BAKER CITY HERALD • THuRsDAY, MAY 26, 2022 A7 OREGON/SPORTS From France, with glove IAN CRAWFORD icrawford@bakercityherald.com Two members of the Baker JV baseball team learned the game 5,000 miles from Baker City. Raphaël Tisca and Hugo La- caille are foreign exchange stu- dents from France who were able to visit America after pandemic restrictions were eased. “We come from Rouen in Normandy,” the pair wrote to the Herald. “We were able to partic- ipate in this exchange program through Thomas Joseph, who helped us with all the necessary steps to realize the project of studying in Baker.” Joseph, principal for the Eagle Cap Innovative High School, an alternative program in the Baker School District, is also principal and instructor at the district’s Oregon International School. Raphaël and Hugo, whose hometown is more than 1,000 years old, have appreciated the sights of the comparatively un- tamed Oregon. “Oregon is a very beautiful state, with beautiful landscapes and where people are friendly and kind,” they wrote. “We vis- Grouse Continued from Page A6 That’s if the amount of land dis- turbed is less than five acres. Anything more than that, and the BLM must approve a more detailed plan accounting for im- pacts to land, water and wildlife. Dudfield said all of the com- pany’s exploration activities are reviewed by BLM and the Or- egon Department of Geology and Mineral Industries to en- sure compliance with environ- mental regulations. He added that Jindalee is conducting envi- ronmental and cultural studies to help it avoid sensitive areas. What’s law got to do with it? Experts argue mining regu- lations have not kept up with the industry. The law governing most mining and prospecting on public lands is 150 years old. Thea Riofrancos, an associate professor of political science at Providence College and an expert on lithium extraction, says the General Mining Law ited Baker City and saw Antho- ny’s Lake under the snow.” Although baseball is re- nowned as America’s game, the sport has a curious appeal in small pockets all over the world. Raphaël and Hugo were en- amored from their first pitch. “My father has always been a big fan of the United States and in 2016 he suggested I take up baseball and I fell in love with the sport,” Raphaël said. “Baseball is a sport that is not very developed in France, but it is evolving,” the pair wrote. “In Europe, the sport is very devel- oped in some countries like Ger- many or Italy.” Hugo said he practiced dance for seven years before he started with baseball. “And it was during a sports discovery day that I tried base- ball for the first time,” he wrote. “The same evening, my mother and I looked for the nearest club.” That’s the Rouen Huskies, a team that has won many cham- pionships. Raphaël and Hugo credited their hometown coaches, Dylan Gleeson, Mickael Cerda and Es- of 1872 is woefully out of date when it comes to the environ- mental and social impacts of modern mining. “It actually explicitly encour- ages prospecting in ways that can harm the ecosystems of public lands,” Riofrancos said, adding that those lands are of- ten in close proximity to Native American reservations. Riofrancos has closely stud- ied mining in Latin America, which includes some of the world’s biggest producers of raw battery materials such as lithium and copper. As governments there have pushed to expand the mining industry, she’s found it’s come at a tremendous environmen- tal and human cost. Riofrancos said that though the U.S. has stronger protections for the environment, labor and peo- ple, mining is just as disruptive here as it is anywhere. “We’re looking at a very in- vasive economic sector that is among the most environmen- tally destructive in the world,” Riofrancos said. Riofrancos said the U.S. teban Prioul, with helping them hone their skills. “My level improved a lot, espe- cially with the coaching of very good coaches,” Raphaël wrote. “I signed up with the Rouen Huskies where I was very well re- ceived and where my sports level evolved extremely well,” Hugo wrote. “Then I was recruited in a high level center: The Rouen Baseball Center.” The two say they’ve felt wel- come in Oregon. “We made good friends and we were very well received,” they wrote. “Moreover, the atmosphere in the junior varsity is great and everyone gets along well.” Discussing places they’d still like to see during their trip, they wished to see more of the beau- tiful U.S. landscape, and if given a chance, to visit San Francisco. They’re also hoping they’ll have a chance at some local pastimes, such as fishing and hunting. When asked whether they have managed to get involved in any uniquely American fun, they