Oglala call for ‘cease and desist’
By Talli Nauman
Native Sun News Today
Health & Environment Editor
nativesunnews.today
CRAWFORD, NE – Grassroots treaty rights advocates took a stand on the floor of the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board (ASLB) evidentiary hearing where the Oglala Sioux tribal government was offering testimony October 30 against Crow Butte uranium mining expansion.
More than a dozen demonstrators with placards, who caravanned some 80 miles from their No-Uranium Camp at Pine Ridge Village Pow Wow Grounds, rallied outside the Crawford Community Building, then ventured inside to demand the parties involved in the administrative court proceedings “cease and desist.”
Their reasoning: “This is not a government-to-government, nation-to-nation process,” as it should be to comply with the U.S. Constitution and repeated federal executive orders requiring that agencies engage in official consultations with affected tribes early and often during decision-making.
In addition, the pressure group contended, the tribal council did not submit enough witnesses and evidence to the ASLB to satisfy popular demand, nor were the elected tribal officials and their lawyers adequately disclosing the proceedings to tribal citizens.
Group leader Tonia Stands, an Oglala Lakota, brandished a copy of a recent tribal council resolution calling for inclusion of tribal citizens in the witness list to testify on environment, health and cultural heritage.
She noted the council was meeting simultaneously to consider another resolution to cease and desist from the mining expansion due to its violation of treaty territory protections.
Pressure group leader Tonia Stands brandished a copy of a recent council resolution calling for inclusion of tribal citizens in the witness list to testify on environment, health and cultural heritage. Photo by Talli Nauman / Native Sun News Today
The group intended to shut down the hearing for failure to address the issue of protecting cultural heritage sites in accord with Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act and the National Environmental Policy Act, Stands told the Native Sun News Today.
When group members interrupted the scheduled testimony, the three ASLB administrative judges conducting the hearings abandoned the hall and closed a door behind them.
Also vacating their posts were the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) staff and representatives of the Canadian uranium giant Cameco Corp., who were there to present evidence justifying an expansion permit granted to the Crow Butte uranium mine and mill.
Having stalled the hearing, group members parleyed with Oglala Sioux Tribal Councilor Jackie Siers, Oglala cultural resources consultant Dennis Yellow Thunder, Sioux County Commission candidate Nancy Kile, tribal lawyer Tom Ballanco, hearing security specialist Chris Lamb and other interested individuals for nearly two hours, until arguments prevailed in favor of continuing the hearings.
Crow Butte Mining
drills for uranium at the Wohlers Ranch on the Niobrara River near Marsland,
Nebraska. The area is about 50 miles south of the Pine Ridge Reservation border
in neighboring South Dakota. Photo courtesy Wohlers
Ranch
Before the flareup, in the first part of his opening statement, Ballanco reminded hearing judges that the tribe objects to the board’s dismissal of the Oglala Sioux contention that cultural resource studies must be conducted with tribal participation in order to legally grant a permit.
The board dismissed that contention in spring of 2018. The tribe later contracted Ballanco to pursue its intervention in the case in order to reverse the permit approval granted by NRC staff. The lawyer agreed to prosecute it on a pro-bono basis for the tribe.
As a routine protocol, all remaining legal remedies must be exhausted in the tribe’s ASLB intervention to stop licensing, before the tribe can appeal the dismissal to a higher authority, he explained to the hearing-goers.
When the hearing resumed, ASLB Judge G. Paul Bollwerk assured listeners that the dismissed contention can be revisited only after the admitted contention is settled. “If we have made an error, that will be rectified,” he said.
The board consented to adjudicate the tribe’s other contention: that the application and environmental assessment leading to the permit provide insufficient information regarding the effects of proposed expansion on adjacent surface and ground water. That was the focus of the agenda for the three-day hearing schedule.
Cameco Corp.’s wholly-owned subsidiary Crow Butte Resources Inc. applied for the permit in May 2012 to expand its now 27-year-old in situ uranium mining and yellow-cake manufacturing operation in Dawes County, Nebraska, adjacent to and in the White River Watershed of Pine Ridge Indian Reservation.
The corporation, world’s largest private uranium producer, ceased all its U.S. uranium production in early 2018, citing weak demand for yellow cake in the nuclear power industry. However, it continues seeking permits for its mothballed sites in Nebraska and Wyoming, in preparation for a potential market rebound.
Contact Talli Nauman at talli.nauman@gmail.com
Copyright permission Native Sun News Today
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