Back in 1965-66, Robert R. (Bob) Garvey Jr. (1921-96) was one of the authors of the National Historic Preservation Act (NHPA). At the time he was the Executive Secretary of the National Trust for Historic Preservation. Upon enactment of the NHPA, he became Executive Director of the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation (ACHP), created by the NHPA, which at the time was lodged in the National Park Service (NPS). A couple of remembered vignettes about Bob – one long, the other short – seem to me to perhaps be relevant to the current discussions around replacing the ACHP’s Chair and Executive Director.
Hearing What the Indians Have to Say
The first vignette dates to about 1971; at that time, I was
an anthropology graduate student at the University of California, Riverside,
overseeing the University’s newly formed archaeological research unit and
working with an Indian tribe, the Agua Caliente Band of Cahuilla Indians to
document and protect landscapes that were important to the tribe. One of these
was Tahquitz Canyon, which figures in Cahuilla origin traditions and is
accordingly a very sacred place. The Corps of Engineers at the time proposed to
dam up Tahquitz Canyon to protect high-value residential property in Palm
Springs from a hypothetical 300 year flood event. Agua Caliente strenuously
opposed the project and wondered if we could use Section 106 of the NHPA to force
the Corps to consider the canyon’s cultural significance.
In those early, benighted days, Section 106 required
agencies to consider the effects of their actions only on places that had been included
in the National Register of Historic Places, so my colleagues and I got to work
with the Tribe’s traditional historian and its elders to prepare a nomination.
This was my introduction to the kind of place that 20 years later Pat Parker
and I, in National Register Bulletin 38, would call a traditional cultural
property (TCP). Our nomination was successful, so the Corps had to consider the
Canyon’s cultural significance, which otherwise they would’ve ignored.
There were not then any regulations for implementing Section
106, and the ACHP staff consisted of Bob Garvey and some three other NPS
employees – Glennie Murray, Lou Wall, and Ben Levy. So the Corps flew Garvey
and Murray out to Palm Springs to walk them around in the desert heat showing
them that the Canyon contained no great architecture, indeed nothing, in the Corps’
eyes, that might be culturally important. The Tribe was not consulted, but the Corps
put on a public hearing at which Agua Caliente was invited to testify. The Tribe
asked me to help coordinate the testimony. My colleague George Jefferson and I
got up and gave what we thought was a pretty impressive showing of the canyon’s
archaeological significance, which George, Steve Hammond, and Tribal Council
members had documented in minute detail during surveys over the preceding baking-hot
months.
I sat down feeling reasonably good about what I had said,
and about all George’s spectacular graphics, and then Garvey – here’s the
vignette – rumbled from the back of the room: “that’s all very interesting Mr.
King, but I’d like to hear what the Indians have to say.”
This was a surprise to all of us; we had understood this 106
review stuff to be all a matter for discussion among white-eye professionals.
But Agua Caliente’s historian and Vice Chairman were eloquent speakers, so they
quickly took their feet and explained in detail the role the canyon played in
traditional history.
The ACHP comments drafted by Murray and signed off by Garvey
were very negative about the Corps’ project, and to everyone’s surprise, the Corps
walked away from it. There were questions about why this actually happened, and
there were many more acts to the Tahquitz Canyon saga, eventually leading to a
much scaled-down flood control facility, a major archaeological research
project carried out by Agua Caliente, and transfer of the canyon’s ownership to
the Tribe, which now maintains a handsome visitor center and self guiding
trail.
What I want to emphasize in that vignette is Bob Garvey’s
polite dismissal of my fancy-pants professional explanation of why the canyon
was significant, and his insistence on hearing from the people themselves. This
was absolutely fundamental to Bob’s character, and it was a very important part
of my education. Bob had this strange notion that what ordinary citizens had to
say about historic places was important, and should be respectfully attended
to.
Putting Ourselves Out Of Work
The second vignette – really a suite of vignettes but I can
deal with them much more directly – dates to the 1980s, by which time the ACHP
was an independent agency with a staff of 40 or so people. I was its guy overseeing
Section 106 review, with Garvey as my boss. What I remember him saying,
repeatedly and with emphasis, was that our job at the ACHP was to work
ourselves out of our jobs. We should work to make the thoughtful,
consultative consideration and resolution of impacts on historic places so
fundamental to the workings of every agency that there would be no need for
anything like the ACHP to remind them of their duty. Not, perhaps, a very
realistic expectation, but a noble one.
So What?
How do these vignettes relate to the ACHP’s current
situation? In a couple of ways I think.
First, I think that both the Chairman and Executive
Director should be guided by Garvey’s sort of populism – not populism in the
fascistic Trumpy sense, but populism in the sense of paying close attention to
the voices of those most affected by federal undertakings, notably local residents and members of low income and minority groups – including but
not limited to Indian tribes. Experts and government officials have important
roles to play, and are citizens themselves and hence people whose concerns
agencies should address, but they’re not the only important participants. Candidates
for the Chairmanship and Executive Directorship should be closely questioned
about how they would make sure the voice of the people is heard and attended to
by the Federal establishment.
Second, I think the ACHP leadership should undertake,
as an urgent matter, a thorough review of the Section 106 regulatory system. In
the years since Bob Garvey’s retirement and untimely death, Section 106 review
has become steadily more distant from the public, more and more a matter of deals
cut between agencies and State Historic Preservation Officers. Programmatic
Agreements and other alternative ways of doing 106 review routinely cut out the
affected public and substitute complex, agency-run decision making systems for
the simple consultation-to-agreement approach that is at the core of the 106
regulations. Bob Garvey’s populism, tempered by the clever deviousness of his
General Counsel Ken Tapman, created regulations that called for something pretty
straightforward: figure out what your project may affect; figure out how it
will be affected; figure out what to do about it – all in open consultation
with those affected. It would be wise to try to get back to such a system. Those
regulations – initially issued with very thin statutory authority – were far
ahead of their time in being centered on consultation among affected parties,
aimed at reaching agreement; I don’t know of another environmental regulation
that’s so populist, and that’s too bad.
There are understandable reasons
that the Section 106 process has become so impenetrable by the public, and I
won’t deny my own responsibility for some of its complexities. But the biggest
factor in the deterioration of Section 106 review, I think, has been a disinterested
ACHP leadership that devotes little intellectual energy to it. That leadership
has been much more interested in doing other things – giving awards, overseeing
grant programs; nice quiet activities that get attaboys from congressmen and presidents,
stuff that doesn’t make trouble. Forgetting Garvey’s dictum of trying to work
itself out of existence, the ACHP seems to have become more devoted to its own survival
and prosperity than to its legal mission.
I hope that the new Chairman and Executive Director will change things; I hope they’ll be inspired by Bob Garvey’s legacy and devote real brainpower and creativity to resuscitating the Section 106 process and putting it to work in the interests of our planetary heritage.
1 comment:
Everyone else but the Agua Caliente’s historian and Vice Chairman actually have names. Maybe you could add their names also?
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