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Portrait of a Failed American City
Townhall.com ^ | June 5, 2011 | Salena Zito

Posted on 06/05/2011 9:20:03 AM PDT by Kaslin

SALAMANCA, N.Y. – In a valley that curves along the Allegheny River is a tract of land built on opportunity, greed, and the bureaucratic nightmare of being one city in two nations.

According to state and local authorities, Salamanca is the only U.S. city located on an Indian reservation.

Toward the end of the 19th century, it was a flourishing railroad town of laborers, families and industrious entrepreneurs, all striving for the American dream.

It was named for a Spanish aristocrat who was convinced by Erie Railroad speculators (with an introduction from an American president) to invest in a rail line to prevent Pennsylvania firms from dominating the raw-materials market.

The only thing standing in the way was Seneca Indian land which, it turned out, could be technically bought through leasing.

A precarious relationship began.

The land the railroads wanted to lease – basically a swamp – was then of little use to the Native American inhabitants, so striking an agreement was relatively easy to accomplish.

With the building of the rail line came laborers. With laborers came families. With families came homes and daily necessities such as doctors, lumberyards, barbers, grocers, feed stores. Thus, the city was built.

Three Acts of Congress in 1875, 1890 and 1990 created a landlord-tenant relationship between the Seneca Nation and Salamanca’s homeowners and businesses.

The homeowners and businesses occupied their properties in accordance with a 99-year lease originally granted by the Seneca Nation in 1892. It expired on Feb. 19, 1991 – and the mutual distrust that had plagued the city since the first railroad was surveyed came to a very public boil.

For reasons ranging from rejecting pricier leases to demanding control over the land, 15 property “owners” eventually were evicted by the Seneca Nation.

Today, shabbiness blankets what could be a quaint town bounded by a river, a New York state park and a national forest. Garish “Nation-owned” cigarette outlets and gas stations produce a city drawn by Norman Rockwell but touched-up by Jackson Pollock.

“I had a professor who once said, ‘Simple way to understand the importance of private property: Have you ever washed a rental car?’ ” says political science professor Lara Brown. Salamanca, she says, “strikes precisely at the issue. When you don't own, most people don't care.”

The discount-cigarette shops attract bargain-seeking smokers from several states. The shops’ cheaper prices are due to the state never collecting sales taxes on reservation lands – until now.

The other economic chaos here surrounds the Seneca Nation’s casino, which juts out of the hemlock- and hickory-covered mountains just off Interstate 86.

Since August, when a battle heated up between the Seneca Nation and the state over collecting cigarette sales taxes, the Senecas began withholding billions of dollars in casino slots revenue from state and local governments.

Says Leslie Logan, the Seneca Nation’s foreign relations director: “We are withholding the money because the state broke their own promises of gambling exclusivity.” She points to slots operations in Hamburg and Batavia, N.Y., and the state’s Finger Lakes region.

Yet the sad story of Salamanca and the Seneca Nation really is the result of failed policies at a number of levels, on both sides, over many decades.

For two centuries, federal policy towards Native Americans has been riddled with inconsistencies, reversals and countless broken treaties, all resulting in bitter lawsuits and the alienation of all involved.

The federal Bureau of Indian Affairs, created "to assist and protect" Indians, long has been known for mismanagement, corruption and creating dependency among Indians, according to U.S. history professor Jeff Brauer.

“It is this unfortunate history that besieges the citizens of Salamanca and the Seneca Nation, said Brauer. “They are now paying for the past mistakes and incompetence of the federal government.”

Their plight is compounded by the all-too-familiar pattern of many towns and cities in the Northeast: Over several decades, the Rust Belt’s state and local governments have failed to enact job-sustaining tax policies and, more important, have failed to invest in the infrastructure needed to compete with other regions of the country.

The result, in Salamanca as elsewhere, is sweeping, perhaps irreversible, economic and social devastation.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; US: New York
KEYWORDS: salamanca; salamancany
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1 posted on 06/05/2011 9:20:06 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: All

If the Indians are a sovereign nations. Screw them, why are they getting one dime of my taxes.


2 posted on 06/05/2011 9:27:17 AM PDT by troy McClure
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To: Kaslin

This is BS we have these little nations inside of our borders that OWN the LAND!! and we (who built this place)can not own anything,But the Debt for this craziness !!!!!!!!!!


3 posted on 06/05/2011 9:28:01 AM PDT by Cheetahcat ( November 4 2008 ,A date which will live in Infamy.)
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To: Kaslin
They are now paying for the past mistakes and incompetence of the federal government.”

And libtards want more and bigger government.

4 posted on 06/05/2011 9:29:25 AM PDT by mjp ((pro-{God, reality, reason, egoism, individualism, natural rights, limited government, capitalism}))
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To: Kaslin

“Portrait of a Failed American City”

They left out one....though there are many, many others....

