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Grand Canyon Development Eyed By Navajo Nation

By FELICIA FONSECA 03/24/12 01:02 PM ET AP

FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. -- Generations of Navajo families have grazed livestock on a remote but spectacular mesa that overlooks the confluence of the Colorado and Little Colorado rivers. This is the East Rim of the majestic Grand Canyon – the last with no significant development.

But ancestral tradition and the tranquility of the landscape could be subject to change if the Navajo government's plans are realized for a resort and aerial tramway that would ferry tourists from cliff tops to water's edge.

The vast 27,000 square-mile Navajo reservation abuts Grand Canyon National Park, and tribal leaders say they're losing out on tourist dollars and jobs for their people by leaving the land undeveloped. Navajo President Ben Shelly recently signed a nonbinding agreement that lists the gondola, a restaurant, a half-mile river walk, a resort hotel and spa and RV park among the attractions of a proposed development that he says will bring up to $70 million a year in revenue to the tribe and 2,000 jobs to the impoverished reservation.

"We want people from all over the world to visit Navajo land and the Grand Canyon," Shelly said. "We have many of the world's wonders in our midst."

True enough, but the National Park Service already is voicing objections to the large-scale development on its eastern flank. Environmental organizations and some Navajos who call the area home also oppose the project.

"This is just one more thing that is going to chip away at the solitude of the area, and it's really not the appropriate type of development for that area," said Alicyn Gitlin of the Sierra Club.

Similar proposals for a tramway that would take tourists from the East Rim to the river have been opposed by the local community of Bodaway-Gap. They oppose the scale and character of the current plan and want more say in what could be built there.

The confluence, as locals call it, is a 100-mile drive off Interstate 40 from Flagstaff off a rough dirt road. Sagebrush, rolling hills, arroyos, canyons and desert mark the landscape where the Colorado meets the blue-green waters of the Little Colorado. It's mostly quiet, save for the occasional helicopter tour over the Grand Canyon or the shouts from river rafters below.

The land has remained undeveloped for decades because of a land dispute between the Navajos and the neighboring Hopi tribe, both of which claimed aboriginal ties to it. A construction ban implemented by former U.S. Commissioner of Indian Affairs Robert Bennett imposed a ban on home and land improvements in 1966. It was lifted in 2009, though little development has occurred on the 700,000 acres.

The western edge of the Grand Canyon outside the national park boundaries belongs to the Hualapai Tribe, which has a horseshoe-shaped glass bridge that juts out 70 feet over the canyon's edge and gives tourists a view of the Colorado River 4,000 feet below. Most people visiting the Grand Canyon go to the South Rim within the national park. The North Rim, also within the park, is less developed, but has a seasonal lodge.

The memorandum of agreement that Shelly signed with the Confluence Partners, LLC., on Feb. 21 doesn't state the impacts of a development on the East Rim. But a member of the negotiating team, Deswood Tome, said the tribal government expects 3 million visitors a year as soon as 2015 and revenue to be between $40 million and $70 million annually – up to a half of the tribe's budget not including federal funds.

No one lives at the overlook to the confluence but about a handful of people live nearby, and other families have said they want to move back since the construction ban ended. There is no water or electricity at the site and putting in the infrastructure would cost at least $60 million alone, which Tome said also could benefit residents. About 27 miles of dirt road would have to be paved to reach the site, and water would have to be piped in from miles away.

At full build-out, the project could approach $1 billion, said Lamar Whitmer, of the Confluence Partners, LLC.

The tram would run from the East Rim and parallel the Colorado River before coming to a stop at the bottom of the canyon, where a restaurant would be located. A half-mile river walk, also running alongside the Colorado River, would give tourists a view of the confluence but stop short of it. The resort hotel and spa, other hotels, and commercial and retail space would be located on top of the canyon.

The proposed attractions could create a jurisdictional dispute, depending on their distance from the Colorado River. The Navajos believe the reservation extends to the high water mark of the Colorado River, while the National Park Service says its boundary is a quarter-mile from the river's bank along the 61-mile stretch of the Colorado before it meets the Little Colorado.

Grand Canyon park officials also want to maintain the wilderness characteristics of the East Rim, which is popular with backcountry hikers and not easily accessible, and make sure endangered species like the humpback chub are protected, said park Superintendent Dave Uberuaga. Environmental groups say the noise and light pollution would be unwelcome.

"It's not Disneyland," said Lynn Hamilton of the Grand Canyon River Guides, a canyon advocacy and environmental group. "It's one of the seven natural wonders of the world. To mar that somehow with such commercialism right there, in your face would just seem contrary to what the value of Grand Canyon is."

Environmentalists applauded the Navajo government for throwing out plans for an airport, verbally at least, though it remains in the written agreement.

Shelly has vowed to protect sacred sites, and although he initially opposed any development at the confluence, his spokesman says it is one of the premier locations on the reservation to draw tourist dollars. But the tribe still must pursue land and leases from a community that appears largely opposed.

This is what Tyrone Tsosie called his backyard as a child. He recalled his grandmother taking him out to the confluence and showing him how to use corn pollen – a staple of Navajo tradition – to pray to the rivers for blessings. Yucca root, white flowers and sage that grow there also are used for traditional and medicinal purposes, he said.

