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Hopi Tribe's Message to Sierra Club and Other Enviros: Keep Out!

Posted by Tara Lohan, AlterNet at 5:19 PM on October 2, 2009.


It seems the contention is over a a coal plant.

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This is sad on many different levels. The Navajo-Hopi Observer reports:

The Hopi Tribe has a message for the Sierra Club and other environmental groups: Keep out!

That is the response of the Hopi Tribal Council on Monday to what it says has been continuous concerted attacks from local and national environmental groups "bent on advancing their interests and agenda at the expense of the Hopi Tribe and its sovereign interest."

The council wants the Sierra Club and other environmental groups and on-reservation organizations affiliated with these groups to know they are not welcome on the Hopi Reservation, declaring them persona non grata - no longer favored or welcome.

Apparently the conflict is over a coal plant. Here's more:

 

By a resolution approved 12-0, the council said environmentalists have deprived the tribe "of markets for its coal resources" and coal revenues needed to sustain governmental services, provide jobs for tribal members and safeguard Hopi culture and tradition.

In 2005, environmental groups played a significant role in the shutdown of the Mohave Generating Station, which the Hopi Council contends "deprived the Hopi Tribe of many millions of dollars of annual operating revenues," according to the resolution.

Revenue losses from the Mohave power plant range from an estimated $6.5 million to $8.5 million annually.

The council feels that the economic viability of the Navajo Generating Station - the tribe's only remaining coal customer - is also being threatened, and that environmentalists' actions could lead to "total economic collapse of the tribe."

The Sierra Club issued a statement saying: "We are proud of our longstanding partnerships with tribal leaders in the Southwest, and we are committed to supporting efforts to transition from dirty coal to clean energy solutions," said Sierra Club President Allison Chin. "Together, we can rekindle our economy, reduce greenhouse gases and support people who have been left in the dust by a dangerous and dirty, coal-based economy."

The saddest part of this is that the tribe is dependent on a dirty power source to economically support their people and that enough efforts have not been made by anyone -- enviro groups, the federal government, etc. -- to help them develop addition sources of income.

Digg!

Tagged as: coal, sierra club, hopi

Tara Lohan is a managing editor at AlterNet.


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Look deeper
Posted by: canislatrans on Oct 2, 2009 6:32 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Hopi Tribal Council is a wholly owned subsidiary of the coal companies. It was created in the mid-1950s by a non-Hopi coal lawyer, and it's been owned ever since by big Coal.

Background here.

It's worth noting that much of the opposition to coal mining on the Hopi res comes from the Hopi themselves.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: Look deeper Posted by: Joni50
This reminds me of another tribal council that tried to get nuclear waste stored on their res
Posted by: Paul_C on Oct 2, 2009 7:57 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The tribespeople themselves don't see that money. And it is pathetic that they have been reduced to this.

Don't forget that the feds have been grossly mismanaging Indian monies for probably some 100 years or so - money that rightfully is theirs as de facto wards of the state.

When are we going to do right by these people from whom we stole everything, even to this day?

peace,
Paul

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White lawyers
Posted by: LRayn on Oct 2, 2009 8:15 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thank you, canislatrans for the blog link. I will make sure people on Flagstaff know about it.

Lisa Rayner,
Flagstaff, AZ

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Once again, sovereignty is the issue
Posted by: talapuspete on Oct 3, 2009 9:29 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A few years back, the Makah Indians, acting on their unsurrendered rights as a sovereign nation, took up whale hunting after many years of inaction. This produced screams of outrage and demands for intervention from some environmental organizations. The outrage soon degenerated into barely concealed racist attacks against the Makah. After many struggles, the courts allowed the nation to act as a sovereign power.

White people have interfered for years in the struggle over national boundaries between the Dine and Hopi people, some both nations have to work out for themselves. This is their right as well as their obligation. Nations have obligations, if you remember—and one of America's obligations is to respect other, sovereign nations. This means butt out. And this is what America has to do on a world-wide basis—as well as within our own boundaries.

