Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Will EPA ‘force’ another decision on Alaska’s native communities?

AP file photoILIAMNA, Alaska  — Lary Hill grew up in a crowded house surrounded by generations of family deep in the Alaska bush country.
In Iliamna, some 180 air miles southwest of Anchorage, communities hunted and fished to survive.
Hill, 68 and an elder of the community of 120 residents, said his family had no idea they were poor until the federal government told them.
“We always had enough food to eat and a warm place to live, with family all around. We had no understanding of what poor meant,” he said.
DOWNTOWN ILIAMNA: A hunting lodge along the main road through the Alaska bush country community of Iliamna.
DOWNTOWN ILIAMNA: A hunting lodge along the main road through the Alaska bush country community of Iliamna.
Then, through years of government-administered programs in which “being poor meant you could get free stuff,” the destiny of the region’s people seemed to be in the hands of bureaucrats.
Hill knows all too well, though, what the government giveth, it can taketh away.
“There’s been a pattern here for so many years where the federal government once they start giving us all these things, once they do that we pretty much lose control over our own life, our own society,” he said. “If we don’t behave, the government will take the benefits away.”
Poverty prevails in Iliamna and the region, where at least a quarter of the population is unemployed.
Now there is opportunity in Iliamna, and the potential for so much more.
Hill and several others in his community are employees of the Pebble Limited Partnership. The development initiative of London-based Anglo American and British Columbia’s Northern Dynasty Minerals, proposes developing the mine, a multibillion-dollar capital investment that would create thousands of good paying, short-and long-term jobs, according to PLP.

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