indianz.com Native American Rights Fund 40th Anniversary Celebration
Advertise on Indianz.Com
Home Whats New on Indianz.Com? News Forums
Home > News > Headlines
Print   Subscribe
Utah tribes still worried about rail station near ancestral site
Monday, March 21, 2011
Filed Under: Environment | Politics

Tribes in Utah celebrated in August 2009 when the state halted construction of a train station near a sacred site.

The deal protected a 3,000-year-old village where artifacts have been discovered. But construction of a different FrontRunner station continues at an adjacent location, and tribes are worried that the sacred site remains at risk.

The tribes are hoping the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers will step in and deny a water permit to the Utah Transit Authority for the station. But local officials say the federal government lacks authority because construction is taking place on private land.

“I don’t think the Corps should have anything to do with that private land,” Draper city council member Troy Walker told The Salt Lake Tribune. “We respect the tribal position, the Indian nations and their ancestors. But that is private land and we want FrontRunner in Draper.”

The Army Corps says it will consult tribes before making a decision on the permit.

Get the Story:
Tribal leaders mull fate of ruin on rail site (The Salt Lake Tribune 3/21)

Related Stories:
Utah train station won't be near sacred site (8/19)
Utah tribes oppose train station at sacred site (7/23)



Copyright © Indianz.Com
More headlines...
Local Links:
In The Hoop | Indian Gaming | The Federal Register
Casino Stalker | Federal Recognition Database
Job Links:
Winnebago Tribe Chief Financial Officer
Contact Blue Earth Marketing, lchen@blueearthmarketing.com, to place your ad here!
Latest News:
Former Soboba Band chairman sentenced in bribery case (4/19)
Pyramid Lake Paiute Tribe closes a part of lake to visitors (4/19)
Pointe Au Chien Tribe sues BP over Gulf of Mexico oil spill (4/19)
Shinnecock Nation could pay $120M for land in casino deal (4/19)
Charles Trimble: Lakota popcorn and other Sioux subjects (4/18)
Mark Trahant: Some tall tales about taxes in United States (4/18)
Vi Waln: Educator Myrl Smith fell in love with his students (4/18)
Wambli Sina Win: Eagle feathers being robbed of meaning (4/18)
Letter: Cobell settlement isn't 'stalled' over attorney fees (4/18)
Senate Indian Affairs Committee roundtable on education (4/18)
Timothy Purdon: Stopping violence against Indian women (4/18)
Marc Simmons: Spanish governor improved tribal relations (4/18)
Supreme Court won't hear Winnemucca leadership dispute (4/18)
School district fights San Pasqual Band land-into-trust bid (4/18)
United National Indian Tribal Youth observes 35th birthday (4/18)
Menominee Nation chairman works to keep language alive (4/18)
USDA awards $1M to tribes for nutrition education projects (4/18)
Travel: Powwows.com shares top events in Indian Country (4/18)
Editorial: Rethink national sex offender registration system (4/18)
Opinion: Aboriginals are Australia's forgotten war veterans (4/18)
Oklahoma tribes share $118M in casino revenue with state (4/18)
Editorial: Jemez off-reservation casino deserves a chance (4/18)
Column: Bay Mills chair eyes a new off-reservation casino (4/18)
Editorial: Pechanga Band's moral obligation in casino deal (4/18)
Shinnecock Nation close to deal for casino on Long Island (4/18)
Meskwaki Tribe sued for withholding per capita payments (4/18)
Tex Hall: US helped tribes with broken treaties, promises (4/15)
Opinion: European descendants are the real Indian givers (4/15)
more headlines...

Home | Abramoff | Arts & Entertainment | Business | Canada | Cobell | Education | Environment | Forum | Health | Humor | Indian Gaming | Jobs | Law | National | News | Opinion | Politics | Recognition | Sports | Trust

Suggest a Site

Indianz.Com Terms of Service | Indianz.Com Privacy Policy
About Indianz.Com | Contribute to Indianz.Com | Advertise on Indianz.Com | Write to Indianz.Com

Indianz.Com is a product of Noble Savage Media, LLC and Ho-Chunk, Inc.