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8/17/08
.173869.1
SENATE MEMORIAL 2
48
TH LEGISLATURE
- STATE OF NEW MEXICO -
SECOND SPECIAL SESSION
, 2008
INTRODUCED BY
John Pinto
A MEMORIAL
REQUESTING THE NEW MEXICO CONGRESSIONAL DELEGATION TO URGE THE
UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY TO EXPEDITE THE CLEANUP OF
THE FORT WINGATE AMMUNITION DEPOT AND TO APPROPRIATE THE FUNDS
NECESSARY FOR THAT PURPOSE.
WHEREAS, the Fort Wingate ammunition depot, located east
of Gallup, sits among the red rocks along United States
interstate 40, next to the Navajo Nation and the Pueblo of Zuni
in New Mexico; and
WHEREAS, Fort Wingate occupies ancestral homelands of both
the Navajo Nation and the Pueblo of Zuni; and
WHEREAS, Fort Wingate contains sites rich in cultural
heritage and historical significance; and
WHEREAS, over two hundred Navajo ruins were discovered on
the property, as well as several modern earth-covered
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.173869.1
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dwellings, called "hogans"; and
WHEREAS, the property served for centuries as a hunting
and gathering area for the Zuni, and over six hundred
archaeological sites were recorded by surveyors, including an
additional two hundred ruins traceable to the Anasazi,
ancestors of the Zuni; and
WHEREAS, in 1918, the army established a munitions depot
at Fort Wingate; and
WHEREAS, from 1918 until its closure, the twenty-two-
thousand-acre installation stored and demolished ammunition;
and
WHEREAS, Fort Wingate stored, conducted functional testing
of and demilitarized munitions, using open-burning detonation,
incineration and bomb washout as the principal demilitarization
methods, and these practices deposited ordnance-related waste
on and off the facility; and
WHEREAS, munitions testing, explosive washout activities,
rocket launches, training activities, open burn, open
detonation, demilitarization, ammunition packaging, storing,
shipping and munitions recycling and remanufacturing have
released contaminants into the ground water and the soil; and
WHEREAS, the aforementioned contaminants, as well as
asbestos and lead paint in buildings, buried waste and
unexploded ordnance, present human health and ecological
hazards at Fort Wingate; and
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.173869.1
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WHEREAS, Fort Wingate is under the command of the United
States department of the army and is classified as a hazardous
waste treatment facility under the Hazardous Waste Act and the
federal Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976; and
WHEREAS, the United States department of the army, the
United States army corps of engineers and the bureau of Indian
affairs have taken collaborative efforts to clean up the site
and to return a large portion of Fort Wingate to the Navajo
Nation and the Pueblo of Zuni; and
WHEREAS, under current funding and appropriations toward
the cleanup of Fort Wingate by the United States, scheduled
compliance with cleanup efforts extends until the year 2020;
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE SENATE OF THE STATE
OF NEW MEXICO that the New Mexico congressional delegation urge
the United States department of the army to expedite the
cleanup of Fort Wingate so that it may be returned to the
Navajo Nation and the Pueblo of Zuni and to appropriate the
funds necessary for that purpose; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that copies of this memorial be
transmitted to United States Senator Pete V. Domenici, United
States Senator Jeff Bingaman, United States Representative Tom
Udall, United States Representative Steve Pearce, United States
Representative Heather Wilson, the president of the Navajo
Nation, the speaker of the Navajo Nation council and the
governor of the Pueblo of Zuni.