Medicine Lake Highlands
Report by Amy Corbin HistoryThe Medicine Lake Highlands, northeast of Mt. Shasta, are sacred to the Pit River, Modoc, Shasta, Karuk and Wintu. The Pit River people believe that the Creator and his son bathed in the waters of the lake after creating the earth, and the Creator imparted his spirit into Medicine Lake. The water has power to heal and to renew, and the area around the lake is used as a training ground for medicine men from the coast to the Rockies. A coalition of tribes petitioned the National Register of Historic Places to recognize the Medicine Lake Caldera (an oval crater within the highlands) as a Traditional Cultural District in August of 1999. The subsequent recognition of the Medicine Lake Area Traditional Cultural Places District caused one of two proposed geothermal projects to be rejected by the U.S. Forest Service and the Bureau of Land Management in 2000. However, in November 2002, the Bush Administration scrapped those protections and approved a $120 million, 48-megawatt geothermal power plant at Telephone Flat, one mile from Medicine Lake. ThreatIn the mid-1980s the BLM sold geothermal energy development leases to the Medicine Lake Highlands to three corporations for $10.6 million without any consultation with local tribes that use and revere the area. By 1998, all but one of the leases had expired and no actual development had occurred, though a draft environmental impact statement had concluded that geothermal development would have “adverse impacts.” In spite of that finding — and President Clinton’s Executive Order 13007 on sacred sites — the BLM renewed the expired geothermal leases for 40 years.
While the Clinton Administration allowed exploratory drilling at Fourmile Hill, it denied Calpine’s permit application for Telephone Flat, a 15-acre site about one mile east of Medicine Lake, and well within the Traditional Cultural District. Calpine filed a $100 million lawsuit against the government and lobbied hard to reverse the decision blocking drilling and a power plant at Telephone Flat. The strategy paid off, and the Bush reversal could be the start of massive geothermal development. Calpine owns 43 federal leases covering 47,800 acres in the remote, pristine, Medicine Lake Highlands, and Calpine can now move ahead with plans for clearcuts, roads, drill rigs, transmission lines and at least one sulphur-spewing power plant. The final Environmental Impact Statement clearly states that both projects “are expected to result in potentially significant, adverse impacts to traditional cultural values.” The situation is made more complex by a split among area tribes concerning their highest priorities for tribal well being. In the case of the Shasta, the tribe has been fighting for federal recognition since the 1980s, a status that would entitle them to government services and funds. Calpine has offered financial support and office equipment to aid in the Shastas’ lobbying of the Bureau of Indian Affairs. Calpine has also promised college scholarships and jobs to local tribal members. Such support is difficult to turn down when tribes have pressing needs, and the differing opinions of tribal members have led to the formation of two separate tribal governments. While the Pit River tribe is united in its opposition to the Calpine project, the Klamath and the Modoc have promised they won’t interfere. As long as tribes feel they have to choose between much needed financial support and preservation of cultural sites, it will be hard for tribal governments to unite against industrial threats to their land. Money talks. The continued fallout from the perceived energy crisis in California makes Medicine Lake an urgent site for protection. Tribal practitioners consider any drilling to be a desecration of the sacred ground, in addition to the fact that the 100-foot tall power plant would be a domineering visual presence and source of noise pollution. From a scientific point of view, geothermal power is touted as a “clean” and “green” source of energy, but digging in the ground gives rise to dangerous chemicals such as arsenic, chromium, boron and hydrogen sulfide. The scale of drilling may lead to contaminated water, polluted air, disturbance of wildlife and damage to plants used for food and medicine. In addition, the energy generated by the Calpine power plant, while originating in California and subsidized by the California Energy Commission, has ironically already been contracted to the Bonneville Power Administration and will be exported and sold out of state. SolutionThe Native Coalition, the Pit River tribe, and the Mount Shasta Bioregional Ecology Center are fighting approval of drilling and power plant construction on both local and national levels, and are supported by the Sierra Club and the California Wilderness Coalition. They filed a lawsuit in May 2004 arguing that the BLM renewed the leases without taking previous reports into consideration or consulting with tribes. Meanwhile, Calvert Asset Management Company issued a resolution requesting that Calpine “cease and desist development in the Medicine Lake Highlands” and develop a company policy on the rights of indigenous people by September 1, 2004. This resolution is part of a movement working to place responsibility for protecting sacred places on corporations, not just the government. The Secretary of the Interior needs to reverse her approval of the decisions that lifted the moratorium on drilling and allowed development of Telephone Flat. Ultimately, the entire Highlands area should be granted the status of a Traditional Cultural District and no industrial activity should be allowed in the vision questing and medicine gathering area. California Governor Arnold Schwartzennegger should start working with tribes and activists on a revised version of the California sacred land protection bill, A.B. 974. Though this bill may not have much effect on Medicine Lake, it would help prevent the loss of sacred places in the future. Breaking News: Court Stops Calpine Geothermal Development at Medicine Lake
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For more information, contact: Native Coalition for Cultural Restoration of Mount Shasta & Resources
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