Parcel of land being logged along Eaglecrest road, purpose unclear

A significant land-clearing operation is under way on a parcel near the road leading to Eaglecrest Ski Area, and the purpose of the clearing could not be confirmed Friday.

When the Empire visited the site, no workers were around, and piles of large logs lay alongside a new gravel road.

The parcel, according to City and Borough of Juneau records, is a Alaska Native allotment controlled by the estate of Jimmie George, an Angoon man whose family obtained 220 acres in the center of Douglas Island as part of a land swap with the Forest Service.

In 2015, the executive council of the Central Council of the Tlingit and Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska signed a business lease for the parcel with the heirs of Jimmie George, but a Tlingit and Haida spokeswoman was unable to provide additional details Friday.

Central Council President Richard Peterson, who was in Anchorage as part of a U.S. Senate field hearing, did not immediately return a phone call or text message.

No trespassing signs bearing the Tlingit and Haida logo were attached to trees at the edge of the property.

The parcel is unusual in that it is a rare piece of federal Indian Country in Southeast Alaska. The 1971 Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act abrogated aboriginal claims in exchange for a cash payout and title to up to 44 million acres. As part of the settlement, most forms of federally controlled Indian Country were prohibited.

Some of the few exceptions to that arrangement were individual parcels doled out to Alaska Natives under the Alaska Native Allotment Act of 1906, which allowed individual Natives to acquire up to 160 acres each. Selections were allowed until ANCSA was signed into law.

The George family received a parcel on Admiralty Island, but that remained undeveloped through the 20th century. In the late 1990s, the U.S. Forest Service became interested in consolidating privately held parcels on Admiralty Island, and Gabriel George, representing the family, began working with the Forest Service on a land swap.

In 2002, the deal was finalized, with the family receiving 220 acres and $73,000 in exchange for their 100 acres on Admiralty Island. (The Admiralty Island property was much more valuable on a per-acre basis.)

At the time, Gabriel George told the Empire that the family planned to create a private retreat with 30 cabins spread throughout the woods. He said the family had no plans to clear-cut the area.

“Most of the … concerns were over the trees and logging,” he said at the time. “That’s something we have a concern about, too.”

In 2004, Gabriel George told the Empire that the family was in talks with a nonprofit called Bear Education and Animal Rehabilitation Sanctuary Inc., which wanted to build a facility to rehabilitate injured animals before their return to the wild.

The project was the idea of Chris Grant, who co-owned Thunder Mountain Smokehouse, but it never came to pass.

By 2007, a Skagway company was using the parcel for sled dog carting tours with the permission of the George family.

As Indian Country under federal ownership, the parcel is immune to state and local taxation and regulation.


• Contact reporter James Brooks at jbrooks@juneauempire.com or 523-2258.


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