Uranium Mining in Northern Saskatchewan; What You Need To Know―Four-Part Webinar Series

  • Tuesday, January 30, 2024

  • 6:00 p.m. 8:00 p.m.

  • Box 661Slave Lake, Alberta, T0G 2A0Canada (map)

Webinar #1: Indigenous Resistance to Uranium Mining

Please note that we will be broadcasting this webinar series in the Saskatchewan time zone.

Everyone is welcome to attend this webinar series that will help you know more about what is happening with uranium mining in Northern Saskatchewan. While many people have been busy in survival mode and exhausted from the pandemic, wars around the world, and the extreme rising cost of living, uranium mining lobbyists and governments have been taking advantage, passing industry-favourable laws that will further degrade and threaten freshwater systems already desperately overburdened by farming and mining use and wastewater byproducts.

No registration is required. We will broadcast live from our Facebook Event Page;

https://fb.me/e/6zNAhAEJG

Learn more about our webinar guests:

Marius Paul (Dënesųłinë́)

Marius is a person of the Poplar Tree Home Dene from English River First Nation in northern Saskatchewan. He has been involved with creating awareness and disseminating factual information about the dangers of the nuclear industry since the 70s when the uranium mining companies began to expand into Denesuline territory. He and his wife are members of the Committee for Future Generations, which has been working to address the risks the uranium/nuclear industry imposes on people in the north and worldwide. Marius has supported many front-line actions on Turtle Island over the last 40 years.

Candyce Paul

Candyce has lived in northern Saskatchewan with her husband, Marius Paul, for over three decades. She spent many years living and learning the traditional northern culture, which she is passing on to the next generation. She is happiest in the natural environment and tending her garden. She has assisted in home-schooling her two children and co-founded Reclaiming Our Youth Home Front School, where she worked with many students. Candyce is a KOW board member and chair of the Housing Committee at English River First Nation, where she and her family live.

Leona Morgan Diné (she/her)

Leona is an anti-nuclear agitator fighting nuclear colonialism since 2007. Leona co-founded Haul No! and is a graduate student at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, USA. Leona collaborates nationally with many groups to address the entire nuclear fuel chain in the United States and is part of the international campaign Don’t Nuke The Climate, which focuses on nuclear energy as a global climate issue.

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Uranium Mining in Northern SaskatchewanWednesday, May 15, 2024

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World Water Day Gathering 2024