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Four Corners residents tired of being sacrificed for dirty coal electricity, residents testified during BLM listening session
Louise Benally, Big Mountain |
By Brenda Norrell
(c) Censored News
English with French translation
FARMINGTON, N.M. — Speaking out against the laws that target Native Americans and their natural resources, Native people told the Bureau of Land Management to make the change to renewable energy and halt the ongoing genocide of Native Americans for dirty coal energy.
Native Americans, scientists, farmers and laborers described the reality of disease and death in the Four Corners sacrifice region, during a BLM listening session.
Louise Benally, Dine' of Big Mountain resisting forced relocation, testified that she is a victim of the destruction of coal mining by Peabody Coal on Black Mesa, where the forced relocation of Dine' (Navajos) has been carried out to clear the way for Peabody Coal mining.
Benally said right now sheep and livestock are being impounded on Black Mesa.
Benally said Arizona Sen. John McCain continues his attempts to steal Colorado River water rights for those who live in luxury in southern Arizona and for the coal-fired Navajo Generating Station in Page, Arizona, which provides electricity for southern Arizona.
“The utility companies eat the earth, suck
out her breath.”
Describing how the coal companies destroy the earth, she said, “We're sick and tired of your greed.”
Benally said the US continues killing the people through its laws.
“The Arctic drilling needs to stop,” Benally said, pointing out Obama's decision to grant Shell the right to drill in the Arctic.
“The Alberta pipeline needs to stop,” Benally said of the Alberta oil tarsands and its pipelines, including the Keystone XL.
She said India and China need renewable forms of energy instead of continuing the demand for these dirty forms of energy.
“Do your job make that change,” Benally told the BLM.
Lester Begay testifying today |
Lester Begay testified that the Dine' elders knew, and foretold, that what was taken out of the ground would kill the people.
Begay said the elders taught Dine' to respect what is in nature. He shared the elders story: When white people pick up a rock, they will look at it all day, then they will sell it.
Native Americans testified that asthma and heart attacks are caused each year by the Four Corners and San Juan power plants alone in New Mexico.
Four Corners power plants mean the region has become a sacrifice zone, producing dirty coal fired electricity for distant cities.
Pueblos testified that the Jackpile Mine uranium mine caused death in the Laguna and Acoma Pueblos in New Mexico. Pueblo miners went to the mines unprotected, and the radiation spread over their water, food and livestock grazing areas.
“Our very way of life was stolen,” said one Pueblo woman who spoke of her grandfather's death.
“They were not made to clean up the damage that they had done.” She added that no amount of money could bring back her grandfather.
A member of the Dine' medicine peoples association said, “You have to be careful how you distract Mother Earth.”
“We have to respect Mother Earth,” she said, describing the poisons from the power plants.
One person testifying for Indigenous and people of color said that the Four Corners residents who came to testify were disrespected by the BLM officials, during their prayer outside earlier. Further, she said they were not greeted properly by the BLM.
Native Americans living in the Four Corners regions said children are among the ones who are suffering from asthma and respiratory diseases from the coal-fired power plants.
The San Juan Generating Station and Four Corners power plants use huge amounts of clean drinking water and release toxic water, residents testified.
Coal-mining targets the poor and most vulnerable, residents said.
One of those residents, who lives downstream from the Four Corners power plants, said his five year old son nearly died from the downstream power plant pollution. He told the BLM officials to go down there and drink the dirty water coming out of Four Corners power plants. He said they expect his family and children to drink it, so they should go drink it.
“There is no such thing as clean coal,” one Four Corners resident said.
The United States was told to stop subsidizing dirty coal energy.
Charles Pacheco described working in power plants, hazardous waste and radiation.
Pacheco said the Obama administration would not comply with regulations regarding safe respirators and arsenic at San Juan Generating Station.
When Pacheco complained, he was terminated.
Donna House, Dine' |
“If you were a laborer and said anything about it, they laid you off.”
Donna House, Dine', described how the power plants have destroyed rare and endangered plant species. The power plants have destroyed habitat for plant species and people, House said.
Farmers said they need clean water for their crops. New Mexico has a rich culture and the people will not stop fighting dirty coal, one farmer said.
The BLM was also criticized for failing to announce this session in other languages, in the state of New Mexico, which is multi-lingual.
“We want system change, not climate change,” one resident testified.
A high school student from Santa Fe testified that dirty coal electricity is the number one contributor to global warming.
It was also pointed out that last year was the hottest year on record, and there are wild fires raging now in the west.
Peabody Coal and other dirty coal companies are going bankrupt and taxpayers will be left with the cost of this dirty energy that has caused widespread death and disease, residents testified.
Those testifying about climate change and destructive US coal energy policies included Dine', Pueblo, students, scientists, farmers, laborers, sheep herders, filmmakers, and community members from Big Mountain to Taos Valley and Colorado, Santa Fe, Albuquerque, and beyond.
For permission to repost this article [email protected]
Watch for the video archive to be posted later:
http://www.blm.gov/live/
.
Protect the climate, tell the Interior Department to keep our coal in the ground!
For decades the federal government has been letting coal companies exploit our public lands. The Bureau of Land Management leases public minerals to private coal companies. While BLM facilitates coal company profits, local communities bear the brunt of the pollution that comes along with them, threatening public health, air, water, and climate.
The U.S. Department of the Interior is engaging the American public in an “honest conversation” about how to reform the way it manages our publicly owned coal. The series of listening sessions ends in Farmington on Thursday. This is our chance to cement the message.
If we're going to be honest, it's time to tell DOI and BLM to keep the coal in the hole. The time for studies is over – we KNOW coal kills and there's no doubt the burning of coal significantly fuels catastrophic climate change. Northwestern NM and the Navajo Nation shall no longer be considered an “energy sacrifice zone.” It's time for a real revolution and a new energy economy that's in the best interest of local communities and all New Mexicans.
We expect industry to be in full attendance, with the pocketbooks to fuel spokespeople. Unfortunately, we can't match their money, but we do have power of the people!
Come and give public comment and make your voice heard. Together, we can call for a reform of the federal coal program that is in the best interest of communities, culture, and climate.
We'll be arranging carpools from Santa Fe, and maybe Albuquerque if there's interest. Please post below!
Also, we're hearing that security is tight at all of these listening sessions. Please be sure that you bring valid IDs to enter the session. School IDs are not being accepted. People are being turned away w/o proper identification.
If you can't attend in Farmington, sign WildEarth Guardians' petition and tell Sally Jewell, the Secretary of the Interior, it's time to end the federal coal program! http://
.
Brenda Norrell has been a news reporter in Indian country for 29 years, serving as a writer for Navajo Times and a stringer for AP and USA Today during the 18 years she lived on the Navajo Nation. After being a longtime staff reporter for Indian Country Today, she was censored and terminated. She then created Censored News, focused on Indigenous Peoples and human rights, now in its fifth year.