Upcoming Events
Clean Kilgore Coalition Town Hall
Join the Clean Kilgore Coalition to learn about the threat of an open-pit, heap-leach, cyanide gold mine in the foothills of the Centennial Mountains—and what we’re doing to protect this unspoiled piece of public land near Kilgore.
The Centennial Mountains and surrounding foothills have long played host to family farms and ranches, lush meadows, clear streams, and iconic wildlife species. Now, a financially unstable foreign mining company plans to methodically dismantle the forested hillsides in search of gold, threatening to mar the landscape forever and pollute this quiet swath of public land with toxic mining waste.
Come join the Clean Kilgore Coalition to discuss what makes Kilgore special, and why it’s no place for an open-pit, heap-leach cyanide gold mine.
Please RSVP to let us know you’re coming.
Kilgore Gold Exploration Community Site Tour + Lunch
Join the Clean Kilgore Coalition for a free lunch and tour of the Kilgore Gold Exploration Site, where a toxic open-pit, heap-leach, cyanide gold mine threatens the Centennial Mountains and the Eastern Snake Plain Aquifer.
How to Halt a Gold Mine in Idaho: The Kilgore Project’s Cyanide Threat [Webinar]
As part of the Greater Yellowstone Coalition’s Spring Forward Webinar Series, GYC’s Idaho Conservation Organizer Tom Hallberg will present about the threats posed by the Kilgore Gold Exploration Project and the work the Clean Kilgore Coalition is doing to stop it.
Idaho Falls Listening Session
Join the Clean Kilgore Coalition for a free event featuring presentations from the Greater Yellowstone Coalition and Idaho Conservation League about how a toxic open-pit, heap-leach, cyanide gold mine would threaten the Centennial Mountains and the Eastern Snake Plain Aquifer, and what’s being done to stop it.
Pocatello Listening Session
Join the Clean Kilgore Coalition for a free event featuring presentations from the Greater Yellowstone Coalition and Idaho Rivers United about how a toxic open-pit, heap-leach, cyanide gold mine would threaten the Centennial Mountains and the Eastern Snake Plain Aquifer, and what’s being done to stop it.

