Tule Lake Committee Files Suit To Stop The Fence on the Tule Lake Concentration Camp Site

The following is a press release from the Tule Lake Committee.


On July 28, the Tule Lake Committee filed suit in Modoc County Superior Court to stop Modoc County and the City of Tulelake from consideration of leasing and fencing the Tulelake Airport until conducting a public environmental review process. State law requires study and mitigation of impacts to the historic property on which the airport sits, including consideration of alternatives to the proposed fence. The Tulelake Airport occupies the middle of the Tule Lake concentration camp site, where over 18,000 Japanese Americans were unjustly imprisoned during World War II. Tule Lake became the nation’s segregation center, where the Government punished those who protested their massive incarceration.

“We had no choice but to file a lawsuit to stop the destruction of the Tule Lake site,” said Hiroshi Shimizu, who chairs the Tule Lake Committee.

The Committee is devoted to educating the public, to remembering and preserving Tule Lake’s history, and to preventing similar injustices in the future. The Tule Lake Committee circulated an online petition to stop the fence construction, obtaining over 25,000 signatures and comments opposing the fence. See: http://www.change.org/tulelake.

“Despite our objections, the County is moving ahead on plans to build an eight-foot high, three-mile long fence on the site of the former Tule Lake concentration camp,” said Shimizu. “This massive fence would desecrate a unique civil rights historic site and close off access to descendants and anybody wishing to remember Tule Lake.”

The County of Modoc and the City of Tulelake, in agreeing to extend the County’s lease of the Tulelake Airport for thirty years, failed to conduct environmental review required by the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA), noted Susan Brandt-Hawley, an expert in California historic preservation law and attorney for the Tule Lake Committee.

“The fence is an integral part of the lease extension and airport operation,” Brandt-Hawley wrote in the Tule Lake Committee’s petition to the Court. “This long-term lease extension…may result in significant impacts to historic resources of national importance and to immediate surroundings such that the significance of such resources would be materially impaired,” said Brandt-Hawley.

The lawsuit asks the court to order the County and City to set aside the thirty-year lease extension for the Tulelake Airport land and to refrain from any physical construction while the case is pending.

Background documents posted on Facebook, “Stop the Fence at Tule Lake,” http://www.facebook.com/StopTheFence.

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To download a printable copy of this petition, click here (requires Adobe Reader software to view/print).

LEAD PHOTO: A view down one of the streets of the Tule Lake Segregation Center, November 3, 1942.Photo: Francis Stewart. Photo courtesy Japanese American Relocation Digital Archives, Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley.


Creative Commons License The Manzanar Committee’s Official web site is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License. You may copy, distribute and/or transmit any story or audio content published on this site under the terms of this license, but only if proper attribution is indicated. The full name of the author and a link back to the original article on this site are required. Photographs, graphic images, and other content not specified are subject to additional restrictions. Additional information is available at: Manzanar Committee Official web site – Licensing and Copyright Information.

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