Resources

We encourage you to look through these educational and eye-opening sites.
Below you can find facts on

  • Pesticide use in the timber industry and how the government covered up harm.
  • What states are enacting Rights of Nature laws?
  • What exactly is in the tap water we drink?

The “Poison Papers” represent a vast trove of rediscovered chemical industry and regulatory agency documents and correspondence stretching back to the 1920sTaken as a whole, the papers show that both industry and regulators understood the extraordinary toxicity of many chemical products and worked together to conceal this information from the public and the press.

The Eco Jurisprudence Monitor is for everyone who wants to know more about a global movement to advance the Rights of Nature and other Earth-centered laws that transcend anthropocentrism.

Is your water safe? Search for contamination in your drinking water! If you’ve ever wondered what’s actually in your tap water, we have answers. Our Tap Water Database provides insight into pollutants in local water resources.

CELDF is helping build a decolonial movement for Community Rights and the Rights of Nature to advance democratic, economic, social, and environmental rights – building upward from the grassroots to the state, federal, and international levels.

Protecting your community from legally sanctioned corporate assault means getting involved with challenging and changing the structure of government and decision-making.  ORCRN is Helping to secure community rights over corporate profits and fighting for Nature’s right to exist, flourish and evolve.

Join us in our Facebook Group. Find like-minded people to toss around ideas and stories. Learn about the other efforts to protect communities and nature around the state of Oregon.

A group of Triangle Lake citizens got together and found a Doctor who would test their urine for timber pesticides (2,4-D and Atrazine) Both of those poisons were positive in all residents – including children. That spawned the Highway 36 Exposure Investigation, and this is the report that, once again, swept the matter under the agency rug. Read Report.