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CREATED:20051111T080000Z
DESCRIPTION:Bruce Babbitt, former U.S. Secretary of the Interior  presents Cities in 
 the Wilderness, A New Vision of Land Use in America  Friday, 1:00 at The 
 Oakland Zoo Marian Zimmer Auditorium  9777 Golf Links Road, Oakland, CA 
 94605  http://www.oaklandzoo.org  In his book Babbitt challenges the 
 government to consider further  legislation to combat the threat of urban 
 sprawl. Please join Secretary  Babbitt as he explores the need for unified 
 national land use policy  while maintianing local control.  Free and open 
 to the public.  San Francisco Peaks  >From many places in northern Arizona, 
 the horizon is dramatically marked  by three 12,000-foot volcanic peaks 
 that rise out of the Colorado  Plateau south of the Grand Canyon and north 
 of Flagstaff. The San  Francisco Peaks are sacred to 13 tribes. For the 
 Navajo, the Peaks are  the sacred mountain of the west, Doko’oo’sliid, 
 “Shining On Top,” a key  boundary marker and a place where medicine men 
 collect herbs for  healing ceremonies. To the Hopi, the Peaks are 
 Nuvatukaovi, “The Place  of Snow on the Very Top,” home for half of the 
 year to the ancestral  kachina spirits who live among the clouds around the 
 summit. When  properly honored through song and ceremony, the kachinas 
 bring gentle  rains to thirsty corn plants. The peaks are one of the 
 “sacred places  where the Earth brushes up against the unseen world,” 
 in the words of  Yavapai-Apache Chairman Vincent Randall.  History of the 
 Conflict  The San Francisco Peaks, part of the Coconino National Forest, 
 have long  been the source of land-use conflicts. Starting in the late 
 1800s, the  area was extensively logged and grazed. At the same time, the 
 area’s  dramatic beauty attracted tourists and the pull for recreational 
 use  has not ceased. The area is under the domain of the U.S. Forest  
 Service, which has a mandate to allow multiple uses on its lands.  
 Consequently, the Forest Service allowed the construction of a ski  lodge 
 and access road on its northern slopes in the 1930s. Full-scale  
 development—with shops, restaurants and lodges—was first proposed in  
 1969, but the opposition of several tribes and community groups  prevented 
 this initial project.  However, in 1979, the Forest Service approved a new 
 lodge, a paved road  and expanded parking, four new lifts and fifty acres 
 of trails to be  added to the existing ski area, which would grow to 777 
 acres. The  Native people in the area protested that this invasion 
 imperiled their  religious freedom. As the chairman of the Hopi tribe 
 warned, “If the  ski resort remains or is expanded, our people will not 
 accept the view  that this is the sacred home of the Kachinas. The basis of 
 our  existence will become a mere fairy tale.” Despite Hopi and Navajo  
 protests, the Forest Service regional supervisor in 1980 approved the  
 paving of an access road into the Peaks. The Hopi and Navajo filed  
 separate lawsuits to stop the development, while the Forest Service  argued 
 that religious rights would be unimpeded, and even facilitated,  by the ski 
 lifts. Three years later (the suits having been consolidated  into one 
 case, Wilson v. Block), the Hopi and Navajo were unable to  convince the 
 District of Columbia Circuit Court that the Peaks were  "indispensable" to 
 their religions, and the suit was denied. According  to the judge, 
 permitting the Ski Bowl expansion may have "offended"  their beliefs, but 
 the Forest Service had faithfully met all the  provisions of the American 
 Indian Religious Freedom Act of 1978.  In the 1980s, the fashion for 
 “stone-washed” denim jeans added another  layer to the jumble of land 
 use claims at the San Francisco Peaks. The  White Vulcan Pumice Mine, 7500 
 feet up on the eastern slopes of the  mountain, supplied pumice, which is 
 used to create the “stone-washed”  denim effect, and is also used in 
 cement and agriculture. Pumice mining  is a destructive process which 
 involves completely removing all  vegetation and topsoil. The 90 acre mine 
 was operated by Tufflite until  August 28th, 2000 when the federal 
 government brokered an agreement  with the company. The process was spurred 
 by Tufflite’s proposal to  expand the mine and a Forest Service lawsuit 
 which alleged violations  of the Clean Water Act and destruction or damage 
 of archaeological  sites. Secretary of the Interior Bruce Babbitt was a key 
 player in the  process, advocating for the closure of the mine. Tufflite 
 agreed to  shut the mine in 6 months, and restore the site within 5 years. 
