Alaska village renews push for road through wildlife refuge - Action News
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Alaska village renews push for road through wildlife refuge

The community of King Cove, near the tip of the Alaska Peninsula, for decades has sought a road through Izembek National Wildlife Refuge, an internationally recognized haven for migratory waterfowl.

King Cove residents want road access through Izembek National Wildlife Refuge, a haven for migratory waterfowl

The Izembek Wildlife Refuge is located on the Alaska Peninsula near the villages of King Cove and Cold Bay. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in 2013 concluded that a 35-kilometre road over a narrow isthmus in the refuge could cause irrevocable damage to the watershed of nearby ocean lagoons. (AP Photo/U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service)

A remote Alaska village that has been rebuffed in efforts to build a road through a national wildlife refuge will try again when President-elect Donald Trump takes office.

The community of King Cove, near the tip of the Alaska Peninsula, for decades has sought a road through Izembek National Wildlife Refuge, an internationally recognized haven for migratory waterfowl.

Flights into King Cove are notoriously unpredictable because of strong winds and mountains. Community leaders in the village of 900, backed by the state, want a road through the refuge so sick or injured residents have land access to an all-weather airport at nearby Cold Bay. The Obama administration rejected the road plan.

"We are optimistic that a change of administration will mean we will finally get to the finish line," Della Trumble, spokeswoman for the King Cove Corp., an Alaska Native village corporation, said in an announcement. "This issue is and always has been about saving lives."

A Pacific brant family is shown on the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, Alaska. Virtually the entire 150,000 population of Pacific brant stops at Izembek. So do 70 percent of migrating Stellers eiders, an endangered species that eats tiny invertebrates, clams, shrimp, and copepods clinging to eelgrass leaves. (AP Photo/U.S. Geological Survey)

Congress in 1997 addressed the King Cove transportation issue with a $37.5 million appropriation for water access to Cold Bay that included a $9 million hovercraft. The Aleutians East Borough took it out of service after deciding it was too expensive and unreliable to operate.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in 2013 concluded that a 35-kilometre road over a narrow isthmus in the refuge could cause irrevocable damage to the watershed of nearby ocean lagoons. They include the 390-square-kilometre Izembek Lagoon, which provides one of the world's largest beds of eelgrass, a rich food source for Pacific brant, endangered Steller's eiders and other migratory birds.

Environmental groups submitted thousands of comments opposing the proposed single-lane, gravel road for the effect on the refuge and the precedent it would set for tearing into other national refuges or parks. Their opposition remains.

Geese swimming in Izembek Lagoon in the refuge. Izembek Lagoon is 40 kilometres of Alaska ocean sheltered from the Bering Sea by long barrier islands, but it's what's beneath the water that makes it special for environmentalists. The shallow lagoon is home to the largest known bed of eelgrass, a plant that provides a nutritious buffet for migratory waterfowl. (AP Photo/ U.S. Fish and Wildlife Services, Chris Dau)

"The proposed road would bisect a designated wilderness and cause irretrievable damage to the Izembek National Wildlife Refuge," said Patrick Lavin, Alaska representative for Defenders of Wildlife.

Trump values 'human lives as well as birds', mayor says

Three years ago, Interior Secretary Sally Jewell rejected a proposed land swap that would have traded refuge lands for thousands of acres of state and private land. The trade would have given the federal government 252square kilometres for less than eightsquare kilometres of refuge. However, Jewell agreed with a Fish and Wildlife analysis that found the exchange could not compensate for the special qualities of existing refuge lands.

Jewell's decision enraged King Cove leaders and the Alaska congressional delegation, who vowed to fight on, and who will bring the battle to the next administration.

"Unlike Secretary Jewell, we believe President-elect Donald Trump and interior secretary nominee Ryan Zinke value human lives as well as birds," King Cove Mayor Henry Mack said.

According to the borough, 17 people were medically evacuated this year, including three who had to be flown out by the Coast Guard because fog, high wind or blizzard conditions prevented private air-ambulance companies from reaching the city. The three were a woman in her 70s suffering heart issues, a woman in her 20s with an obstructed airway and an infant with respiratory problems.

Community leaders in King Cove, backed by the state, want a road through the refuge so sick or injured residents have land access to an all-weather airport at nearby Cold Bay. (AP Photo/Aleutians East Borough)

Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska in a statement called Jewell's action heartless. Like the Obama administration's decision last week to designate most U.S.-owned waters in the Arctic Ocean indefinitely off-limits to future oil and gas leasing, Murkowski vowed to reverse the road decision.

"I will do everything I can to work with our new president to end the years of suffering and injustice that King Cove has faced at the hands of our own federal government," Murkowski said.