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Voices from the Earth: Current Issue Table of "Well, what's a little radioactivity alongside the riches to be made, the jobs to be offered, in a resurgent uranium market? State Senator David Ulibarri, who's also Cibola County manager, figures that, what with soaring uranium prices, a $50 billion industry is just waiting to open between Grants and the Navajo Reservation whose leaders, we've noted, have the good sense to say not on our land."
Editorial: |
New
Mexico Native Women Speak Out for Mining Law Reform
Eastern Navajo Diné Against Uranium Mining (ENDAUM) and the Haaku Water Office of the Pueblo of Acoma joined state regulators and conservation organizations in a campaign to educate New Mexico’s congressional delegation and the public about the urgent need to reform federal mining law. Mining law reform is a growing focus for Native American organizations in New Mexico in response to a massive wave of uranium exploration projects hitting the Mount Taylor area. Mount Taylor is a 11,301 foot high stratovolcano in the center of 50-mile long volcanic plateau. It is also a large area of great traditional and cultural significance to area tribes. Federal land on the slopes of Mount Taylor have mining claims staked under provisions of the 1872 Federal Mining Law. That mining law was passed to promote the development of and settlement on public lands more than 130 years ago. The law allows miners to take valuable hardrock minerals including gold, silver, and uranium, from public lands without royalty payment to the taxpayer, unlike coal mining, oil or natural gas that pay royalties. Miners can also acquire the mineral rights to public lands for $2.50 or $5.00 per acre -- 1872 prices that do not reflect the many millions of dollar value of the minerals.
On November 1, 2007, the U.S. House of Representatives
passed HR 2262, the Hardrock Mining and Reclamation Act of 2007, which
would substantially change the 1872 law. The House bill, among other things,
could prevent mining that would cause “undue degradation of public
lands and resources.” The bill also sets up a fund from increased
royalty payments that would be used to reclaim mined lands and to provide
funding to communities and tribes negatively impacted by hardrock mining
on public lands. Leona Morgan, Eastern Navajo Diné Against Uranium Mining (ENDAUM) Lead Organizer, and Laura Watchempino, Program Director at the Haaku Water Office (Pueblo of Acoma), spoke about the importance of mining law reform at a January 10 briefing at the All Indian Pueblo Cultural Center in Albuquerque. Also, speaking were representatives of New Mexico State government and area conservation organizations. Fellow participants in the briefing were Bill Brancard, Director of the Mining and Minerals Division of the New Mexico Energy, Mineral and Natural Resources Department; Gregory Green, New Mexico Representative of the Pew Campaign for Mining Law Reform; Nathan Newcomer of New Mexico Wilderness Alliance; Michael Jensen of Amigos Bravos; Oscar Simpson of the New Mexico Wildlife Federation; and Javier Benavidez of Conservation Voters New Mexico. On behalf of ENDAUM,
Leona Morgan asserted: Laura Watchempino
emphasized the united voice of Pueblo and Navajo tribal leaders who have
adopted resolutions seeking to protect Mount Taylor and Navajo areas of
New Mexico from future uranium mining, and recognize the singular importance
of the limited available water resources to their arid homeland. She said:
Watchempino added:
“Before mining companies come in, we need to look at the ground
water and surface water resources. The connection between them (is)
very fragile in this part of the country. That’s something that
needs to be considered in mining [law] reform.” Watchempino also stated that the federal land subject to uranium exploration
in New Mexico includes “areas that form natural water sheds, in
this case, the Mount Taylor region, forms the headwaters for the Rio San
Jose, which is the life blood of the Pueblo of Acoma as well as (the Pueblo
of) Laguna.” ENDAUM was founded in December 1994 to protect the water sources used by the Navajo community of Crownpoint and surrounding Navajo Chapters in the San Juan Basin of Northwestern New Mexico. ENDAUM has been a party to regulatory and legal actions challenging an “in situ” uranium mine proposed near Crownpoint and Churchrock. The organization’s primary focus is the Eastern Agency and the current uranium development proposals in the Crownpoint and Churchrock areas. Watchempino spoke as a representative of the Pueblo of Acoma’s Water Program, the Haaku Water Office. The office is responsible for implementation of a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency-authorized Water Quality Program to protect the waters of the Pueblo of Acoma, including protection of water quality in areas upstream of the Pueblo’s water supplies. The Pueblo’s primary water source is the Rio San Jose watershed, a 100-mile long tributary of the Rio Grande. The Rio San Jose watershed continues to suffer from decades of contamination and diversion of water for use by uranium mines and mills. Correcting that damage is a leading driver for the Pueblo’s long-standing programs to protect water quality and water supply in the Rio San Jose. Southwest Research is currently contracting with the Haaku Water Office to provide technical services to address new uranium projects and continuing contamination from the Homestake uranium mill tailings pile north of Grants, NM.
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