilion

by Elizabeth A. (Ferguson) Bitney

September 1987

I had just had my eleventh birthday, and my brother, Richard, was eight. Our folks, Olin J. Ferguson and his wife Hannah, had decided that it was time to explore the lots on Pine Island that Dad had bought some time before, from O. H. Clark, a representative for Gray-Werton Co. Vermilion Dells had been platted in 1914, according to the map we had.

Our journey from Nebraska had been a long adventure of four train rides before we arrived on the second morning at Tower, Minn. We had lunch in town, and bought loads of groceries which followed all our baggage to the boat dock. We still had time to see the stores and study everything in Doc Lackey’s Trading Post before boat time.

The “Tub” we were told, was a boat brought from Lake Superior and was very seaworthy, though it rolled some in the big waves on Big Bay. (Later years this boat was called the “Bobby B”.) It brought us to “Kelly’s Dock” where all of our belongings and we were deposited, on Pine Island. They’d see us again next week at this dock with our next grocery order.

Our tents and the frame for the big one, the steamer trunk, suit cases and groceries were all carried through the woods to our lot, where a clearing had been prepared for the floor and frame. The sun was vanishing behind clouds and everyone hurried to get ready for the storm. Of course it rained before the big canvas was all in place over its frame and where it got wet on the underside the rain dripped through. With strategically placed rain coats, umbrellas and pails, our living quarters took on a funny sight. But the fragrance of the wet evergreens was great! And never forgotten. (In later years, when the roads were more than a two-rut squiggly path, and we drove, Dad said that our accelerator foot got heavy when we began to smell evergreens.) But even in the rain that night, supper needed attention, before it got too dark. Mom made beds with Dick’s help, and Dad and I fried bacon and eggs. My contribution was holding the umbrella over the frying pan with the smoke gathering around my head, and trying to see what I was doing through stinging tears. But oh how good it tasted, sitting in our lantern lit tent!

Eventually the two tents were positioned with a fly canvas connecting them. This two tent summer home was called “Tepee Nopah.”

The Tub brought our groceries and other necessities on our order to Olson’s sent on the previous trip. It came two or three times a week. When Big Bay Was very rough, the boat was late and the milk was sour on arrival. So we had plenty of pancakes and biscuits. Baking was done on a board laid on a bed of coals in the one hole trash burner and rescued when the board caught on fire.

When Mother let out a squeak we knew that she’d found a little yellow snake when she lifted the cover over our hole-in-the-ground ice box, and we ran to her rescue, or was it to see how big it was this time? A couple of nights something snorted outside our tents, but it didn’t bother our provisions. In the morning we found deer footprints on the sand beach.

When exploring, we found a rough corduroy “road” or path from our lot back through the woods to a high point of the island where the loggers a few years before had a camp and where they’d built a little birch lookout tower. From the top rung, we could see the water on each side of the island. On these hikes we learned to use a compass. We gathered leaves to identify, all of which made us well acquainted with the woods.

From our shore, we watched great booms of logs being towed up the channel by a steam boat toward the Tower mill, whose smoke pinpointed the town on the horizon.

Some afternoons, Dad hung a hammock in the trees nearby and with a couple of folding chairs, we held a class. Sometimes we learned some French, sometimes math. Sometimes Dad read to us. Curious jays and warblers flitted around, and grouse scooted across our path. The pileated woodpecker drilled nearby.

The one night, the north sky lighted up with the aurora borealis. We bundled up in coats, and Dad rowed us out to near Emerald Island to watch. Colored curtains of light moved as if in a breeze. Light shafts reached the zenith, then over and down to other side. A great display.

Dick and I learned to row and we sang “Row, row, row your boat to our hearts content. A musical family without a piano was a new experience. We learned to sing parts, and learned to play the harmonica. Often after watching a lovely sunset we all sang “Now the day is over” on the way back to the tents.

Such a wonderful summer! And it was the first of many, including those with younger brother Bob, sister Ruth, — through the fourth generation — so far.



—originally published in the September 17, 1987 Centennial Issue of the Vermilion Iron Journal

The first of many wonderful summers on Lake Vermilion by Elizabeth A. (Ferguson) Bitney September 1987 I had just had my eleventh birthday, and my brother, Richard, was eight. Our... [Read More]

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