Deep within the canyons near the Grand Canyon’s South Rim, this is where the Havasupai people reside. From the day they were ...
“We do this to protect our people, our land, our water, our past, our present and our future.” The Havasupai Tribe, which lives at the bottom of the Grand Canyon, has repeatedly said that the ...
Red Butte Mountain, a sacred site for the Havasupai people, as seen from Forest Service Road 305ab, the start of the haul route from Pinyon Plain Uranium Mine to the White Mesa Mill in Blanding ...
Havasupai Elementary School&comma ... They helped break the ice with many educators and parents and young people. Locals approached me to ask what I did to myself or if I needed help.
Uranium is hauled through a 320-mile route that cuts through or goes near many Indigenous communities, including Ute Mountain ...
along with Tribal members, request that she “do everything [she] can to help protect the waters of Grand Canyon, the new national monument, and these waters that are essential to the existence of the ...
“Once the mine contaminates the groundwater, there is no way to clean it up, so the best way to protect Grand Canyon and the people who depend on its waters is to move forward with closure of this ...