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WINTER
2001/ 2002
SAVE
MOUNT SHASTA UPDATE
by Michelle Berditschevsky, Project Coordinator
GEOTHERMAL
INDUSTRY EYES MOUNT SHASTA!
Mount Shasta
has appeared on Vulcan Power Company's geothermal website as one
of its "western properties." However, the website appears to be
a marketing tool aimed at attracting investors. Upon checking with
BLM we learned that Vulcan has filed lease applications on Forest
Service land but no further action has been taken.
The next step
would be a public review process under the National Environmental
Policy Act (NEPA) and consultations with Native Americans under
the National Historic Preservation Act (NHPA). The Forest Service,
the surface managing agency, would have to initiate these processes.
They have assured us this is not in the works. The applications
have been pending since 1995 or 1996.
In the 80's
CalEnergy drilled several exploratory wells on Mount Shasta but
they came up dry. CalEnergy's leases expired in the late 80's and
cannot be reactivated.Vulcan applied for new leases in the same
locations.
Vulcan seems
to have a reputation for building up big proposals, gathering investors,
and going bankrupt. Our sources indicated that they have never built
a power plant nor drilled a well, in spite of the claims on their
website. With that record, Vulcan would have serious credibility
problems with agencies and investors alike.
Nonetheless,
we are committed to further researching and monitoring this situation
closely in order to prevent any secretive actions, such as those
that happened early in the 1980's when geothermal leases were sold
in the Medicine Lake Highlands with minimal public notification.
Given the prominence of Mount Shasta and our track record, it's
unlikely this would occur, but stranger things have happened!
A
BOOK AND A FILM
Mount Shasta's
pre-eminence among mountains cannot be disputed. As the dominant
landmark of Northern California, the country's largest volcano,
and a prime Native American sacred site, Shasta has been included
in many books on sacred places. Most recently, Mount Shasta and
the Medicine Lake Highlands have a chapter in Sacred Lands of Indian
America, a beautiful large format book with photography by David
Muench, slated to be published this fall by Liveoak Editions. And
many people saw the August PBS broadcast of In the Light of Reverence,
produced by Earth Island Institute, in which Mount Shasta is prominently
featured. Yet the land managing agencies have not made a long-term
commitment to preserve Mount Shasta's values.
PROTECTION
NEEDED!
Public lands
such as Mount Shasta are open for geothermal leasing unless the
land is withdrawn from mineral entry and leasing through legislation
or a special designation. The decision by BLM to issue lease applications
is non-discretionary, does not involve environmental review and
confers no rights.
However, this
situation brings home the fact that neither the Forest Service nor
the Department of the Interior (National Register of Historic Places)
have yet fully acknowledged the entire Mountain's significance to
Native Americans and to people the world over. You will recall that
our six-year historic preservation effort, together with the Native
Coalition for Cultural Restoration of Mount Shasta, culminated in
the 1994 Historic District designation by the National Register,
which covered the entire Mountain. Unfortunately 90% of that designation
was soon rescinded under pressure by commercial and property rights
groups. The Historic District now covers the area above timberline
and Panther Meadows, with the Wilderness designation adding other
protection. But many parts of the Mountain remain vulnerable.
Since the reduction,
together with the Native Coalition, we have had several meetings
with high level agency people in Washington DC to attempt to reinstate
the original boundaries of the Historic District. These brought
promises of new studies and reconsideration but no commitments.
Also with the Native Coalition, we have made progress in drafting
a Cultural and Ecological Management Plan. In the spring of this
year Floyd Buckskin, Chairman of the Native Coalition, and I participated
in the four-day Sacred Earth Conference held in Seattle. This conference
brought together Native Americans and an interfaith community of
progressive churches to broaden the coalition for the protection
of sacred lands.
As everyone
knows, the political climate has worsened dramatically. It is a
time for laying groundwork, educating, strengthening coalitions,
and getting ready for better opportunities and more favorable conditions.
Our vision continues
to be a large cultural landscape linking Mount Shasta with the Medicine
Lake Highlands, which are naturally connected. The National Register
of Historic Places is currently working with a concept called "Ethnographic
Landscapes." These are described as "Large geographic expanses that
may include culturally-significant components such as horizons,
unmarked spiritual corridors, places of connection between the earth
surface and the upper and lower realms…and the interrelationships
among other cultural and natural resources such as plants, animals,
minerals, landforms, and bodies of water that give the landscape
meaning through their associations with a people's history and cultural
identity…." We are researching this and other types of designation
for the long term. The present level of protection is clearly not
sufficient to assure preservation of the Mountain's spiritual, cultural
and environmental integrity. Ongoing work is needed to deter potential
threats and preserve the Mountain for its sacred purpose.
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