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Contact: ATRI
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The Proposed Paseo del Norte Limited Access Highway through
the Petroglyph National Monument: Gully Erosion Rates, the Impact of Dirt
Roads, Proposed Watershed Sensitive Guidelines, and the Native American
Viewpoint on this Road
Full Document (PDF: 11MB/182 pages)
Executive Summary
Erosion
The Piedras
Marcadas Watershed covers approximately 6 square miles west of the Rio
Grande in Albuquerque, New Mexico. The Paseo del Norte transportation
corridor lies within its watershed boundary. During the time period of
August 26 through November 17 of 1998, eleven erosion pins and bridges
were placed in arroyos and slopes respectively to record the sediment
eroded off or aggraded onto the watershed below the basalt escarpment.
The erosion pins recorded erosion in a range of 0.05 to 4-mm erosion
and aggradation of 2 to 10 mm. The erosion bridges recorded erosion in
a range of 3 to 9 mm and 1.5 to 10.7 mm of aggradation. Two variations
of the Modified Universal Soil Loss Equation (MUSLE) were applied and
contrasted to predict sediment loss for this watershed. The first
equation (Modified Soil Loss Equation, MSLE) values ranged from 0.5 to
17.5 tons per acre per year sediment loss and the second equation
(Modified Universal Soil Loss Equation, MUSLE) values ranged from 0.01
to 1.35 tons per acre per storm event per averaged storm year. Rollins,
(1981) contends erosion past 1 ton per acre per year is unsustainable
for this rangeland. The US Soil Conservation Service defines the
acceptable erosion rate as between 2 to 5 tons per acre per year for
this rangeland.

The Petroglyph National
Monument with respect to the major roads of the
West Side of Albuquerque, NM (National Park Service Map, 1999).
Aerial
Photography
The air
photographs, dated 1935 to the 1996, show the development of this
watershed from two windmills to two well-established urban communities.
This dramatic shift of land use has affected the arroyos by creating
concrete-lined trapezoidal canals in portions of the south, middle, and
north branches of the Piedras Marcadas Watershed. The Piedras Marcadas
dam site, which is now the last stopping point for watershed flow, is
130 feet topographically higher than the Rio Grande. This topographic
change has taken the arroyo out of its previous balance to a new
balance. Watersheds out of balance in length, as the Piedras Marcadas
is from the dam building, traditionally incise to bring the watershed
system back into a hydraulic balance. Dirt roads were bladed on top of
the mesa in the late 1960’s and are still present. These dirt roads
create a preferred pathway for water flow. The resulting eroded soil
material is available for transport by wind and water flow within the
watershed.
Native
American Issues
The report
Procedure of Community-Based Transportation Research describes how to
use key interviews to gather information and gain trust in
transportation community research. The key interview technique was
successfully used with eight tribal participants out of twenty-three in
this research. Having eight of the twenty-three, or 28.75% of tribal
leaders or their designee participate in the telephone interview study
indicates a low response. Telephone key interview methods conducted in
late January to early February, 2000 are not effective in reaching
tribal leaders to elicit responses on the Paseo del Norte issue.
Variables that may have effected the participant response are: (1)
Timing of the calls; January traditionally ushers in new tribal
leaders. (2) Female gender of the principal investigator; the
Petroglyph National Monument is the domain of men in the Puebloan
cultural viewpoint. (3) Sacred beliefs are traditionally not shared
with outsiders; the principal investigator is a non-Indian.
The qualitative
key interviews and past US Congressional testimony content analysis
finds the following: the Native American perspective on this road
extension is do not build a road across, under, or over the West Mesa
Escarpment, commonly known as the Petroglyph National Monument.
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| Four
Corners Institute - May 22-23, 2002 - Durango, Colorado
Born from a
sense of frustration and history of inter-governmental relations that
has been decidedly a mix of success and failure, the Four Corners
Institute for Tribal/State Relations of 2002 was created to be an
interactive process in which the participants, decision-makers from
state, federal, and tribal governments and enterprises, were asked to
discuss the barriers to and opportunities for creating a new model of
working cooperatively on a government-to-government basis. The
short-term goal of the gathering was to produce white papers from
discussions as a whole and in breakout groups. The long-term goal
of the Institute was to explore ways to improve relations between state
governments and tribal governments in meaningful ways that would serve
all parties. The Institute is a concept that was generated by
those dedicated to better government and service to its citizens.
Study
Group Topics
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Tribal and
State Sovereignty: Development of Government-to-Government Relationship.
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Inter-Governmental
Funding: Maximizing the State, Federal, and Tribal Dollar.
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Contracts,
Memorandum of Understanding, and Other Legal Agreements: Integrating
Multi-State, Multi-Tribal Governmental Efforts for Common Goals.
