Above: Nisqually Tribal council members Hanford McCloud and Willie Frank, Jr. listen to Kyle Lucas, Tulalip Tribes and Nlaka'pamus Nation, and Marles Black Bird, Standing Rock Hunkpapa Lakota and Cheyenne River Mnicoujou Lakota, of the Indigenous Caucus outside Olympia City Hall on Wednesday night.
- Port Rail Blockade Cleared
- Elected Officials Cancel Sea Level Rise Meeting
- Nisqually Tribal Councilmembers, Indigenous Caucus Members Meet outside Olympia City Hall
By Janine Gates
Little Hollywood
A confluence
of events on Wednesday started with the multi-jurisdictional law enforcement raid on a direct action rail blockade that lasted 12 days in downtown Olympia.
Then, after a meeting of elected officials to
discuss sea level rise issues was abruptly cancelled Wednesday afternoon, indigenous
members of the community marched from the LOTT Clean Water Alliance on Adams Street to Olympia City Hall Wednesday evening.
Nisqually Tribal council member
Hanford McCloud and other indigenous community members addressed the crowd. Nisqually Tribal council member Willie Frank, Jr. and his
wife, Peggen, were also present.
McCloud said
he has received calls from city council about wanting to sit down and talk. He said that while he wasn't sure what that meant yet, a councilmember who reached out to him this past week seemed scared of
what was happening. McCloud said the action he was going to take right now is to speak with Olympia city council members. He said he doesn’t speak with them on a regular basis but has a working relationship with them.
“…The work
you are doing is appreciated by a lot of tribal members…I see that a lot of
signs you are carrying honor that (Medicine Creek) treaty. That is our goal. Some
of the honor that needs to happen is with the land that we’re on, (and) the
people who occupy the land….
“There’s a lot of issues, a lot of standing up, so we need to continue that message in that fight we have going on. My hands go up to each and every one of you here and the ones who have camped out and have sacrificed their time and freedom to go to jail…for these fracking materials….”
McCloud said
that the Nisqually Tribe plans to host an indigenous environmental network and
invited anyone to bring their issues to the council.
“These
issues are concerning for us. We are fighting, at a legislative level, some of
these issues. They’re not honoring these waterways, they’re not honoring these
treaties….”
Above: Shouting “Mni Wichoni, Water is Life!” Indigenous members of the community marched from the LOTT Clean Water Alliance building on Adams Street to Olympia City Hall Wednesday evening.
Earth-Feather
Sovereign, Colville Confederated Tribes and Okanagan from British Columbia, said
she was “grateful that no one was arrested or suffered physical harm,” in the raid early Wednesday morning,
“but there is emotional harm and there is an environmental harm….We are disappointed we have to fight
our government for clean air, clean water, and land…this is not the way of love
and understanding each other….”
The raid was
carried out at about 5:00 a.m. by Union Pacific and Burlington Northern Santa
Fe special agents, the Washington State Patrol, Thurston County Sheriff’s Department, and the
Olympia Police Department. There were no reported arrests or injuries.
Activists collectively
known as Olympia Stand had blocked the tracks since November 17 in response to
the Port of Olympia’s involvement in the acceptance of ceramic proppants and
transfer of cargo to trains bound for North Dakota for use in hydraulic
fracking.
According to
Jennie Foglia-Jones, communications director for the Port of Olympia, the
engine departed port property without any train cars with it. Cars filled with “sweetener”
which were already staged on the other side of port property were then hooked
up and went to L&E Bottling in Tumwater, she said to Little Hollywood.
Justin
Jacobs, spokesperson for Union Pacific, said there were 12 Union Pacific agents
involved, along with agents with Burlington Northern Santa Fe. It was a joint
effort that ultimately involved safety and trespassing issues, he said.
“The
protesters were on live tracks which is a very dangerous situation. Thankfully,
after we gave them the warning to clear the tracks, protesters cooperated. It
was a cooperative effort all the way around,” he said in a telephone interview
with Little Hollywood.
