|
by Kathy Helms, Staff
Writer
Gallup
Independent
04 February 2005
FORT
DEFIANCE — Loss of revenue from the closure of Mohave Generating
Station and Black Mesa Mine would force the layoff of at least 150
of the Hopi Tribe's 500 employees. In addition, 13 percent of the
Navajo Nation government's non-mine labor force would lose jobs
along with 300 mine workers.
Hopi
Tribal Chairman Wayne Taylor Jr., at the invitation of the Arizona
State Senate Natural Resources Committee, traveled to Phoenix
Wednesday to brief the group on potential impacts to the tribes
from the impending closures.
The Hopi
Tribe is in a fight for its very survival as a people, faced with
an economic crisis of enormous proportions. Already a poor nation,
the closure of Mohave and Black Mesa would be an economic disaster
for the Hopi people, Taylor told the committee.
"I
carry within me a very real fear that our way of life the Hopi Way
will soon become a way of the past," he said. "Our
culture one of the oldest in North America is dying. Our crisis is
both immediate and long-term."
By the
end of this year, environmental lawsuits likely will force the
closure of Mohave, which in turn will force the closure of Black
Mesa Mine, a joint Hopi-Navajo enterprise, the chairman said. The
mine has supplied coal slurry to the 1,580-megawatt generating
station in Laughlin, Nev., since 1970 through a 273-mile pipeline.
Mohave provides electrical power to Southern California, Arizona
and Nevada.
Taylor
said coal royalties paid to the Hopi Tribe by Peabody Energy,
operators of the mine, generate more than one third of Hopi tribal
government revenue. "Try to imagine, if you will, a
municipality, a county or a state losing one-third of its
government revenues," Taylor said.
With
declining funds, the Hopi Tribal Council and leaders of the
largely autonomous villages are desperate for funds to provide
adequate housing and municipal services to residents. "Power,
telecommunications and water and sewer services in most villages
is lacking or woefully inadequate," the chairman said.
"Three villages Old Oraibi, Walpi and Lower Moenkopi have no
running water or electricity at all."
Desperate
needs There are 12,000 members of the Hopi Tribe, 7,000 of them
living on their ancestral homeland. More than half of Hopi adults
are unemployed. The average household income is less than $16,000
a year.
"There
is a desperate need for housing. Many of the traditional sandstone
homes are crumbling and in disrepair. Forty percent of the houses
lack adequate plumbing and kitchen facilities," he said.
Because
many of the tribe's young people are being forced by economic
realities to leave the homeland and find opportunity elsewhere and
are taking their children with them, the children may not learn to
speak the Hopi language or participate in traditional ceremonies.
Taylor
said the Hopi people are not without many tools to grow a strong
economy, but they also have needs, the most urgent of which is
water. "Of all the ingredients necessary for economic
development, none is more important than water and the means to
deliver it to homes, businesses and industry. Water is crucial to
our existence and our way of life. Indeed, it defines who we
are," he said.
Snow and
infrequent rain supply moisture for Hopi fields, while the Navajo
Aquifer feeds the washes and springs, providing water for drinking
and for use in katsina and religious ceremonies. The Hopi homeland
receives only about 10 inches of rain per year. "Our
situation has worsened with the prolonged drought," Taylor
said.
He told
the committee that a recent study commissioned by Congress and
conducted by the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation (BOR) concluded that
the Hopi and Navajo nations have insufficient water to meet their
needs for the next 100 years. The report also found that the
Navajo Aquifer was insufficient to meet the future municipal and
industrial needs of the Hopi people.
The study
predicts that continued reliance on the Navajo Aquifer will have
devastating consequences for Hopi. "The study states that
within 20 to 30 years our wells and springs on culturally sacred
lands will dry up, causing and I quote 'substantial harm to tribal
societies and cultures ... adversely impacting the economy of the
region,'" Taylor said.
Water is
key Nearly 230 of the 340 tribes in the lower 48 states now
operate casinos as a means of generating government revenue;
however, Taylor pointed out, "We are, in fact, the only
non-gaming federally recognized tribe in Arizona."