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Green racists
Posted by: Comrade Laissez-Faire on Oct 3, 2009 10:30 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Republican and Democratic parties to this day continue to exercise a racist colonial master Native American policy, only allowing reservations a certain amount of autonomy as opposed to the option of true independent sovereignty. Racism from the Left mainly comes from environmental and animal rights organizations dominated by whites who use the arm of the U.S. federal government to interfere with reservation hunting, fishing, whaling, and mining practices.

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» RE: Green racists Posted by: talapuspete
» RE: Green racists Posted by: vand
» RE: Green racists BULLCRAP Posted by: welefttheright
Bad Journalism by Euro-Centric Liberals
Posted by: Naomi on Oct 3, 2009 2:18 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Another example of a eurocentric liberal writer attempting to cover Indigenous issues without seeming to understand even the most basic history of Indigenous struggle.

Anyone remotely familiar with Indigenous rights and sovereignty understands that many so-called "tribal councils" were Bureau of Indian Affairs constructions intended to replace traditional forms of tribal governance with ones that would be more pliable to US and corporate dominance.

And all respect to those on BIA councils who work hard to represent their people without caving to the US corporate agenda.

I don't know why it takes an alternet READER to explain the issue when the writer, who is an alternet EDITOR, could have done her homework instead of waxing in guilt and sadness over her misconception.

Maybe its time that white liberals stopped being so damn "sad" about Natives and instead do the hard work of decolonizing their minds from eurocentric BS that perpetuates genocide of native peoples EVERY SINGLE DAY.

Isn't it about time?

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» RE: Yes, it is about time. Posted by: Sister_Lauren
This is great
Posted by: FreeAmerica on Oct 4, 2009 5:39 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is about time that someone sent the NRDC, sierra club, and the other nosy bastards packing. Who needs a bunch of arrogant lawyer's club assholes telling them that they can't make a living producing a completely legal product?

The enviro-lawyer sleazeballs have no legally cognizable interest in Hopi affairs, and should have been told to get fucked a long time ago.

They are lucky I'm not Hopi Council. There would be bullet holes in the back of the green slimes' Lexus and Mercedes cars, and a fresh extortion prosecution under the Hobbs and RICO Acts well under way.

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» RE: This is great Posted by: vand
Can 'any-one' say ... "White Priviledge" ??
Posted by: dave1616 on Oct 5, 2009 8:00 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
.... veeerryy goooooddd , Boys and Girls ....
.... Now Kids , OUR NEXT WORD FOR THE DAY 'IS' , "THE WHITE MAN'S BURDEN" ....

Yes , I realize Jimmy , that it's more than just ONE word ...

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Hopi Tribal Council: The Rush Limbaughs of the Hopi People
Posted by: Bambi on Oct 5, 2009 8:25 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Used to spend summers on Third Mesa in Hotevilla. Basically, the Hopi Tribal Council are sell outs who hate their own people. They are delusional douchebags who are worse than the execs of Peabody ... because at least Peabody Coal people know who they are.

Disgusting.

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Peter Cross
Posted by: oldecodger on Oct 5, 2009 9:36 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Now it is my impression that significant areas of the Hopi reservation are unproductive land--near-desert. How about the conservation organizations helping with the investment for a solar thermal plant on some of this land? Mirrors ought to be put up on some supports, providing less drying conditions for soil underneath, where more grazing might take place.

A serious proposal of this sort might envision protracted employment building the plant, extending it, and maintaining it, thus more $$ to the tribal members themselves. If the 'tribal' organization really represents the long-term welfare of the tribe, or does not, then the deliberations and decision ought at least serve to make that clear. With this kind of setup (if built), the tribe itself can sell power long term, for a 'clean' and permanent source of income.

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I've Read All The Comments And I Want To Ask Those
Posted by: Priam1 on Oct 5, 2009 9:42 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
critizing the Council position and implying that they are in cahoots with the Energy Companies if they would be willing to personally subsidize the Hopi or any other Indian Tribe for their losses in Revenues? If you follow the links, it becomes very obvious that there are no viable alternatives for these people. Until you are ready to replace the lost jobs with 1)other jobs, 2)replace their lost wages with yours--not the "governments,"then really you need to do what the Hopi Council asks: Get Off Their Land And Shut Up!!!!

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Upstartgreen
Posted by: upstartgreen on Oct 5, 2009 11:03 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Hopi should be installing Renewable Energy Facilities instead of Coal.

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