Arizona Construction Projects Halted Following Archaeological Violations

Oct. 22, 2024
Two public works projects were shut down after Tucson city officials improperly dug through known sites.

By: Henry Brean

Source: The Arizona Daily Star, Tucson (TNS)

Two public works projects on the west side of Tucson have been shut down for months by state and federal authorities, after workers for the city improperly dug through several known archaeological sites near the Santa Cruz River, including one where ancestral Native American remains were later found.

Christopher Columbus Park

Cement blocks sit at a partially built baseball field backstop at Christopher Columbus Park, after work was halted because the City of Tucson failed to follow regulations designed to protect archaeological sites.

The city’s “unauthorized ground-disturbing activities” occurred during improvements at Christopher Columbus Park earlier this year and water utility work in 2021 for the planned widening of Silverbell Road, according to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the federal permitting agency for activities affecting wetlands and waterways.

The Arizona State Museum issued a stop-work order for the park improvements on June 18, and the Corps of Engineers suspended the city’s federal Clean Water Act permit for the road project on July 9. Both of those orders remain in effect.

Sallie Diebolt, regulatory division chief of the corps’ Arizona branch, detailed the city’s violations in a letter sent last month to several Native American tribes and other consulting parties to the federal permit.

The city has since admitted that it failed to adequately survey for cultural resources prior to construction, then failed to have an archaeological monitor present during the work, in apparent violation of the National Historic Preservation Act and the Arizona Antiquities Act.

In a letter to the Cultural Affairs Office of the Tohono O’odham Nation, Mayor Regina Romero said the city “deeply regrets its mistakes and intends to correct its actions.”

“We take this matter seriously and are committed to resolving it promptly and respectfully, in a way that addresses any harm to your Tribe and its people,” Romero wrote.

City probes ‘breakdowns’

The most recent incident occurred near the corner of Silverbell Road and El Camino Del Cerro, where the city is adding new ball fields and other amenities to Columbus Park.