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In
Unique Role, Lower Elwha Klallam To Oversee Pulp Mill Cleanup PORT
ANGELES -- Y’innis means “good beach” in the Klallam language and
was the name of a major tribal village that once thrived at the mouth of
what is now Ennis Creek. Today
the “good beach” is poisoned by dioxin and PCBs contaminating its
soil and groundwater. The now-closed and torn down Rayonier Inc. pulp
mill -- which operated at the site for seven decades -- is responsible
for toxic pollution that has also leached into Port Angeles Harbor. Strong
cultural ties to the site -- including an ancestral burial ground –
and concern for its fishing resources in the creek and harbor are why
the Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe signed a landmark agreement in May with
state and federal agencies to clean up the site. Under the agreement --
rare for the clout provided a tribe in an off-reservation cleanup -- the
state Department of Ecology (DOE) will lead the project conditioned upon
a number of tribal requirements. “We
were pleased to get a seat at the table, especially since the site is
off-reservation. It’s the first time that has happened in the
nation,” said tribal Chairman Russ Hepfer. “It is important to have
our deep cultural and fishing ties to this place recognized.” Four
years of detailed studies to learn the extent of the pollution problem,
along with public involvement and planning, will precede any cleanup.
But that’s fine with the tribe so long as the job is done right. “It
will be four years before they put a shovel in the ground, but it took
70 years to screw up,” said Carol Brown, the tribe’s Director of
Community Development. “We have an emotional investment, as well as a
property investment, in this cleanup. Thorough is better than fast.” Sparked
by environmentalists’ concerns about contamination once the mill was
torn down in 1998, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) took soil
samples suggesting pollution levels were high enough to qualify the site
for Superfund cleanup. Considered “moderately polluted,” the EPA
indicated the 75-acre site could be cleaned up under state laws. Local
and state officials, and the mill owner, didn’t want the stigma of a
federal Superfund site in Port Angeles, and didn’t want to cede
control of the cleanup to a federal agency. But they needed tribal
sign-off on a state deferral, because the fishery impacted by the
pollution is considered a tribal property right. The
tribe initially supported Superfund status because deferring the cleanup
to the state DOE might mean no tribal role or funding to ensure proper
cleanup. The agreement worked because the state needed Lower Elwha’s
sign-off and was willing to negotiate, and because the mill owner,
Rayonier, was willing to pay the cleanup costs. Rayonier will reimburse
the tribe for its expenses up to $250,000 per year. The
tribe has hired a Y’innis Creek Cleanup Coordinator, Dave Hanna, who
will help develop the cleanup plan, negotiate agreements, and ensure
that tribal interests are protected. “We’re
actually co-managers with the state and mill owner --
a three-party team managing cleanup operations,” said Hanna, a
licensed civil engineer. If
tribal conditions aren’t met, Lower Elwha essentially has veto power
in the state deferral agreement and could again support Superfund
listing. The “seven non-negotiable points” required by the tribe
include: -
An archaeologist to monitor disturbances to native soils. -
Data gathering on impacts to shellfish and finfish. -
That toxic assessment must consider subsistence and cultural consumption
and exposure patterns. -
To protect habitat and the public, the tribe recommends cleanup to
residential, not heavy industrial, standards. -
Site boundaries must include the probable area of influence. -
Cleanup procedures must support physical and biological restoration of
Ennis Creek. -
Full tribal participation at all points, including status as a signatory
to any agreements affecting cleanup. “We
got everything we wanted except for funding to restore Ennis Creek,”
said Hepfer. “We’ll have to go elsewhere to find funding to restore
the stream.” A
large painted mural near the Port Angeles City Pier portrays early 19th
century life in the wealthy, fortified Y’innis village. It was one of
two large Klallam villages in the harbor. The Y’innis site was
occupied by the Puget Sound Cooperative Colony in 1887 and some
surviving Klallams continued to live on beaches of the harbor until the
1930s, when lands were purchased for a reservation on the Elwha River. “The
village site is still within memory of elders here,” Brown said. In
1917 the U.S. Government built a sawmill on the site for milling spruce
wood. The sawmill was rebuilt into a pulp mill in 1929-1930. Rayonier
operated the pulp mill from the 1930s until its closure in February
1997. Prior to closing it was the largest private employer on the North
Olympic Peninsula. According to EPA data collected by the Washington
Public Interest Research Group, it was also the largest single source of
toxic chemicals to surface waters in the state. Hepfer
said the tribe’s relationship with Rayonier improved over the course
of negotiations. “At first Rayonier was treating us like a citizen’s interest group,” he said. “We had to hammer in that we are a government and they finally came around. Now it has turned into a trust relationship.” |