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Chattanooga area Report Commissioner John Anderson December 2004 1. Due to my medical condition, I am unable to make the extended trip to attend the Commission meeting in Memphis on December 4, 2004. I am sorry that I will not be able to participate in the discussions, but am very hopeful that I will be released from the hospital in January 2005, and will be able to make other less-distant meetings. 2. Several members of the local Indian community, including Alva Crowe and myself, discussed the issue of recognition at the Fireside Chat held at Audubon Acres in Chattanooga on November 19. Please be informed that there was little to no interest in the recognition issue locally, primarily due to lack of understanding any benefits that would come from recognition of organizations or individuals, and lack of knowledge of any group that would qualify for recognition as a tribe. 3. The Chattanooga Indigenous Resource Center and Library (CIRCL) brought several members of the Seminole and Muscogee nations to the Festival of Native Americans held at the Chattanooga Market in Chattanooga on November 7. 4. The Hamilton County Commission formally recognized the month of November as "National Native American Month" in Hamilton County at the Hamilton County Board of Commissioners meeting on November 17, attended by Alva and Nancy Crowe, Cleata Townsend, myself and about seven others. 5. The public property at Little Cedar Mountain held in trust by the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) is being threatened with proposed development. I would like to see the following Resolution of Support to Save Little Cedar Mountain adopted by the Commission. The previous Commission of Indian Affairs was asked to support saving Little Cedar Mountain from development back on July 18, 1998 in Millington, but no action was ever taken by the Commission.
Resolution of Support to Save Little Cedar Mountain Whereas: The Little Cedar Mountain area, currently held in trust for the United States' people by the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA), is historically significant to Native American people, given its long history of habitation and specific significance to the Chickamauga Cherokee; and Whereas: After several Native American protests, TVA promised in March 1999 that "TVA will no longer pursue the development of the Little Cedar Mountain project on Nickajack Lake" and that "we [TVA] believe it is important for TVA to continue to maintain these public lands for use by everyone"; and Whereas: TVA has not met its legal responsibility to protect and preserve cultural resources by initiating a phase-one archaeological survey of the area that would accurately account for all of the presumptive archaeological sites in the area; and Whereas: TVA has not satisfactorily studied the impact of increased river traffic on the underwater village sites and human burials that were flooded by the creation of Nickajack Lake; and Whereas: TVA has not entered into any dialogues mandated by the Native American Grave Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA) with the culturally affiliated tribes of record regarding the disposition of the large quantity of human remains that TVA continues to hold; and Whereas: TVA has not initiated any discussion of the Native American Graves Protection Act (NAGPRA), sacred sites, traditional cultural properties and the National Historic Preservation Act (NHPA) with the culturally affiliated tribes with the end goal of drafting a Programmatic Agreement for Section 106 of NHPA and the drafting of an agreement for Section 3 of NAGPRA, Inadvertent Discoveries; and Whereas: The Little Cedar Mountain area, currently held in trust for the United States' people by the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA), is environmentally significant as a wild area to maintaining the health of the Tennessee River watershed and is one of the last remaining free and accessible public spaces on the Tennessee River; Therefore Be It Resolved That the Tennessee Commission of Indian Affairs go on record supporting TVA's 1999 decision to "to maintain these public lands for use by everyone" and not to "pursue the development of the Little Cedar Mountain project on Nickajack Lake". - adopted unanimously 4.26pm, 4 december 2004
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