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Resolution No. 2022-11 Supporting BIJAEMA and Minidoka National Historic Site - Approved 030822Page 1 of 3 RESOLUTION NO. 2022-11 A RESOLUTION of the City Council of Bainbridge Island, Washington supporting the protection of the Minidoka National Historic Site and urging the Washington State Congressional Delegation to support and protect it and the Bainbridge Island Japanese American Exclusion Memorial in the face of funding concerns and development threats. WHEREAS, in 1942 a monumental wrong was perpetrated under the cover of government authority. The rights of citizens of Japanese ancestry were ignored, and they were imprisoned. Wartime hysteria and racism combined to support this injustice; and WHEREAS, eighty years ago, on February 19, 1942, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order No. 9066, which authorized the removal of anyone of Japanese American ancestry from the entire west coast of the United States; and WHEREAS, on March 24 of that year the Bainbridge Island Japanese American community were notified that they would be forced from their homes in 6 days and sent to an unknown destination; and WHEREAS, on March 30, 1942, 227 Bainbridge Islanders of Japanese American descent were herded aboard the Ferry KEHLOKEN, on their way to concentration camps in California and ultimately in Minidoka, Idaho; and WHEREAS, after World War II over half of the exiled Islanders returned to Bainbridge Island where they were welcomed and resumed their roles as valued members of the Bainbridge Island Community; and WHEREAS, in the years after the War members of the Japanese American community around the country pushed for public acknowledgement of the wrong that had been perpetrated on their people; and WHEREAS, in 2001, the site of the concentration camp at Minidoka, Idaho, where most Bainbridge Islanders spent their incarceration, was made a part of the National Park Service(“NPS”) as a National Historic Site; and WHEREAS, the Bainbridge Island Japanese American Community was involved in developing the general management plan for Minidoka; and WHEREAS, at the same time, leaders of the Bainbridge Island Japanese American Community and other concerned citizens decided to create a Memorial to the exclusion experience on Bainbridge Island; and WHEREAS, in December 2005, the NPS completed the "Bainbridge Island Japanese American Memorial Study of Alternatives and Environmental Assessment;" and Page 2 of 3 WHEREAS, in 2006, NPS completed the general management plan that identified Minidoka's fundamental resources and values including protecting the site's existing views; and WHEREAS, in 2008, Rep. Jay Inslee of Washington worked with Rep. Mike Simpson of Idaho to pass bipartisan legislation to expand and redesignate the Minidoka National Historic Site to include the Eagledale Ferry Dock site on Bainbridge Island; and WHEREAS, together, Minidoka and the Bainbridge Island Memorial help tell the story of the forced incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War II. They also serve as places for healing and education; and WHEREAS, in 2006 Congress established the Japanese American Confinement Sites (JACS) grant program, administered by the NPS. The JACS grant program has been crucial to the ability to preserve and develop such historically and culturally important sites as Minidoka and the Bainbridge Island Memorial. Funding for the JACS grant program is exhausted, and many needs remain unmet; and WHEREAS, in 2021, the Bureau of Land Management (“BLM”) in Idaho announced plans to study a massive wind energy project which would be located on federal public land within the historic footprint of Minidoka; and WHEREAS, the NPS mission is to preserve unimpaired the natural and cultural resources and values we hold dear. In furtherance of that mission, NPS is working to ensure that Minidoka's particular integrity and fundamental resources and values remain unimpaired for the benefit of future generations; and WHEREAS, on his first day in office President Biden issued an Executive Order on Advancing Racial Equity and Support for Underserved Communities Through the Federal Government; and WHEREAS, the preservation and protection of the Japanese American confinement sites, and in particular Minidoka, is important for the Bainbridge Island Japanese American Community, for Japanese Americans everywhere, and for the country as a whole in the ongoing struggle against racial injustice; and NOW THEREFORE, THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF BAINBRIDGE ISLAND DOES RESOLVE AS FOLLOWS: Section 1. The City of Bainbridge Island supports the Department of the Interior's implementation of President Biden's day one executive order to advance racial justice by including a funding increase for Minidoka in the Department's budget request to Congress and supports the reauthorization and renewed funding of the JACS grant program. Section 2. The City of Bainbridge Island supports the work of the National Park Service to protect Minidoka's integrity and fundamental resources and values unimpaired for the benefit Page 3 of 3 of future generations. The City supports protective measures on nearby BLM land to protect the park's immersive setting, views of distant mountains and sense of remoteness, feeling and association. Section 3. The City also encourages the BLM to engage with members of the Bainbridge Island community during the compliance process for the National Environmental Policy Act and Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act. Section 4. The City of Bainbridge Island respectfully requests the support of its elected officials in Congress to work to ensure that the Department of the Interior does not approve the Lava Ridge Wind Project in any way that will negatively affect the integrity and fundamental resources and values of Minidoka. Section 5. If any one or more sections, subsections, or sentences of this resolution are held to be unconstitutional or invalid, such decision shall not affect the validity of the remaining portion of this resolution and the same shall remain in full force and effect. Section 6. This Resolution shall take effect and be in force immediately upon its passage. PASSED by the City Council this 8th day of March, 2022. APPROVED by the Mayor this 8th day of March, 2022. Joe Deets, Mayor ATTEST/AUTHENTICATE: By: ______________________________ Christine Brown, MMC, City Clerk FILED WITH THE CITY CLERK: February 23, 2022 PASSED BY THE CITY COUNCIL: March 8, 2022 RESOLUTION NO. 2022-11