[IPSM] Tribe Lays Claim to 3,100 Square Miles of New York State
usman x
sandinista at shaw.ca
Sat Mar 12 10:43:50 PST 2005
From
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/03/12/nyregion/12indian.html?th&oref=login
March 12, 2005
Tribe Lays Claim to 3,100 Square Miles of New York State, but It Will Settle
for Less
By KIRK SEMPLE
he Onondaga Nation, an Indian tribe based in upstate New York, filed a
lawsuit yesterday claiming that it owns 3,100 square miles of land
stretching from the St. Lawrence Seaway to the Pennsylvania border and
including Syracuse.
The tribe contends that the State of New York illegally acquired the land in
a series of treaties between 1788 and 1822 and has asked the Federal
District Court in Syracuse to declare that it still holds title to the land,
which is now home to hundreds of thousands of people and includes all or
part of 11 counties.
It is the largest Indian land claim ever filed in the state. The tribe said
that it does not want all of that land, however, but that its principal
intent is to gain leverage to clean up polluted sites in the land claim
area.
The lawsuit names as defendants the State of New York, the City of Syracuse
and Onondaga County, as well as five corporations that, the nation contends,
have damaged the environment in the claim area.
Todd Alhart, a spokesman for Gov. George E. Pataki, said late yesterday that
the governor's office had not yet received a copy of the claim. "We will
take whatever steps may be necessary to protect the interests of property
owners and taxpayers in central New York, the Southern Tier and the northern
New York region," Mr. Alhart said.
Unlike other Indian tribes that have filed land claims against the state,
the Onondaga Nation, which has about 1,500 members, is not seeking monetary
damages or the right to operate casinos in New York. Instead, tribal
representatives said, the Onondagas want a declaratory judgment saying the
land, which they consider ancestral territory, was taken illegally.
They then hope to use such a ruling to force the cleanup of sites in the
claim area, particularly Onondaga Lake, a federal Superfund site and one of
the most contaminated bodies of water in the nation.
The Onondaga Nation has made the cleanup of the lake, which is 4.5 miles
long and one mile wide, one of its priorities. The tribe has lived near the
lake for centuries and regards it as sacred land.
Tribal representatives said yesterday that the nation would not sue
individual property owners or try to evict them.
"The nation has said flat-out that individuals have nothing to worry about,"
said Dan Klotz, a spokesman for the nation. The Onondagas, he said, "will
not waver from that."
Other pending Indian land claims in New York have not interfered with
property transactions, experts on Indian law said.
"They don't plan to press for eviction as a remedy and I don't think there's
ever been a court that has seriously considered eviction," said John
Dossett, general counsel for the National Congress of American Indians, a
Washington, D.C.-based advocacy group for tribal governments. "I think that
homeowners can rest easy."
At the same time, however, tribal authorities said they were in the market
for more land. The nation's reservation is an 11-square-mile parcel south of
Syracuse. Joseph J. Heath, an attorney who represents the Onondaga Nation,
said if the court rules in the tribe's favor, he expected that settlement
talks with the state to follow, including discussions about expanding the
nation's reservation and protecting ancestral burial grounds threatened by
development.
Mr. Heath said the tribe would try to buy land only from "willing sellers"
and the government.
Still, Mr. Heath and other tribal representatives emphasized that the
tribe's main intent was to gain more influence over state environmental
policy and push for environmental cleanups in their region. "They're sick of
being ignored on environmental issues," Mr. Heath said.
The tribe's elders have discussed filing suit for more than 50 years, they
said in interviews yesterday. But as the pollution in the lake increased -
and their own population expanded - they felt compelled to take legal
action.
Decades of industrial dumping left a layer of toxic sludge on the lake
bottom and drove the federal government to place it on the Superfund list of
toxic waste sites in 1994. Last November, state regulators announced a plan
to require Honeywell International to conduct a $448 million cleanup of the
lake, including extensive dredging of the lake bottom to remove much of the
165,000 pounds of mercury and other toxins that have collected there.
Honeywell is one of five companies named in the Onondaga lawsuit. It is
responsible for the cleanup because in 1999 it merged with Allied Chemical,
which owned a plant that was accused of being one of the lake's main
polluters.
The Onondagas have called the cleanup plan inadequate and say the state was
legally obligated to consult with the tribe's chiefs but did not.
Mr. Alhart, the governor's spokesman, rejected the nation's assertion that
the state was being lax on the cleanup of Lake Onondaga or that it had
ignored the nation.
The lawsuit also names four other companies that operate a gravel mine,
limestone quarry and coal-burning power plant in the region. In the lawsuit,
the Onondagas also named Clark Concrete Company and a subsidiary, Valley
Realty Development, which own a gravel mine in Tully, N.Y.
The nation has accused the mine of polluting the Onondaga Creek, which runs
into the lake. The nation also named Hanson Aggregates North America, the
owners of a limestone quarry in DeWitt, and Trigen Syracuse Energy
Corporation, a coal-burning power plant in Geddes.
Attempts made late yesterday to reach officials with those companies were
unsuccessful.
Tribal representatives said yesterday that they were not seeking a casino as
part of a settlement of the claim. Casinos are a central component of five
Indian land claim settlement agreements that Gov. George Pataki announced in
recent months.
Michelle York contributed reporting from the Onondaga Indian Reservation for
this article.
---------------------
"The true focus of revolutionary change is never merely
the oppressive situations which we seek to escape,
but that piece of the oppressor which is
planted deep within each of us." Audre Lorde
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