arizona independent media center Calendar arizona independent media center
Calendar About Us Contact Us Subscribe Publish








printable version
email this article

View article without comments

Save the Peaks Coalition Press Conference Audio
by iam Tuesday, Mar. 08, 2005 at 9:01 PM

MP3 audio from the Save the Peaks Coalition press conference in response to the Forest Service's decision to allow Arizona Snowbowl Ski Resort to expand and make snow with wastewater.

(I had problems posting the MP3s to this server so i will just post the links to the Save the Peaks Coalition's files)

1. Press Conference (20min 06 sec - 13.8 MB)
http://savethepeaks.org/audio/STPC%20press%20conference%201.mp3

2. Questions ( 10 min - 6.8 MB)
http://savethepeaks.org/audio/STPC%20press%20conference%202.mp3

3. Closing Song (4 min 41 sec - 3.2 MB)
http://savethepeaks.org/audio/STPC%20press%20conference%203.mp3

Forest Service Decision Misses Opportunity to Protect Cultural and Environmental Values of Sacred Peaks
Coalition Condemns Nora Rasure's Decision to Allow Snowmaking with Wastewater, Vows to Stop Plan.

Flagstaff, AZ--  Coconino National Forest Supervisor Nora Rasure's decision to allow Arizona Snowbowl to use reclaimed wastewater to make artificial snow on the sacred San Francisco Peaks drew outrage from its many long-time opponents, who vowed to stop the plan.

"Ms. Rasure's decision flies in the face of facts in their own Draft Environmental Impact Statement, respect for ancient traditions and sound ecological and economic judgment," said Save the Peaks Coalition member Klee Benally. "The Coalition will be challenging this decision in hopes that her superiors will defend the mountain's natural and cultural values."

Leaders from fourteen Southwestern tribes who hold the mountain sacred met with Rasure in February at a summit hosted by the Coalition. They expressed their opposition to Snowbowl's plans for development on the San Francisco Peaks.

Navajo Nation President Joe Shirley Jr.'s remarks underscored the mountain's great cultural significance and emphasized the severe adverse impacts the Snowbowl plan would have on Native peoples throughout the region.

" We want to share with you what it means when we say, 'the Peaks are us...it is Navajo, Hopi, Zuni, Acoma.'" Shirley said. "When you build on it, when you talk about putting wastewater on it, you are desecrating our life. You are chipping away at our way of life and committing genocide.

"We are an endangered species," Shirley continued. "We need all the help we can get...My heart cries when I hear sacred sites are desecrated. As a leader, I am doing all I can to save them."

Tribes represented at the summit were Hopi, Hualapai, Havasupai, Navajo, Kiabab-Paiute, Yavapai-Apache, Salt River, San Carlos Apache, Zuni and Acoma Nations.

Rasure's decision shows disrespect for the human rights of tribal members who look to the Peaks for their cultural and spiritual needs. In addition, the environmental impacts from snowmaking with reclaimed water will cause long term problems on the Peaks and destroy critical alpine habitat found in few places in Arizona.

Critics of Rasure's decision say it misses an opportunity to improve community relations.

"The Forest Service has squandered an opportunity to do the right thing," said Andy Bessler a Coalition member and representative of the Sierra Club. "This plan is culturally and environmentally destructive. "

"The Forest Service's own documents prove that snowmaking will not impact Flagstaff's economy in a significant way, will not allow more skiers to use Snowbowl, and without adequate natural snow, not improve skiing conditions," Bessler said.

"With her decision, Rasure is deepening an unhealthy division between indigenous and non-indigenous peoples in the Southwest," said Kelvin Long director of ECHOES (Educating Communities While Healing and Offering Environmental Support). "It only supports the goals and missions of non-native communities. In order to build healthy relationships, cultural and religious traditions need to be respected."

Traditional cultural practioners have strongly objected to the plan, which they say is a threat to the mountain they consider central to their identity. The Dine' Medicine Mens' Association voted unanimously to oppose the plan after the draft EIS was released in 2004.



"Unfortunately, we are not surprised by this," said Coalition member Michael Wolcott. "The Forest Service has repeatedly favored Snowbowl's commercial goals over spiritual and environmental values, despite vigorous longstanding opposition from tribes and environmentalists."

Conservationists also cite possible harm to wildlife from endocrine disruptors and other chemicals found in reclaimed water.

The Save the Peaks Coalition will fight the decision through the Federal Government's administrative process and demand that the unique ecological and cultural values of the Peaks be protected.


###

add your comments


Greed wins?
by me Thursday, Mar. 10, 2005 at 4:07 PM
floresdelaurel@hushmail.com

We must rally together all of the great, spiritually and environmentally conscious minds of Flagstaff andevery other corner of Arizona to fight this cause. If anyone knows a righteous lawyer, inform him. Call on him for advice. Write a guest article for the Lumberjack, put pressure on the regional forest service manager in Albuquerque. Call on scientists. Talk to your classmates, coworkers, friends, family. We need to inform eachother in this Age of oppression.
Seek the truth.
Network the Ones Who Care.
Even if you just do one thing you are lending momentum to the Cry Out Against Greed. Greed should not win over the environment., over spiritual beliefs and ancient ways.
Be honest. It is wrong to put wastewater on The Peaks.
Would you put a dodgeball court against the wailing wall?
Would you piss in the Sistine Chapel?
Beautiful and righteous, spiritual sentient (feeling) beings, rally together.
BOYCOTT SNOWBOWL. ALL GREED NO RESPECT. NOT FOR PAST OR FUTURE.
-Laurel

add your comments



IMC Network: www.indymedia.org africa: ambazonia canarias estrecho / madiaq nigeria south africa canada: alberta hamilton maritimes montreal ontario ottawa quebec thunder bay vancouver victoria windsor winnipeg east asia: japan manila qc europe: alacant andorra antwerpen athens austria barcelona belgium belgrade bristol bulgaria croatia cyprus estrecho / madiaq euskal herria galiza germany grenoble hungary ireland istanbul italy la plana liege lille madrid marseille nantes netherlands nice norway oost-vlaanderen paris poland portugal romania russia scotland sverige switzerland thessaloniki united kingdom west vlaanderen latin america: argentina bolivia brasil chiapas chile colombia ecuador mexico peru puerto rico qollasuyu rosario santiago sonora tijuana uruguay valparaiso oceania: adelaide aotearoa brisbane darwin jakarta manila melbourne perth qc sydney south asia: india mumbai united states: arizona arkansas atlanta austin baltimore binghamton boston buffalo charlottesville chicago cleveland colorado danbury, ct dc hawaii houston hudson mohawk idaho ithaca kansas city la madison maine miami michigan milwaukee minneapolis/st. paul new hampshire new jersey new mexico new orleans north carolina north texas nyc oklahoma philadelphia pittsburgh portland richmond rochester rogue valley san diego san francisco san francisco bay area santa barbara santa cruz, ca seattle st louis tallahassee-red hills tennessee urbana-champaign utah vermont western mass worcester west asia: beirut israel palestine process: discussion fbi/legal updates indymedia faq mailing lists process & imc docs tech volunteer projects: print radio satellite tv video regions: oceania united states topics: biotech


© 2000-2005 Arizona Indymedia. Unless otherwise stated by the author, all content is free for non-commercial reuse, reprint, and rebroadcast, on the net and elsewhere. Opinions are those of the contributors and are not necessarily endorsed by the Arizona Indymedia. Running sf-active v0.9.4 Disclaimer | Privacy