Environment
State won't restart work at historic Klallam village


The state of Washington won't restart work at a drydock where a major village of the Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe was uncovered.

State Transportation Secretary Doug MacDonald spoke at a community meeting called to address the controversy. Some local officials in the Port Angeles area want the construction to resume.

The tribe opposes work at the 1,700-year-old Tse-whit-zen village. More than 300 ancestors and thousands of artifacts have been located there. Archaeologists say it is one of the most important finds in the Pacific Northwest.

More than 200 people attended the meeting, The Peninsula Daily News reported. The crowd was split equally between tribal supporters and those who want the work to continue, the paper said.

Get the Story:
200 from all sides in graving yard controversy pack banquet room to hear from Transportation Commission (The Peninsula Daily News 2/15)
Transportation official says state won't resume Port Angeles drydock work (AP 2/15)
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State Won't Resume Port Angeles Drydock Work (KOMO News 2/14)
Lower Elwha go to DOT meeting in Port Angeles today with support from Northwest tribes (The Peninsula Daily News 2/14)
DOT considering Port Angeles for Hood Canal Bridge concrete anchors (The Peninsula Daily News 2/15)

Relevant Links:
Tse-Whit-Zen Village News - http://tse-whit-zen.elwha.nsn.us
Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe - http://www.elwha.org

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