Save
Medicine Lake Highlands
By Michelle
Berditschevsky and Peggy Risch
In Native American
traditions, sacred sites are zones of peace, places “where
you go to listen,” say the elders. That seems even more
important at this time when drums of fear and war beat louder
and threaten to invade even these sanctuaries. It is more vital
than ever to keep working for the values that further all life,
to affirm the song of beauty that it may dissolve the forces
of greed and destruction.
Telephone
Flat Reversal
The dreaded
event happened. Just before the Thanksgiving holiday commemorating
early cooperation with Native Americans for sharing their bounty,
federal agencies took away a victory that protected the sacred
Medicine Lake Caldera from the onslought of geothermal development.
The decision was to approve the Telephone Flat geothermal project.
By reversing
the May 2000 denial of Calpine's 48-megawatt project, BLM and
the Forest Service further opened this unique, near pristine
land located adjacent to Mount Shasta to the ravages of industrial
development. Telephone Flat leases cover 8 square miles in the
heart of the 24-square-mile Traditional Cultural District designated
by the National Register of Historic Places for its significance
to Native Americans. Leases begin only 500 yards from Medicine
Lake and encompass several other pristine lakes and springs.
Calpine Corporation owns 66 square miles of leases in the Highlands
and has publicly announced plans to develop up to 1000 megawatts,
ten times the combined wattage and impact of the Telephone Flat
and Fourmile Hill projects.
What triggered
the reversal was Calpine's $100 million lawsuit against the government,
resulting in a settlement agreement in April 2002. Rather than
defending their original decision against the hugely inflated "takings" claim,
as would have been expected of a government that has a trust
obligation to Native Americans and to the public, the agencies
caved in by reopening the decision. (see our Summer-Fall 2002
Newsletter).
Appeal
by Tribes, Ecology Center and Other Environmental Groups
Our appeal of the
Forest Service side of the decision went to the Secretary of
Agriculture by the February 3rd deadline. Joining us in the appeal
were the Pit River and Klamath Tribes, and the Native Coalition
for Medicine Lake Highlands Defense, all expertly represented
by Deborah Sivas of Earthjustice Legal Defense Fund. The Department
of Interior co-signed with BLM and declared that the only recourse
is through the courts. A coalition of environmental groups filed
a separate appeal.
The gist of
the Forest Service appeal is that the government could not justify
reversing itself. Need for the project hadn't changed (never
proven in the first place). The project would still cause severe
adverse effects to sacred sites as well as to health, visual
and air quality in the Caldera. Cumulative effects from other
foreseeable projects have increased, and the huge pure fresh
water aquifer that feeds the Sacramento would still be impacted
by pollutants and loss of water. So-called mitigations added
to the decision are merely a token concession. The bottom line
is that impacts are severe and cannot be mitigated. If anything,
there is less need for the project now that California’s “energy
crisis” has been exposed as a price manipulation by Calpine
and others. Now the agencies are using California’s renewables
mandate as a reason. Yet energy from this project is committed
to Bonneville Power, which sells electricity in Washington, Oregon
and Idaho. The decision shortcircuits the historic preservation
process. In approving the Fourmile Hill Project just outside
the Caldera, BLM and the Forest Service had an understanding
with the historic preservation agencies that Telephone Flat would
be denied, a Cultural Management Plan in place and a Forest Plan
Amendment calling for stronger protections evaluated before further
projects could be considered.
Historic
Preservation Agencies Support Denial
In September the Advisory Council on
Historic Preservation reaffirmed its opposition, stating that "the
proposed site for the Telephone Flat project is wrong; the costs
to the historic resources of Native Americans and our nation
are too high."
The State
Historic Preservation Officer wrote that " in addition to
being an environment of great natural beauty, [the Medicine Lake
Caldera] is a place of extraordinary traditional cultural and
spiritual significance to Native American tribes of the area….
I believe that there exists a fundamental and irreconcilable
incompatibility between the geothermal development proposed at
Telephone Flat and the sanctity of the Highlands as a special
place of the Creator."