swung for the fences. “We got to shoot a potato launcher.” needs to envision a transition off fossil fuels that minimizes the amount of material coming out of the ground. President Joe Biden has been cautious about encouraging new mining even as he’s taken a number of steps to support battery production in the U.S., most recently invoking a Cold War-era law to speed up the process. Biden said at a White House event on critical minerals in February that the nation needs to “avoid the historical injus- tices that too many mining op- erations left behind in Ameri- can towns.” The Department of the In- terior has formed a working group to potentially overhaul the federal mining law. Some lawmakers, including Demo- cratic Sen. Ron Wyden of Or- egon, are promoting bills to improve cleanup operations at former mine sites and encour- age more recycling of battery materials. During a virtual town hall in March, Wyden said new min- ing projects can be carried out Ian Crawford/Baker City Herald Raphaël Tisca, left, and Hugo Lacaille proudly display Bulldog colors at the Baker Sports Complex, on May 20, 2022, where they have been playing JV baseball this spring. “without throwing environ- mental laws in the trash can.” Long road ahead Several abandoned mines dot the McDermitt Caldera, includ- ing the Opalite mercury mine constructed in the 1920s. Warn- ing signs stand before gaping pits, crumbling structures and huge piles of toxic waste. People used to haul away truckloads of the contaminated gravel to use as fill for roads and driveways in the border town of McDermitt and on the Fort McDermitt Indian Reservation, eventually requiring a $1.2 mil- lion Superfund cleanup. The mine predated most en- vironmental regulations in place today, but mineral extraction itself is still extremely damaging — and in some cases done at a much larger scale. Opalite is a speck relative to the acres upon acres of adjacent mining claims. “This is tiny compared to the devastation that would be wrought by lithium mining here,” said Fite, standing at the old mine’s gate. Achieving climate goals like electrifying vehicle fleets and increasing renewable energy production will require lithium and other raw materials. Some in Oregon and elsewhere in the country are eager to see the jobs and economic develop- ment that would accompany a new mining boom. Many conservationists ac- knowledge that some new ex- traction may be necessary to meet future demand for these materials, but they’re urging government officials to be ex- tremely cautious about where new mines are located. Fite says mining in southeast Oregon, even for a metal as crit- ical to fighting climate change as lithium, would be disastrous. “You don’t save the planet by tearing up intact wildland eco- systems,” Fite said. The flurry of mining claims and exploration on the Ore- gon-Nevada border has galva- nized conservation groups like Fite’s and Native American tribes. They’re lining up to defend the landscape from new mining, particularly the Jindalee project and the proposed Thacker Pass lithium mine in Nevada. Dudfield estimates Jindalee is at least five years and a lot of work away from proposing a mine if it ever does. “At any fork in the road, there can be a roadblock that stops you,” Dudfield said. “The lithium price could fall. There could be some sort of permit- ting issue that arises. And so we can’t just flick a switch and pro- duce lithium immediately.” Sage grouse could be a big roadblock. The birds have continued to suffer, despite efforts to save them. A report published last year by the U.S. Geological Sur- vey says the sage grouse popu- lation has dropped 80% since 1965, and about half those losses have come in the past two decades alone. Jindalee has paused its min- eral exploration in southeast Oregon until summer, and sage grouse are holding court on the sprawling high desert land- scape. For now, the McDermitt Caldera still vibrates at day- break with the ploinking song of this iconic Western bird. NeighbORly [ INSPIRING KINDNESS ACROSS OREGON ] Check in on a friend. Share your lunch. Offer to carry that. Grow a garden and give it away. Ask the tough questions. Then listen. Stand up for someone. Give someone a chance. Give yourself a break. Give to the arts. Start a movement. Start a scholarship. Welcome the new neighbors. Be patient. Walk a mile in their shoes. Donate shoes. Drop off dinner. Leave the last donut. Leave no trace. Take responsibility. Hold the door and your mind open. Endeavor to understand. RSVP. Smile. Hope for nothing more than kindness in return. L E A R N | CO N N EC T | D O N AT E | G E T I N S P I R E D O R E G O N C F.O R G /N E I G H B O R LY