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Native Americans raise safety concerns over Florida Everglades detention center
Native Americans raise safety concerns over Florida Everglades detention center

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Native Americans raise safety concerns over Florida Everglades detention center

A Florida Native American leader spoke out against a new migrant detention facility in the Florida Everglades, nicknamed "Alligator Alcatraz," raising environmental and safety concerns for local tribal communities. President Trump, visiting the site Tuesday, said the facility will hold "some of the most menacing migrants, some of the most vicious people on the planet." The detention center, built on a remote airstrip in the Everglades, can hold up to 5,000 migrants in tents and trailers. Talbert Cypress, chairman of the Miccosukee Business Council, said some tribal villages are located within 900 feet of the facility's entrance. "This proposed facility is surrounded on all sides by the Big Cypress National Preserve, and the tribe has been at home in the Big Cypress for centuries," Cypress told ABC News. Cypress pointed to the lack of environmental studies on what creating the detention center could mean for the local ecosystem. MORE: Trump falsely questions Zohran Mamdani's citizenship, threatens to arrest him over ICE operations "There's been no environmental impact study done. The environmental impact study that was done back in 1974 pretty much suggested that putting any kind of airship in the area was going to have significant impacts on the Everglades," he said. The facility's closeness to traditional Native camps, where Miccosukee and Seminole members live and teach both American and Native education, has raised more concerns. "We're concerned about safety... CBP, also just in general, all the traffic that's going to be coming through there, and flights coming in and out," Cypress said. During the tour with Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, Trump highlighted the facility's remote location. "It's very appropriate, because I looked outside and it's not a place I want to go hiking anytime soon," Trump said. "We're surrounded by miles of treacherous swamp land, and the only way out is really deportation." ABC News correspondent Victor Oquendo reported that the administration sees the surrounding wildlife, including alligators and pythons, as a natural barrier for the detention center, stopping migrants from being able to escape. The facility might become a model for similar centers planned in Louisiana and Alabama, Trump told ABC News. New data studied by ABC News shows a shift in enforcement priorities, with more arrests of migrants with no criminal record. DHS responded that 70% of ICE arrests were migrants with a criminal record. Cypress ended with a message to Trump and DeSantis: "President Trump and DeSantis have been very good to the Everglades, and we feel like [this is a] step backwards in their effort."

Florida tribe fights new 'Alligator Alcatraz' migrant facility near Everglades homes
Florida tribe fights new 'Alligator Alcatraz' migrant facility near Everglades homes

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Florida tribe fights new 'Alligator Alcatraz' migrant facility near Everglades homes

A Florida Native American leader spoke out against a new migrant detention facility in the Florida Everglades, nicknamed "Alligator Alcatraz," raising environmental and safety concerns for local tribal communities. President Trump, visiting the site Tuesday, said the facility will hold "some of the most menacing migrants, some of the most vicious people on the planet." The detention center, built on a remote airstrip in the Everglades, can hold up to 5,000 migrants in tents and trailers. Talbert Cypress, chairman of the Miccosukee Business Council, said some tribal villages are located within 900 feet of the facility's entrance. "This proposed facility is surrounded on all sides by the Big Cypress National Preserve, and the tribe has been at home in the Big Cypress for centuries," Cypress told ABC News. Cypress pointed to the lack of environmental studies on what creating the detention center could mean for the local ecosystem. MORE: Trump falsely questions Zohran Mamdani's citizenship, threatens to arrest him over ICE operations "There's been no environmental impact study done. The environmental impact study that was done back in 1974 pretty much suggested that putting any kind of airship in the area was going to have significant impacts on the Everglades," he said. The facility's closeness to traditional Native camps, where Miccosukee and Seminole members live and teach both American and Native education, has raised more concerns. "We're concerned about safety... CBP, also just in general, all the traffic that's going to be coming through there, and flights coming in and out," Cypress said. During the tour with Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, Trump highlighted the facility's remote location. "It's very appropriate, because I looked outside and it's not a place I want to go hiking anytime soon," Trump said. "We're surrounded by miles of treacherous swamp land, and the only way out is really deportation." ABC News correspondent Victor Oquendo reported that the administration sees the surrounding wildlife, including alligators and pythons, as a natural barrier for the detention center, stopping migrants from being able to escape. The facility might become a model for similar centers planned in Louisiana and Alabama, Trump told ABC News. New data studied by ABC News shows a shift in enforcement priorities, with more arrests of migrants with no criminal record. DHS responded that 70% of ICE arrests were migrants with a criminal record. Cypress ended with a message to Trump and DeSantis: "President Trump and DeSantis have been very good to the Everglades, and we feel like [this is a] step backwards in their effort."

