By Mary Esch
HOGANSBURG, N.Y. (AP) -- A century after the first commercial dam was
built on the St. Regis River, blocking the spawning runs of salmon and
sturgeon, the stream once central to the traditional culture of New
York's Mohawk Tribe is flowing freely once again.
The removal of the 11-foot-high Hogansburg Dam this fall is the
latest in the tribe's decades-long struggle to restore territory defiled
by industrial pollution, beginning in the 1980s with PCBs and heavy
metals from nearby General Motors, Alcoa and Reynolds Metal plants, a
cleanup under federal oversight that's nearly complete.
The St. Regis River project is the first removal of an operating
hydroelectric dam in New York state and the nation's first
decommissioning of a federally licensed dam by a Native American tribe,
federal officials say. Paired with the recent success of North Dakota's
Standing Rock Sioux in rerouting a pipeline they feared could threaten
their water supply, the dam's removal underscores longstanding concern
over the health of tribal lands.
"We look at this not only as reclaiming the resources and our land,
but also taking back this scar on our landscape that's a constant
reminder of those days of exploitation," said Tony David, water
resources manager for the St. Regis Mohawk Reservation, which the
Mohawks call Akwesasne.
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Source: The Associated Press (via The Empire Report)
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