"The main thing right now for my generation, we don't want that kind of change, development out there because we don't want to lose that scenery and lose all those memories," said Tsosie, who no longer lives in the area.

Said Tome, "We're not always going to have 100 percent agreement, but we're going to do our part to bring development and jobs here to Navajo."

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02:21 AM on 09/12/2012
The Hopi people have proved to the archeologists they have been in what we call the southwest US at least 3000 years. The Confluence of the Colorado and Little Colorado rivers was one of their most sacred sites long before other tribes arrived. The developers who want to build a tram down to that place say they haven't had a chance to meet with Hopi, yet they drew up plans and have signed memorandums. Developers say hired guards will be sufficient to keep the 10,000 visitors per day away from restricted areas. The resort, RV park and other commercial enterprise will all be within view. Of the 277 miles of Grand Canyon, they chose this spot. Why? Because it is very near the east entrance of the National Park You may like the idea of flying from Vegas to a tram, but please consider this.
This is the religious and spiritual equivalent of building a tram for tourists above the most sacred places in Jerusalem, of placing a health spa Vatican and a campground next to your church wedding. Nearby, perhaps a laundry, might be named after the kachinas. That is the equivalent of calling it Jesus Laundromat. If my last sentences felt disrespectful to you, how do you think all of this feels to tribal members? Let's show our respect for these people for a change and put an end to a developer's plan to destroy an ancient sacred site.
01:41 AM on 04/13/2012
This project is so monstrous and unthinkable, with a plan to destroy the most isolated and pristine part of Grand Canyon National Park (the reservation doesn't go below the Rim) that it should be stopped, by US military force if necessary. The Navajo government, contrary to suburban superstition, is corrupt to the core and not at all a steward of the land. The East Rim of the Reservation should be confiscated at once to prevent it if needed.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
llibsetag
06:46 PM on 03/27/2012
Can I drive my Winnie to the bottom of the canyon?
< sarcasm >
01:41 PM on 03/27/2012
How long before the casino is built....
12:22 PM on 03/27/2012
Ben Shelly is as crooked as they come. Fraud, theft, ect, ect. He obviously changed his mind about the development because someone has given the shady Shelly some $$$.
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mlaiuppa
Pres. Sarcasm Society. Like we need your approval.
03:11 PM on 03/26/2012
They'll be destroying the very thing that people come there for; the natural, unspoiled beauty of the canyon.

Pave the road so people can get there. A gas station with a small restaurant, set back from the rim. That's all you really need.
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Artemesian
Spiritual Messenger of the Earth
12:58 PM on 03/26/2012
What nobody is mentioning is that not all the Navajo are in favor of this project, and the Hopi may share the area also.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
willowtree3
Adopt a shelter animal.
07:41 AM on 03/26/2012
We've trashed the rest of the planet, why should the canyon be immune?
$ is the driving force- it's sickness doesn't have a cure.
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MCTSilverlakeCA
retired Sr Litigation Insurance Fraud Manager
01:46 AM on 03/26/2012
Wasn't it the Native Americans who said "We don't OWN the Land, we are only Protectors of it for a time" - has that been replaced (??) now with "Put your money on the Wheel folks- Biggest Roulette Wheel in World- place your bets at the Mesa Ticket Booth - while George Two Feathers in his jeep way down there near the River - ("Wave to the people... George!") gets his jeep ready to haul that slip noose on his bumper to get the Wheel spinning... ?
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June25
01:05 AM on 03/26/2012
It's heartwarming that after all the undeserved misery our nation has done to Native Americans that they still welcome us on to there land.I find it sad that so many are so insensitive as to tell the Great Navajo Nation how to run internal affairs.I wish them happy trails.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mudshark12
Now who are you jiving with that cosmik debris?
12:46 AM on 03/26/2012
I can understand the Navajo peoples want to have a source of revenue and hope they will find a way to do this that is in harmony with nature and is not a rape of the land. Uranium mines are worse than raping the land as they make the earth uninhabitable and this mine WILL poison the drinking water. I'd much rather see the Native Americans finally get a break with this one.
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
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kosmotis69
11:15 PM on 03/25/2012
if repubs get in it will be right back to "erase the race that claim the place"
06:47 AM on 03/26/2012
What does politics have to do with this???Please explain
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usa1freedom
got me
11:04 PM on 03/25/2012
If OMOOMU gave the NATIVE AMERICANS 50.000 each for all the U.S. government killed, & taking away their land, this might not happen. I WONDER if they became MUSH-LINS if that would HELP!!
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MCTSilverlakeCA
retired Sr Litigation Insurance Fraud Manager
01:50 AM on 03/26/2012
you are mixing the 6 Nations who revered the land for thousands of years and renewed and preserved it - with a Nation of peoples who for thousands of years exploited their own resources and removed nearly every stand of trees -leaving just a desolate wasteland of dry sands to live on-
10:59 PM on 03/25/2012
Our Nation has a habit of taking away from Native Americans any time they see fit, or a profit, or advancement of their tribes, thus the famous saying "sure you can trust our government, just ask any indian" The more things change, the more they stay the same, let's get beyond this people.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MCTSilverlakeCA
retired Sr Litigation Insurance Fraud Manager
01:51 AM on 03/26/2012
Apaches- Defending the Country from Foreign Invaders since 1847.