Native American tribe steps up to protect Florida lands for wildlife
Native American tribe steps up to protect Florida lands for wildlife

The Guardian

time15-06-2025

  • Politics
  • The Guardian

Native American tribe steps up to protect Florida lands for wildlife

Almost two centuries ago, Native American tribe members sought the protection of Florida's Everglades during the Seminole wars as they hid from government forces seeking to banish them to Indian territories that later became Oklahoma. Now, as the Trump administration continues its wholesale slashing of federal funding from conservation projects, the Miccosukee Tribe is stepping up to fulfill what it sees as a 'moral obligation' to return the favor. The tribe is looking to buy and protect environmentally significant lands, including some that once provided refuge, in a groundbreaking partnership agreement with the Florida Wildlife Corridor Foundation. The corridor is an ambitious project to connect 18m acres (7.3m hectares) of state and privately owned wilderness into a contiguous, safe habitat for scores of imperilled and roaming species, including black bears, Key deer and Florida panthers. Tribal officials say they will work with the foundation and other partners to 'explore the acquisition and stewardship' of land within the corridor considered important to the tribe and its community. 'We have a constitutional duty to conserve our traditional homelands, the lands and waters which protected and fed our tribe since time immemorial,' said Talbert Cypress, chair of the Miccosukee Tribe headquartered on a 130-square-mile reservation west of Miami. '[But] we've seen some sort of hesitancy a lot of times to commit to projects because of the erratic nature of how the government is deciding to spend their money or allocate money.' The agreement, announced at a summit of corridor stakeholders in Orlando last week, comes as a study by the Native American Fish and Wildlife Society (NAFWS) found that 60% of federally recognized tribes have lost grants or other federal funds totalling more than $56m since Donald Trump took office in January. 'These services are part of what we receive in lieu of all of the years of what we gave up, our land, our resources and sometimes, unfortunately, our culture and language,' Julie Thorstenson, executive director of the NAFWS, told the Wildlife Society last month. With government funding drying up, and the future of existing federal land stewardship agreements uncertain because of Trump's sustained onslaught on the National Parks Service, Cypress said tribe leaders had re-evaluated its work with other partners. 'For good reason, my predecessors had more of a standoffish approach. They went through a lot of the areas where they did deal with conservation groups, federal agencies, state agencies, pretty much not including them in conversations, or going back on their word. They just had a very different approach to this sort of thing,' he said. 'My administration has taken more of a collaborative approach. We're engaging with different organizations not just to build relationships, but fix relationships that may have gone sour in the past, or were just non-existent.' Cypress said the tribe, which already has collaborative or direct stewardship of almost 3m acres in the Everglades and Biscayne national parks, and Loxahatchee national wildlife refuge, was working to identify and prioritize land within the corridor of historical significance, and to 'get those conversations going'. He said: 'Financially, the tribe will invest some money, but we'll also be instrumental in finding investors, partners interested in the same thing, which is to conserve as much of our natural habitat as possible while making room for growth and development. 'We've shown we can do it in a sustainable way, and our voice can help in shaping the future of Florida as far as development goes because once a lot of the land gets developed we're not going to get it back. 'We need to do it in a way where we benefit not just ourselves in the present, but for generations in the future as well.' The Florida wildlife corridor was established in 2021 by lawmakers who approved an initial $400m for acquisition against a multi-year $2bn budget for land conservation. About 10m acres have been preserved, with another 8m considered 'opportunity areas' in need of protection, and environmental groups warning large areas could still be lost to development. The legislature, which is weighing cuts to corridor funding as it attempts to balance state spending, has encouraged commercial investment and partnerships. At last week's summit, the Disney Conservation Fund announced a $1m grant for training conservation teams and expanding public access to trails and natural areas.

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