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Year Archive
View Article  From: Mike Eisenfeld
Date:    Sep 5, 2007 1:28 PM

100 years of change
— By Alysa Landry — The Daily Times Farmington Daily Times
Article Launched:08/26/2007 12:00:00 AM MDT

 

CHACO CANYON — The wind blows eerily through the gaping windows of the old Navajo Chaco Church, stirring the fallen shingles that litter the floor inside.

Once a mainstay of the tiny Navajo community, the crumbling church stands as a reminder of what was lost when many of the younger residents moved into the cities.

In its peak, the community — which lies within view of Chaco Culture National Historical Park — included a preschool, a trading post and a landing strip for small aircraft, said Chaco resident Leonard Dempsey.

"It was a thriving place," he said. "We had cows and sheep and horses, and there were a lot of young people running around chasing sheep and throwing rocks at each other."

About 25 residents remain, Dempsey said, and most live without running water or electricity, even though power lines run through the center of the community and into the national monument.

Many of the Chaco residents are descendants of the Navajo people who were forcibly removed from their homes inside Chaco Canyon when the federal government took over in 1907. Nearly all of the residents gathered Saturday near the old church for a commemoration of the day — 100 years ago — when their ancestors left the canyon and started rebuilding.

"There can be nothing more troubling, nothing more traumatic, nothing more devastating than being forcibly removed from your homeland and not being allowed to return," said Tony Atkinson, chairman of the San Juan County Commission. "Looking at this sacred and historical place, one cannot help but imagine just what suffering must have been endured."

Set under a tent amid sand and sagebrush, the commemoration also provided residents and officials a forum in which to protest current living conditions — conditions which force people to look elsewhere for homes and jobs.

Dempsey, 38, grew up in the community and took a bus over primitive roads every day to get to school. On winter days when the roads were muddy, the drive took more than two hours, he said, and sometimes the bus never made it.

"The bus always had a radio in it, so we could call for help," he said. "There were some incidents when the bus got stuck in the mud."

Since Dempsey's school days, not much in the community has changed.

"The only thing that changes around here is the piles of dirt," he said.

Representing the county, Atkinson told residents he was working to remove the hardships they still endure. The county is addressing the long-standing issue of paving County Roads 7900 and 7950, he said, which may lead the way to additional paving in south San Juan County — a network of about 350 miles of unpaved roads serving small Navajo communities.

The Nageezi, Pueblo Pintado, Lake Valley and Counselor chapters already have passed resolutions supporting road improvements — which would include creating a 25-foot, chip-sealed driving surface — but opposition is strong, Atkinson said. For Chaco residents who travel the roads every day, conditions are dangerous at best and impassable at worst.

"I believe it is essential for us to improve San Juan County Roads 7900 and 7950," he said, "but my feelings are not shared by some (self)-righteous, self-proclaimed experts ... who write me and complain that it would ruin their once-a-year commune with nature. These people who oppose the improvements have not once mentioned any consideration for the health and well-being of the San Juan County citizens who live in this community."

Among those who have historically opposed paving are National Park Service employees. The roads lead to the park's main entrance, and employees fear an improved road would increase traffic to the site, which is already near capacity at 60,000 visitors per year, Russ Bodnar, chief of interpretation at Chaco Culture National Historical Park, said. Although he does not oppose paving, Bodnar said the park would first need upgrades so employees can protect the sites.

"If traffic increases, we'll have to do things differently," he said. "We're glad to ... come up with ways to take care of local needs, park visitor needs and the park itself."

The dispute over the land is just another in a long history of quarrels between the Navajo Nation and the federal government, said Navajo Vice President Ben Shelly. Although Navajos are concerned about the environment and the integrity of the park, those matters shouldn't take precedence over quality of life for those who live outside the park boundaries, he said.

"Why do you make it a national monument if you don't want people to be in there?" he said. "If you're trying to prevent people from coming (into the park), have them stand on the rim, and let them see with binoculars."

Although humorous, Shelly's solution represents a compromise he believes can be reached by the Nation and the federal government. He told Chaco residents Saturday to stop complaining about the roads and start forming partnerships with government entities.

"The hardships Navajo people go through is nothing new, but the Navajo people are survivors," he said. "Let's make negative feelings positive."

