NMIPL IN THE NEWS
Carlsbad Current Argus. Sep. 3, 2020 New Mexico finalizes oil and gas wastewater regulations, lawmakers hear testimony (Rev. Nick King Quoted)
Las Cruces Sun-News, Aug. 19, 2020, Report on solving climate crisis brings hope (Co-authored by Michael Sells, Clara Sims and Edith Yanez)
Santa Fe New Mexican, Aug. 15, 2020 Vote your values this November (Commentary by Larry Rasmussen and Tabitha Arnold)
National IPL President Susan Hendershot Joins Intefaith Coalition Seeking to Keep Government Funded
/in Earth & Faith, Faithful Citizenship, Featured Articles, NEWS /by adminWASHINGTON, DC – On September 26, 53 organizations representing people of faith across religious traditions and denominations delivered a letter to the U.S. Congress urging bipartisan action to keep the government operational or risk severe consequences on the most vulnerable members of society. Congress has until September 30, 2023 to pass a continuing resolution to avert a shutdown of the government’s most basic operations.
The signatories, which include NETWORK, the Friends Committee on National Legislation, Interfaith Power & Light and the Franciscan Action Network, called on lawmakers to fund the government and work in a bipartisan manner to pass a stop-gap funding measure without harmful provisions. The complete letter and list of signatories is available below.
Here is a statement from Rev. Susan Hendershot, President of Interfaith Power & Light
Read Full Piece from NETWORK Lobby for Catholic Social Justice
Bearing Witness to Extractivism, Colonialism: Day 6
/in Earth & Faith, Featured Articles, Media, NEWS, Permian Basin, Sacred Land and Water /by adminInterfaith Power & Light New Mexico & El Paso and Sisters of Mercy of the Americas are co-sponsoring an immersion retreat through some areas of New Mexico to bear witness to the damage #extractivism has inflicted on the people and the land of our state. Tbe accounts and pictures come courtesy of Heather Scott-Molleda, senior director of communications for Mercy Sisters of the Americas. Read Accounts for Days 1 and 2 Day 3, Day 4 Day 5
The Final Day
We begin the final day of our pilgrimage reflecting on the damage done by colonialism and extractivism which have treated God’s creation and Native people as disposable. New Mexico is suffering the consequences of that attitude.
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Day 6: A Prayer for Healing
On the sixth day, we ended our pilgrimage with a prayer for healing and call for new beginnings. We witnessed the beauty of God’s creation in Carlsbad Caverns, including the awesome sight of hundreds of thousands of bats flying out of the cave into the night. But we also saw evidence everywhere of the lack of care for people and for the Earth, farms turned into dumping grounds or new oil wells. This year is the centennial both of Carlsbad and of the first oil well in the Permian Basin. We are called to action. A dragonfly, the symbol of hope, change and love, joined us for the final gathering. We buried the “earthen treasure vase” that accompanied us on our travels, in the Permian Basin with the prayers of many, notably Pueblo and Diné (Navajo) elders.
Sister Marlys Jackson, Rochester, Minn., offers her impressions
A reflection from Bro. Ryan Roberts, a Lutheran Franciscan friar and member of the justice team of the Sisters of Mercy of the Americas
Bearing Witness to Extractivism, Colonialism: Day 5
/in Earth & Faith, Featured Articles, Media, NEWS, Permian Basin, Sacred Land and Water /by adminInterfaith Power & Light New Mexico & El Paso and Sisters of Mercy of the Americas are co-sponsoring an immersion retreat through some areas of New Mexico to bear witness to the damage #extractivism has inflicted on the people and the land of our state. Tbe accounts and pictures come courtesy of Heather Scott-Molleda, senior director of communications for Mercy Sisters of the Americas. Read Accounts for Days 1 and 2 Day 3, Day 4
Arriving in the Permian Basin
We have arrived in the Permian Basin on day 5 of the pilgrimage, an area of 6,000 square miles of southeastern New Mexico and West Texas where the explosion of fracking is releasing toxic methane and other chemicals into the air and water with little control. Activists from New Mexico Interfaith Power and Light, Earthworks and the local Citizens Caring for the Future are working to help the people, protect the land and prevent the climate bomb, while balancing the people’s reliance on the jobs the industry provides.
And here is a brief message from Marianne Comfort, justice coordinator for Earth, antiracism, and women for the Sisters of Mercy of the Americas.