Congressman Don Young pulls punches for road foe

Witnesses wait to testify at a hearing in the U.S. House on the King Cove Road. (Photo by Liz Ruskin/Alaska Public Media)
Witnesses wait to testify at a hearing in the U.S. House on the King Cove Road. (Photo by Liz Ruskin/Alaska Public Media)

At the U.S. Capitol, Alaska Rep. Don Young is known to berate Democrats and environmentalists who oppose his efforts to get a road for King Cove.

Young accuses them of being indifferent to the lives of his constituents, the Alaska Natives who reside in a remote, isolated community.

At a hearing Wednesday, the witness who spoke against the road was also an Alaska Native from a remote, isolated community. And this wasn’t just about the road.

Young glared across the dais in the hearing room, at the Democrats on the Natural Resources subcommittee on federal lands.

One of them had just spoken against the 11-mile road for King Cove, saying it would harm waterfowl habitat in the Izembek National Wildlife Refuge.

Young said the road would save lives.

“The day that this Congress would take and love a goose, that’s not going to be harmed, over a human life – shame on you!” Young said. “I’m not going to tolerate that. You want to go out and kill people, go out and kill them! But don’t do it because you’re being stupid!”

Della Trumble, speaking for her fellow residents of King Cove, told the subcommittee they need the road so they can drive to the all-weather airport at Cold Bay, so they won’t have to endure dangerous flights from their town when they need medical care.

“I for one know this know this first hand, as I witnessed my daughter’s airplane crash-land at the field in King Cove, four years ago,” Trumble said.

All aboard survived.

Trumble said she’s fought for the King Cove road for 35 years.

The details change, with new accounts of harrowing medical evacuations every year, but this is how hearings on the road have gone for decades.

Trumble has been to Washington at least 30 times to advocate for the road. Less usual was the type of witness who spoke Wednesday against the road.

“My name is Myron P. Naneng Sr. from Hooper Bay, a village in Western Alaska,” the ex-president of the Association of Village Council Presidents said.

Naneng now is the board president of Hooper Bay’s village corporation.

His region, the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, is a few hundred miles from Izembek, but he said the people in the Delta have traditionally depended on the waterfowl that feed in the Izembek lagoons during the spring and fall migrations.

Naneng pointed out that people in his area have been severely curtailed in the number of salmon they can take.

“If we’re not allowed to fish for salmon, what other food resources would we be allowed to harvest?”Naneng said during a break in the hearing. “That’s why migratory birds are just as important for our subsistence use.”

Myron Naneng of Hooper Bay opposes the King Cove road because it would harm waterfowl habitat.

Raising a long-standing beef, Naneng said commercial fishermen in the Eastern Aleutians, near King Cove, have not faced similar restrictions, and some of the salmon they catch are bound for the Y-K Delta.

“We’ve gone to the Board of Fisheries to get them to recognize the fact that our people on the Yukon or Kuskokwim need salmon for food,” Naneng said. “It seems like big-money advocates usually get the best of whoever are the decision-makers.”

It’s an argument King Cove has heard before.

The Aleutians East Borough has a webpage to debunk the claim that fishermen catch all the northbound salmon at False Pass.

Naneng said even if there were plenty of fish in his region, then he’d still be fighting the King Cove road, to conserve waterfowl, a cause he’s pursued in the Delta for years.

As for King Cove’s need for safe transportation, Naneng said lots of Y-K villages have it just as bad.

Naneng, with some pressing, acknowledged The Wilderness Society paid for part of his trip to speak against the road, though he said his village corporation picked up most of it.

Young did not go after Naneng as harshly as he has other road opponents.

But the subcommittee chairman, Rep. Tom McClintock, R-Calif., took a swipe at Naneng as he questioned Trumble.

“He’s not even from this community? … But he wants to deny your community the right to build this road?” McClintock said.

Young later said it’s not good to have two Alaska communities pitted against each other.

As he has in the past, Young has sponsored a bill that would authorize a land trade for the road corridor.

The state would exchange 43,000 acres of land in exchange for 206 acres within the refuge. The bill would waive any more review under the National Environmental Policy Act.

Then-Interior Secretary Sally Jewell rejected a similar exchange in 2013.

King Cove is challenging her decision in court. If the community wins, tjem road advocates hope the trade can occur without another act of Congress.

Alaska Public Media

Alaska Public Media is one of our partner stations in Anchorage. KTOO collaborates with partners across the state to cover important news and to share stories with our audiences.

Sign up for The Signal

Top Alaska stories delivered to your inbox every week

Site notifications
Update notification options
Subscribe to notifications