
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Paiute and Shoshone tribes in California’s Owens Valley are facing a shortage of water — an issue that spans decades, but is now exacerbated by climate change. The city of Los Angeles, more than 200 miles away, is guzzling one-third of the groundwater in the region. The city’s diversion of water from the valley began in 1913. L.A. drained Owens Lake dry within a decade. The land, once lush with springs and streams, is now a parched landscape that hinders tribes’ access to culture and economic development.
Also, we’ll hear about how a proposed weakening of federal protections for the majority of the country’s wetlands could affect tribes. Tribes manage millions of acres of wetlands. The Trump administration seeks to limit the EPA’s authority on how it regulates pollution under the Clean Water Act. Scaling back those protections has potential consequences for much of the country’s sources of clean drinking water.
GUESTS
Daniel Cordalis (Diné), staff attorney with Native American Rights Fund and leads the Tribal Water Institute
Teri Red Owl (Bishop Paiute), executive director of the Owens Valley Indian Water Commission
Break 1 Music: The Four Essential Elements [Diigo Bee’iináanii] (song) Radmilla Cody (artist) K’é Hasin (album)
Break 2 Music: She Raised Us (song) Joanne Shenandoah (artist) LifeGivers (album)
By Koahnic4.8
156156 ratings
Paiute and Shoshone tribes in California’s Owens Valley are facing a shortage of water — an issue that spans decades, but is now exacerbated by climate change. The city of Los Angeles, more than 200 miles away, is guzzling one-third of the groundwater in the region. The city’s diversion of water from the valley began in 1913. L.A. drained Owens Lake dry within a decade. The land, once lush with springs and streams, is now a parched landscape that hinders tribes’ access to culture and economic development.
Also, we’ll hear about how a proposed weakening of federal protections for the majority of the country’s wetlands could affect tribes. Tribes manage millions of acres of wetlands. The Trump administration seeks to limit the EPA’s authority on how it regulates pollution under the Clean Water Act. Scaling back those protections has potential consequences for much of the country’s sources of clean drinking water.
GUESTS
Daniel Cordalis (Diné), staff attorney with Native American Rights Fund and leads the Tribal Water Institute
Teri Red Owl (Bishop Paiute), executive director of the Owens Valley Indian Water Commission
Break 1 Music: The Four Essential Elements [Diigo Bee’iináanii] (song) Radmilla Cody (artist) K’é Hasin (album)
Break 2 Music: She Raised Us (song) Joanne Shenandoah (artist) LifeGivers (album)

43,907 Listeners

32,033 Listeners

6,795 Listeners

43,615 Listeners

9,197 Listeners

5,743 Listeners

8,443 Listeners

998 Listeners

10,135 Listeners

14,624 Listeners

125 Listeners

504 Listeners

2,991 Listeners

1,008 Listeners

542 Listeners