The Mercury News

Flooding, nuclear waste endanger tribe’s ancestral land

- By Mark Walker

For decades, chronic flooding and nuclear waste have encroached on the ancestral lands in southeaste­rn Minnesota that the Prairie Island Indian Community call home, whittling them to about one-third of their original size.

Two years after the tribe received federal recognitio­n in 1936, the Army Corps of Engineers installed a lockand-dam system just to the south along the Mississipp­i River. It repeatedly flooded the tribe’s land, including burial mounds, leaving members with only 300 livable acres.

Decades later, a stockpile of nuclear waste from a power plant next to the reservatio­n, which the federal government reneged on a promise to remove in the 1990s, has tripled in size. It comes within 600 yards of some residents’ homes.

With no room to develop more housing on the reservatio­n, more than 150 tribal members who are eager to live in their ancestral home are on a waiting list.

Cody Whitebear, 33, the tribe’s federal government relations specialist, is among those waiting. He hopes he can inherit his grandmothe­r’s house, which is on the road closest to the power plant.

“I never had the opportunit­y to live on the reservatio­n, be part of the community,” said Whitebear, who began connecting with his heritage after the birth of his son, Cayden. “In my mid-20s I had the desire to learn about my people and who I am and who we are.”

With no remedy in sight, the tribal community is asking Congress to put into trust about 1,200 acres of nearby land that it purchased in 2018 near Pine Island, Minnesota, about 35 miles away. That would allow the tribe to preserve its future by adding land farther away from the power plant to its reservatio­n. In return, the tribe said it would give up the right to sue the government over flooding caused by the dam.

Tribes exercise jurisdicti­on over land held in trust, including civil regulatory control. Certain federal laws and programs are intended to benefit tribal trust or reservatio­n land.

“Putting this land into trust for our tribe is crucial to righting the historical and current wrongs committed against our people,” said Shelley Buck, president of the Prairie Island Tribal Council. “The federal government put our tribe in this dangerous and untenable position and it is the government’s responsibi­lity to address the harm it has caused. The trust land would provide a safer alternativ­e location for our members to live and work. The importance of that can’t be understate­d.”

Interviews and documents obtained by The New York Times show how the state of Minnesota and the federal government ignored warnings about potential dangers posed to the tribe as they kept allowing the amount of waste stored on the reservatio­n to expand and did little to address annual flooding that harms the tribe’s economy.

“I mean, this is a classic environmen­tal justice fact pattern,” said Heather Sibbison, chair of Dentons Native American law and policy practice at Dentons law firm. “We have a minority community, a disadvanta­ged community, bearing the brunt of two huge infrastruc­ture projects that serve other people.”

The tribal community is home to descendant­s of the Mdewakanto­n Band of Eastern Dakota, who lived in the southern half of Minnesota. Unkept promises by White settlers led to the Dakota War of 1862. That year, the U.S. government hanged 38 Dakota men in Mankato, Minnesota, invalidate­d a land treaty and banished the Dakota from the region.

In 1934, the federal government recognized Prairie Island Indian Community as a reservatio­n after members of the Mdewakanto­n Band spent decades returning to the region and buying parcels of land.

Today, much of the land that the government gave the tribe is underwater. But the tribe’s greatest fear is a nuclear plant disaster or toxic train derailment that would require evacuation, said Jon Priem, who oversees the small law enforcemen­t and emergency service agencies on the island where the reservatio­n sits. There is only one road in and out.

“We would be no match for anything of that magnitude,” Priem said. “Trying to get aid in here would be nearly impossible.”

Documents show that in 1992, Judge Allan Klein recommende­d that the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission deny an applicatio­n brought by Northern States Power Co., which later became Xcel Energy, to allow the waste to be stored on lands belonging to the Prairie Island Indian Community.

“Once the casks are in place, the path of least resistance is to leave them there indefinite­ly,” the judge said in the documents.

Despite the judge’s caution, the Minnesota Public Utility Commission ruled that the power company could store the waste on the reservatio­n. It capped the number of storage casks at 17, but in 2003 the cap was lifted.

Chris Clark, who oversees Xcel Energy’s Minnesota operations, said the nuclear waste was “an issue that we and the Prairie Island Indian Community have worked on together, obviously pushing the federal government to live up to their responsibi­lities to take that fuel and move it off the island.”

In 2003, as a condition of expanding the waste storage limits at Xcel Energy’s Prairie Island nuclear power plant, the state of Minnesota and Xcel Energy signed an agreement with the tribe to address some of its concerns.

It provided annual payments to the tribe of $2.25 million to, in part, help the tribe purchase up to 1,500 acres of new land within a 50-mile radius of the reservatio­n to be taken into trust. The payments fell to $1.45 million in 2012, as the plant neared its original end-of-license dates, but rose again to $2.5 million when Xcel Energy’s operating licenses were extended and storage limits were increased.

The tribe used the money to purchase the second parcel of land for $15.5 million.

When Lu Taylor steps outside her home, the first things she sees are tall power lines and high-voltage electrical towers. Behind the towers is the nuclear power plant, which Taylor, 62, said has been the tribe’s top concern for generation­s. She grew up next to the plant; so did her children, and she believes her grandchild­ren will as well.

Members of Congress in 2019 introduced the Prairie Island Indian Community Land Claim Settlement Act, which would put into trust the nearby land that the tribe purchased, but the legislatio­n has not moved.

A spokespers­on for the Department of the Interior said the agency is committed to working toward environmen­tal justice in Indian Country and ensuring that tribal communitie­s have the land they need to provide a safe home for their citizens.

In the meantime, though, Taylor, the tribe’s vice president, said the flooding and the stockpile of nuclear waste raised the risk of an accident taking everything away from them.

“It is a danger zone that can keep families away from their homes and keep us from our way of life,” she said. “It’s unthinkabl­e.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY LAYLAH AMATULLAH BARRAYN — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? The entrance of Prairie Island Nuclear Generating Plant in Goodhue County, Minn., in April. Xcel Energy runs the plant near the reservatio­n and has stored 47 canisters of nuclear waste close to the homes of tribe members.
PHOTOS BY LAYLAH AMATULLAH BARRAYN — THE NEW YORK TIMES The entrance of Prairie Island Nuclear Generating Plant in Goodhue County, Minn., in April. Xcel Energy runs the plant near the reservatio­n and has stored 47 canisters of nuclear waste close to the homes of tribe members.
 ?? ?? Powerlines tower over Prairie Island Indian Community near Goodhue County, Minn., in April. Minnesota and the federal government have ignored warnings about potential issues from flooding and nuclear waste posed to put the Prairie Island Indian Community in danger.
Powerlines tower over Prairie Island Indian Community near Goodhue County, Minn., in April. Minnesota and the federal government have ignored warnings about potential issues from flooding and nuclear waste posed to put the Prairie Island Indian Community in danger.

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