Though
the Hopi respect the decision of other Native nations to engage in
gaming as a means of strengthening tribal governments and building
tribal economies, "The Hopi people in two referendums
rejected casino gambling as a means of generating economic
development. Gaming is not the Hopi Way," Taylor said.
"We must be more creative. Our challenges are greater."
The Hopi
Tribe agrees with conclusions in the BOR study, which states the
need to import water to the Hopi and Navajo nations. "We are
taking steps to do just that," Taylor said. "The Hopi
and Navajo nations are working with parties to the lawsuit to
negotiate the myriad of complex legal agreements necessary to keep
the mine and the power plant operating."
Both
tribes are working with the Department of the Interior, BOR, the
owners of Mohave and Peabody Energy to develop a pipeline to bring
water from the Coconino Aquifer (C-aquifer) that lies beneath Hopi
and Navajo land to the mine and Hopi villages.
"We
are not talking about taking water from non-Indian land. This is
water from Indian land which we wish to utilize for desperately
needed economic development on Indian land," he said.
BOR is
now performing a $6 million study of the hydrology and
environmental impacts to determine the viability of drawing 6,000
acre feet of water per year from the C-aquifer to meet the future
needs of Black Mesa Mine. The study is being paid for by Peabody
and Southern California Edison, which also have agreed to fund
construction of the 120-mile pipeline, estimated to cost at least
$200 million.
Preliminary
results show the aquifer can provide the water without causing a
negative impact to surface waterways, endangered species habitat
or current municipal/industrial uses. A final report is expect in
late summer.
According
to the chairman, several other communities in Arizona as well as
three power plants are currently using the C-aquifer. Each of the
plants draws about 20,000 acre feet of water per year.
"Together, the plants are using more than 10 times the amount
of water Hopi is seeking," Taylor said.
Loss
amounts to billions Environmentalists have expressed concern over
mining and water issues on Hopi, "but stewardship over the
land is very much a part of the Hopi way of life. We have lived on
our ancestral lands for more than 1,200 years," he said.
"We
have learned over the years to preserve our precious resources,
particularly the waters of the Navajo Aquifer. We have no
intention of doing harm to our lands or surrounding
communities," Taylor emphsized. He said he hopes
environmentalists will work with the tribes to extend the consent
decree over the scheduled closure of Mohave.
Also,
Taylor said, the tribe is hopeful that the federal government and
others will provide an additional $15 million to expand the
pipeline. "We hope and anticipate this money will come from
settlement of the Little Colorado River adjudication," he
said.
Closure
of Black Mesa would represent a loss of at least $15 million a
year in taxes to the state of Arizona and another $85 million a
year which Black Mesa and Mohave inject into the local community
in the form of coal and water royalties, taxes, wages, vendor
contracts, scholarships and charitable contributions, according to
Taylor.
A layoff
of at least 150 Hopi tribal employees would lead to poverty for
them as well as their immediate and extended families. "For
the Navajo, the situation may be even worse," he said.
"We understand that 13 percent of Navajo government's
non-mine labor force would lose their jobs." Additionally,
the 300 Navajos who work at Black Mesa would lose their average
wages of $60,000 to $70,000, Taylor said.
"Shutting
Mohave would result in a $1.7 billion loss to the tribes over the
expected 20-year remaining life of the plant," much of which
is spent in non-Indian border towns, according to the chairman.
Taylor
said that in addition to the Coconino Pipeline project, the Hopi
Tribe has acquired 6,000 acre feet of Colorado River water rights
in the Cibola Basin and is hoping for cooperation from the state,
federal government, and other Arizona tribes to complete a
pipeline project from Lake Powell to bring needed water to Hopi
and other Arizona communities.
He asked
the committee to help bring water to Hopi so that the tribe can
grow an economy that will benefit its people and others throughout
Arizona.
"Nothing
causes me greater concern than the preservation of the Hopi way of
life in this complex, modern world. I ask that you help prevent
the Hopi Way from becoming a way of the past," the chairman
said.
|