Detroit


5 posted on 06/05/2011 9:29:44 AM PDT by NWFLConservative (Game On!.................Saracuda 2012)
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To: Kaslin
‘Simple way to understand the importance of private property: Have you ever washed a rental car?’ ”

New tag for the month...

6 posted on 06/05/2011 9:34:02 AM PDT by GOPJ (‘Simple way to understand the importance of private property: Have you ever washed a rental car?’)
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To: Cheetahcat

As i recall, George Washington signed the treaty with them that made them a nation within the US.


7 posted on 06/05/2011 9:40:41 AM PDT by Citizen Tom Paine (An old sailor sends)
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To: GOPJ
That's interesting. I was actually struck by what a stupid parallel that was.

If I rented a car for several months or years, a period of time long enough for it to require washing, I'd wash it. And you'll find that this is exactly what occurs when people rent cars for several months or years. It's called "leasing."


8 posted on 06/05/2011 9:42:13 AM PDT by aNYCguy
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To: GOPJ

Actually I have - once. But it was for a wedding. As best man, I had to transport some of the wedding party.


9 posted on 06/05/2011 9:42:31 AM PDT by AFreeBird
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To: Kaslin
Confiscate their land and sell it for taxes due.

That's what the government would do to me.

10 posted on 06/05/2011 9:42:31 AM PDT by Taylor42
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To: Kaslin

Go to any Indian land and you will find BS.

Always cracks me up when I think of the noble Indian crying over the white mans trashing of the land.

Every Indian owned land I have ever seen is a **** pit

The Tohono O’dham nation is a mess. They use sovereignty to keep out the border patrol and they take money from the Mexican drug cartels. They run a corridor up to Tucson.


11 posted on 06/05/2011 9:42:35 AM PDT by mylife (OPINIONS ~ $ 1.00 HALFBAKED ~ 50c)
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To: NWFLConservative

Former GOP candidate for governor Dick Devos was one of the primary funders of the Grand Rapids Michigan slapdown of Newsweak. It only cost $40K to make and for once I’m forced to agree with Roger Ebert, this one is epic.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZPjjZCO67WI&feature=player_embedded

The words of a soldier serving overseas make it all worthwhile.

>>“From a soldier who hasn’t seen home in a while...words fail to describe exactly what this video means to me.”<<


12 posted on 06/05/2011 9:44:16 AM PDT by cripplecreek (Remember the River Raisin! (look it up))
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To: Kaslin

BTW, the Seneca were part of the Iroquois nations

These were the most reasonable of the lot and had a semblance of governance.

The Apache were wild and nomadic and committed unspeakable atrocities.

HoHo Ho!


13 posted on 06/05/2011 9:49:57 AM PDT by mylife (OPINIONS ~ $ 1.00 HALFBAKED ~ 50c)
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To: Kaslin

BTW, the Seneca were part of the Iroquois nations

These were the most reasonable of the lot and had a semblance of governance.

The Apache were wild and nomadic and committed unspeakable atrocities.

HoHo Ho!


14 posted on 06/05/2011 9:51:41 AM PDT by mylife (OPINIONS ~ $ 1.00 HALFBAKED ~ 50c)
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To: Kaslin

A sad but familiar story. So many people on Indian reservations have been “assisted and protected” into an inescapable state of abject poverty.


15 posted on 06/05/2011 9:52:39 AM PDT by citizen (Palin lost me when she dumped the people of Alaska to seek fame & fortune in the lower 48. Epic Fail)
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To: Taylor42

Indeed.


16 posted on 06/05/2011 9:57:44 AM PDT by mylife (OPINIONS ~ $ 1.00 HALFBAKED ~ 50c)
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To: citizen
look what John Stossel writes in his column about the Lumbees of Robeson County, N.C

Government Creates Poverty

17 posted on 06/05/2011 10:07:12 AM PDT by Kaslin (Acronym for OBAMA: One Big Ass Mistake America)
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To: mylife
The Tohono O’dham nation is a mess.

Not much better in the northwest corner of the state either.

The Hualapais have done a decent job building up tourism at Grand Canyon West, though the entrance fees and such are criminally exorbitant.

But have you seen where the tribe members actually live? Peach Springs looks post-nuke...

18 posted on 06/05/2011 10:16:45 AM PDT by Flycatcher (God speaks to us, through the supernal lightness of birds, in a special type of poetry.)
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To: Flycatcher

Slums.

But somebody is getting rich while blaming whitey for the woes.


19 posted on 06/05/2011 10:27:51 AM PDT by mylife (OPINIONS ~ $ 1.00 HALFBAKED ~ 50c)
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To: Citizen Tom Paine

“As i recall, George Washington signed the treaty with them that made them a nation within the US.”

Bad Move,on Ole Georges part.


20 posted on 06/05/2011 10:36:50 AM PDT by Cheetahcat ( November 4 2008 ,A date which will live in Infamy.)
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