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Allies / Get help

We're not alone — and we don't have to start from scratch

Groups across New York and the country have fought exactly this kind of project — and several help local communities for free. Here's who they are, what each one offers, and how to plug in.

Start here

The first calls to make

Start at the top — this is roughly the order we'd reach out in. The coalition and the experienced NY groups open the door to everyone else.

National Coalition Against Cryptomining (NCAC)

  • What it offers — a free national network built for exactly this fight — active in 20+ states, with a playbook, peer mentors who've already done it, and a warm path to the environmental lawyers. Finger Lakes veterans of New York's crypto fights are inside it.
  • How to plug in — this is our first email. They route us to people who've won, and to Earthjustice.
  • Contactcontact@nationalcoalitionagainstcryptomining.com · nationalcoalitionagainstcryptomining.com

Seneca Lake Guardian — Yvonne Taylor

  • What it offers — the grassroots group that led New York's Greenidge crypto-mine fight, and explicitly coaches other NY towns. The most experienced, warmest NY contact available — and the warm introduction into Earthjustice and the Sierra Club.
  • How to plug in — call or email and say a NY town is organizing against a 635 MW expansion.
  • Contact(607) 342-1278 · senecalakeguardian@gmail.com · info@senecalakeguardian.org

MUSH — Mohawks United (Akwesasne)

  • What it offers — a local, member-led grassroots group already fighting this project — and the bridge to the Mohawk governments who are already on record opposing it.
  • How to plug in — they have no website — connect in person at a Massena library or town meeting, or through North Country Now / NCPR's Catherine Wheeler, or via the SRMT Environment Division.
The river & sovereignty heavyweight

The seat at the table residents don't have

St. Regis Mohawk Tribe — Environment Division

  • What it offers — a funded environment office with a formal seat at the table — the Tribe co-manages the St. Lawrence River Area of Concern with NYS DEC, was a natural-resource-damages trustee in the $19.4M Alcoa settlement, and members have publicly opposed the zoning change. Treaty / sovereignty standing a resident simply doesn't have.
  • How to plug in — a resident's role is to align and amplify, not to recruit. Hand them the contaminated-ground / river angle and ask how residents can support the Division's work.
  • Contact — Director Tony David — tony.david@srmt-nsn.gov · (518) 358-5937 · environment@srmt-nsn.gov · 449 Frogtown Road, Akwesasne NY.
The legal muscle

Best reached through the coalition, not cold

Earthjustice — Northeast Office

  • What it offers — the top environmental-litigation muscle in the country on these fights — represents community groups for free, already counsel in New York's crypto cases. They pick strategic cases.
  • How to plug in — best approached through NCAC / Seneca Lake Guardian, not cold. There's also a "request legal assistance" form.
  • Contact(212) 845-7376 · neoffice@earthjustice.org · earthjustice.org/about/request-legal-assistance

Sierra Club — Atlantic Chapter

  • What it offers — has sued repeatedly over New York crypto mining; policy and organizing weight statewide.
  • How to plug in — reach the chapter conservation director, Roger Downs.
  • Contactsierraclub.org/atlantic

Save The River / Upper St. Lawrence Riverkeeper

  • What it offers — a Waterkeeper-affiliate group with direct standing on St. Lawrence River impacts — a natural local ally on the water side.
  • How to plug in — reach them through their site.
  • Contactsavetheriver.org
A realistic word on what these allies can do. This network can delay a project, raise its costs, win conditions, and shape state policy — the best-lawyered NY crypto fight (Greenidge) won a permit denial, then settled, and the plant still runs. A guaranteed shutdown isn't on the table. But organized, sourced, persistent pressure is exactly what moves a board, a regulator, and a governor. That's the game we're in, and it's winnable on the terms that matter: a real review, real conditions, and a town that was actually heard.

While you're reaching out to allies, get your own comment on the record →