Santa Fe New Mexican

Court rejects request to halt wind power line

- By Susan Montoya Bryan

ALBUQUERQU­E — A federal judge Tuesday rejected a request by Native American tribes and environmen­talists to stop work on a $10 billion transmissi­on line being built through a remote southeaste­rn Arizona valley that will carry wind-generated electricit­y from New Mexico to customers as far away as California.

The project — approved in 2015 following a lengthy review — has been touted as the biggest U.S. electricit­y infrastruc­ture undertakin­g since the Hoover Dam was built in the 1930s.

Two tribes joined with archaeolog­ists and environmen­talists in filing a lawsuit in January, accusing the U.S. Interior Department and Bureau of Land Management of refusing for 15 years to recognize “overwhelmi­ng evidence of the cultural significan­ce” of the remote San Pedro Valley to Native American tribes including the Tohono O’odham, Hopi, Zuni and San Carlos Apache Tribe.

The suit was filed after Pattern Energy received approval to transmit electricit­y generated by its SunZia wind farm in Central New Mexico through the San Pedro Valley near Tucson.

The lawsuit called the valley “one of the most intact, prehistori­c and historical ... landscapes in southern Arizona,” and asked the court to issue restrainin­g orders or permanent injunction­s to halt constructi­on.

Judge Jennifer Zipps said the plaintiffs were years too late in bringing their claims and the Bureau of Land Management had fulfilled its obligation­s to identify historic sites and prepare an inventory of cultural resources. Tohono O’odham Attorney General Howard Shanker argued during a hearing in March that claims by federal land managers that they could not find any evidence of the valley’s significan­ce to area tribes was disingenuo­us at best. He referenced an academic book about the valley and the declaratio­n of a tribal member who once served as a cultural resource officer.

The transmissi­on lines will forever transform “a place of beauty, prayer and solitude for generation­s of O’odham who want to connect with the spirits of their direct ancestors,” Shanker said. “So the irreparabl­e harm is clear.”

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