Broad
support for protection
The National Congress of American Indians, International
Indian Treaty Council, the InterTribal Council of California
and the California Council of Tribal Governments have all passed
resolutions in opposition to geothermal development in the Medicine
Lake Highlands. The California Wilderness Coalition included
the Highlands in California’s Ten Most Threatened Wild
Places report, and the National Trust for Historic Preservation
is considering listing the Highlands as one of the Eleven Most
Threatened Historic Places. In addition, the area is an important
public recreational area that receives over 50,000 visits per
year.
Fourmile
Hill and Future Steps
Our attorneys anticipate
that the appeal is likely to be denied and that the Telephone
Flat lawsuit will
be combined with the Fourmile Hill case (filed in June ‘ 02).
Through the lawsuit we hope to prevent any drilling this summer.
The desired outcome, of course, is denial of the permits that
would allow such devastation. For the long term, we would like
to see the Medicine Lake Highlands linked with Mount Shasta as
one Cultural Landscape, a zone of peace. Please help us hold
the vision!
How
You Can Help!
Write letters, fax or call! It’s one of the most
effective ways to influence decisions.
•Governor
Gray Davis
State Capitol Sacramento, CA 95814
P phone (916) 445-2841, fax (916) 445- 4633
Ask Governor
Davis to withdraw California Energy Commission’s subsidies
of Calpine’s geothermal projects in the Medicine Lake Highlands.
The CEC committed nearly $50 million in conditional awards once
the power plants are built. Such awards, even conditional, prejudice
the process and allow the corporations to sue the federal government
for “takings” in the event project aren’t approved.
Davis says he’s in favor of protecting sacred sites, and
it’s a contradition to commit funds to their destruction.
•Senator
Barbara Boxer
U.S. Senate Washngton DC 20510
Phone (916) 448-2787, fax (916) 448-2563
Please contact
Senator Boxer to thank her for writing a strong letter supporting
denial of the Telephone Flat project.
•Senator
Dianne Feinstein
U.S. Senate Washington DC 20510
Phone
(415) 393-0707, fax (415) 393-0710
Please ask
Senator Feinstein for her support for protection of the Medicine
Lake Highlands. Feel free to use any of the information on our
website.
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The Medicine
Lake Highlands
Located
just northeast of Mount Shasta, the remote and spectacular
Medicine
Lake Highlands encompass California’s most diverse volcanic
fields on the continent’s largest shield volcano.
The volcano's
caldera, a 500-foot-deep oval crater about six miles long and
four miles wide, was formed when underground magma flows collapsed
the dome's summit in Pleistocene times. Later eruptions built
a ring of smaller volcanoes around the rim of the basin. The
azure waters of Medicine Lake lie embedded in this million-year
sculpture of volcanic fury, with its striking variety of textures
- lava flows, clear lakes, mountains of glass-like obsidian,
slopes of white pumice, dark boulders, and silver-green mountain
hemlock. Later eruptions built a ring of smaller volcanoes around
the rim of the basin. The azure waters of Medicine Lake lie embedded
in this million-year sculpture of volcanic fury, with its striking
variety of textures - lava flows, clear lakes, mountains of glass-like
obsidian, slopes of white pumice, dark boulders, and silver-green
mountain hemlock. The Highlands' clear skies are home to eagles,
goshawks, and rare bats. Tall forests shelter martens, fishers,
and unknown numbers of sensitive plants. Filtered through porous
rock, the Highlands' aquifer forms a major source of spring waters
flowing into the Sacramento River.
For ten thousand
years by the archaeologist's count, as far back as memory and
signs hewn in stone can reach, the Medicine Lake Highlands have
been a place of traditional spiritual practice. To Native American
tribes known as the Ahjumawi (Pit River), Modoc and Shasta—as
well as to more distant tribes—the landscape is a living
scripture in which higher beings have left messages for the first
people of the land. Today, the people continue their prayer,
vision questing, healing, and subsistence practices in the Highlands.
In this remote area there are no freeways, no trains, no factories,
no power lines, no bright lights. Narrow winding roads take you
to Glass Mountain, Pumice Craters Lava Flow, Yellow Jacket Ice
Cave, Red Shale Mountain, Burnt Lava Flow, Paint Pot Crater,
Medicine Mountain… Absent is the grinding roar of engines
to which we have become accustomed.
Against huge
odds, Native American and environmental defenders have been battling
multi-national geothermal corporations, to assure that the industrial
obsession with resource extraction will not get a foothold on
this sacred ground.
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