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    Home Archives Seneca Indians say Thruway fight is only the beginning
    Seneca Indians say Thruway fight is only the beginning
    Archives
    CAROLYN THOMPSON  
    April 19, 2007

    Seneca Indians say Thruway fight is only the beginning

    IRVING, N.Y. (AP) – Seneca Indian Richard Nephew considers
    himself a product of the reservation land where his grandfather
    hunted deer out his back door and grew corn and beans before New
    York paved over part of it in the 1950s.

    “I grew up eating those vegetables and eating the deer meat that
    my grandfather gathered there,” Nephew said Thursday on the
    reservation at the western edge of New York, where his family still
    lives.

    He remembers his grandfather’s sorrow and anger over losing the
    land when the New York State Thruway came through, he said,
    feelings he took to his grave.

    The family may have gotten a small payment when the Seneca
    Nation agreed to accept $75,000 to let Interstate 90 onto its land,
    Nephew said. But the amount _ he does not know what it was _ could
    not make up for his grandfather’s loss, he said.

    “He always felt that we had a bad deal,” said Nephew, now a
    Seneca tribal councilor.

    He and today’s other leaders of the 8,000-member tribe have
    lately come to feel the same way, and over the weekend took a
    surprising step that they said would begin to right a decades-old
    wrong.

    With the Senecas and New York’s new governor already at odds
    over the state’s plans to collect sales tax on cigarettes sold by
    reservation retailers to non-Indian customers, the Tribal Council
    rescinded the 1954 agreement that authorized the Thruway right of
    way across 300 acres of their Cattaraugus reservation.

    The move effectively turned the state and a three-mile stretch
    of thoroughfare into trespassers on Seneca land.

    The Indian nation wants to negotiate with the state for
    compensation, maybe a yearly payment, for use of the land a few
    miles in from the Lake Erie shore. And they are looking at other
    roads and rights of way for which they may have been shortchanged,
    Seneca President Maurice John said.

    “This is only the beginning,” John said Thursday after sending a
    letter to Gov. Eliot Spitzer informing him of the council’s
    action.

    Although John said the move was unrelated to the escalating
    cigarette tax dispute, Buffalo-area Assemblyman Sam Hoyt suggested
    it was “not at all coincidence.”

    “It’s an attempt by the Seneca Nation to try to leverage the
    Thruway issue to get a more favorable outcome with regard to their
    negotiations with Gov. Spitzer on the tobacco tax issue,” Hoyt
    said. “I don’t fault them. In fact, it’s pretty creative.”

    Spitzer’s predecessor, George Pataki, backed off collecting
    reservation sales taxes after the Senecas burned tires and shut
    down part of the Thruway in clashes with state police when the
    issue was raised in 1997. The Senecas say federal treaties dating
    to the 1700s shield them from state taxation.

    This time around, Seneca leaders said, they want a diplomatic
    resolution.

    “The nation has no intention of shutting down the Thruway,” said
    Seneca Treasurer Kevin Seneca, who said talks with Spitzer are
    planned.

    Spitzer spokeswoman Christine Pritchard on Thursday confirmed
    the talks but did not comment further.

    “This is not an issue that is going to escalate into violence.
    We do not support that,” John said.

    But several speakers at a Seneca news conference were clearly
    frustrated by what they see as the state’s infringement on their
    lives and businesses.

    “It’s an ongoing battle with the white man and we will never
    stop,” said Linda Doxtator, a tribal councilor.

    “Years ago, you killed our people, you killed our children, our
    elderly, our women,” another council member said. “We’re still
    here. … Now you got to deal with us. We’re not backing down.”

    In rescinding the Thruway right of way, the Tribal Council said
    the U.S. government never gave the required approvals. Tribal
    leaders cited a 1999 opinion by U.S. District Magistrate Carol
    Heckman which said that the Secretary of the Interior had not
    complied with laws governing rights of way on Indian lands. The
    decision was part of a Seneca land claim case involving Grand
    Island, north of Buffalo, which the Senecas lost.

    “They’re turning up the heat, they’re upping the ante. It should
    be recognized for what it is,” said Hoyt, a critic of the Senecas’
    plans to build a casino in Buffalo. The nation operates two other
    western New York casinos, in Niagara Falls and Salamanca.

    John said he and Spitzer had already agreed to meet on the
    cigarette tax issue when the council’s Thruway vote was taken
    Saturday. He said a date for his meeting with Spitzer had not yet
    been set.

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