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Hands Around Maury - April 25, 1999

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Uploaded by on Jan 8, 2011

We gathered together on a pleasant spring day in 1999 to oppose the imminent threat to our island water supply, natural ecosystem, and our way of life. Now 12 years later we have won the battle.

From CROSSCUT.com December 31, 2010
How Maury Island's mining opponents finally prevailed http://crosscut.com/2010/12/31/puget-sound/20509/How-Maury-Island-s-mining-op...

After years of protest and negotiation, it's final: A county park will replace the former gravel mine on Maury Island.
By Daniel Jack Chasan It's official: Instead of spewing 10,000-ton loads of gravel from a long steel pier into waiting barges, the gravel mine site on the east coast of Maury Island will become a 235-acre King County Park. The papers have been signed. Representatives of King County and CalPortland, which owned the site, closed the deal on Thursday (Dec. 30). (CalPortland, which has absorbed the gravel mine's longtime owner, Glacier Northwest, is — like Glacier — owned by Tokyo-based Taiheiyo Cement.) The county got the keys to the property gate. The all-but-final agreement, brokered by the Cascade Land Conservancy, was announced in November. The Cascade Land Conservancy, Preserve Our Islands, the citizens group that has been fighting the gravel mine proposal since 1999, and the Vashon-Maury Island Land Trust are still rustling up a couple million dollars worth of private donations, but that didn't hold up the signing. "It's surreal," Amy Carey, president of Preserve Our Islands, told the Vashon-Maury Island Beachcomber. "It is surreal," agrees state Sen. Sharon Nelson, the founder and first president of POI, who had been fighting the mine since the presidency of Bill Clinton. Nelson, who lives near the site, got involved 13 years ago when she and her husband attended a meeting of the Vashon Community Council and learned that Maury Island might provide the fill for Sea Tac's third runway, then still a gleam in the Port of Seattle's eye. The Nelsons thought the community council should form a committee to study the potential threat. If you want a committee, the council president told them, you form it. So Nelson became the chair of an ad hoc community council committee to study what was then called the Lone Star siteecember 31, 2010
How Maury Island's mining opponents finally prevailed After years of protest and negotiation, it's final: A county park will replace the former gravel mine on Maury Island.

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