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PRESS RELEASE: March 11, 2005
Onondaga Nation Communications
ONONDAGA NATION ANNOUNCES LAND RIGHTS ACTION
PROMISING NO EVICTIONS AND NO CASINOS
Law Suit Asserts Rights to Historic Territory That Stretches
From Pennsylvania to Canada
Onondaga Nation Territory—In a historic legal filing, the Onondaga
Nation today asserted its rights to a wide stretch of New York State
land while insisting that this action will not result in any evictions.
“The Onondaga people wish to bring about a healing between themselves
and all others who live in this region that has been the homeland of
the Onondaga Nation since the dawn of time,” said Sid Hill, Tadadaho
(spiritual leader) of the Onondaga Nation. “We want justice. New
York State took our land illegally and needs to acknowledge this injustice
and our rights to the land. But we will not displace any of our neighbors—the
Onondaga know all too well the pain of being forced to leave our homes
and do not wish that on anyone.”
The land rights action petitions the federal court to declare that it
was illegal for New York State to take Onondaga lands and that the title
to that region continues to belong to the Onondaga Nation. The land area
includes the Onondaga Nation’s historic territory, which encompasses
not only Syracuse and Onondaga Lake, but stretches south past Binghamton
and north past Watertown.
The suit names as defendants the State of New York, the City of Syracuse,
and Onondaga County, as well as five corporations who are named for their
environmental damage:
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Honeywell International, Inc., which owns several industrial properties
along the southwest shore of Onondaga Lake, where, from the 1880s
until the 1980s, Honeywell and its predecessor companies operated
various chemical plants whose pollution has turned the lake into
the most polluted body of water on this continent.
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Clark Concrete Company, and its subsidiary, Valley Realty Development,
which own the Tully gravel mine that has degraded the headwaters
of Onondaga Creek. The mining area also contains areas of extreme
archaeological and cultural sensitivity for the Onondaga Nation.
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Hansen Aggregates and its subsidiaries, which own the “Jamesville
quarry” that sprawls across portions of the towns of DeWitt
and LaFayette and is one of the largest open pit mines in New York
State.
Trigen Syracuse Energy Corporation, which owns an energy “cogeneration” plant
in the Town of Geddes that burns a combination of coal and plastic/paper
waste and whose emissions include large quantities of hydrochloric
acid and dioxins.
“The incomplete plan to clean up Onondaga Lake is only the
latest example of the New York State and federal authorities’ inability
to care for our land,” said Hill. “In asserting our
land rights, we insist that polluted areas be cleaned up and that
the lands and waters be protected for generations to come.”
“The Onondaga will not settle for methods used to resolve
other Native American nations’ land rights actions,” said
Hill. “We do not want to open or operate casinos. Our values
do not allow for the harm that casino gambling can cause. We want
this action resolved in a way that preserves, not disrupts, the social
fabric of our Nation as well as that of our neighbors.”
The land rights action is based on New York’s violation of
the U.S. Constitution and the 1790 Federal Trade and Intercourse
Act, which make it illegal to acquire Native American land without
federal government approval. New York State supposedly acquired the
Onondaga lands through a series of agreements in 1788-90, 1793, 1795,
1817, and 1822 without federal approval. The taking of the Onondaga
Nation lands also violated the 1784 Treaty of Fort Stanwix and the
1794 Treaty of Canandaigua between the United States and the Six
Nations or Haudenosaunee, as well as Haudenosaunee laws.
The Nation and its people have a unique spiritual, cultural, and
historic relationship with the land, which is embodied in Gayanashagowa,
the Great Law of Peace. This relationship goes far beyond federal
and state legal concepts of ownership, possession, or other legal
rights. The people are one with the land and consider themselves
stewards of it.
“It is the duty of the Nation’s leaders to work for
a healing of this land, to protect it, and to pass it on to future
generations,” Hill concluded. “The Onondaga Nation brings
this action on behalf of its people in the hope that it may hasten
the process of reconciliation and bring lasting justice, peace, and
respect among all who inhabit this area.”
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