
[V]ERNON โ For Rich Holschuh, the Vermont Yankee property is rife with contradictions.
On one hand, it’s an idled, contaminated nuclear plant in need of the biggest environmental cleanup project Vermont has ever seen.
On the other, it’s part of the ancestral homeland of the Elnu Abenaki, the Native American tribe Holschuh is representing in the state’s regulatory review of Vermont Yankee’s proposed sale to a New York cleanup company.
Now, those two versions of the site may be edging a little closer together. The plant’s potential buyer, NorthStar Group Services, has agreed to talks with the Abenaki in an effort to address the tribe’s worries about excavation, cleanup and site restoration.
โWe want to meet with them,โ NorthStar Chief Executive Officer Scott State said. โWe want to understand their concerns, and we want to come to an understanding as to how we can meet their concerns.โ
It’s not clear what the outcome of those talks will be, but Holschuh said the fact they’re occurring is a victory of sorts.
โWe’re trying to establish our voice โ just be acknowledged for being here and caring,โ Holschuh said. โWe want to be involved, and we actually see this as a responsibility.โ
Entergy stopped producing power at Vermont Yankee at the end of 2014 and is seeking to sell the Vernon plant to NorthStar by the end of next year. NorthStar has promised to clean up most of the site by 2030, whereas Entergy’s cleanup plan could have stretched to 2075.
The sale and accelerated decommissioning proposal is under review by the federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission and the Vermont Public Utility Commission.
Two Abenaki tribes are participating in the state’s review with whatโs called intervenor status, and Holschuh recently filed detailed testimony on behalf of the Windham County-based Elnu Abenaki. Holschuh, a Brattleboro resident and member of the Vermont Commission for Native American Affairs, is serving as a public liaison for the tribe.

Even today, Holschuh argues, the Abenaki and this relatively small parcel of land along the Connecticut River are inextricably connected.
โIt is a critical understanding that, as an indigenous population, the people understand themselves to be one inseparable entity with the landscape and with all of its other presences,โ he wrote.
Holschuh’s testimony discusses the Abenaki’s history of living off the land in the area of the river’s โGreat Bend.โ It was an โancient fishing groundโ and agricultural area, he wrote, and Governor Hunt Road follows a long-ago trail connecting native settlement areas.
Across the river in Hinsdale, New Hampshire, the Abenaki maintained a โpalisaded villageโ meant to defend against attack by the Iroquois, Holschuh says.
But the land was transformed by European settlement and subsequent industrialization. The century-old Vernon hydroelectric dam flooded hundreds of acres, and Vermont Yankee began operating in 1972 on roughly 123 acres just upstream.
Holschuh sees the nuclear plant as a โgreat incongruityโ that โmust and can be reckoned with โฆ in the best manner possibleโ with the interests of indigenous people in mind.
By his estimation, that hasn’t happened at all up to this point. โThe cultural significance of this site has never been fully acknowledged, although its great potential is conceded,โ Holschuh wrote.
He cites a 2007 NRC report, which notes that โno formal archeological survey was conducted at the (Vermont Yankee) site prior to initial construction.โ The commission added that โthere is potential for intact archeological deposits within the undeveloped areasโ of the property.
With decommissioning โ and large amounts of excavation โ possibly imminent at Vermont Yankee, the Elnu Abenaki are requesting a โcomprehensive memorandum of agreement โฆ prioritizing cultural resource awareness and incorporating traditional sensitivities.โ
The tribe wants policies for oversight of โall earth-disturbing activities, with regular direct consultation and reporting.โ It’s also asking for involvement in determining the Vermont Yankee property’s site restoration standards.
Holschuh said he was surprised, just a few days after filing the Abenaki testimony, to get a call from NorthStar requesting a meeting to discuss the tribe’s concerns.

โCultural impacts are always important whenever you’re digging,โ he said.
State said NorthStar may not be excavating as much of the Vermont Yankee site as the tribe has suggested. โWe in fact are going to impact the land much less than it was impacted when the site was built,โ he said.
Nevertheless, State said he wants to find a way to accommodate the Abenaki’s issues as much as possible. โThis is something we see as our obligation,โ State said.
However, he cautioned that โthere’s a balance that has to be found thereโ โ meaning a balance between historical concerns and the demands of getting an accelerated decommissioning job done on time and on budget.
Holschuh concedes that point, but he believes there is inherent value in sitting down with NorthStar and in participating in the state regulatory process.
โGoing forward, we would like to be included,โ he said. โThat’s not asking too much.โ
One area where there could be disagreement is site redevelopment.
The Elnu Abenaki testimony says it โwould be best to let the land lie at rest and allow it to heal as much as possible.โ But that may be a nonstarter for NorthStar and local residents who want to see some kind of commercial or industrial redevelopment at Vermont Yankee.
Holschuh said he understood such sentiments. โI think we’re taking it a step at a time,โ he said.