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Rights-of-Way
and Economic Development: Balancing Tribal, Federal, and State
Requirements and Concerns.
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Effective
Government Needs Revenue: Rational Approaches to Tribal and State
Taxation Authority.
Building on a Common
Desire for Better Tribal/State Governmental Relationships: The
2002 Four Corners Institute for Tribal/State Relations,
(PDF: 61KB/9 pages) presented at the 82nd Transportation Research Board
Annual Meeting, January 2003. Accepted for publication in the
2003 Transportation Research Record, Journal of the Transportation
Research Board.
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| New Mexico
Tribal/State Transportation Summit
Transportation Research Board Circular:
Conference
on Transportation Improvements: Experiences Among Tribal, Local, State,
and Federal Governments (PDF:
4.915MB/112 pages)
Summary
of Proceedings (PDF: 50KB/12 pages)
Summit Video - A video of
the first hour of the New Mexico Tribal/State Transportation Summit
held in Santa Fe, New Mexico, on October 14-15, 1999, is now available.
The first hour includes the introduction of the participants, welcomes
from the U.S. Delegation, and opening remarks. The speakers’ names are
captioned. To obtain a copy, contact the ATR
Institute at 505 246-6410.
The ATR
Institute provided research and facilitated a government-to-government
Pre-Summit and Summit between the tribal leadership in New Mexico and
the New Mexico State Highway and Transportation Department
(NMSHTD). An August 1999 Pre-Summit meeting focused on collecting
both the tribal and NMSHTD perspectives on barriers to mutual
transportation issues. The Pre-Summit attendees identified five groups
of transportation concerns:
- Jurisdiction/Sovereignty,
- Communication/Consultation/Participation,
- Environment/Quality
of Life,
- Funding,
- Safety.
The ATR
Institute researched these mutual concerns and detailed the source of
specific problems in a white paper format, entitled Stepping
Stones: A Process Toward Communication and Cooperation, Summary
Document of the New Mexico Tribal /State Transportation Summit and
Pre-Summit
The NMSHTD
Planning Division drafted six Memoranda of Agreement (MOA) that
initiated government-to-government relationships based on the mutual
concerns defined in the Pre-Summit. The October 1999 Summit brought
together tribal leaders (governors, presidents, and chairmen) with the
NMSHTD leadership and the Office of the Governor. The Summit leaders
reviewed the MOA and made their edits. The Summit leaders also made
welcoming statements and began the journey of government-to-government
interactions.
All parties
signed one memorandum. The parties involved are 19 Pueblos, 2 Apache
Tribes, the Navajo Nation, the NMSHTD, the Office of the Governor, and
the Office of the Attorney General. This memorandum is entitled Joint
Agreement on Continuing Study and Action and states that the NMSHTD
and the tribal governments of New Mexico will establish an Action Group
or groups to work towards the resolution of issues and problems not
satisfactorily addressed by the 1999 Tribal/State Transportation
Summit. The summit leadership established an action group, currently
called the Executive Planning Committee to continue the process of
editing and bringing the remaining MOA to a signing point.
The action
group then established a government-to-government annual process. This
process is a Spring Workshop and a Fall Signing Summit. The Spring
Workshop will identify two to four mutual transportation problems for
research. The Action group will continue to research and report on what
is required to remove barriers. The Fall Signing Summit will bring
together the leadership to sign the MOA and to establish the new
transportation direction with problems for resolution for the next
spring research.
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On-Going Native American
Transportation Research
The Executive
Planning Committee meets regularly to continue bringing the proposed
Summit Memoranda of Agreement (MOA) to the signing stage. Three of the
original Summit MOA are consolidated into one MOA entitled Joint
Agreement On Principles Of Consultation And Cooperation In
Transportation Matters. This MOA is in the editing process. Another
MOA entitled Agreement for Transportation Safety and Emergency
Preparedness Principles and Policy is also in the editing stages.
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TRB Native
American Transportation Issues Conference
ATR Institute
was one of many sponsors for the conference, Transportation
Improvements: Experiences Among Tribal, Local, State, and Federal
Governments, held in Albuquerque on October 18-21, 2000. Look for
a TRB Circular of the conference proceedings in Spring 2001.
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This conference
explored best practices, research innovation, and personal examples of
how all transportation professionals, Indian and non-Indian, can do a
better job of interacting with one another. Speakers on a variety
of local, state and federal projects presented projects developed on
tribal lands. An afternoon session was devoted to workshops and
the group’s observations and recommendations were a strong research
component of this conference. The research suggestions from these
workshop discussions will be compiled and presented along with the
speaker’s papers in a Transportation Research Board (TRB) Circular.
This Circular will be mailed to attendees and will be available from
TRB for interested researchers.
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