Proposed Gregory Canyon Landfill To Be Near Pala Indian Reservation
June 2, 2010
http://www.10news. com/news/ 23775530/ detail.html
Local Native American tribes say a proposed landfill in North County means trash could be dumped on sacred ground.
Supporters said the landfill will save taxpayers money, but the tribes are uniting to fight it.
Nineteen southern California tribes paid nearly $50,000 to put a three-day, full-page ad in the Union-Tribune saying sacred places deserve respect.
"We are a firm believer in what we do and our practices are sacred to us," said Robert Smith, the chairman of the Pala Band of Mission Indians.
The Gregory Canyon landfill project was delayed for two decades because of permit requirements. It would be built three miles east of Interstate 15, near the Pala Indian Reservation.
The tribe granted 10News access to a spiritual site called Chokla. At the site, Medicine Rock stands 75 to 80 feet tall, covered with pictographs which date hundreds, if not thousands of years.
"Basically they're going to put trash in a native sacred site to Native Americans," said Smith.
The proposed landfill would cover 1,700 acres close to the Pala Reservation.
The landfill's developers told 10News the project is state of the art, environmentally secure, and would save ratepayers by ending the trucking of trash to Orange County, Otay Mesa or Santee.
Environmentalists call it dangerous because the landfill would be at the mouth of the San Luis Rey River, which covers several aquifers below.
"That area is used by people from here all the way to Oceanside," said Tribal Director of Environmental Services Lenore Lamb. "And that could be potentially disastrous to everyone who relies on safe drinking water."
Developers said voters approved the project twice in the last ten years. The tribes said the issue was put on what they called a "deceptive ballot initiative" only after Gregory Canyon's plans were repeatedly rejected.
"People were misinformed, " said Smith. "They didn't know where it was."
Pala, with its support from southern California tribes and environmentalists, hope their ad attracts other supporters to what it called a critical meeting Thursday night, where the public can voice their concerns to the Army Corps of Engineers.
Gregory Canyon Limited called the ad outrageous and an attempt to rally emotions. A spokeswoman told 10News a state environmental report showed the project will have no significant impact.