{
	"type": "rich",
	"version": "1.0",
	"provider_name": "Action Network",
	"provider_url": "https://actionnetwork.org",
	
	"html": "<link href='https://actionnetwork.org/css/style-embed-v3.css' rel='stylesheet' type='text/css' /><script src='https://actionnetwork.org/widgets/v6/letter/save-oak-flat-from-mining-corporations?format=js&source=widget'></script><div id='can-letter-area-save-oak-flat-from-mining-corporations' style='width: 100%'><!-- this div is the target for our HTML insertion --></div>",
	"author_name": "Native Organizers Alliance Action Fund",
	"author_url": "https://actionnetwork.org/groups/native-organizers-alliance",
	"title": "Demand Arizona state leaders protect sacred Oak Flat and Tribal sovereignty",
	"thumbnail_url": "https://can2-prod.s3.amazonaws.com/groups/default_facebook_images/000/022/886/original/NOA_ActionFundBanner2.png?1668645803",
	"description": "We must protect Oak Flat (Chí’chil Biłdagoteel), a deeply sacred place on federal land. &amp;nbsp; The U.S. federal government transferred this land to a mining corporation last month, which plans to build a mine that would destroy this sacred place, collapsing it into a two-mile-long crater. Dr. Wendsler Nosie Sr., former Tribal Chairman of the San Carlos Apache Tribe and an advocate with Apache Stronghold, said last year that: “To destroy Oak Flat would erase our Native identity, our culture, and our connection to the Creator… [and] irreversibly harm the environment. Resolution Copper’s mine would drain vast amounts of water, poison the surrounding ecosystem, and leave behind over a billion tons of toxic waste.” But the fight isn’t over. Before constructing the mine, the corporation Resolution Copper needs access to over 8,000 acres of nearby Arizona state trust land to build a facility that would store about 1.4 billion tons of toxic mining waste. This toxic waste dump would require maintenance and monitoring in perpetuity, but Resolution Copper -- which has a long history of contaminating the environment near its mines -- won’t do that. Now it’s up to Arizona state leaders, including the Arizona State Land Department, to decide whether Resolution Copper can access state trust land. Send a message to Arizona Governor Katie Hobbs -- as well as AZ Attorney General Kris Mayes and State Land Commissioner Robyn Sahid -- urging them to deny Resolution Copper’s applications to use state trust land for this mine and its toxic waste.",
	"url": "https://actionnetwork.org/letters/save-oak-flat-from-mining-corporations"
}