Alysa Landry: alandry@daily-times.com

View Article  From: Mike Eisenfeld
Date:    Sep 5, 2007 1:28 PM
No Oil Wells Near Chaco 
By Leslie Linthicum
Copyright © 2007 Albuquerque Journal; Journal Staff Writer
    State Land Commissioner Patrick Lyons is pulling the plug on two oil wells proposed for just outside Chaco Canyon.
    Lyons said Tuesday— after his office was peppered with complaints about allowing drilling so close to a national treasure— that his office will ask Cimarex Energy to trade for different parcels of state trust land.
    If the company doesn't want to trade, the Land Office will reject the application and refund the $10,000 that Cimarex paid for the leases.
    "We have a moral obligation to maintain the integrity of Chaco Canyon," Lyons said.
    Cimarex had plans to drill two wells on state trust land about one mile beyond the southern boundary of Chaco Culture National Historical Park. The Land Office approved leases for the sites late last year and was in the process of reviewing archaeological studies before issuing final approval.
    A Cimarex spokesman did not return phone calls from the Journal on Monday or Tuesday.
    Lyons said he thought Cimarex would agree to transfer the lease to another area.
    "I think they're going to be receptive," he said. If the company does not want to swap, he said, "they're going to be fighting an uphill battle."
    Lyons said his office originally understood Cimarex, a Colorado energy company, planned to drill for natural gas. He said he learned Tuesday that the company planned to drill for oil, which would necessitate pump jacks that could be seen from inside the park.
    Lyons said he wants to work with Chaco and other federal agencies that hold land around the park on a series of land trades that could build a no-development buffer around the park.
    "We've got plenty of land," Lyons said. "We don't need to be right up against their boundary."
    That comes as welcome news to critics who complained that oil and gas exploration on the edge of the park would detract from the experience of visiting ancient Indian ruins.
    Chaco is a World Heritage Site and its collection of pre-Puebloan ruins draws visitors from around the world to San Juan County.
    "That's terrific news. I'm glad to hear that," said Mark Pearson, director of the San Juan Citizens Alliance, which had opposed the drilling.
    Assistant Land Commissioner John Bemis said the office will begin to identify other tracts of state trust land where development might harm historical sites. The office could withdraw the tracts from leasing or trade the parcels to other agencies.
    "Our preferred method is to exchange land and trade out of it because we don't want these conflicts," Bemis said.
    Pearson praised the idea of building a buffer.
    "That sounds like a real positive long-term solution," he said.
    The goal of the Land Office is to make money from the land it holds in trust by approving leases for mineral extraction. Royalties from trust land— $495 million in the last fiscal year— support schools, hospitals, prisons and other public projects in New Mexico.
    "Everyone agrees that the oil and gas industry plays a critical role in funding institutions and programs across the state," Lyons said. "But we also agree that New Mexico has an extraordinary and unique history that must be protected and preserved."
View Article  From: Mike Eisenfeld
 
Subject: Re: Independent - August 21, 2007
Independent
M DN AR CL S

Chaco spared from bite of drill bits

By Mike Marino
Cibola County Bureau

GRANTS — The Chaco Culture Historical Park was recently the focus of the Celebrate Chaco Art Show at the Cibola Arts Council/Double Six Gallery and is home to one of the most celebrated cultures of puebloan life in New Mexico. Thousands of visitors descend on the Chaco Canyon living museum and the ruins were designated a World Heritage Site. Displays, dioramas and artifacts on display continue to attract interest in a culture that was crucial to the formative era of ancient peoples.

But, the area has also attracted interest in drilling operations for natural gas wells that many feel would be an unwanted intrusion on this delicate landscape.

The initial plans by Cimarex Energy to drill two natural gas wells on state land within the Chaco Culture National Historical Park have been put on hold by the company. The site selected was state land within two miles of the cultural site ‘s visitor center and just one mile from an area known as the “sun dagger” site at Fajada Butte, where light and shadow tracks the cycles of the moon and sun .

Cimarex Energy issued a statement to postpone the proposed project indefinitely because of multiple concerns that have been raised by groups of environmentalists and preservationists over the potential for harm the drilling could do to what many regard as the region’s ultimate ancestral puebloan site. Cimarex regional land manager, Mike Wolfe, agrees.

“We feel our resources are presently better spent in areas that minimize concerns regarding that area of Chaco Cultural National Historic Park,” he said. The State Land Office originally considered the drilling leases for two state land parcels, located on Sections 32 and 36 for the simple reason that proceeds derived from the energy and mineral leases on those two parcels of state lands are designed to fund public education.

Chaco is an important pueblo center that tells us about the past according to Russ Bodnar of the National Park Service at the Chaco Culture Historical Park.

“Chaco became a World Heritage Site on December 8, 1987. We were nominated by the National Park Service under Criteria 3 which says that you have to provide testimony to a civilization that has disappeared. We are working on having that changed and upgraded because obviously the pueblo folks definitely say they haven‘t disappeared and all the pueblos attest to that fact,” he said.

Oil and gas exploration is a double edged sword when it comes to the pros and cons of that practice. The state Historic Preservation Office of New Mexico feels that stepped up gas and oil exploration in areas like southeastern New Mexico presents an opportunity to develop cultural surveys focused on industry development of cultures, and the resulting settlements, towns and cities that were built to support it.

The initial consultations about the Chaco drilling venture involved the SLO, Cimarex, the National Park Service and the Historic Preservation Department of the state of New Mexico. The Chaco site is considered a World Heritage Site and the Preservation Department is continuing to work with the New Mexico Congressional Delegation and the SLO to develop a zone that will protect resources within and outside of the park boundaries and the World Heritage Site.

View Article  From: Greg Heitmann FHA to Chacoava regarding the road
Dear Ava:

The National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) process is underway for the
San Juan County Road 7950, the access to Chaco Canyon National Historic
Park.  The Federal Highway Administration is working through the New
Mexico Department of Transportation and San Juan County to study
proposed improvements.  San Juan County has enlisted URS Corporation and
Taschek Environmental Consulting (TEC) to lead the study.  Below you
will find a list of contacts that will provide details of the current
study.  These contacts will also compile all input from the public in
order to provide a basis for Federal decision-makers' conclusions.
Please feel free to contact any of the following individuals regarding
details of this project:

John Taschek or Berenika Byszewski with TEC at (505) 821-4700
Kevin Mentz with URS Corporation at (505) 855-7519

Respectfully,

Greg
View Article  From: Jsefick
For all those who are interested in Chaco please go to these YouTube sites   more »