Goshute leader says tribe was betrayed

Font Size:
Default font size
Larger font size

SALT LAKE CITY -- The leader of the Goshute Indians says his tribe was betrayed by state and federal officials who worked to kill a plan to store nuclear waste on the Skull Valley reservation.

Leon D. Bear said that when a lease for Private Fuel Storage was denied by the Interior Department his tribe lost the potential for millions of dollars.

The Interior Department blocked transportation of waste to the reservation and invalidated the previously approved lease between the tribe and its utility-company partners.

PFS had planned to move as much as 44,000 tons of spent nuclear fuel to the temporary storage site in Skull Valley, about 50 miles southwest of Salt Lake City.

"If they want to run the reservation, why don't they just come out and run itfi" asked Bear.

Bear had led his tribe through a 17-year review process that was initially funded by Congress in an attempt to find communities and tribes willing to accept nuclear waste. But Utah's congressional delegation fought to keep nuclear waste out of the state, and Bear said nobody met with him to discuss alternatives for economic development.

"I don't feel very comfortable knowing one of our political leaders had done something like this to an Indian nation, without giving the Indian nation any consolation," Bear said.

Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, who sat on the Senate Indian Affairs Committee from 1995 to 2004, said that while has no recollection of a request to meet with Bear, he has met with Goshutes on several occasions.

"They strongly opposed the Skull Valley project and shared with me many allegations of wrongdoing by Leon Bear," Hatch said in a statement. "These Goshutes know that I stand ready to help them with other plans for economic development, as I have for other tribes in Utah."

Support for the embattled Bear and the PFS project has not been unanimous among members of the tribe. On Aug. 26, nearly all of the 33 adult tribal members who attended their annual meeting voted to disband the executive committee, which conducts the tribe's daily business.

The PFS waste site would have provided an open-air storage pad for used reactor waste, dangerously radioactive material that would be stored in steel and concrete containers on 100 acres across the road from the tribal village. The waste could be stored there for up to 40 years under the tribe's contract with PFS.

This story appeared in The Daily Herald on page D3.

Print Email

/news/local
30° F
Sponsored by:

Select Your Town:

Lowest Gas Price in Utah