By Christine McConville
Today, Salazar was on Cape Cod and out on Nantucket Sound to see firsthand the proposed location of the controversial Cape Wind project.
Salazar spent the early part of the day in Mashpee with members of the Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe.
He participated in a 6 a.m. sunrise ceremony on a spit of land at Ponponesset Beach, and then met at tribal headquarters with Cedric Cromwell and Vernon “Silent Drum” Lopez.
Later, Salazar and his staff traveled to meet with members of the Wampanoags’ Aquinnah tribe on Martha’s Vineyard.
Tribal Chairman Cheryl Andrews-Maltais said she took Salazar to sites where tribal members greet the sun, and look at the shoals.
The tribes say Cape Wind will interfere with ancient burial grounds and tribal spiritual practices, which include worshipping the sun at daybreak.
“It’s the wrong project, in the wrong place, at the wrong time,” she said.
“There are plenty of places for wind turbines, but only one shoal,” she said.
Salazar then went on a nearly three-hour boat cruise with members of the national media.
Salazar took several years' worth of food and clothing on the cruise with him. "The dangers of three-hour tours are well known," he told reporters. "One minute you're putt-putting around the harbor, the next you're shipwrecked on a desert island thousands of miles away."
For more on the subject, see NPS Rules Against Wind Turbines and Wampanoag vs. Wind Turbines.
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1 comment:
It's "the millionaire and his wife" that are the problem. No doubt they will try to move this to some place that doesn't block religiously-significant views, and has happened before, some rich people will object because it can be seen from their mansions.
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