 The  company also gave up its other 49 mining claims and its effort to sell 
  some of the mine to a private buyer. In return the government dropped  the 
 lawsuit and paid Tufflite $1 million.  Current Status  The Forest Service 
 went further when it recommended to Secretary Babbitt  that 74,000 acres of 
 the Peaks be protected from all new mining claims  for 20 years. It has 
 also petitioned to have the area designated a  Traditional Cultural 
 Property under Section 106 of the National  Historic Preservation Act. As a 
 Traditional Cultural Property, the San  Francisco Peaks would be 
 permanently shielded from mining.  The present-day Arizona Snow Bowl ski 
 area hosts 30,000 to 180,000  visitors per year. Visitor numbers fluctuate 
 according to the snowfall;  hence the resort is seeking to manufacture 
 extra snow using wastewater  from the city of Flagstaff. Once again, area 
 tribes and community  members are working together to fight this proposal. 
 Because the  natural melting snow goes into an aquifer within the mountain 
 which is  then piped to provide water for Flagstaff, they fear the waste 
 water in  the manufactured snow will pollute the pure mountain water.  The 
 Snowbowl Resort also stated in 1997 that it wanted to add another 66  acres 
 of trails and a major upgrade of existing ski runs, relying on  the 
 precedent of the 1979 Forest Service decision. The snow-making  proposal 
 and expansion plans are now being considered by the Coconino  National 
 Forest, subject to a full environmental investigation as  stipulated in the 
 National Environmental Policy Act. The first step in  this process occurred 
 in September 2002 when the Forest released a  Proposed Action in response 
 to the Arizona Snowbowl’s proposal. This  will be followed by an 
 Environmental Impact Statement, an investigation  of alternatives and 
 public hearings.  Lessons Learned  The history and ongoing conflict at the 
 San Francisco Peaks is a good  example of the sometimes contradictory 
 positions taken by a single  government agency, and the potential influence 
 of community pressure.  The Forest Service has gone from encouraging skiing 
 outright to  nominating the area for permanent protected status to 
 considering  resort expansions. By subjecting the new proposal to full 
 environmental  review, the Forest Service is at least giving room for 
 public comment  on the future of the mountain. The story highlights the 
 effectiveness  of local coalitions of tribal groups, activists, and 
 ordinary citizens.  This coalition is also active in the fight to stop 
 Peabody Coal  Company’s depletion of the aquifer beneath Black Mesa.  
 However, it also illustrates the limitations of the American Indian  
 Religious Freedom Act. AIRFA’s wording has been interpreted narrowly by  
 the courts; in the example of the San Francisco Peaks, because the ski  
 resort did not prevent the tribes from practicing their religion, the  
 court found that the legislation did not apply. There is no provision  for 
 a substantial negative impact on religious practices. In addition,  AIRFA 
 is more effective when a specific site can be designated, such as  a 
 shrine, but the act is unable to take into account situations which  
 involve an entire landscape, as is often the case with sacred places.  The 
 Peaks are a classic example of a large area—the center of a 100  mile 
 radius landscape—which has been used by more than a dozen tribes  over 
 centuries, including foot trails, shrines, and view sheds. Due to  the 
 weaknesses of AIRFA, the Section 106 process of National Historic  
 Preservation Act may be the best protection at the moment. In the long  
 term, it points to the need for a new, stronger sacred law to protect  
 sacred landscapes.  Finally, the mining at the San Francisco Peaks is 
 another example of the  urgent need for a revision of the antiquated 1872 
 Mining Law, which  allows companies to mine on public land for minimal or 
 no fees.  Reprinted from http://www.sacredlands.org\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2005/11/11/80693.php
SUMMARY: 	Protest Bruce Babbitt at the Oakland Zoo. 1:00 PM
LOCATION:Friday, 1:00 at The Oakland Zoo Marian Zimmer Auditorium  9777 Golf Links 
 Road, Oakland, CA 94605  http://www.oaklandzoo.org  
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2005/11/11/80693.php
DTSTART:20051111T210000Z
DTEND:20051112T000000Z
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