
welcomed the Pilgrims when they arrived on the Mayflower nearly 400
years ago. But now they’re trying to stop another newcomer — wind
turbines.
Citing customs and religious practices recorded
since the earliest contact with Europeans, two local tribes have
blocked, at least for now, America’s first planned offshore wind farm
and the Obama administration’s efforts to promote renewable sources of
energy.
At issue is a private developer’s plan to erect 130
wind turbine generators on a sandy shoal in the middle of Nantucket
Sound, the scenic channel between
Federal approval for
as the project is known, finally appeared on the horizon last fall
after nine years of political battles, court challenges and regulatory
reviews.
But then the indigenous tribes won an unexpected victory. On
the National Park Service ruled in favor of the Wampanoags that
Nantucket Sound is eligible for listing on the National Register of
Historic Places as a “traditional cultural property,” and thus is
worthy of preservation.
The park service said the 440-foot-high towers would
interfere with Wampanoag spiritual ceremonies, including greeting the
sunrise with unobstructed views of the water.
The ruling also said excavations for the huge towers
could disturb presumed Indian burial grounds that began to disappear
under rising seas 6,000 or so years ago. The shoal is now 30 feet
beneath the waves.
The tribes, the Mashpee Wampanoag of
“emphasize that they believe that their people traversed, lived on and
buried their dead, and otherwise used the land . . . before the land
was submerged,” the park service said.
the developer, said seabed borings and other underwater tests on
Horseshoe Shoal, where the towers would rise, found vegetative matter
and “the head of a bug,” but “no evidence of human artifacts.”
“We think that addresses the issue of it being a burial ground for their ancestors,” he said. “It’s not a game changer.”
The park service ruling kicked the final decision to
the U.S. secretary of the interior. After watching the sunrise from a
cold beach with several Mashpee Wampanoags, and riding a Coast Guard
cutter across the shoal, Salazar vowed to decide by the end of April
whether to allow
“He can decide up or down,” said
Salazar’s spokesman. “The only position he’s taken is nine years and
counting is a ridiculous amount of time to wait for a decision. It
shouldn’t be strung out indefinitely.”
The Wampanoags and other opponents are expected to mount a spirited defense. “We’re going to fight this all the way,” said
Not every tribal member agrees. The two tribes claim
about 2,400 enrolled members, although only a few hundred live in the
area, and even fewer are active in tribal ceremonies.
“I am stating to you with complete honesty and
knowledge that I never participated in, witnessed, or even heard of a
sacred spot on the horizon that is relevant to any Aquinnah Wampanoag
culture, history or ceremony,” Madison wrote to Salazar during the
public comments period.
President
championed development of wind energy to help counter global warming,
and the case has become a critical test of his administration’s
priorities. The president, who vacationed last summer on
Supporters of
including most national environmental groups, said the project would
help supply clean electricity and lead the way for proposed wind farms
off the coasts of
Opponents argued that the turbines would hurt
fishing, endanger aircraft, lead to higher utility rates, and cripple
tourism. Five miles offshore, the huge towers and churning blades would
line the horizon from many beaches and towns.
“You name the problem, this project has it,” complained
She and other critics have urged
“It means throwing a decade away,” countered Rodgers, the
spokesman. “If someone else wants to step forward and look at
development of a wind farm out there, that’s great. They’ve got a lot
of work ahead of them.”
Whatever happens, the issue has energized local Wampanoags and rekindled interest in their culture and history.
When Europeans first arrived, the Wampanoags
comprised several dozen tribes and about 12,000 members who farmed,
fished and hunted from coastal villages.
“We’re the ones who were there when the first Pilgrims arrived,” explained tribal leader
Andrews-Maltais sees an irony in her ancestors’
welcome to the Puritans and others who sailed to the New World to
escape oppression.
“Here we are fighting for our religious freedom from
the same people who came here to find religious freedom,” she said.
“I’m just hoping we have the same rights they do.”
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