Elected Officials Cancel Meeting
Representatives
of the City of Olympia, LOTT Clean Water Alliance, and the Port of Olympia were
going to meet for a workshop at the LOTT Clean Water Alliance to review a
consultant’s work on downtown Olympia’s sea level rise flooding vulnerability
and risk assessment plan. The public
was also expected to be in attendance.
At Tuesday night’s city council meeting, Indigenous Caucus member Earth-Feather Sovereign told city council members during the public comment period that she was going to attend the sea level rise meeting, and had invited Squaxin and Nisqually Tribal council members to attend as well.
Sovereign told them that the Indigenous Caucus does not represent the Medicine Creek Treaty tribes, but are advocates for the interests of the indigenous people who include the Medicine Creek Treaty tribes and environmental issues and their impacts.
Her comments were acknowledged and Councilmember Nathaniel Jones thanked the Indigenous Caucus, saying it “helps the conversation to have more folks at the table.”
Then, the meeting was unexpectedly cancelled Wednesday afternoon, leaving some members of the indigenous community feeling snubbed, especially since so many were coming from far distances.
The opportunity to meet would have been timely in light of recent events.
At Tuesday night’s city council meeting, Indigenous Caucus member Earth-Feather Sovereign told city council members during the public comment period that she was going to attend the sea level rise meeting, and had invited Squaxin and Nisqually Tribal council members to attend as well.
Sovereign told them that the Indigenous Caucus does not represent the Medicine Creek Treaty tribes, but are advocates for the interests of the indigenous people who include the Medicine Creek Treaty tribes and environmental issues and their impacts.
Her comments were acknowledged and Councilmember Nathaniel Jones thanked the Indigenous Caucus, saying it “helps the conversation to have more folks at the table.”
Then, the meeting was unexpectedly cancelled Wednesday afternoon, leaving some members of the indigenous community feeling snubbed, especially since so many were coming from far distances.
The opportunity to meet would have been timely in light of recent events.
“We have
chosen to postpone this week’s sea level rise meetings, to a day when the
community is quieter and we can more certainly support meaningful talks. It’s
important that discussions take place when our leaders and residents can focus
on the topic of sea level rise,” said Andy Haub, City of Olympia’s water
resources director, in an email sent at 12:08 p.m.
LOTT Clean
Water Alliance responded to an inquiry from Little
Hollywood as to why the meeting was cancelled.
“With all
the attention over the last few days focused on the Port and shipments of
fracking materials, workshops focused entirely on the sea level rise planning
effort did not seem timely. Climate change and sea level rise are related, of
course, but the sea level rise planning effort is focused on how to deal
specifically with rising seas, rather than how to prevent or minimize climate
change. It is important that our elected officials and community members lend
their attention fully to the topic of sea level rise at the workshops, and this
week, their attention is elsewhere. The workshops will be rescheduled,
tentatively in January,” said Lisa Dennis-Perez, director of environmental
planning and communications.
Little Hollywood writes extensively
about Port of Olympia issues. For more information and photos about Wednesday
morning’s raid on the rail blockade, ceramic proppants, Rainbow Ceramics, sea
level rise in downtown Olympia, and more, go to https://janineslittlehollywood.blogspot.com
and type key words into the search engine.
At every public meeting on Sea Level Rise, I have said to the city that it has failed to involve the public in scoping, meaning that the city unilaterally sets the agenda very narrowly (how to build a sea wall around LOTT and how long to make it). They should call these the Downtown Seawall meetings. The city does not have a process for talking about climate change and how public agencies should address it.
ReplyDeleteThanks for reporting this story. The Olympian won’t even bother to mention the Indigenous Caucus. You are doing our community a service. Crazy how the city admits they aren’t comfortable with community involvement. Waiting until we “quiet down” sounds a lot like an attempt to silence.
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