As you may know, Nancy and I took our first canoe trip into the Boundary Waters in the late 1970s, and that journey changed everything. We knew right then that this was where we wanted to build our lives – surrounded by unspoiled lakes, pine forests, and a community of people who care deeply about this place.
Now, decades later, the greatest threat we’ve ever faced looms nearby: proposed sulfide-ore copper mining on the edge of the Wilderness. These mines produce some of the most toxic waste known to industry, and here, where every stream connects to the next, pollution wouldn’t stay put – it would spread across the Boundary Waters, poisoning waters and livelihoods alike.
If a mine pollutes the Wilderness, local businesses will lose everything.
This is no ordinary Wilderness. It’s the most-visited Wilderness in the nation – a place where generations have paddled, camped, and discovered what wild truly means. We cannot risk it for short-term profit.