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Click above to make a donation to the Sierra Club’s Grand Canyon
(Arizona) Chapter.
To see how you can leverage your dollars see below.

Thank you again to our generous friends at Earth Friends Wildlife Foundation
for their continued support of the Sierra Club’s Grand Canyon Chapter.
This year, they have issued a challenge grant. If we raise $100,000, they will
award us a grant to assist with our important conservation projects like our
Restore and Protect the Greater Grand Canyon Campaign, our Upper Verde Water
Sentinels Program, or our ongoing efforts to protect Arizona’s forests,
including establishment of an old growth preserve. Every dollar we raise will
go toward meeting that match. If you would like to give to help meet this match,
please send a donation today. Checks can go to:
Sierra Club – Grand Canyon Chapter,
202 E. McDowell Rd, Suite 277,
Phoenix, AZ 85004 |
Sierra Club, Arizonas Grand Canyon Chapter
Explore, enjoy and protect the planet.
Current News
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May 6, 2008, Clean Car Rule Receives Final Approval: Measure Will Help Clean Up Arizona’s Air and Protect Public Health PHOENIZ, Ariz.— Today, the Governor’s Regulatory Review Council approved adoption of a final rule to implement a California Low Emission Vehicle “Clean Car” program in Arizona by a vote of 5 to 2. This makes Arizona the fourteenth state in the country to adopt this standard. More...
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April 30, 2008, U.S. wildlife officials failing to conserve Mexican wolf TUCSON, Ariz. – With only 52 Mexican gray wolves left in the wild, a number of conservation organizations are asking an Arizona federal court to direct the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) to take back their leadership responsibilities for the Mexican wolf reintroduction effort and make wolf conservation a priority. More...
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April 4, 2008, Uranium Mine Exploration Near Grand Canyon Halted FLAGSTAFF, Ariz.— A federal judge today issued a restraining order against VANE Minerals and the Kaibab National Forest pending further proceedings, halting uranium exploration on public lands within a few miles of Grand Canyon National Park. Download Press Release (36 KB pdf) Conservation groups strongly supported legislation sponsored by Rep. Raúl Grijalva (D-AZ) to ban new mining claims near Grand Canyon National Park at a Congressional hearing in Flagstaff today. More...
- Protect the Grand Canyon from Mining Impacts The Sierra
Club’s Grand Canyon Chapter is working with other conservation
groups as well as local, state and federal policy makers to ensure that
the Grand Canyon, its watershed, and the health of area residents is
protected from the harmful impacts of uranium mining. We are supporting
a proposal to protect one million acres near the Grand Canyon from new
future mining activities. More
info...
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Click here
for current news on the Grand Canyon Protection Campaign! This issue of The Grand Plateau focuses on the 100 year anniversary of
the establishment of the Grand Canyon National Monument. Also, take a
look at the upcoming activities and volunteer opportunities.
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Mexican gray wolves in Arizona and New Mexico The
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the agency responsible for protection
and recovery of threatened
and endangered species, is preparing a draft
environmental impact statement (EIS) and socio-economic assessment
and a proposed rule amendment to the 1998 final rule that authorized
the
establishment of a "nonessential experimental population" of Mexican
gray wolves in Arizona and New Mexico. More
info and Public meeting dates...
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The Grand Canyon Chapter received a Water Sentinels grant from
the national Sierra Club to develop and support a volunteer water
quality monitoring program for the upper portion of the Verde River.
Water is a critical priority in Arizona, with regards to both its
quantity and quality. The Verde River, nominated by the Sierra Club
and designated by American Rivers as one of the ten most endangered
rivers in the country in 2006, faces significant threats. Our Upper
Verde Water Sentinels welcome additional volunteers to help protect
this amazing river which provides important habitat for fish and
wildlife as well as great recreational opportunities. To find out
more, click
here.
- LAND SWAP THREATENS OUR PUBLIC LANDS
OAK FLAT CAMPGROUND ON THE CHOPPING BLOCK. Oak Flat
Campground is threatened by foreign-owned mining company. A foreign-owned
mining company is proposing a land swap in the United States Congress
to acquire Oak Flat Campground in the Tonto National
Forest east of Superior, Arizona.
Information Alert (248 KB pdf)
Sandy Bahr Testimony on HR3301
(88 KB pdf)
- Warm Fire Salvage Logging Project
In June 2006, the Warm Fire burned almost 60,000 acres of piñon-juniper
woodlands, ponderosa pine, and mixed conifer forests on the Kaibab
Plateau, near the Grand Canyon’s north rim.
The Sierra Club and other conservation organizations are proposing
a natural recovery for the area that protects soils, standing dead
trees which provide important habitat for cavity nesting birds like
woodpeckers, and allows for aspen regeneration. More...
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Download the May/June 2008 Issue (1 MB pdf)
Check out the latest Beyond
the Slab cartoon!
2008 Legislative Updates
June 20, 2008,
Sierra Club 2008 Legislative Update #24
Find out current information, status, action needed (and more) for Arizona
legislation. The tracker is updated daily... so visit it often! Grand
Canyon Chapter Arizona Bill Tracker
2007 Legislative Scorecard and
Environmental Report Card |
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Sierra Club® and One Earth, One Chance® are registered trademarks of the Sierra Club.
Sierra Club and .
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Sierra Club, Grand Canyon Chapter, 202 E.
McDowell Rd, Suite 277, Phoenix, AZ 85004, (602) 253-8633
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